WoodenBoat 227 JulAug 2012

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Why Maine LobsterMen Choose Wood • antigua CLassiCs

THe MAGAZINe FOR WOODeN BOAT OWNeRS, BUILDeRS, AND DeSIGNeRS


Peter Kass
Terrapin Smack
Seaclipper 10
Mumbai
Ranger Class
JULY/AUGUST 2012

BENITO: Maine Builder, Australian Owner JULY/AUGUST 2012


Shop-Built Powerboat Steering NUMBeR 227
Anchoring Under Sail • A Trainer Trimaran $6.95
$7.95 in Canada
£3.95 in U.K.
www.woodenboat.com

WB227_C1A.indd 1 5/23/12 10:50 AM


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paints are sailed.
Paint and varnish. Experience the two passions
of Epifanes at your local chandlery, online at
www.epifanes.com or call us at 1-800-269-0961.

AALSMEER, HOLLAND ■ THOMASTON, MAINE ■ ABERDEEN, HONG KONG

FOLLOW US

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

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Discover a Modern Classic

US Sailing Team Athletes Paige & Zach Railey • Brimbles Sweater, Shipyard Short 1 Mick Anderson

We call it our Deck-to-Dock Collection


And you can probably guess why. With clean, traditional styling,
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Atlantis227.indd 1 5/21/12 9:40 AM


48 Rope Steering for Powerboats
Simple and affordable
shop-made solutions Harry Bryan

Page 48

Page 78
54 The Seaclipper 10
A trimaran for the pure joy
Features of sailing Jim Brown

62 BENITO
33 Revisiting the Classics
Discovered on YouTube,
The terrapin smack Reuel B. Parker
built by Skype Bruce Stannard
40 Anchoring Under Sail
Sharpen your skills with
the motor off Bruce Halabisky

44 A Letter from India


Visiting Mumbai’s
Sassoon Dock Peter Neill

Page 40

69 Catching Up with Peter Kass


Thirty years of wooden
lobsterboats Matthew P. Murphy

78 The Ranger Class


A wholesome sloop from
Page 54
Sydney John D. Little

2 • WoodenBoat 227

TOC227_03.indd 2 5/21/12 5:13 PM


Number 227
July/August 2012

ReadeR SeRviceS

116 How to Reach Us

117 Boatbrokers
Page 69 120 Boatbuilders

128 Kits and Plans


depaRTmenTS
132 Classified
5 Editor’s Page
Bonus Content 143 Index to Advertisers
8 Letters
16 Currents edited by Tom Jackson
TeaR-ouT SupplemenT pages 16/17
28 Fo’c’s’le
How Not to Anchor David Kasanof Getting Started in Boats:
74 In Focus Tools for Boatbuilding Greg Rössel
Antigua Classic
Yacht Regatta Cory Silken
87 Designs
Shore Liner and Gunkholer:
Cover: In southern
Shoal-draft cruisers Mike O’Brien Australia, the 44' Peter
Kass–built lobsterboat
90 Wood Technology BENITO cruises her
Why Specific Gravity, home waters. Via Skype,
Not Density? Richard Jagels the owner oversaw the
boat’s construction at
92 Launchings… the Maine-based
John’s Bay Boat Co.
and Relaunchings Robin Jettinghoff See page 62.

99 The WoodenBoat Review


Photograph by
• G.L. Watson John Rousmaniere Peter Champion
• VaSa Tom Jackson
• Metal-cutting blade Kevin D. Porter WoodenBoat (ISSN 0095–067X) is published bimonthly in January, March, May, July, September,
• Books Received and November in Brooklin, Maine, by WoodenBoat Publications, Inc., Jonathan A. Wilson,
Chairman. Subscription offices are at P.O. Box 16958, North Hollywood, CA 91615–6958;
1–800–877–5284 for U.S. and Canada. Overseas: 1–818–487–2084.

109 Calendar of Events Subscription rate is $32.00 for one year (6 issues) in the U.S. and its possessions. Canadian
subscription rate is $37.00, U.S. funds. Surface rate overseas is $45.00, U.S. funds per year.
Periodical postage paid at Brooklin, ME 04616 and additional mailing offices. In Canada,
144 Save a Classic periodical postage paid at Toronto, Ontario (Canadian periodical Agreement No. 40612608,
GST Registration No. R127081008).
ONDINE, POCAHONTAS, and U.S. Postmaster: Please send Change of Address (form 3579) to P.O. Box 16958, North
Hollywood, CA 91615–6958
MARION M Maynard Bray Canada Postmaster: Pitney Bowes, P.O. Box 25542, London, ON, N6C 6B2, Canada.

July/August 2012 • 3

TOC227_03.indd 3 5/21/12 5:13 PM


WoodenBoat magazine’s

design challenge iV
Rethinking the Wooden Runabout

the runabout, without a doubt,


is one of the world’s favorite recreational
boats. For fishing, picnicking, water skiing,
or just zipping around on a sunny summer
day, it’s hard to beat the pure fun of this
versatile family boat.

The popularity of the type dates back to the years PaRameteRs:


between the two World Wars, when builders such as
n Conceive a fun, multipurpose day boat, in wood, that could
Gar Wood and Chris Smith popularized these boats be built by a dedicated amateur.
through mass production. The efficiencies they
n The length of the new boat must fall between 18’ and 25’.
achieved helped make boat ownership an attainable
n There is no stated horsepower restriction, but common
dream for the person sense should prevail.
of average means.
n There must be a minimum seating capacity for four people.
The booming post-
World War II economy submissions must be the designer’s original, previously
brought about great unpublished, work and must include:
evolution in the n A narrative description of the design concept (Word
design of these boats, document or PDF).
but these changes n Lines, profile, sections, and construction plans, an accurate
came with the weight study, and performance and cost calculations (JPG
or PDF).
fiberglass revolution, and there was little fresh thinking
in wood—at least compared with the great variety of The judging of this Challenge will include a “reader favorite”
fiberglass runabouts that emerged during that era. category, requiring that the materials described above be posted
on the WoodenBoat magazine website, www.woodenboat.com,
For this new Design Challenge, we ask you to rethink for judging.
the wooden runabout, applying design principles,
We will award $1,000 to the first-place design, $500 to the
powering options, layouts, and construction techniques second-place winner, and $500 to the reader-favorite winner.
not available or conceived of during Chris-Craft’s heyday.
Entries must be received by November 1, 2012.
Wooden Runabout design challenge
WoodenBoat’s sister publication, Professional BoatBuilder, is currently
WoodenBoat magazine sponsoring a similar contest, but for a production-built boat. These two
P.o. box 78 • brooklin, me 04616 usa contests will be judged separately, and so must be entered separately.

Photos courtesy of The Wooden Runabout Company, Holland, Michigan

DesignChallengeIV_226.indd 4 5/22/12 9:19 AM


Bonus Content
As I write this in mid May, we’re just days away from a long-anticipated
41 WoodenBoat Lane • P.O. Box 78 relaunching of our website. An ever-growing wish-list of offerings, and
Brooklin, ME 04616–0078 the numerous technical challenges associated with them, have turned
tel. 207–359–4651 • fax 207–359–8920
a seemingly straightforward project into a months-long task for website
e-mail: woodenboat@woodenboat.com manager Greg Summers. But now, the countdown clock is ticking toward
web site: www.woodenboat.com a launch day, so here’s a list of some of the things you’ll encounter at the
new site—if you haven’t already found your way to it:
PUBLISHER Carl Cramer Video and Photos
EdItORIAL
Editor Matthew P. Murphy You can post or view videos in one of several ways. The “WoodenBoat TV”
Senior Editor Tom Jackson button will take you to a collection of videos from other sites. Want to
Assistant Editor robin Jettinghoff
technical Editor Maynard Bray
learn how to build an ultralight, wood-framed, fabric-covered canoe? Or
Boat design Editor Mike O’Brien watch a documentary about Viking ships? Or see Crosby Stills and Nash
Contributing Editors Harry Bryan, Greg rössel performing their classic song “Wooden Ships” live in 1974? WoodenBoat
Copy Editor Jane Crosen
ARt & PROdUCtION TV is the place. You can also post your own videos and photographs, and
Art director Olga Lange view those of others, in a section dedicated to community videos. And you
Advertising Art director Blythe Heepe
Associate Art director Phil Schirmer
can visit the Bonus Content Section under WoodenBoat magazine to view
CIRCULAtION our ever-growing library of videos related to the magazine’s content.
director richard Wasowicz
Associates Lorna Grant, Pat Hutchinson Calendar of Events and Schools Listing
MARkEtINg & SALES This will be the last issue of WoodenBoat to carry the Calendar of Events.
Associate Publisher Anne Dunbar The roster of events has been growing in recent years, and we realize that,
AdvERtISINg
director Todd richardson
with WoodenBoat’s worldwide reach, most of the events in the calendar are
Manager Laura Sherman not relevant to most readers. Therefore, we’ll highlight a few events in
Classified Wendy E. Sewall print each issue (beginning in September, this will appear in Currents),
Sales Associates
E ast Coast & M idwEst: and move the complete Calendar to the website. You’ll be able to manage
ray Clark, 401–247–4922; rgclark@cox.net your own calendar listings online.
Frank Fitz, 401–245–7424; ffitz@cox.net
NEw ENglaNd: John K. Hanson, Jr., For many years, we’ve also published a six-page listing of boatbuilding
207–594–8622; john@maineboats.com schools. This list will now live online, and may be continually updated by schools.
wEst Coast aNd wEstErN CaNada:
Ted Pike, 360–385–2309; brisa@olympus.net Launchings
iNtErNatioNal: 207–359–4651;
advertising@woodenboat.com We’ve had an online version of our popular Launchings department for
woodENBoat M arkEtplaCE: a few years, but it’s even better now. It has a cleaner layout, with a list
Tina Dunne, tina.dunne@woodenboat.com
of boats and thumbnail images of each boat on that list. Click on the
RESEARCH
director Anne Bray thumbnail for a gallery of images, the boat’s technical specifications,
Associates Patricia J. Lown, rosemary Poole and a short narrative of the boat’s design and construction. The search
BUSINESS function for this section has gotten better, too: It’s easier to use and more
Office Manager Tina Stephens
Staff Accountant Jackie Fuller powerful than before.
Associate roxanne Sherman
Reception Heidi Gommo The Backstory
tHE WOOdENBOAt StORE In this soon-to-be-added blog, we’ll share anecdotes and images related
www.woodenboatstore.com
1–800–273–SHIP (7447); fax 207–359–2058
to articles in the magazine—the stories behind the stories.
Catalog Manager Ann Neuhauser
Associates Jody Allen, Elaine Hutchinson,
Marketplace and Boats for Sale
Chet Staples Do you have a business for which you’re seeking wider exposure, or are
WOOdENBOAt BOOkS you selling a wooden boat? Our marketplace section allows you to initiate,
www.woodenboatbooks.com update, and pay for your listing online. If you’re selling kits and plans, we
Book Publisher Scot Bell
WOOdENBOAt SCHOOL also have a section where you can list your offerings free of charge.
director rich Hilsinger
Business Manager Kim Patten Free Boat Plans
WEBSItE The Alexandria Seaport Foundation in Virginia has generously made
Manager Greg Summers available the plans for their popular Bevins Skiff, along with a manual
Chairman & Editor-in-Chief Jonathan A. Wilson
describing how to build the boat. At our new website, you can download
President and general Manager James E. Miller these files in PDF format—as long as you agree to involve kids in the
building of your boat.
Copyright 2012 by WoodenBoat Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be We hope you find this new website engaging and that it helps you connect
reprinted without written permission from the publisher.
with the wider wooden boat community. Please let us know what you
CONTrIBuTIONS: Address all editorial communica-
tions to Editor, WoodenBoat, P.O. Box 78, Brooklin, think of it. You can reach us by email, Facebook, the online comment
ME 04616–0078. WoodenBoat is a largely reader- written
magazine. Care is taken with unsolicited contributions,
form, the WoodenBoat Forum (which will remain unchanged on the new
but we are not responsible for damage or loss. website), and by good old postal mail.
PrINTED
IN u.S.A. Printed on 10% Recycled Paper

July/August 2012 • 5

EdPage227_FINAL.indd 5 5/23/12 10:35 AM


9 TO JULY 1
E 2 ,2
N 0

JU

12
21ST ANNUAL
WOODENBOAT
SHOW
MYSTIC SEAPORT
MYSTIC, CONNECTICUT
PRODUCED & PRESENTED BY
WoodenBoat Magazine
To order tickets:
800-273-7447
www.TheWoodenBoatShow.com

TM

WBShow227.indd 6 5/22/12 11:08 AM


• Exhibitor List as of May 18, 2012 •
Adirondack Guide Boat Inc.  Hud-Son Forest Equipment Inc.  S/V Rebecca of Vineyard Haven
Air Head Composting Toilets International Yacht Restoration School Brian Malcolm
Airchairs  (IYRS) Reuben Smith’s Tumblehome Boatshop
American Schooner Association  Island Jewelry Rescue Tape
Antique Tools and More  J.M. Reineck & Son  Restorations by Phil Mitchell
The Apprenticeshop LaBrie Small Craft Rocking the Boat
Arey’s Pond Boatyard  The Landing School Rockport Marine, Inc
Artisan Boatworks  Layton’s Loft  Ron Rantilla Rowing Systems
Atkin Boat Plans  Lee Valley & Veritas Tools The Rope Dope
Avesta & Co  M/V LIBERTY NY - Thomas Harnisher Ross Bros
Bad Dog Tools  Lie-Nielsen Toolworks  Salt Water Workshop
Beetle, Inc.  The Log Cabin Gallery Shop  Scrimshaw - Jane & Lara
The Belted Cow Co.  Lowell’s Boat Shop  Sea Fever Gear
Benford Design Group  Luxe-Craft, Inc. Sea-Legs, Inc.
Berkshire Boat Building School  Mack Boring and Parts Co./Yanmar  Shelter Institute
Bete-Fleming, Inc.  M/V Malesh - Arthur T. Lyman Ships of Glass, Inc.
The Beveled Edge  Midwestern Solutions  Sound Marine Diesel LLC
Boats by Thurston MP&G  Stonington Boat Works, LLC
Bonnie Lasse Unlimited, LLC Monroe Boat Shop  Strong Fire Arms Company LLC
Boston BoatWorks LLC M/V Mundoo II  Sunglass World
Brewer Banner Designs  Ned Murtha Realty Swanson Boat Company
Brightworks, Inc.  Newport Nautical Timbers  T & L Tools
Bristol Boat Company  NOAH Publications/Calendar of Taylor & Snediker Boatbuilding &
Brooks Boats Designs  Wooden Boats  Yacht Restoration
Bryan Boatbuilding and Topsail Canvas Noah’s  Thomas Townsend Custom Marine
Cape Cod Maritime Museum  Oakcliff Sailing  Woodworking
Cesars World Inc. Ocean Classroom Foundation Tidal River Clothing Co.
Chart Metalworks  OffCenterHarbor.com  Tiller Publishing
Chesapeake Light Craft  Old Charts of New England  M/V TRUE LOVE - Fred Roffe
Coastal Tool Onion River Boatworks Two Daughters Boatworks
Concordia Company, Inc.  Peaceful Places UBS Financial Services
Connecticut River Books  Pease Boatworks & Marine Railway U.S. Sportswear
Crocker’s Boat Yard  Penobscot Bay Porch Swings West System Inc.
Crushable Hats Inc.  Pert Lowell Co., Inc. Wood-Mizer Products, Inc.
Custom Cordage LLC  Pettit Paint Wooden Boat Regatta Series
D N Hylan & Associates  Pleasant Bay Boat & Spar Company Wooden Boat Rescue Foundation
Dudley Dix Yacht Design Points East Magazine WoodenBoat Books 
East Passage Boatwrights  Portland Yacht Services WoodenBoat Magazine Editorial 
EasyCare Energy Solutions Prazi USA, Inc. WoodenBoat Magazine Subscriptions
M/V Edelweiss, Scott Lanzner Prism Polish The WoodenBoat School
Epifanes NA Inc. Pulsifer Hampton WoodenBoat Store
FeatherBow  R&W Traditional Rigging & Outfitting World’s Best Dog Harness
Festool RBG Cannons, LLC YNOT Yachts
Fein Power Tools
Forman School 
Frayed Knot Arts  Saturday Evening Tribute Dinner
Gannon & Benjamin Honoring Gannon & Benjamin Marine Railway
Great Lakes Boat Building School  Advance tickets required.
Grundy Insurance 
Guillemot Kayaks  800-273-7447
Hamilton Marine  www.woodenboatstore.com
Hansen Marine, Inc. 
Have a Heart Children’s Cancer Society
Heritage Marine Insurance  Sponsors:
Herreshoff Marine Museum 
I Built It Myself Demonstrations Concours d’Elegance
Hewes & Company 
Pamela Hitchcock, Goldsmith Interlux Yacht Finishes Gorilla Glue Heritage Marine Insurance
HMS Enterprises, Inc. 
Hoist Away Bags 

