About Cobalt Boats
Out here in Cobalt Boats part of America, dreams have always begun where the waters come together. The people who first lived on this prairie named their home “Neodesha.” [Nee-oh-de-shay]. An Osage word, it means “the meeting of the waters”.To this day Cobalt boats anchor night after night in a tradition of rugged individualism, in the pride of people with extraordinary skills set among a small town's uncompromising notion of what might be. They know these people, the neighbors who come every morning to build these boats. They know their grandparents and their grandkids, second and third generations of families now crafting the fourth decade of Cobalts. They are rooted people, solid in a work ethic born on farms and ranches, people who understand at first hand the ways in which personal accountability serves collective achievement. People who grew up with Cobalt's founder Pack St. Clair in a small town with big ideas. People with a sense of place. And of time. Time enough to know that -- for them as for you -- dreams are liquid, able to be grasped only in the moment, in the ebb and flow of lives lived one good day to the next.
|