- Narrator: Going against the wind is one of the everyday tricks of sailing. Theory has it that, instead of the wind getting into the sails and pushing these boats, the wind really passes over the sails like air over an airplane wing. A vacuum is created on the belly side of the sail, and the boat moves into it. Thus, a sailboat really pulls itself up into the wind.
- [first lines]
- Narrator: Down Bermuda way, where the sun is bright and life is gay, that ocean is used for sailing - but what sailing!
- [last lines]
- Narrator: There is only one other place that these lovely little monsters can be seen. That's Australia, where the boats are a little longer. Down under or up over, they offer fascinating and often wet sports. But what does that matter, when you're sailing where the life is right and life is gay - when you're sailing in Bermuda.