WBShow227.indd 7 5/22/12 11:16 AM


Memories of Great South Bay the original West Sayville “Dutch- sel drifting and working a telescop-
Dear Matt, men” baymen (all tongers)—some ing aluminum pole over the bottom.
The article on the Great South Bay in their 80s—coming back in the The deeper the water, the longer the
tong boat in WB No. 226 came over early afternoon at the same dock pole and number of sections. You
me like a wave of déjà vu. I am a that is shown in the Clamdigger video would constantly see a raker adjust-
product of the time, place, and era on your website. They’d caught ing the length of his pole depend-
described in that article, and since it twice as many hard-shell clams as I ing upon the tide. A little wind or
showed only a narrow sliver of those did in my early 20s. tide was good for a raker, but too
days, vessels, and boatbuilders, I’d The raking garveys and sharp- much and he needed to slow down
like to share some additional infor- ies were almost all built of plywood his drift, so various drags were
mation based on my experiences. (often A–C) on oak or fir frames, and used ranging from light mushroom
Dick Brennan, the man who taught fiberglassed. There were a few all- anchors to scrap metal secured to
my father how to sail, taught me this fiberglass models, but they were in a rode with the cleat handy to the
saying from the Great South Bay: the minority. The larger tong boats raker. A tonger in a larger vessel
“You can take the boy out of the bay, ranged from original working-sail with a hold could pull the hatch(es)
but you can’t take the bay out of the oyster catboats or sloops converted back, step into the hold, and cull
boy.” to power (almost all sawn frame and the clams on the deck to make it
I am enclosing a photo of a tong carvel planked), to later wooden ves- easier on his back. A raker gener-
boat working on Great South Bay sels of similar model built for power. ally had his cull rack set handy on
during the 1970s. It was originally Later, when traditional plank-on- the rail. The cull rack was an alumi-
a working-sail vessel, and was con- frame construction was less com- num grate made from tubes set at 1"
verted to power and had just under- mon on the bay, some of the tong apart—the legal limit for littlenecks.
gone a major refit at the time of the boats were built in the Chesapeake Clams were culled, sorted, and sold
photo. This is typical of tong boats Bay region, deadrise-style, and a few by size, littlenecks and “top”-necks
of the middle, wider part of Great hulls were even built in Maine and bringing the best price. I remember
South Bay. The garvey-style, decked based on lobsterboats—but with prices of $18–$20 per bushel for lit-
tong boats such as the one in your cut-down freeboards. tlenecks ), $8–$12 for cherrystones,
article were more common in the The tong boats would anchor and $2–$4 for “chowders”—the larg-
western and eastern, more shel- when they were clamming, usually est size. Clam buyers would set up
tered parts of the bay. The largest with a modified kedge anchor with box trucks along the creeks, as in
percentage of clammers were “rak- sharp and narrow bills. They had the Clamdigger video, and be paid in
ers” during the boom of the 1970s. a long rode and would drop back cash—usually with a cooler of soda
Tonging in our more exposed area as they worked. Also on board was and beer handy, so the clammer
of the bay off Sayville and West Say- generally a light grapnel, so that could grab one as he was paid.
ville was generally done in vessels they could work the boat sideways, During those boom years of the
ranging around 28'–35'. Raking was if needed. Tonging for clams was an 1970s, it was similar to what we have
generally done in open garveys and evolution of tonging earlier for oys- been experiencing here on the
sharpies ranging from 18' to 22', ters; it employed various-length shaft Maine coast over the past decade
with garveys by far the most com- tongs depending upon the depth of with lobsters: Young, hardwork-
mon. I remember watching some of water. Raking was done with the ves- ing people, just out of high school,
would be making enough money
A former catboat, converted for clamming on Great South Bay in the 1970s. to build a new boat with the largest
of engines and be driving a brand-
new four-wheel-drive pickup truck.
Obviously these boom times were
not sustainable; historically bay-
men (as with Maine coast lobster-
men) lived a more modest lifestyle
with more blue-collar wages. A true
bayman might scallop in the fall or
run a fyke or pound net, just as in
COURTESY OF STEVE PAGELS

Maine a fisherman might lobster,


scallop, or work a herring weir.
Sorry, this letter has kind of just
spilled out. I hope you find at least
some of this to be interesting.
Capt. Steven F. Pagels
Bar Harbor, Maine

8 • WoodenBoat 227

Letters227_AD_FINAL.indd 8 5/23/12 1:55 PM


pa n e r a i . c o m

history a n d heroes.

luminor 1950 3 days - 47mm

Available exclusively at Panerai boutiques and select authorized watch specialists.


BAL HARBOUR SHOPS • BEVERLY HILLS • BOCA RATON • DALLAS
LA JOLLA • LAS VEGAS • NEW YORK • PALM BEACH

RichemontPanerai227.indd 9 5/22/12 8:51 AM


Efficient Cruisers than their fair share of press cov- new development, nor to say that
Dear Editor, erage. As practical proof of my they are “a recent rediscovery of
Peace and greetings to you, and the contention that safe, fuel-efficient, the boating community.” My point
staff of WoodenBoat. I always look low-powered cruising powerboats was, in fact, just the opposite—
forward to the arrival of each issue have long been part of the modern that the boating community has
of WoodenBoat, and once again I fleet of available designs, I suggest largely ignored the development
was not disappointed. The variety to WoodenBoat readers that they in this vein; exactly as you say,
and extent of the articles, along reread Mr. Stephens’s review, “A these vessels have been dramati-
with the photographs, found in 50' Power Sharpie Power Cruiser: cally overshadowed by the main-
the May/June 2012 issue contin- Efficiency in motion” designed by stream industry’s overwhelming
ues to reflect the high standards Reuel Parker, found in the Septem- attention to two specific styles of
of WoodenBoat. I do wish, however, ber/October 2004 issue. For those powerboat design: planing deep-V
to quibble with some of Robert who wish to read more about the sportfisherman types and heavy,
W. Stephens’s contentions in his safe and efficient power cruisers, I heavy, long-range trawler types.  I
review “The Passagemaker Lite would highly recommend George strongly believe the day of light,
39: A study in efficiency.” With- Buehler’s book, The Troller Yacht efficient powerboats is coming,
out going line-by-line through Mr. Book, published in 1999, as a fun and that advances in materials
Stephens’s commentary, I respect- and informative read. Thank you technology will continue to make
fully disagree with his assessment for putting up with my nit-picking. them lighter, faster, and more
that low-powered, fuel-efficient Mark R. Harris efficient.
power cruisers are a recent redis- New Lisbon, Wisconsin
covery of the boating community. Bob Stephens replies: A Letter from Morbihan
I will agree that such vessels are Thanks for your comments about Dear WoodenBoat,
severely under-represented and my review of Tad Roberts’s Pas- I had two reasons to really enjoy
unappreciated by the vast major- sagemaker Lite 39.  I’m glad to your April edition. One was (in
ity of the boating media. Sadly, it know someone’s paying attention!  Launchings) seeing my husband
is the gas-guzzling “go-fast boats” I did not mean to imply that low- and our friends in BAGOR, the cat-
of the world that are given more powered, fuel-efficient boats are a boat we launched last June, and the

0 1 2
2 ront Mari enter
L
e C
A
t i m
Bayf
FES T I V

10 • WoodenBoat 227

Letters227_AD_FINAL.indd 10 5/23/12 1:55 PM


That was then.

This is now.

This is now.

Get out WoodenBoat


and boat. PO Box 78, Brooklin, ME 04616
www.woodenboat.com
“George Washington Crossing The Delaware” photo courtesy Metropolitan Museum of Art. Artist: Emanuel Leutze (1816–1868).

WBCorp12_309Promo226V2.indd 11 5/23/12 1:59 PM


other was the wonderful article on day of the Semaine, and now north ready in time, be going to the tra-
the Semaine du Morbihan by Peter of Vannes, where the Parade ends. ditional boat meeting in Brest, held
Neill. The coast and gulf of Morbihan every four years.
We took part in the event in 2007 are wonderful cruising grounds, Another not-to-be-missed event is
in our Drascombe lugger, CURLEW, beautiful and at times challenging. the annual secondhand boat show in
attended as spectators in 2009 and BAGOR is already part of the Flotille the Port du Crouesty, Arzon, which
2011, and shall take part again in Traditionnelle de Basse Vilaine (the is held over All Saints’ weekend
BAGOR next year. The Morbihan Vilaine being an enchanting river (Halloween).
has been our summer home since where she is moored) and took part The problem for sailors in the
1989, first in Port Navalo, where the in the July 14 celebrations there last Morbihan is finding a permanent
Grand Parade leaves from on the last year. She will also, if we can get her mooring. There are long, long
waiting lists at all ports, which are
owned by the townships. We put
our name down everywhere as

HM MARINE
soon as we started building BAGOR
HAMILTON in 2003, and finally got a slip on
the Vilaine in 2010. In Port du
Crouesty, we have crept up to about
FREE 700th on the list!
PORTLAND ROCKLAND SEARSPORT SOUTHWEST HARBOR JONESPORT Catalog! I would be very happy to hear
from anyone who is planning
to go and visit this wonderful
area of Brittany, and to help with
Boat Hooks Cap Fit information.
Boat hooks come with Sylvia Marlow
finished wooden handle. Punta Gorda, Florida, and
Baud, France
Flush Fit
Time Warp
Dear Editor,
I was walking around a local book-
Type Style Length Order# List SELL store when I saw a copy of Wood-
Brass Cap Fit 65" 732714 55.95 45.99 enBoat in their magazine rack. I
Brass Cap Fit 78" 732715 61.65 50.99 bought it, took, it home, and pro-
Stainless Steel Flush Fit 65" 739056 99.99 69.99 ceeded to go through it. It had
Stainless Steel Flush Fit 78" 739057 119.99 79.99 been a long time since I’d read the
magazine, and I was overwhelmed
Moose Point Laminated Varnished Spruce Oars with memories and recollections of
a past passion.
Over 30 years ago, I was deter-
mined to pack up and move to one
of the Eastern coastal states, take
a course in boatbuilding, and set
These beautifully crafted, up a new life working on wooden
Length Order# Each Length Order# Each
lightweight but strong oars boats. Alas, I purposely gave up that
are made from knot-free 5' 175572 33.99 7' 154041 44.99
5.5' 172614 35.99 7.5' 156016 49.99 desire due to pressing issues that
Eastern Canadian spruce. It
looks expensive, but it isn’t. 6' 154040 39.99 8' 154042 59.99 needed my attention. As I worked
By far our best selling oar. 6.5' 154049 42.99 9' 175573 64.99 my way through the magazine, I was
surprised to be swept up in a time
Debond warp. Past ambitions and fantasies
Marine Formula We stock a wide range flooded in. Things hadn’t changed
A specially formulated of colors, both traditional through all of the years that had
mixture that cleans and and bold and always passed. WoodenBoat brought back
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sealants. 4 oz. aerosol. monourethanes and two- pelling as they were originally. Pour-

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MFA-4 favorites of Maine boat- of the pressure, but it won’t satisfy
Order# 167283 builders and owners. the itch.
Allen Calvin
800-639-2715 Typographical errors are unintentional Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
and subject to correction.
hamiltonmarine.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

12 • WoodenBoat 227

Letters227_AD_FINAL.indd 12 5/23/12 1:55 PM


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CircMotorboats227.indd 13 5/23/12 8:51 AM


WoodenBoat School
2012 Schedule at a Glance
*MAY JUNE JULY
27 – 2 3–9 10 – 16 17 – 23 24 – 30 1–7 8 – 14 15 – 21 22 – 28
Introduction to Cold
Fundamentals of Boatbuilding Fundamentals of Boatbuilding Fundamentals of Boatbuilding Fundamentals of Boatbuilding
with Greg Rössel with Wade Smith with Greg Rössel with Warren Barker
Molded Construction F
with Mike Moros

Making Friends with Your Build Your Own Build Your Own Build Your Own Traditional Wood-and-
Building the Caledonia Yawl
Marine Diesel Engine Northeaster Dory Greenland-Style Kayak Stand-Up Paddleboard Save A Classic with Eric Blake Canvas Canoe Construction La
with Geoff Kerr
with Jon Bardo with David Fawley with Mark Kaufman with Geoff Kerr with Rollin Thurlow

Build Your Own Building the Introduction to Stitch-and-Glue Build Your Own Bronze Build Your Own Plank Fine Strip-Planked
Woodcarving Boat Cabinetry with
Fox Canoe with Asa Thomson Skiff Boatbuilding with Construction with Salute Cannon with Duke Constructed Pond Yacht Boat Construction C
with Reed Hayden Dave Merrifield
Bill Thomas with John Karbott Bill Thomas Sam Devlin McGuiggan & Michael Caldwell with Thom McLaughlin with Nick Schade w

