23rd Annual Hampton Beach Sand Sculpting Classic – a sight worth seeing

“Raptor Ryder”ย 

HAMPTON BEACH, NH โ€“ The $25,000 Hampton Beach Sand Sculpting Classic concluded Sunday, though the entries are available for viewing through June 25.

Greg Grady Sr. has been the driving force behind the Classic since its inception. According to him, the composition of the sand and the weather are always key factors.

The typical 200 tons of contest sand are imported from a Hudson quarry. โ€œThe sand has to hold together in my hand,โ€ Grady explained. โ€œThe sand is the single most important element.โ€

The common question of โ€œHow does it hold together?โ€™ is easily answered. Contestants use a combination of water and Elmerโ€™s Glue that is sprayed onto the sculptures.ย 

Sand sculpting at the Master level is no day at the beach. The ten Master sculptors in this yearโ€™s contest represented seven states and Canada. There are worldwide competitions literally every weekend of the year. Kudos to Grady for attracting the Master competitors.

Gradyโ€™s son Greg J. Grady, winner of the 2022 Governorโ€™s Award, competes, but as Grady Sr. explained โ€œHeโ€™ll never win.โ€ Grady Sr. serves as a judge. Heโ€™s dead serious.

Grady Jr. has traveled all over the world for competitions and as a hire at places such as Richard Bransonโ€™s island.โ€ If you dream it, we can sculpt it,โ€ he said. Competitor John Gowdy worked for the White House Commission of Remembrance at the Normandy beaches in France.

Dinosaurs figured heavily in this yearโ€™s competition but itโ€™s surprising to know that sculptors start each contest fresh. โ€œIโ€™ve never sculpted the same thing twice,โ€ Grady Jr. explained.

What follows is some of the detail from this yearโ€™s competition.


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