*May 13-19 and Inspecting Wooden Inspecting Fiberglass Elements of Elements of Seamanship Vintage Pond Yachts
Lofting with Marine Electrics The Art of Scrimshaw Bu
May 20-26 Boats with Boats with Seamanship with with Annie Nixon & Part II with
Greg Rössel with Patrick Dole with Ron Newton w
Alumni Work Weeks David Wyman Sue Canfield Jane Ahlfeld & Annie Nixon Steve Stone Thom McLaughlin

WANDERBIRD with The Skills of Coastal Bronze Casting for Metal Working for the Elements of Seamanship II
Coastwise Navigation L
Rick & Karen Miles Seamanship with Boatbuilders with Boatbuilder & Woodworker with Martin Gardner &
with Jane Ahlfeld Jane
(June 23-July 2) Andy Oldman Sam Johnson with Erica Moody Robin Lincoln

Elements of Coastal Elements of Seamanship Elements of Seamanship Craft of Sail on

Gift certificates
Kayaking with with Martin Gardner & with Martin Gardner & ABIGAIL with
Bill Thomas Sue LaVoie Sue LaVoie Hans Vierthaler

available for all Island Exploration


urses!
Blacksmithing and Coastal Cruising

WoodenBoat co
Sailing Downeast
Modern Welding with & Seamanship with Seamanship on ABIGAIL
with Andy Oldman
Doug Wilson & Will Dupuis Andy Oldman with Hans Veirthaler

Coastal Landscapes in Elements of Coastal


Color with Kayaking (camping 2
Susan Vanderlin nights) with Bill Thomas

Can’t make it to Brooklin, Maine? Try our courses at Chesapeake Light Craft Shop,
We’re very excited to be working with John Harris APRIL 2-7 BUILD YOUR OWN PASSAGEMAKER DINGHY
OR EASTPORT PRAM
and the good folks at CHESAPEAKE LIGHT CRAFT With Geoff Kerr
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to offer courses at their excellent facility. APRIL 16-21 BUILD YOUR OWN ANNAPOLIS WHERRY
With David Fawley
Tuition for each of these courses is $750
Materials: $1429
Check our website for our entire 2012 program MAY 14-19 BUILD YOUR OWN CHESAPEAKE 17LT SEA KAYAK
www.woodenboat.com With Geoff Kerr
Materials: $1029

WBSchool227.indd 14 5/22/12 9:33 AM


Access to experience
The finest instructors available and a beautiful location on the coast of Maine make
WoodenBoat School an exciting learning experience for amateurs and professionals alike.
This season, our 32nd, we are offering over 90 one- and two-week courses in
various facets of boatbuilding, as well as, seamanship and related crafts.

AUGUST SEPTEMBER
29 – 4 5 – 11 12 – 18 19 – 25 26 – 1 2–8 9 – 15 16 – 22 23 – 29
ld Build your own Build Your Own Wooden Boat Restoration Methods Advanced Fundamentals of Boatbuilding Fundamentals of Boatbuilding
on FAMILY WEEK Greenland-Style Kayak Shearwater Sport Kayak
with Walt Ansel with Greg Rössel with Wade Smith
with Mark Kaufman with Eric Schade

d- Build Your Own Build Your Own Build Your Own Glued-Lapstrake Finishing Out Build Your Own Willow/
Building a Dory Traditional Lapstrake Construction
tion Lapstrake Canoe with Skipjack Sailing Model Annapolis Wherry Plywood Construction Small Boats with Quickbeam Sea Kayak
with Walt Ansel with Geoff Burke
w John Harris with Alan Suydam with Geoff Kerr with John Brooks John Brooks with Bill Thomas

Build Your Own The Essentials of Elements of Boat Building the 12½' Boatbuilder’s Hand
th Building the Somes Sound 12½ The Art of Woodcuts Building Half Models
Chuckanut Kayak Fine Woodworking Design with Semi-Dory Skiff with Tools with
with John Brooks with Gene Shaw with Eric Dow
with David Gentry with Janet Collins Graham Byrnes John Karbott Harry Bryan

Elements of Seamanship Strip Composite Traditional & Modern Coastal Maine in Introduction to Introduction to Inspecting Fiberglass
aw Build Your Own Pram Rigging with
with Martin Gardner & Construction with Oar Making with Watercolor with Sailmaking with Canvas Work with Boats with
n with Bill Thomas Myles Thurlow
Dave Gentry Clint Chase Clint Chase Amy Hosa Marti & Jed Siebert Ann Brayton David Wyman

p II Elements of Seamanship Beach Cruising & Coastal Sailmaking for Pond Small Boat Voyaging Marine Photography
Learn to Sail with Lofting with
& (women only) with Jane Camping with Ross Beane Yacht Owners with with Jane Ahlfeld & with Jon Strout &
Jane Ahlfeld & Annie Nixon Ahlfeld & Gretchen Snyder Greg Rössel
& Bill Thomas Alan Suydam Bill Thomas Jane Peterson

Craft of Sail on Seascape/Landscape Sailing Traditional Daysailers Elements of Coastal


Craft of Sail II Craft of Sail on MISTY Sea Sense Under Sail
BELFORD GRAY in Watercolor & Beach Cruisers with Kayaking (over 40)
with David Bill with Queene Foster with Havilah Hawkins
with David Bill with Phil Steel Al Fletcher & Mike O’Brien with Mike O’Brien

Coastal Cruising Tallship Sailing and Craft of Sail on MISTY Elements of Coastal
t Sea Sense Under Sail
Seamanship on ABIGAIL Seamanship with Capt. (women only) Kayaking II
n with Havilah Hawkins
with Hans Veirthaler Barry King & Jane Ahlfeld with Queene Foster with Stan Wass

l Cruising through the Elements of Windjamming on


2 Watches on ABIGAIL Seamanship II with LEWIS R. FRENCH
mas with Hans Vierthaler Martin Gardner with Capt. Garth Wells

in Annapolis, Maryland For additional information

SEPTEMBER 10-15 BUILD YOUR OWN WOOD DUCK KAYAK Check our website for our entire 2012 program:
With Eric Schade www.woodenboat.com
Materials: 10’ - $954 12’ - $1029 or call Kim or Rich at
SEPTEMBER 24-29 BUILD YOUR OWN NORTHEASTER DORY 207–359–4651
With David Fawley To order a complete course catalog, call toll-free
Materials: $1425 (rowing) $2524 (sailing) 1-800-273-SHIP (7447)
OCTOBER 22-27 BUILD YOUR OWN STAND-UP PADDLEBOARD WoodenBoat SChooL
With Geoff Kerr P.O. Box 78,
Materials: $915 Brooklin, Maine 04616-0078
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

WBSchool227.indd 15 5/22/12 9:34 AM


CURRENTS Edited by
Edited by Tom
Tom Jackson
Jackson

In 1955, a crew of six crossed the Pacific


Ocean in this junk, named FREE CHINA,
from Taiwan to San Francisco.

COLLECTION OF RENO CHEN FAMILY/CHINESE JUNK PRESERVATION


A junk goes home from San Francisco
by Tom Jackson

F ifty-seven years ago, a half-dozen


novice sailors set sail from Taiwan
on a most improbable voyage. They
ship MUTUALITY on her way to the
port of Keelung, where she will open a
new chapter of her life, preserved as an
Currents, WB No. 182). Had this junk
not been sailed away, she would likely
have met the same fate as the rest of
were aboard an aging 80' Chinese junk exhibit at a maritime museum. them, broken up or abandoned.
with an audacious plan to get to New- It turns out that the junk, which was Chow and the four other initial
port, Rhode Island, to enter a New York a good half-century old by the time crew—Reno Chia-Lin Chen, Benny
Yacht Club transatlantic race to Sweden. expedition leader Paul Chuan-Chun Chia-Cheng Hsu, Marco Yu-Lin Chung,
Although delays made that idea not just Chow and his compatriots bought her and “Huloo” Loo-Chi Hu—were all refu-
unlikely but impossible, they neverthe- in 1955, is today considered one of the gees from mainland China who had
less sailed 6,000 miles across the Pacific oldest existing authentic working Chi- been retrained as fishermen under a
Ocean, passing through the Golden nese junks—an irony of her unusual life United Nations program in Taiwan.
Gate and landing at San Francisco in story. Built in Fujien Province sometime Although all had been to sea, none had
August 1955. around the turn of the 20th century, she done so under sail. They bought the boat
Now, their junk, abandoned for years had a varied career as a coastal trader from a smuggler who was in jail at the
and falling deep into disrepair, is itself and smuggler until the young would-be time, aided by some financing approved
making an equally improbable voyage— racers bought her. By mid-century, the by the governor of Taiwan on the condi-
aboard a freighter this time—back to end was near for working sail through- tion that they rename the junk FREE
Taiwan. As of this writing in May, the out China. No sailing junks remain CHINA . Their voyage came at the height
junk was aboard the Chinese container today, save historical replicas (see of the Cold War and only six years after

16 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 16 5/22/12 1:41 PM


GETTING STARTED IN BOATS
from the Editors of Magazine

Volume 35 Tools for


Boatbuilding

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 1 5/21/12 5:34 PM


— Tools for BoaTBuilding —
by Greg Rössel
Illustrations by Jan Adkins

A
fter selecting the plans for your first boat particular style of wood plane or chisel might
and finding a suitable location for a shop, look the same, yet many manufacturers have in-
it’s time to round up the tools to build it. corporated subtle differences such as size,
No question about it—having the right tool weight, finish, or type of cutting iron that can
for the right job can make a project flow easily affect how the tool works or even how it feels in
and expeditiously. Most people contemplating your hand. The answer to the question, “Which
building a boat will probably already have some tool is best?” is usually, “Builder’s preference.” If
basic household tools, and some of these will be possible, try borrowing a tool first to see how
useful in boatbuilding. But setting out to build you like it.
a boat will probably mean supplementing your One of the most important tools is the one
tool inventory. that is often forgotten—a good, heavy-duty, long
Some tools—a few planes and chisels, for ex- workbench, which can be homemade, like the
ample—can be acquired even before choosing a one shown on the cover of this issue of Getting
particular boat to build. But if you’ve settled on Started in Boats. Nothing beats a rugged surface
a boat, the place to begin is with a look at the that is stable, resists movement, and has a com-
plans. If your boat is to be built from a quality kit fortable working height tailored to you. A bench
with just about everything accurately precut, you that is 36" high, 30" deep, and 8' long is a reason-
will need little more than what might be found able size. That’s longer than many workbenches,
in the kitchen tool drawer. For everything else, but the extra length comes in very handy when
you will likely need to own (or borrow) a small shaping the long pieces of wood that are com-
kit of dedicated woodworking tools. mon in boatbuilding, such as planks, rails,
The trick is to find a balance. The spartan backbone timbers, and lots more. Add a qual-
or minimalist approach is to grab a few tools ity woodworker’s vise (or two), and you’ll have a
from the $4 bin at the local discount store. At workstation to be reckoned with. It will beat any
the opposite end of the spectrum, you could store-bought bench that is meant to be portable
purchase every item in that glossy “investment- or is based on a foundation of sawhorses.
grade quality” woodworkers’ catalog, including Your bench may end up being among the least
all the bronze-bodied hand planes. If you’ve got expensive of your tools. It can be built from lum-
the budget, go for it—quality tools are a wise beryard materials—4 ×4s for legs, 2 ×4s for fram-
investment. But buying quality need not drive ing, and perhaps a 3/4" plywood top. The whole
you to the poorhouse. If buying new, look for business can be fastened together with carriage
reliable, time-tested brands for tools that you ab- bolts and deck screws. If you have a wood-floored
solutely need. Also, consider buying used tools shop, it can be fastened down. For a deluxe ver-
at tag sales, estate sales, or through eBay. Some sion, you can install a full-length shelf under-
antique stores carry, or even specialize in, old neath, on which to store your cache of tools and
tools. With a little effort, a reliable old tool can fastenings. This will not only provide storage
be brought out of retirement for a fraction of but also ballast the bench, making it even more
the cost of a new one. stable. If you want to be able to move the bench
Interestingly, like their users, tools are from place to place, just bolt on a set of wheels
individuals. In a catalog, various brands of a and you are on your way.

WOODENBOAT PUBLICATIONS, INC.


P.O. Box 78 (41 WoodenBoat Ln.), Brooklin, ME 04616 • Tel. 207–359–4651
www.GettingStartedinBoats.com • www.WoodenBoat.com
1–800–274–4936 (U.S. and Canada)

Subscribe to WoodenBoat Magazine: 1–800–274–4936

2 • Tools for Boatbuilding

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 2 5/21/12 5:34 PM


— A Plethora of Planes —

D B

I n these days of digitally laser-guided and


gyroscopically balanced devices, it is some-
times easy to forget the speed and accuracy—
of an uneven surface, skimming off the peaks and
gradually creating a flat and true surface (C).
• Spokeshave. Looking to sculpt the interior
and relatively small cost—of a hand tool that is curves of a thwart knee or breasthook? This
well tuned and has a keenly honed cutting edge. highly maneuverable, two-handled edge tool is
For the boatbuilder, edge tools, especially hand the one for the job (D).
planes, provide subtle control. Since they avoid
the elaborate setup often required for a power • Rabbet plane. Both the short “bullnose” type
tool, they are quick to put into use. Best of all, (E) and the larger duplex “78” style are useful.
they are cordless, quiet, and a pleasure to use. Unlike most other planes, the cutting iron of a
There’s a dazzling array of specialty planes, but rabbet plane extends the full width of the rabbet
here’s a sampler of those most useful for almost plane, which has cutouts in each side allowing
any kind of boatbuilding: the blade edges to be flush with the sides of the
• Low-angle block plane. The sportscar of wood plane body. This allows the tool to make a right-
planes—think MG or Mazda Miata—these angled cut—called a rabbet—into a piece of
small planes are extremely versatile and maneu- wood. The shorter bullnose is just the ticket for
verable. They are especially handy for planking, rabbets shaped along a curve. A good example of
finishing compound bevels, and shaping. (A) a curved rabbet is at the bow of a boat, where the
rabbet follows the curvature of the stem to re-
• Jack plane (also known as No. 5). This is the ceive the plank ends. The larger duplex is great
good general-purpose plane that was a mainstay for straighter rabbets, like those along the keel.
of school wood shops. These planes are great The duplex type is a versatile tool that also has a
for flattening surfaces and joining edges of fence that allows you to take shavings parallel to
moderate-length stock (B). the edge of a piece, as in “shiplap” siding. This
• Fore plane (No. 6) or jointer plane (No. 7 or type of cut is often essential in boatbuilding, for
No. 8). These long hand planes are a handy (and example in forming the “gains” at the end of lap-
cheaper) alternative to an electric jointer for tru- strake planks so their faces come together flush
ing up edges of stock that need to be mated to- at the stem or transom, or for making shiplap
gether perfectly, such as the pieces making up a joints for bulkhead staving, which is a bit like
boat’s transom. Their long length is designed, wainscoting. For specialized tasks, wood-bodied
like a road grader, to “ride over” the undulations planes (F) can be bought used or made.

Tools for Boatbuilding • 3

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 3 5/21/12 5:46 PM


— More Edge Tools and a Way to Sharpen Them —

A selection of good chisels is every bit as


important as a selection of hand planes.
Very long and wide chisels, called slicks in boat-
each type, then add the other dimensions later
as needed.
• Wooden mallet. You’ll need a comfortable wooden
builder’s language, are wonderful tools, but they
mallet to drive those chisels. A popular style is a
are hard to find, expensive, and most useful for
flat-sided version that allows you to work more
large work. Chisels, on the other hand, are in
effectively in confined areas than is possible
constant use on boats of all sizes. For example,
with a round-headed mallet of the type wood-
those pesky stem rabbets mentioned in previ-
carvers prefer. Making a mallet, of course, will
ously (see also WB No. 111) typically begin with
give you a test drive for those firmer chisels and
chisel cuts, then are finished with rabbet planes.
result in a mallet of just the shape you want (C).
• Chisels. Two kinds of chisels, called “bevel” • Sharpening stones. These are absolutely neces-
(A) and “firmer (B),” are commonly used in sary to get the most out of edge tools like planes
boatbuilding. Both are important to have on and chisels. Traditionalists prefer oilstones (D),
hand. Bevel-edged chisels are slightly under- which are effective but messy. Modernists like
cut on their sides, making them easy to push waterstones (E), which require no oils but can
into the corners of a cut. Firmer chisel blades be destroyed if your shop is subject to freez-
are rectangular in cross-section, making this ing weather. The third option is the diamond
type stronger, and therefore a better choice for “stone,” (F) which makes less mess and remains
heavy-duty work. A good selection of both types flat despite repeated use. Diamond stones, how-
can be important. For small boats, sizes ranging ever, are also the most expensive. Whatever type
from 1/4" to 1 1/2" wide will do fine. If you’re on you choose, get stones with a range of coarse-
a budget, start off with the 1/2" and 1" width of ness, or at least medium and fine.

4 • Tools for Boatbuilding

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 4 5/21/12 5:34 PM


— Capturing Information —

B oatbuilding is all about accurately


transferring information from
plans to wooden stock or from one
location to another. Having proper
tools for measuring dimensions and
angles is indispensable.
• Bevel gauge. Bevels are angles, and
what’s more important than calcu-
lating them in degrees is to be able
to measure them physically, as a bevel gauge
does. Whether transferring a desired bevel on
the edge of your planks or checking the rake
of the mast, you will need a bevel gauge. In
fact, you’ll need two, one long (A) and one
short (B). The long type, which looks a bit
like a jackknife with a blade about 6" long,
is commonly available and a good choice.
The smaller one, say about 2" long on each
leg, is used for measuring in tight places
or where the curvature of a piece makes
a longer gauge inaccurate. This gauge is
usually home-made. Many boatbuilders
cut its two arms from an old hacksaw blade,
making their bevel gauges just the length
they need. The pieces are riveted together to be
loose enough to move but tight enough to hold • Spirit levels, long (F) and short (G). These com-
the measured angle while it’s being transferred. mon carpenter’s helpers are used constantly
• Scale rule. There is plenty of information on throughout the construction process. You get
a set of boat plans that is not given in numerical what you pay for. Carpenter levels that are made
fashion. The only way to get it is to measure it of machined aluminum or hardwood will usu-
with an architect’s scale rule (C). This will get ally outperform those made of other materials.
you mighty close to what the designer intended. The 2' and 4' versions are the most popular. The
Most small-boat plans are drawn to a scale of handy torpedo level (6" to 9" long) is sometimes
between 1" and 2" to the foot, and the scale is necessary in tight spots.
always noted on the plans. • Plumb bob. As ancient as the pyramids, this
• Combination and framing squares. These (D) tool can be used where your levels might not
are used constantly to get things, well, square. Boats f it, as in checking that the stem is dead
are full of curves, but right angles occur more vertical or that the mast partner aligns directly
often than you might think, whether squaring- over the maststep. This tool is reliable and
off plank edges or making sure molds are per- inexpensive.
pendicular to the centerline during setup. • Dividers (H) and pencil compass (I). If you
• Steel measuring tape. This (E) should be long are planning to measure planks by spiling—
enough to handle most of your measuring tasks, which is a method of transferring measure-
from sparmaking to setting up the construction ments—you will need these. The most useful of
jig. A tape that’s 25' long and 3/4" wide is a good the two is the pencil compass, which is used to
compromise. Short steel rulers, usually 6" long, scribe arcs. Calipers ( J), are useful in measur-
are also very handy. ing plank thickness.

Tools for Boatbuilding • 5

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 5 5/21/12 5:35 PM


— Algebra
— Saws — —
and Drills
A you could bore the bung hole first, then drill a pilot
hole for the screw shank, followed by another pilot
B hole sized to accommodate the screw’s length and
root diameter, which is the diameter of the thread-
ed section not counting the threads.

C
D espite the increasing use of power saws of one
type or another (see page 8), handsaws will al-
ways have a place in the boatshop. Often, the best
way to trim off the projecting end of a piece such
as a just-hung plank, when a power saw would be
impossible or dangerous to use, is with a handsaw.
In a practiced hand, a handsaw can cut a compound
angle to very close tolerances quickly, with minimal
DH setup time. In choosing a saw, there are also some
EF West-versus-East philosophical decisions to be made.
G
• Traditional Western saws. Many boatbuilders still
prefer Western-style saws, which cut on the push
stroke. Their blades are comparatively thick, so they
W hether predrilling for screws, rivets, or bolts,
making limber holes for drainage, or a thou-
sand other necessary jobs, you will be making a lot of
are easy to keep on track, and they have a distinct ad-
vantage in that they can be sharpened (relatively) eas-
ily. A ten-point crosscut saw (I) and a five-point ripsaw
holes. (Small holes are “drilled,” large ones are “bored.”)
Although a list of recommended and optional power
(J) would be good choices. These saws are also good
for comparatively heavy work.
tools is on page 7, we’re including a power drill here
because this tool is so versatile that it should be con- • Japanese-style saws. Heading East, one encoun-
sidered essential for boatbuilding, small or large. ters the Japanese pull saw (K). Such saws, which
Granted, you could use an eggbeater-style hand drill have thin blades and cut on the pull stroke, are
for everything—and you still might want to use one sometimes called “a piranha on a stick” because
from time to time—but for the many holes you will of their aggressive sharpness and speed in cut-
be boring, you’ll soon learn that a power drill just ting. They make a thin kerf, can be very accu-
can’t be beat. rate, and with their fine teeth make a smooth cut.
• Good-quality, variable-speed, 3 ⁄8" hand drill. Ei- Some have blades with crosscut teeth along one
ther a cordless (A) or a plug-in version (B) can be edge and ripsaw teeth on the other. Japanese saw
used for predrilling for many kinds of screws, and blades hold their sharpness well, but they can’t be
also (with caution) for driving them. Single-hand resharpened effectively. When they dull, bend,
function, speed, ease of use, and light weight argue or have teeth broken off, it’s time to replace the
in favor of the cordless, especially for small boats. blade. An old friend once told me, “I resisted us-
We’ll address drills again in the power tool section ing them for years, but after using one there is no
on page 7. turning back.” Take one out for a spin.
• Set of twist-drill bits. “High-speed steel” bits (C), • Hacksaw (L). Essential for trimming bolts and
available at most hardware stores, are fine. metal rod to length.
• A few long twist-drill bits. For boring deep, straight
holes through stems, keels, and such, these bits (D),
sometimes called “installer” bits, are very useful and
readily available. They’re available in 12" and 18"
lengths; 1/4" and 3⁄8" would be good choices to start.
Auger bits ( E), spade bits (F), and Forstner bits (G),
can also be useful.
• Set of “Fuller”-style tapered drill bits with coun-
tersinks, plug cutters, and adjusting wrench. These
tapered bits (H) allow you to drill, in a single opera-
tion, a proper-sized tapered hole for a given size of
screw, and at the same time form a shallow counter-
sink for a puttied head or a deeper counterbore to fit
a bung. As a three-step, time-consuming alternative,

6 • Tools for Boatbuilding

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 6 5/21/12 5:35 PM



—William Hand——
Power Tools
A C

D B

H
aving already mentioned a light power drill • Router. This tool (D) has plenty of uses: shaping
as the first power tool to add to the toolbox, rails, milling bead-and-cove stock for a strip-planked
the next choices are infinite, depending on boat, manufacturing stock for a bird’s-mouth spar,
the shop space and budget you have available. This and lots more.
brief listing isn’t meant to be all-inclusive. • Power drills. Although cordless drills, as men-
Large stationary power tools are expensive, take tioned on page 6, are light and versatile for boat-
up a lot of floor space, may require upgraded electri- building, they lack the power for boring large holes.
cal wiring, and are difficult to move, whether across A larger, corded drill, with a 1/2" chuck and plenty of
the room or across town. You can buy a lot of hand power, can be valuable when boring keelbolt holes,
tools for the price of a single stationary tool. Plus, in for example, or using a holesaw to bore a large hole
some cases, a handheld power tool may be versatile for a mast.
enough—or even more versatile—for the boatbuild- • Power plane. These are versatile planes, commonly
ing job at hand. For instance, a sabersaw can do some 4" wide. They are often used even in large ship work
of the work of a bandsaw, and a circular saw can be for fairing sawn frames. For someone on a budget,
used in less shop space than required for a contrac- such a plane can be an effective substitute for a
tor’s tablesaw, and these can easily be taken where stationary thickness planer.
the work is, even outdoors. That said, if you have the
space and the budget to buy them, stationary power
tools definitely earn their keep. Whether considering Stationary Power Tools
handheld power tools or stationary ones, get the best • Bandsaw. The ubiquitous and highly versatile 14"
you can afford. version (E) has been a boatshop mainstay for over
half a century. If you can only afford one stationary
Handheld Power Tools power tool, this is the one to get.
• Sabersaw. With a good-quality sabersaw, fitted with a • Drill press. For very clean-sided large, flat-bottomed
sharp blade, you can rough-cut a plank or the curve of holes like those made by Forstner bits, or for very
a transom, among many other tasks in fairly light accurate holes in either wood or metal, a drill press
stock or in plywood. Get blades appropriate to the is a worthy partner to the other drills you need.
task. The heavier-duty cousin, a reciprocating saw (A), • Tablesaw. For milling a lot of stock, ranging from
is good for rough work and very useful in removing frames to keels to spars, this machine will do the job.
old work during restorations. It is also is a machine that demands respect and is
• Portable circular saw. These saws (B) can do many unforgiving of operator inattention. If you get one,
of the jobs usually relegated to a tablesaw. A circular get a good one.
saw can rough-cut long, gentle curves surprisingly • Thickness planer. For a small shop, a bench-top
well and can be a preferred tool for a builder who planer that can handle widths of 12" to 15" is fine.
might otherwise be wrangling a heavy piece of oak This tool allows the builder to purchase rough stock
through a tablesaw singlehanded. Many boatbuilders and quickly transform it into precision components
consider the worm-drive versions the best. of exactly the desired thickness.
• Sanders. A random-orbit sander (C) can be very • Dust collection. Finally, consider a good vacuum
versatile, perfect for the subtle curves of boat hulls. system to capture all the dust these woodworking
Disc sanders can also be a good choice, although marvels will produce. Wood dust can not only be a
they are more aggressive and less forgiving. nuisance but also present fire hazards and health risks.

Tools for Boatbuilding • 7

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 7 5/21/12 5:41 PM


— Odds and Ends —

S ome tools, no matter how necessary, don’t fall


into neat categories but are essential neverthe­
less. Here are some of them:
• Clamps. These (A) are always important for grip­
ping stuff together. The old saying, “You can never
have enough clamps,” is true: As soon as you think
you have enough, you’ll find you need more. Start
with ten C­clamps, say, two 4", four 6", and four 8".
If you throw in a half a dozen hand­spring clamps
and a few quick­acting, sliding­bar clamps, 12" to
24", you’ll be glad you did.
• Screwdrivers for both slotted (B) and Phillips (C)
screws. You’ll be using these a lot, so look for drivers
with smooth, oval­sectioned handles. These tend
to fit ergonomically and comfortably in your hand,
and they allow maximum control and torque to be
applied with the tool. Get driver bits, too, for your
power drill or hand brace, in sizes and types that
match the screws you’re using (D). For example,
Frearson (aka Reed & Prince) heads, which are
often used in marine uses, require matching • Chalk line (G). Even in the days of the laser, there
Frearson bits. are still plenty of duties for a well­stretched string,
• Hand brace. This old­time tool (E) can’t be beat among them lofting, determining centerlines, and
for giving you positive torque to set or remove checking station mold alignment.
screws. A brace (see WB No. 225) gives you more • A few files. Get a variety of shapes—round, half­
control than a power drill when driving screws, round, flat (H). A “four­in­hand” woodworking
because you can better feel how tight the screw is rasp (I) is also a good choice. It gives you four
being driven—and when to stop before twisting its tools for the price of one, it’s inexpensive, and it
head off, especially with screws made of relatively will be used a lot.
soft metal like silicon­bronze. Hand braces with
appropriate bits can also be used for boring large • Ice pick or awl (J). This is a simple tool, but it is
holes, ones that a handheld cordless drill isn’t very useful for marking, scribing a line, anchoring
powerful enough to handle. a chalkline, indexing holes for drilling, and many
other uses.
• Light ball-peen hammer (F). For peening the
ends of rivets, creating heads for drift pins, and Greg Rössel is a contributing editor for WoodenBoat and a regu-
locking the threads on bolts to prevent nuts from lar teacher at WoodenBoat School. He builds boats at his own
backing off, there is no substitute. shop in Troy, Maine.

Getting Started in Boats is dedicated to those who are new to boats and boatbuilding.
Please tear out and pass along your copy to someone you know who will be interested.
Earlier volumes of Getting Started are available in past issues of WoodenBoat, and as PDF (electronic) files, from
The WoodenBoat Store. Please refer to the web pages, at: www.woodenboat.com/wbmag/getting-started

8 • Tools for Boatbuilding

GS_Vol35_Tools_FINAL.indd 8 5/21/12 5:35 PM


WoodenBoat’s Boatbuilding & Rowing Challenge (BARC) is a grassroots effort to involve communities and,
in our specific case, high school programs, in the team-building aspects of boatbuilding and then
competitively rowing one specific boat: Iain Oughtred's 22', 330 pound St. Ayles Skiff,
with a crew of four rowers and one helmsperson (coxswain).

North American Championship JuNe 29–July 1, 2012


at the WoodenBoat Show, Mystic , CT
For further information, please see our website: http://BARC.woodenboat.com

chris perkins peter nisbet

July/August 2012 • 17

WB227_Pg17Fracts.indd 17 5/22/12 2:25 PM


the 1949 Communist revolution in main- personal history and also that it was the sory council and helped me all along
land China. When they approached the last junk of its kind, the oldest Chinese the way. The NPS could not provide a
U.S. Embassy for visas, they encountered sailing boat of possibly operable condi- home, but they did provide expertise
Calvin Mehlert, a young diplomatic atta- tion in the world, I thought this was a and support.” She also found support-
ché there, who liked the idea so much tragedy, that it might be chopped up ers in the National Trust for Historical
that he decided to join the crew himself. and burned.” Preservation and the Chinese Histori-
After a rough start, the crossing proved The boat was indeed forlorn. One cal Society of America, and her orga-
uneventful, the longest stretch being 54 of her later owners had cut off much nization raised enough to support the
days from Yokohama, Japan, to San Fran- of the characteristic upswept stern. nearly $170,000 cost of having the junk
cisco. Most of the crew ended up settling Originally engineless, she was given a shipped to Taiwan.
in the Bay Area. heavy diesel somewhere along the line. “After we got into looking for an
And there the junk remained. She She was badly hogged. Chen neverthe- owner, we realized it was not going to
went through a succession of owners, less formed a nonprofit organization be very easy to find the one organiza-
kept alive by Bay Area volunteer boat- called Chinese Junk Preservation and tion or person who would really take
builders and maritime preservation- set about searching every angle she care of it permanently,” she said. Even a
ists, one of whom, Harry Dring, once could think of to save the boat. The caring individual might, as in the past,
bought her for $1. Under a subsequent first logical choice, the U.S. National fail to find an equally dedicated succes-
owner, she was abandoned in the early Park Service, didn’t want to accept sor. “You really have to start looking for
2000s on the hard at the Marine Empo- the junk into its collections at the San a government or an organization. The
rium in Bethel Island in the California Francisco National Maritime Historical sad thing for me was that in America I
Delta east of Antioch. Park, as it hadn’t years before, in Harry couldn’t find a home for it, even though
It was Dione Chen, a Bay Area resi- Dring’s day. However, John Muir and it’s a part of American history.”
dent and American-born daughter of Todd Croteau of the NPS advised Chen In one audacious outreach, she
crewman Reno Chen, who helped bring to have the boat documented—which asked surviving crewmen Chow and
about the boat’s chance for salvation. they themselves did, producing a laser- Mehlert, both living in the Bay Area, to
After her father died in 2007, she set scanned record of the boat from which write about the boat in Chinese, which
out to learn about his voyage. “I wanted lines plans and detail drawings could be she doesn’t speak, to none other than
to see the junk and know more, so I made later. (Fundraising continues for the president of Taiwan. No one was
visited with my mother, brother, and the purpose.) more surprised than she when the letter
two children,” she said. “When I saw “John Muir became really impor- hit the mark. With government support,
it, and knowing the importance in my tant,” Chen said. “He joined my advi- things in Taiwan gained momentum,

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18 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 18 5/22/12 1:41 PM


especially when a noted junk historian
and modelmaker launched a grassroots A century-old
effort to bring the junk home to be junk built in
housed in the new National Museum Fujien Province,
of Marine Science and Technology in China, and sailed
Keelung, just outside of Taipei. “I can to San Francisco

COURTESY RAJ DHINGRA/CHINESE JUNK PRESERVATION


say, from what they told me,” during by a half-dozen
a reception just before the junk left adventurers in
California, “that they feel very proud 1955, was loaded
that this is part of their history and it’s aboard a container
returning to its home. I suspect that ship in April 2012
they have many, many of the same chal- for shipment to
lenges that people in America do. In Taiwan. The junk,
our rush to live our lives and make a liv- though much
ing, there’s not as much time, resources, altered, is believed
and attention to saving the past as we to be one of the
might think.” For Chen, the important oldest surviving
thing is that the boat will be preserved. working junks of
For her part, she continues to China and will be
keep the history of junks alive in the preserved at a
Bay Area’s consciousness. “There are maritime museum
amazing stories about each person, in Taipei.
how they persevered and succeeded in
their own ways.”
Her father, she thinks, would have more poignant. Her father left Shang- cisco, and a car dealer even gave them
told her to forget about it, that she was hai during the revolution with the a Buick they used to drive to New York,
too busy, that no one would care. “No sound of gunfire in his ears, catching where the New York Yacht Club fêted
one thought that we could do it. This the last boat to Taiwan. He worked hard them. Still, work was hard to come by.
is the sad thing, and it’s why I hope to as a fisherman there. But, “His dream Her father started off washing dishes,
inspire others to preserve history,” she was to come to America,” Chen said. busing tables, pulling weeds. Crewman
said. For her, the story could not be The crew was celebrated in San Fran- Chen could not have predicted when

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July/August 2012 • 19

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 19 5/22/12 1:47 PM


setting sail across the wide ocean that
he would have a daughter who would When Reuben Smith
go on to earn an MBA at Stanford Uni- opened Tumblehome
versity. “I think my family is a total tes- Boatshop in
timony to the American Dream—living Warrensburg, New
proof of it,” she said. York, in early 2012,
“The junk is so lucky, because it has among his first projects

COURTESY TUMBLEHOME BOATSHOP


a story. Many people are not maritime were the completion of
enthusiasts, but the story they can relate restoration on a pair of
to. My motivation was to share the story Sound Interclub sloops
of the voyage, the importance of historic from 1926. His projects
preservation, and to know more about so far have also
the Chinese maritime achievement and included a wood-and-
how it relates to the Chinese diaspora. canvas canoe, an 1880s
The message I try to tell people is that Matthews launch, and
saving history, saving historical objects, a 24’ catboat.
or boats, or stories, is a privilege and
also a responsibility for each of us as
individuals. You can’t say, ‘Later, when I
have time,’ because the person might be Around the yards their boat,” Managing Partner Cynde
gone, or the boat might be burned up. Smith said. “In the shop today are two
You’ve got to step up and do it yourself, 1926 Sound Interclub sailboats that are
if you think it’s important.” ■ Reuben Smith has opened Tumble- receiving the final touches after a full
home Boatshop in upstate New York. restoration,” she said. The Interclub is
For more information, see www.chinesejunk The shop is in a 6,000-sq-ft building in a Charles D. Mower design, 28' 9" LOA.
preservation.com. For further reading, see Warrensburg on Route 28, one of the Smith had worked on the restorations
Hans Van Tilburg’s book, Chinese Junks on principal roads into the Adirondack earlier, while employed at Hall’s Boat
the Pacific: Views from a Different Deck, Mountains. “We’re designing the shop Corp. Smith’s new yard also has a Mat-
which has a chapter about FREE CHINA. to be the kind of friendly place a fam- thews launch from the 1880s under
ily would feel comfortable in while they restoration, part of which involves
Tom Jackson is WoodenBoat’s senior editor.
stop to see how work is progressing on repowering the boat with a new Elco

255 North Lincoln Avenue


Lebanon, PA 17046
Phone: (717) 270-2700
Fax: (717) 270-2702
ON THE WEB AT:
www.keystonespikes.com

BOAT/DOCK SPIKES

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20 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 20 5/22/12 1:42 PM


electric motor. The shop is also restoring the hard that July, was the only boat
a vintage Old Town wood-and-canvas damaged in the blaze.
canoe and a Fred Goeller–designed 24' “Not wanting to focus on the regrets
catboat, plus building a new 12' dinghy that memories make, he shrugged and
to a Goeller design. “Boatbuilder Sean became resolved to fix his 45' LOA yacht
O’Neill has joined Reuben at the shop,” again. FORTUNA not only has a pedi-
Smith said, “plus Reuben’s brother, gree but also has remained competitive:
Alex Smith, is apprenticing here this Before her first restoration, even with
summer.” Alex previously worked for 68 frames in desperate need of replace-
his father, Mason Smith, at his boatshop ment from decades of heavy racing in
in Long Lake, New York, and for his Lake Michigan, she never betrayed him,
uncle, Everett Smith, at his boatshop though she took on her share of water.
in Canton, New York, just as Reuben “After the fire, she sat in the worst
Smith did earlier. “We’ll be conduct- disrepair to date. Her trunk cabin,

KRISTIN HEINICHEN
ing regular open-shop events, lectures, toerail, transom, and mast were dam-
workshops, plus we’ll have a grand aged, and more than 15 strakes of her
launch on Lake George this summer double-planked hull were charred. My
of the two restored Sound Interclubs,” father chose a close-to-home wooden
Cynde Smith reported. Reuben Smith’s boat craftsman, Billy McCaffrey of
Tumblehome Boatshop, 684 State Route 28, Waukegan, Illinois, to put things right.
Warrensburg, NY 12885; 518–623–5050; A Herreshoff Fishers Island 31 is That was nine years ago, and the work
www.tumblehomeboats.com. being rebuilt in Waukegan, Illinois, is progressing slowly, with McCaffrey’s
after a fire severely damaged the characteristic precision. My father, in
■ Kristin Heinichen writes from Chi- hull only three years after a previous the meantime, purchased a fiberglass
cago, Illinois, with news that her father, restoration. sailboat to keep himself in the running
Walter Heinichen, is—for a second for the Chicago–Mackinac Island Race,
time—restoring his 1927 Herreshoff which this July will mark his 56th year
Fishers Island 31 sloop. “In 2003, he after he had had FORTUNA completely as a contender. But he has not forsaken
received a phone call that came at 3 restored. An arsonist had taken issue the mothballed FORTUNA . Rather, he
a.m. to tell him that his classic wooden with that particular Chicago boatyard. muses that she is named after the god-
sailboat had caught fire, just three years FORTUNA , one of the few boats on dess of fortune who brings both good

“92 ft ketch“ • Bruce King • Westlawn Alumnus


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July/August 2012 • 21

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 21 5/22/12 1:42 PM


luck and bad. She stands to represent her in hand,” a press release
life’s capriciousness, and after nearly from school director Bill Mahler
four decades of ownership he knows to states, “and in 2011, Repair and
love her at his own peril.” Restoration Class instructors
Ben Kahn and Sean Kooman led
■ At the Northwest School of Wooden the class in beginning the res-
Boatbuilding in Port Hadlock, Wash- toration of FELICITY ANN.” The
ington, restoration has begun on class runs each year from July to

COURTESY RAJ DHINGRA/CHINESE JUNK PRESERVATION


the historic 23' canoe-sterned sloop September, focusing on several
FELICITY ANN. The original construc- projects for well-rounded experi-
tion, though interrupted by World War ence as part of the two-year train-
II, commenced in 1939 at the Mash- ing program. The project, which
ford Brothers Ltd. boatyard in the resumes this summer, will there-
town of Cremyll in Cornwall, England. fore last several years. Fittingly,
Ann Davison, who bought the boat a young women have key roles.
few years later, in 1952–53 became the Liz Palmer and Annie Teater,
first woman to achieve the feat of a school graduates who worked
solo transatlantic passage, which she on the boat in 2011, are now
wrote about in her book, My Ship Is So working with the school’s associ-
Small, in 1956. She eventually settled ated Community Boatbuilding
in Florida and continued to use the Program, and they, along with
boat for U.S. East Coast voyaging. She Penelope Partridge, who took a
died in 1992. After going through suc- sailmaking and rigging class that
cessive owners, the boat finally was year, are working to support the
abandoned in New York. An Alaskan restoration. They hope to bring Donated to the Northwest School of
owner found her there and had her at-risk young women into the Wooden Boatbuilding, FELICITY ANN is
shipped to Haines, Alaska, for resto- process for hands-on learning, undergoing a complete restoration. Sailing
ration but decided instead to donate and the boat itself may be ulti- her in 1952–53, Ann Davison became the
the boat to the Northwest School to mately used for sail-training or first woman to complete a solo crossing of
see the extensive project through. as a floating museum. Northwest the Atlantic.
“Our chief instructor, Tim Lee, took School of Wooden Boatbuilding, 42

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22 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 22 5/22/12 1:42 PM


North Water St., Port Hadlock, WA 98339;
360–385–4948; www.nwboatschool.org.
See also felicityann.com.

■ GRETEL , the Australian AMERICA’s


Cup contender of 1962, is under-
going a thorough restoration at
Robbe & Berking Classics in Flens-
burg, Germany. The composite-built
racer (with wood planking over steel
frames) was designed by Alan Payne
and in her debut series won the first
race over an American Cup defender
since 1934. She represented Austra-
lia’s first attempt at the AMERICA’s
Cup, in a campaign backed by media
mogul Frank Packer, with Alexander

COURTESY ROBBE & BERKING CLASSICS


“Jock” Sturrock at the helm. Although
the American skipper Emil “Bus”
Mosbacher sailed WEATHERLY mas-
terfully to defend the Cup that year,
GRETEL was broadly recognized as a
serious threat, with many innovations,
among them foot-pedal-powered
sheet winches. She never contended
for the Cup again, though she served
as a competitor in trial series in Aus-
tralia, where she remained until sold
in the late 1990s to an owner in Italy. At Robbe & Berking Classics in Flensburg, Germany, the Australian composite-built
Robbe & Berking bought her, accord- AMERICA’s Cup challenger GRETEL of 1962 is to be restored.
ing to Oliver Berking, to restore her

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 23

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 23 5/22/12 1:42 PM


to her 1962 specifications. Berking
Volunteer boatbuilders said in a press release that the yacht’s
in Rosendal, Norway, ultimate future is not certain, though
brought the 72’6” museum ownership may be possible.
galeas GURINE—a She is 69' 5" LOA , with a beam of 11' 9"
near-sister of Roald and a draft of 8' 9". Robbe & Berk-
Amundsen’s famous ing, founded in 2008, specializes in
Northwest passage classic yacht restorations and repli-
explorer GJØA—home cas, among them a previously unbuilt
for restoration. She is 12-Meter designed by Johan Anker
under a purpose-built and the restoration of JENETTA , an
cover only a stone’s Alfred Mylne–designed 12-Meter.
throw from where she The yard, founded in 2008, has also
was built in 1875. built or restored Six-Meters and
motoryachts. Robbe & Berking Classics,

EIRIK SK ÅLA
Am Industriehafe 5, 24937 Flensburg,
Germany; www.robbeberking.de.

Hull planking for ■ “GURINE , a 72' 6" galeas, is now


GURINE was milled under going major restoration in
at a historic sawmill Rosendal, Norway,” Eirik Skåla
in the nearby town writes from that town. “GURINE was
of Herand during the built for Jacob T. Bleie in Rosendal
winter of 2012. in 1875 by master shipwright Knut J.
Skåle, who built Roald Amundsen’s
GJØA a few years earlier.” Amundsen
is the Norwegian polar explorer who
EIRIK SK ÅLA

took GJØA on the first transit of the


Northwest Passage, ending in 1906,
and the boat he made famous is now
on exhibit at the Norwegian Maritime

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Build Your Own SULTANA PROJECTS’ 12TH ANNUAL
Scamp Pocket Cruiser
with John Welsford and Howard Rice DOWNRIGGING WEEKEND
August 6–17th at the Northwest Maritime Center TALL SHIP & WOODEN BOAT FESTIVAL
in Port Townsend, WA
Photo Courtesy: Small Craft Advisor Magazine

Photo by David Biehler

Learn more about John Welsford and the Scamp in the OCTOBER 26-28, 2012
March/April 2012 issue of WoodenBoat. Howard Rice is the
famed small boat adventurer and Cape Horn solo sailor.
CHESTERTOWN•MARYLAND
For more information or to register, please contact the School at
360-385-4948 or e-mail us at summer2012@nwboatschool.org TALL SHIPS  WOODEN B OATS  MUSIC
FIREWORKS  BOATBUILDING  LECTURES
The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding is hosting several
short classes this summer. Check out our web site for additional PUBLIC SAILS  FAMILY DAY  MODELS  RACING
classes including “Build a Whitehall Pulling Boat” with Rich Kolin
Information & Boat Entry
/NWBoatSchool
www.nwboatschool.org /NorthwestMaritimeCenter W W W. S U LTA N A P R O J E C T S . O R G
24 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 24 5/22/12 1:42 PM


Museum in Oslo. GURINE had rather INE , which bought the boat, which was of money before GURINE is sailing the
a different fate. “Bleie used GURINE towed from Bergen to Rosendal on Hardangerfjord once more.”
for ‘nordlandsfart,’ or buying dried May 27, 2011. By September 25, she was
For more information, see www.gurine.no (in
cod in northern Norway for transport hauled out a few hundred meters from
Norwegian only).
and sale, mostly to southern Norway where she was originally built. A work-
but sometimes as far as the Baltic,”
Skåla writes. “She was built as a jakt
shop has been readied and a roof built
over the ship to protect her from the
Offcuts
with one mast,” like GJØA , “but later elements. Her bilges have been cleaned
she was rigged as a two-masted galeas.
This was often done because handling
of a mainsail and mizzen was easier
out, and she is now drying so that the
real work may begin. In the meantime,
she has been fully measured digitally,
O ffcuts, as we all should know (and
for which this section of Currents
is named), are prized short pieces of
than handling a big mainsail.” In the and the data are being processed in a wood. They await just the right use,
course of her hundred years, she has computer design application to pro- never going to waste. Comes now Grain
undergone many transformations duce an accurate set of lines. During Surfboards, the York, Maine, wooden
common to workboats. Originally she the winter, the crew has searched the surfboard company (see WB No. 191),
was 60' 1" long, but in 1959 she was woods on a nearby island for compass with a new “Offcuts Initiative,” in which,
lengthened to 72' 6". She is 19' 1" wide. timbers for frames and root crooks for among other things, they make wooden
She had a motor installed and her rig knees. The timber will be milled on skateboards from wood too short for
removed. But in 1985, the enthusiast the island at an old sawmill, which is their full-sized surfboards. “The Offcuts
Georg Gundersen bought her and an attraction in itself, with a vintage Initiative is a recognition of our effort
restored her hull and rigging. 25-hp semi-diesel engine that has a two- to waste no waste,” Brad Anderson said
“Long-term maintenance of a ship ton flywheel. About 300 meters (984' ) in a press release. In collaboration with
of this size is not an easy task, and for of hull planking stock and 600 meters Courtney Strait, the company makes a
the past 10 years, she has been lying (1,968' ) of deck planking stock are also model called the Cider Hill Skateboard,
quayside in Bergen, exposed to rain ready, having been milled at an old saw- using cedar offcuts over local maple in
and bad weather. When the owner of mill at Herand. The next step is to start laminations that are strong and have
the quay wanted her out of the way, it replacing rotten frames. just the right feel, sheathed in bam-
seemed that the end of her story might “It is a major challenge that the boo cloth set in a type of epoxy made
be at hand. However, a bunch of enthu- Friends of Galeas GURINE have taken from organic waste of the bio fuel and
siasts in Rosendal wanted it otherwise. up. It will probably take some 20,000 paper-pulp industries. Check it out at
They formed Friends of Galeas GUR- man-hours, at least five years, and lots www.grainsurfboards.com.

July/August 2012 • 25

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 25 5/22/12 1:42 PM


COURTESY TOOMAS KOKOVKIN,

COURTESY AIN TÄHISTE


WWW.FOTOKOGU.COM

Above, left—A locally historic type of


Estonian schooner used for cargoes of
firewood is being built by boatbuild-
ers, with volunteers and apprentices
overcoming unemployment. She is
55’ LOA. Above, right—Several other
interesting projects are also under
way in Estonia’s islands, among them
the restoration of a 1980s wooden
fishing boat.

Families or Groups:
T he maritime traditions of Estonia
are going through something of
a renaissance, we hear from Teet Laja
of that country. “On the island of Hii-
Find YOUR Opportunity to Build a Boat umaa, Estonia’s second-largest island
with 10,000 inhabitants, locals are
Family BoatBuilding Organizers: trying to restore boatbuilding tradi-
tions,” he writes. In Kärdla, a town on
List Your Event for Free the island, Ain Tähiste is leading two
boatbuilders, together with volunteers
and trainees, in the reconstruction of

www.FamilyBoatBuilding.com
a type of schooner used in the Baltic
Sea islands for delivering firewood. By
the end of 2009, engineer Enn Metsar
had completed plans, and soon after
the tree was felled for the keel timber.
The Motherlode of all “Our island habits and traditions tell us
Family BoatBuilding events it must take place in winter, just before
the full moon time,” Tähiste wrote. “No
will be taking place at the women can participate and even watch
WoodenBoat Show or see the process of the keel tree. The
tree must fall down to the north. Our
June 29–July 1, 2012 mission was complicated because the
keel tree, a 120-year old Siberian larch,
Mystic Seaport, Mystic, CT was felled inside our town, so to fulfill
every rule, we started very early in the
Come build a kit in two and a half days during the show with morning. A traditional handsaw was
the help of expert instruction. Then take it home with you! used.” During 2010 and 2011, materials
NO previous boatbuilding skills are required. were gathered, including compass tim-
bers for oak sawn frames, which are used
We hope to have as many as 8–12 different kits to
in combination with laminated frames.
choose from. We will be posting available kits for you at During the summer of 2012, the oak
www.thewoodenboatshow.com. Click the floor timbers, keelson, and deckbeams
“Family BoatBuilding” tab at the top of the page. will be completed, and planking with
Siberian larch is expected to begin. The
We use the expression “family,” but you may form your own boat is 55' LOA , with a beam of 16'6"
group of friends, 4-H or Boy Scout troop, church group, or other and drawing 4'. See halulaev.ee for further
well-meaning organization. information (one section is in English).
A traditional Estonian motorized
fishing boat is being restored by the
Family BoatBuilding is produced by WoodenBoat magazine, same organization. The type, unique
online at www.woodenboat.com. to Estonia, was in use through the
1980s, and the one in for restoration,

26 • WoodenBoat 227

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 26 5/24/12 3:17 PM


50' LOA with a beam of 11' and drawing which he went on to build in numbers. Marine), to manufacture stainless-steel
only 3' 6", was built in 1989. Only half a He also built 25' Folkboats. After having hardware for plywood boats made by
dozen survive today. to close the business in 1970, he relo- a sister company, starting a career in
Meanwhile, on the neighboring cated to Norfolk and continued to build sailboat gear and aluminum masts that
island of Muhu, a replica of an Esto- boats until very late in his life. continued with various companies until
nian coastal trader of a type that has its Mr. Harvey’s retirement in 1998. He
roots in the Middle Ages is under con- ■ James Harvey Armitage, 91, Febru- also owned a restored 37' Bunker and
struction. The organization Väinamere ary 10, 2012, Madison, Connecticut. Ellis trawler, LIGHTFOOT II.
Uisk is building a faithful reproduction A marine hardware design engineer,
of a “uisk,” or “snake,” a descendant of Mr. Harvey and associate formed Star (The paragraph above repeats an entry in
Scandinavian types. Such boats were Marine Hardware in 1961 in Madison, “Across the bar” in WB No. 226, which con-
in use as late as the 19th century, used Connecticut (later bought by Kenyon tained a significant error.)
for transporting interisland goods.
The last one, MARIA , was broken up
in 1913. Today, a Muhu Water Tourism
Network is in place on the island, which
the website describes as “a place where
time rests.” The network links varied
natural and historic sites, one of which
is the boatyard where the boat is being
built. She is 60' LOA , with a beam of
17', and carrying 1,420 sq ft of sail in a
gaff-headed cutter rig. See www.uisk.ee;
mercifully available in English.
Laja also informs us that each June,
coinciding with the important Jaan-
ipäev holiday, a Wooden Boat Festival
is held at Sõru Harbor on the south end
of Hiiumaa. “In our harbor, there are 10
to 15 wooden boats gathering together

Do you know…
annually, and there are trips on the sea,
and so on,” he said.

A tip of the hat, if you please, to the


90' LOA Maine schooner MARY DAY,
which this season is marking her 50th
…if you’re as protected as you think you are?
…if you are getting the most out of your insurance dollars?
year of charter sailing. When she was Heritage Marine Insurance understands exactly what you need to protect your
launched in 1962, at the Harvey Gam- boat. Compare your policy features to those provided in our exclusive Classic
age Shipyard in South Bristol, Maine, Coverage ProgramSM and find out.
she was the first schooner designed and
built new specifically for Maine’s char-
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ter-schooner trade, as opposed to being • Pollution/Fuel Spill limit of $800,000 in addition to Liability limit? ✔Yes
converted from working sail. See www. • Salvage charges to protect against further loss in addition
sailmainecoast.com. to Hull coverage? ✔Yes
• Coverage for resulting damage in many cases after mechanical
A further tip of the hat to John Brady,
executive director of the Indepen-
dence Seaport Museum of Philadelphia,
breakdown or latent defects?
• Boat Show & Demonstration Coverage that is automatically included?
✔Yes
✔Yes

Pennsylvania, whom Rocking the Boat • Watercraft Liability limits to meet your needs, among the ✔Yes
highest amounts available?
of Bronx, New York, named its White-
hall Award recipient for commitment to • No charge for marinas as additional insureds? ✔Yes
experiential education. • Marine specialists adjusting any claims you may have? ✔Yes
• Only experienced marine agents, who are classic boat enthusiasts ✔Yes
just like you, managing your insurance needs?
Across the bar • Special Discounts for ACBS and CYA Members? ✔Yes
All of this plus many other valuable protections you should expect
■ Jack Chippendale, 87, February 24, from your classic boat specialist.
2012, Norfolk, England. Mr. Chippen- Don't guess. Contact Heritage Marine Insurance for answers!
dale was a noted builder of wooden rac-
ing dinghies, especially in the 1950s and
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See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 27

Currents227_ADFinal.indd 27 5/22/12 4:23 PM


How Not To Anchor
by David Kasanof
ship-lengths off the wharf, letting

M y first boat was a squishy


10-footer on which, with
one exception, nothing worked
the anchor chain rattle out as the
ship’s momentum carried it closer
and closer to the wharf. Then, at
right. The cotton sail had been just the right moment, he would order
blown out into a shapeless bag the chain to be snubbed around the
long before I got the boat. The bitts. This would jerk the ship into a
centerboard trunk did what center- sharp turn away from the wharf, just
board trunks do best—leak uncon- enough to bring it parallel to the
trollably, and the rudder was so wharf and to stop it a few feet away—
ineffective that moving the tiller close enough for docking lines to be
was an action taken in the hope, thrown ashore.
rather than rational expectation, Naturally, when I read this
of a change to the desired course. many years ago, I was young
Amid all this nautical squalor and, consequently, stupid.
one thing stood out as a glorious That’s why I wanted to try
example of excellence. Even now I something like this maneu-
remember it fondly. It consisted of ver with CONTENT. I might
30' of 1/4" manila line tied to one half have been foolish enough
of a cinderblock. I speak, of course, to try that stunt as described
of my little yacht’s anchor. PETE GOrSKI above, but CONTENT did not lie
Go ahead and scoff if you must monofilament line. When the against a wharf but in her own nar-
at my crude device, but note that it anchor hit the water, it had pulled row slip between two piers. So I had
never fouled its line and never got out sufficient scope. I was already to modify my plans. Good judgment
snagged under a ledge. It was always where I wanted to be without hav- had nothing to do with it.
easy to recover. Come to think of ing to drift back to bring the line My simplified version was to
it, how can half of a cinderblock reasonably taut. hang an anchor over the stern with
become fouled or snagged? Further- If I didn’t like where I was, it lots of chain laid out on deck. After
more, rocks with holes in them, was easy to kedge repeatedly to the dropping my main, I dropped my
which archaeologists believe to be desired spot. In a flat calm, I could get stern anchor and headed straight
ancient anchors, have been found up to 2 or 3 knots with this method. for my slip. A few boat-lengths
all over the eastern Mediterranean Try that with your Danforth. from it I snubbed the line on the
and Aegean. If rocks with holes were Naturally I don’t recommend mainsheet cleat.
good enough to anchor the ships the ancient Greek anchor for larger Nothing happened. This was
of Odysseus and all those guys, it modern boats. I did, however, sail the moment when I realized that
seems that I was in good company in CONTENT with a keen eye on the the bottom of the harbor had the
regard to anchor technology. past. My reading taught me that the consistency of chocolate pudding.
A major advantage of the ancient old times had a lot to teach us about Astutely surmising that CONTENT
Greek-style anchor is that it’s so using anchors to help maneuver a was not going to slow down, much
simple that nothing much can go boat under challenging conditions. less stop, I sprang into action. This
wrong with it. The modern anchor They used their anchors to help action took the form of waving my
has parts. A rock with a hole in it bring a ship about when wind and arms in the air and shouting vulgar
is just made up of…well…a rock waves were making that difficult. unpleasantries. A crowd of helpful
with a hole in it. No parts, no prob- They also used anchors to get the onlookers gathered and assisted
lems. Your line can’t become fouled ship away from a wharf when tugs me by telling me to apply the
around a fluke if your anchor ain’t weren’t available. I have read some- emergency brake. We were finally
got no flukes. where that under certain conditions, stopped by the end of the pier itself
This foolproof property permit- clipper captains could bring their ves- amid much thudding, crunching,
ted me to abuse one of the funda- sels alongside a wharf without the aid and whoops of sadistic amusement
mental rules of seamanship: Never of tugs by using the ship’s anchor and by those helpful onlookers. The
throw an anchor. Well, never say an incredibly keen judgment. After moral of this tale is, I suppose,
never. My anchoring technique was striking or luffing all sail, old Cap- unless you have the skill and judg-
to throw the damn thing just as hard tain Stormalong would head for the ment of old Captain Stormalong,
as I could. The 1/4" line would billow wharf at an acute angle, then drop you’d better take what you read
out after it like a trout fisherman’s anchor when the ship was several with a grain of salt.

28 • WoodenBoat 227

Focsle227_FINAL.indd 28 5/17/12 10:32 AM


MaritiMe MuseuMs
I f you want to learn more about wooden
boats, particularly about their origins and
history, visit a maritime museum. Each of
full-sized watercraft. Boatbuilding skills are
sometimes taught under the auspices of mari-
time museums and there are often gather-
the museums listed here has something to ings where people can rendezvous with their
offer the wooden boat aficionado — from boats. Plan a summer visit to a maritime
half models and historical photographs to museum — call today for more information!

Columbia River Maritime Museum


Astoria, Oregon • www.crmm.org

July/August 2012 • 29

MuseumSection227GrayBlueInnerGlow.indd 29 5/24/12 11:17 AM


MaritiMe MuseuMs

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

(802) 475-2022 www.lcmm.org


See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Since 1982
Located In the
Historic Maritime District

Home of the
National Historic Landmark
WWII Tug “LT-5”
Open Daily —1-5
Open July & August—10-5
Over 400 years of
Maritime History West 1st Street Pier, Oswego, NY
315-342-0480
www.hleewhitemarinemuseum.com

30 • WoodenBoat 227

MuseumSection227GrayBlueInnerGlow.indd 30 5/24/12 3:24 PM


the most enjoyable boat trips are
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can dock for the day, or overnight — overnight docking rates even include Museum
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Mystic227.indd 31 5/23/12 3:43 PM


WBFestival227.indd 32 5/23/12 2:44 PM
ReUel PARKeR
Revisiting the Classics
The terrapin smack by Reuel B. Parker

A
long time ago, while still a youngish fisheries in Florida
man, I came across a pair of marvelous and the Gulf of Mex-
books on wooden boatbuilding by Harry ico. I believed him, of
Sucher, Simplified Boatbuilding—The Flat-Bottom course, and for many
Boat, and Simplified Boatbuilding—The V-Bottom years I thought that’s
Boat, both published in 1973 by W.W. Norton & where they originated.
Co. Browsing through the second book I came across Two decades or so later, when I started my research
the “33' Modified Sharpie Terrapin Schooner.” Such- for The Sharpie Book, I turned up information (and a
er’s plan shows a flat-bottomed hull with increasing sketch) in Howard I. Chapelle’s The National Watercraft
deadrise in the quarters carrying on back to the tran- Collection (1960, U.S. National Museum Bulletin 219),
som. The little schooner has low freeboard, twin houses that he’d garnered in turn from Small Yachts: Their Design
(very low), and a self-tending gaff-schooner rig. The and Construction, Exemplified by the Ruling Types of Modern
bottom is cross-planked forward, and file-planked aft. Practice by C.P. Kunhardt (1886). It turns out that the
Sucher claimed that his design was based on the terrapin schooners were actually sharpie fishing smacks
“terrapin schooners” of the 1880s, used in the turtle used on Chesapeake Bay and waters south.

Above—The Terrapin 34, TOMFOOLERY, designed and built by the author and launched in 1989. Inset—This drawing of a
terrapin smack by C.P. Kunhardt was published in Forest and Stream in 1885.

July/August 2012 • 33

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 33 5/23/12 10:27 AM


Chapelle’s lines drawing of a Maryland Terrapin Smack was based on  a wreck, sketches and photographs, as well as
dimensions recorded by C.P. Kunhardt. The lines were published by the Library of Congress in 1961.

The one factor that defines a “smack” is a wet well, reference (other than Sucher’s) to suggest that the terra-
or fish hold, created by isolating the middle portion of pin smacks were so used. Nevertheless, it seems plausible
a vessel’s hull with watertight bulkheads, and boring that they were. I can envision these boats sailing along
small holes in the bottom of that portion to flood the the southeast Florida coast, harvesting the turtles as they
hold. This flooded section then provides a healthy envi- swam off the beach after laying their eggs.
ronment in which any caught fish can live until they can Chapelle also described the terrapin smacks, in
be taken to market; no ice required. This would work more detail, in Paper 25: The Migrations of an American
as well for turtles as for fish, but I have never found any Boat Type (1961, Library of Congress), and he included

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34 • WoodenBoat 227

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 34 5/23/12 10:27 AM


The author’s lines for his arc-bottomed
Terrapin 34, designed in the mid-1980s.

a lines drawing of one measuring 37'10½", 9' in the However, if you look closely at Kunhardt’s sketch, you
beam, and 1' 7¼" draft. Her wet well is divided in half can just see deadrise at the transom. It is also of note
lengthwise by the centerboard trunk. that a similar type, called the Hampton Flattie, existed
It is of note that Chapelle’s drawing shows no dead- on Chesapeake Bay, and did have a flat bottom forward
rise aft, which made me speculate that Sucher may and deadrise aft. These so-called “flatties” were smaller
have added this common modification on his own. than the “terrapin” models, according to Kunhardt,

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July/August 2012 • 35

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 35 5/23/12 10:27 AM


The first Terrapin 34 in frame
in Islamorada, Florida, in 1989

who wrote about them for Forest and Stream; they


varied in size from 16' to 30', and were rigged
as gaff sloops. Chapelle found a flattie hulk near
Elliot, Maryland, in about 1940, and drew plans
based on it. Flatties were used for oystering and
crabbing, while the terrapins seem to have all

REUEl PaRKER
been wet-well smacks.

I
n the mid-1980s, two friends approached me
with a request for an extreme-shoal-draft,
low-cost, charter bareboat for the Indian River area excellent fishing there, clams and oysters can be col-
of Florida’s east coast. In response I designed my own lected in season, and the bird life alone is fantastic.
version of a terrapin schooner. My first hull lines were Wildlife enthusiasts could easily spend a week cruising
for a modified arc-bottomed sharpie, 34' between per- the Indian River from Stuart to Cape Canaveral, stop-
pendiculars, 10' in the beam and with a 2' 3" draft. I ping to anchor each night in protected coves. There are
later designed a second version of the same dimensions numerous parks and wildlife refuges right on the water.
but with deadrise forward (V-shaped bow sections), My Terrapin 34 would be equally at home in Florida
which I felt would be more seaworthy and would not Bay, the Keys, or the Bahamas, and she would be an
pound—always the nemesis of sharpie hulls. excellent choice for Georgia, the Carolinas, Chesa-
I designed it to be a simple cruising sailboat, hoping peake Bay, and the shallow inland waters of New Jersey.
that several would be built and rented as “bare boats” Unfortunately, the bareboat enterprise never mate-
out of Fort Pierce on the Indian River—a long, narrow, rialized (I still believe it was a great idea), and I rel-
shallow estuarine lagoon, protected by barrier islands, egated my design to the status of “stock plan.” But in
and teeming with wildlife of great diversity. There is 1989 I received a phone call from a retired colonel in

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rolling fields and sunny orchard. It is surrounded

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ready and is surrounded by mature apple orchards and
hay fields and provides all year access to community,
cultural and outdoor activities. $710,000.
Contact: Allison Fox Glover, Megunticook Real Estate
Phone: 207 542 4410
E-mail: info@saltwaterfarmdowneast.com
Photos at www.saltwaterfarmdowneast.com

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36 • WoodenBoat 227

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 36 5/23/12 11:32 AM


The first layer of planking is fitted over the bottom
frames; the planking is 5⁄8” yellow-pine plywood,
commonly used in concrete forms.

the curves (5 ⁄ 8"), and nominal 5 ⁄ 8" (actually 19 ⁄ 32")


plywood for the topsides, joined by butt blocks. For
the first Terrapin hull I specified 5 ⁄ 8" BBOES ply-
wood, normally used in making concrete forms.
This yellow-pine plywood seemed to be of very
REuEL PARKER

good quality, with thick surface veneers, almost no


core-laps or voids, and very few “footballs” (knot-
plugs). The slightly oily surfaces bonded thoroughly
to epoxy during my tests. I am always looking for
Texas; he was driving to my Islamorada boatyard in the good-quality, inexpensive plywood as an alternative to
Florida Keys to meet me. I tried to discourage him, and marine plywood, but now advise my clients to use the
then he mentioned that he was bringing money. best material they can afford.
Even though it was very late in our “building sea- Construction progressed rapidly with a crew of six.
son”—neither I nor epoxy can tolerate the Florida heat I divided my workforce into two and sometimes three
between May and November—we started construction crews, each with separate projects. Thus, we were simul-
on the first Terrapin 34 schooner in April 1989, and taneously building the hull, centerboard, rudder, and
launched the finished TOMFOOLERY 16 weeks later, in spars, and making custom stainless-steel hardware.
July. The hull went together easily and quickly, although
While designing the Terrapin 34 I had decided we broke a couple of planks on the curvaceous stern.
upon a simplified version of my usual method for cold- Decks consisted of the same 5 ⁄ 8" plywood as the hull,
molded hull construction. I dubbed it “quick-molding.” laid over sawn Douglas-fir beams. Masts were got out
It involved double-diagonal planking for the hull bot- of solid, full-dimension, 6×6 air-dried Douglas-fir tim-
tom using the thickest plywood planks that could take bers, and booms and gaffs from smaller fir timbers.

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but the lighting of a fire.
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July/August 2012 • 37

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 37 5/23/12 10:46 AM


TOMFOOLERY being lifted up for her launching in July 1989.
Her shoal draft makes her ideal for the Texas waters
for which she was built. The author can be seen
to the right of the centerboard.

The interior consisted of painted plywood trimmed


with varnished mahogany—simple but elegant. The
colonel specified that no through-hulls be fitted, so I

AuThOR’S cOLLEcTIOn
gave him a removable basin whose contents he could
toss overboard. The head consisted of a similar arrange-
ment. There was also a large ice hold, and a two-burner
stove. Total materials cost, including outboard motor,
sails, upholstery, and rigging, was $24,000. Labor was
about twice that figure.
The outboard was a four-stroke 9.9-hp Yamaha
mounted in a well in the cockpit. Sails and running captain. The little schooner sailed fast, was stiff, bal-
rigging were Dacron; anchor rodes and docklines were anced, pointed well, and was quick in stays—she never
nylon (spliced to 5/16" chain); standing rigging was 5/16" missed a tack. I also thought she motored well, but the
stainless steel, with galvanized rigging screws and stain- colonel thought she should do better, and tried put-
less-steel chainplates. All exterior surfaces were cov- ting the outboard on a transom bracket. I recommend
ered with epoxy-saturated Xynole-polyester cloth—two against transom brackets as they tend to be fragile,
layers on the bottom. All exterior paint was linear poly- inconvenient, unprotected, and cause the propeller to
urethane over epoxy primers. Bulwarks were Douglas- lift out of the water when the boat pitches.
fir finished bright. When launched, TOMFOOLERY was

T
a pretty sight. o the best of my knowledge, there has never been
The colonel and his wife came for sailing trials and a revival of terrapin smack schooners. It seems
then to take TOMFOOLERY home to Texas with a hired that these beautiful, pragmatic workboats have

Marine ply

Joubert certified Contact


Concannon Lumber Co. - Luke Wolstenholme
6654 Gunpark Dr Ste 100 - Boulder, CO 80301
303-530-0435 - phone - 303-530-3742 - fax
www.wolstenholme.com

You will no longer randomly choose your plywood

The Yachting Experience


of a Lifetime

Yacht Sails Rigging


BUILDERS OF HIGH-QUALITY HAND-FINISHED SAILS
Full-service sail and rigging loft
Luxury cruises aboard MV Olympus in the Pacific Northwest P.O. Box 71, Lincoln St., East Boothbay, Maine 04544
www.yachtolympus.com or 206-919-5099 (207) 633-5071

38 • WoodenBoat 227

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 38 5/23/12 10:46 AM


been lost in the corridors of time. In all the years I have
offered plans for my Terrapin 34, although some have
been purchased I don’t know for certain of another
ever being built. I eventually designed a Terrapin 42,
of which at least two were built (the first being OYS-
TER , built by my partner Bill Smith in Fort Pierce in
1993–94); a Terrapin 25 (SKIMMER , built in 1991, also
by Bill); a Terrapin 21, a Terrapin 30, and a Terrapin
16 (all of which have been built, except the 16). The
four smaller Terrapins are gaff-rigged sloops, like the
Hampton Flatties.
Every once in a while someone from Texas will tell
me that TOMFOOLERY is alive and well—although
under different owners—and that she still turns heads
wherever she sails. Long may she live!

Reuel Parker—profiled in WB No. 224—is a writer, designer, and


builder of boats. He divides his time between Florida, Maine, and the
Bahamas. A full range of his work can be seen at www.parker-marine.
com. His series “Revisiting the Classics” began in WB No. 225.

Plans for Reuel Parker’s Terrapin series of designs are available


from Parker Marine Enterprises, PO Box 651429, Vero Beach, FL
32965; www.parker-marine.com. They may also be found in Parker’s
Catalogue of Cruising Sail.
REuEL PaRKER

TOMFOOLERY under sail in the Florida Keys during trials.

July/august 2012 • 39

TerrapinSmack_AD_FINAL.indd 39 5/23/12 10:27 AM


BRUCE HALABISKY

Anchoring Under Sail


Sharpen your skills with by Bruce Halabisky
the motor off Illustrations by Jan Adkins

T
here is something about a boat maneuvering first choice, the default option, unless I have good rea-
into an anchorage under sail that makes people sons to start the engine.
stop and stare. Conversations taper off, drinks Sometimes this philosophy results in more of
are lowered, and all eyes trace the boat’s course. Unfor- an education than anything that could be called
tunately, it is a rare event to see a sailing vessel of any “fun.” Once, my wife, Tiffany, and I were approach-
size come to rest without starting her engine. ing an anchorage off the small island of Nosy Komba
There are, however, two strong arguments for anchor- on Madagascar’s west coast. We had been into the
ing under sail. First, anchoring under sail demands a anchorage before, it had plenty of room, and there
level of ability you might have to draw upon in earnest was a brisk, reliable breeze to propel us. There seemed
should the auxiliary ever let you down. The skills of no reason to disrupt a nice afternoon sail by starting
anchoring under sail may, in fact, someday save the the engine. I took in VIXEN’s jib to reduce speed as
boat. we approached the entrance. We cleared an outlying
Second, anchoring under sail is a lot of fun. On reef that was marked on the chart and could be seen
VIXEN, my 34' gaff cutter, anchoring under sail is the through the clear water. Tiffany picked a spot behind

Above—Once well anchored, VIXEN rides comfortably off Madagascar, but getting there under sail involved negotiating
a tricky current running contrary to the wind. Here, the rode’s tension is taken by a nylon snubbing line made off to the
bowsprit fitting, leaving the chain slack at the stemhead fitting. The author uses this system to eliminate shock-loads on the
windlass, prevent chafe on the bobstay, and minimize the boat’s movement while at anchor.

40 • WoodenBoat 227

AnchoringUnderSail_FINAL.indd 40 5/18/12 3:03 PM


Most often, anchoring under sail involves pinpointing the desired place to drop anchor, then coming head-to-wind with the
right amount of “carry” to reach the target just as the boat comes to a stop. At that point, the anchor can be lowered and the
chain payed out as the wind gives the boat sternway.

a French catamaran, and I went forward to drop the in a bikini, sitting down to an aperitif, a canapé poised
staysail and ready the anchor. A few boat lengths to halfway to her mouth, which was opened in slack-jawed
leeward of the chosen spot, Tiffany turned into the amazement as she watched the gyrations of this unusual
wind and let the mainsail luff. I dropped the anchor anchoring technique. Was it perhaps some unknown
with a satisfying splash in 20' of water. Canadian method of corkscrewing the anchor into the
Normally the wind would then set us back until the sand?
anchor grabbed and that would be that. What I failed to Finally, during one of VIXEN’s impromptu tacks, I got
notice was a strong current of 3 or 4 knots setting con- the anchor up and Tiffany wrestled the mainsail down.
trary to the 15- to 20-knot wind. This current grabbed Full of shame, we started the engine, moved as far from
hold of VIXEN’s long keel and thrust her stern right up any witnesses as possible, and anchored properly.
into the wind. Simultaneously, the mainsail filled with The lesson learned? Never ignore the current, espe-
wind and hit the shrouds. Suddenly, we were pinned cially in a long-keeled, heavy-displacement boat. Look
in the awkward position of sailing full downwind over at any harbor with a cross-current and a dozen boats of
a bar-taut anchor chain with the hull refusing to turn different displacements and hull shapes lying at anchor.
into the wind because of the aggressive current. The multihulls will all point into the wind, swinging
Then the “fun” really began. back and forth with every shift. Fin-keeled sloops of
A law of physics—I’m still not certain which one— moderate displacement will heed the current and wind
took over, and VIXEN went into a jibe. Her boom about equally. The heavy-displacement, traditional tim-
crashed over, she turned upwind, tacked herself, and ber and steel boats will point into the current, often
then set off again downwind. Despite my efforts to get disregarding the wind altogether. I have had VIXEN
up the anchor and Tiffany’s pushing and pulling at the anchored in 50 knots of wind and seen a current push
helm, VIXEN kept doing pirouettes. Once, twice, three her stern into what I had thought to be an omnipotent
times we went around in this crazy manner. The anchor force. One can imagine the excitement of a catamaran
would not come up and the mainsail would not come and a traditional gaffer anchoring next to each other
down. on a river with strong tidal race.
At one point during the chaos, I glanced up to see a Here are some suggestions for anchoring under sail
young woman aboard the French catamaran. She was and avoiding our blunder at Nosy Komba:

July/August 2012 • 41

AnchoringUnderSail_FINAL.indd 41 5/18/12 3:03 PM


1. Carefully observe the anchorage. Pay particular 7. Take a sighting on shore. When you’ve stopped
attention to wind and current. A perfectly seaman- moving forward, let loose the anchor. Pay out chain
like approach is to take a tack through the harbor as the wind sets you back.
just to see how things lie without any thought of
anchoring on that first pass. 8. Once the anchor has been snubbed, you can
go through the motions of backing the main-
2. Make a plan with your crew. Decide on an escape sail again to sail backward so that the anchor
route if things don’t go according to plan. sets firmly. I’ve never found this to be very effec-
3. Have everything possible prepared ahead of tive, because in heavy winds the anchor sets itself
time. Find the handle to the windlass. Check that from the boat’s windage and in light winds there is
the chain is free to run. Have your halyards ready to not enough power to back the boat down. The real
release. Take a final look at the chart and note the solution to making sure you don’t budge is to have
hazards. We’ve learned to leave our VHF radio on heavy-duty anchoring gear that will set on its own
Channel 16, since a few times friends in the anchor- every time.
age have warned us of uncharted rocks upon our
approach. The weight of anchoring gear is one area where a
4. Reduce speed as necessary. This can be a chal- traditional heavy-displacement boat need not skimp.
lenge in gusty conditions. Consider striking the A couple of hundred extra pounds have little effect
headsails, but be ready to raise them in case you have on the sailing ability of a 13-ton boat like VIXEN. Our
to bail out on the opposite tack. Luff the mainsail. primary anchor is a 45-lb CQR on 260' of 3 ∕ 8" chain
With a gaff rig, consider scandalizing the mainsail spliced to 100' feet of 3/4"-diameter nylon rode, and we
by dropping the peak halyard. also have a 35-lb CQR on the bow. We keep a 25-lb
Danforth stowed on the afterdeck, and deep in the
5. Pick a spot to drop anchor and head to leeward lazarette is a monstrous 65-lb fisherman anchor. Every
of it. The amount of toom to leave depends on how couple of years I consider getting rid of the fisherman,
much time your boat needs in the given conditions but Tiffany won’t hear of it.
to come to a stop after she is put head-to-wind. Once on the Hawaiian island of Molokai we maneu-
Ignore the looks of concern from other boaters. vered VIXEN through a very tight break in the reef. I
6. Put the tiller down and turn into the wind. On dropped the 45-lb CQR and then realized I’d better
small boats or in light winds, speed can be reduced row out the Danforth to keep us from swinging onto
by pushing out the boom to windward and backing the reef. As I sat back to relax and enjoy the evening, I
the main so it will act as a brake. noticed a coral head off to port which we would surely

A full-keeled displacement hull like VIXEN will be more affected by current than by wind, while light boats—such as a dinghy
at a mooring—will be more affected by wind. Observing how various boats lie in an anchorage provides clues about how to
handle anchoring under sail.

42 • WoodenBoat 227

AnchoringUnderSail_FINAL.indd 42 5/18/12 3:03 PM


Anchoring Downwind

A
nother more cavalier approach to anchoring boat on which the anchor was released.
under sail, which you won’t read about in books, We use this “drop it on the run” anchoring technique
is to sail into an anchorage and drop the hook often because it allows for more precise placement of
while barreling along at full speed. Let the chain run. the hook. Sometimes with the traditional approach it is
Just before you hit the beach, snub it off and you’re difficult to judge how much room it will take the boat to
done. The main drawbacks here are that if the anchor stop once pointed head-to-wind; inevitably after turn-
doesn’t grab, there isn’t much of a back-up plan, and ing into the wind VIXEN will stop 10 or 20 yards short
there is a good chance of raking the paint from your or go shooting past the mark. Anchoring on the run is
boat’s topsides and bottom as the chain runs out. This like dropping a dart on a board and not so dependent
can be minimized by turning toward the side of the on boat speed. —BH

be upon when the tide changed. Out went the 35-lb CQR, headway, I sailed VIXEN into the cove in the lee of the
and with that VIXEN was quite stationary lying to three headland. Seth went forward and readied the anchor.
anchors inside a ring of coral. I will admit, however, For a moment it hung over the side, the tip raising a
that that was one anchorage we didn’t sail into. ripple on the still water, then he backed off the brake
and let 15' of chain rattle off. I could see the anchor hit

T
he calamity of anchoring under sail at Nosy the seafloor with a puff of sand. Slowly VIXEN contin-
Komba was an exception. More typical was a ued on her trajectory as Seth let loose an additional 80'
clear summer evening on New Zealand’s east of chain. Then he snubbed it, and VIXEN spun around
coast. Aboard VIXEN were my sister Meghan and her to face what little remained of the dying breeze.
husband Seth. We had left Whangamumu under blus- As I went forward to drop the mainsail, I looked up
tery conditions that morning, but the wind had died off to see a couple standing on the beach. They were gazing
in the afternoon. With the current in our favor and just out at VIXEN, her sails silhouetted by the setting sun. I
enough of an easterly breeze to ghost along, we sailed wasn’t sure what had caught their attention, but I’d seen
the last mile toward Whangaruru Harbor and the that look before. They seemed mesmerized by the sight
anchorage off Raukoura Point. Although the sun would of a boat maneuvering into an anchorage without an
soon be going down and there wasn’t much wind, I kept engine, the beauty of a boat anchoring under sail.
the motor shut down to preserve the peaceful stillness Bruce Halabisky is a freelance writer and traditional wooden boat
of the evening. builder. Six years ago he left Victoria, British Columbia, with his
Under full sail, VIXEN cleared a rocky headland cov- wife, Tiffany, for Hawaii on the first leg of a circumnavigation.
ered with thick grass and gnarled Pohutukawa trees. They—now with two daughters—expect to resume their voyage this
Inside the harbor a sandy beach stretched north, the spring from Rockland, Maine, where the boat wintered while they
shore aglow in the low-angled light. Barely making visited the West Coast. See www.VIXENvoyage.com.

July/August 2012 • 43

AnchoringUnderSail_FINAL.indd 43 5/18/12 3:03 PM


A Letter from India
by Peter Neill
Photographs by Mary Barnes

I
ndia, a nation of one billion people, is requires a frame, a manageable context
a surfeit of color, enterprise, language, around which to order sensual stimulus,
spirituality, and politics, all suffused observation, and glimpses of understand-
into a daily life that is tumultuous, not ing of a society so challenging and com-
always comprehensible, and frequently plex. To that end, let me show you the fish
overwhelming. To gain perspective on market at Sassoon Dock, Mumbai, where
a reality that is so vast in its length and boats, fishmongers, sorters, and sellers
breadth, and so different from one’s own, offer a microcosm of Indian society.

SmALL VeSSeLS And SkILLed mArInerS

O
ne does not necessarily think of India as a impromptu launching ways on mud banks and breaks
maritime nation. And yet it has a coastline in the shoreline where fishing boats and other small
4,671 miles around, bounded by the Arabian craft are simply built and repaired. These little ves-
Sea, the Bay of Bengal, and the Indian Ocean. It has sels make voyages that demand true offshore skill in
had a long tradition of seafaring, exploration, and navigation and seamanship without modern aids and
maritime trade, of near-shore artisanal fishing, and with ultimate faith in crew, boat, and any number of
of water transport along a vast network of inland riv- India’s myriad deities and saints. Like all such utili-
ers, both sacred and profane. It has a navy. It is better tarian vessels, the design has been determined and
known today for ship-breaking than ship construction, refined through experience with resultant low cost,
and one does not look for yards per se, but rather for demonstrated seaworthiness, and undeniable beauty.

44 • WoodenBoat 227

MumbaiFishMkt_FINAL.indd 44 5/21/12 1:40 PM


Visiting Mumbai’s Sassoon Dock

OfflOAding

These vessels make overnight and long-


term voyages, constantly, in all weathers, in
water where they compete against vessels
from other countries and industrialized
fleets for rapidly diminishing supplies of
fish. On return, pressing up against the
stone quay, pushing against each other for
a place to offload, their planks bend and
groan, seemingly held together by leftover
paint, ratty line, nailed patches, flags, and
prayers. Their exhausted diesels belch and
smoke the last gallons of cheap fuel. The
men, surely without much sleep, offload
the meager catch in woven baskets tossed
up to buyers shouting and bargaining from
above. They are making do, much from
little, transforming what is to hand into
livelihood.

Squid—
A THree-dAy HAul

Six men sort and shift it ashore—


everything by hand—before refuel-
ing from rusty drums, taking on
water, filling the hold with crushed
ice through a canvas slide, and set-
ting again out to sea. India’s strength
and weakness are evident here:
infinite labor for subsistence wage,
no need for more modern mech-
anization, no opportunity to change
to a better occupation, no aspiration
to look beyond this catch, this
day. But also evident are resilience,
perseverance, and equanimity.

July/August 2012 • 45

MumbaiFishMkt_FINAL.indd 45 5/21/12 1:40 PM


Cleaning and sorting the CatCh

I
f men provide the catch, then women restaurant chefs come early for the best
control the rest of the process from examples of this or that, but they consti-
sea to table. The stone floor is awash tute a tiny minority of purchasers. There
with fish, here mostly shrimp, but other is little evidence of record-keeping or
species elsewhere. Every piece is cleaned money changing hands; payment is made
by hand, sorted by size and quality, and by a small commission of product retained
allocated to yet another group of women by each woman, sorter or distributor, for
who assemble small amounts of different herself and her family. The system is
varieties and depart the market on foot, astonishing: simple, cheap, efficient,
to distribute on daily routes inside Mum- fair, and effective as a means to provide
bai’s vast slum communities. Hotel and protein to a city of 12 million.

46 • WoodenBoat 227

MumbaiFishMkt_FINAL.indd 46 5/21/12 1:41 PM


A MeAger HAul

T
he state of the world’s fisher-
ies is in crisis, and the catch
evident from this voyage pro-
vides pathetic evidence. These men
live aboard, the boat their workplace,
house, and home; many rarely come
ashore. There is no supportive infra-
structure, association, union, auction,
or regulation; Sassoon Dock appears to
be an example of a pure free market,
responsive only to the harsh reality of
daily supply and demand.

A Quiet sense of order

B
eneath the chaos, nevertheless,
there is an order here that defines
a community of the sea. The col-
ors, the flags, the ubiquitous blue tar-
paulins reveal the visual animation of a
society that, despite its challenges, is on
the move, as dynamic as the ocean itself.
The hardships are met with collective
labor. The resources are never adequate.
The goal is survival. Success provides
food for another day. Failure renews the
cycle of hardship. The next voyage will
be better.
One feels value at Sassoon Dock: of
work, frugality, honesty, utility, humility,
unity, and shared purpose. India teaches
these things and one wants to bring them
home as souvenirs to keep and gifts to
pass along.

July/August 2012 • 47

MumbaiFishMkt_FINAL.indd 47 5/21/12 1:41 PM


Rope Steering for Powerboats
Simple and affordable shop-made solutions

BRyAn GAGneR

by Harry Bryan

I
n recent years, the choice of a steering system for a without blocks or sheaves. The helm unit comes ready
small powerboat has consisted of either a push-pull to mount with a shaft machined to accept the steering
cable or hydraulics. Rope and wire-rope steering, wheel. Outboard motor manufacturers provide easy
which were found almost everywhere in the past, have connection for cables. Hydraulic steering systems are
almost disappeared. also designed to be easy to install and service.
The reasons for this shift are not hard to find. Why, then, should we consider rope as a means of
Older readers of this magazine will remember wire transmitting steering control from the helm to the out-
steering rope with cracked plastic coatings that board motor or rudder? There are at least three good
allowed salt water into the core, where it would cor- characteristics of this older technology that recom-
rode the wire. The clamps that held the wire rope mend it over the newer systems. The first is the elimi-
tight often slipped. The rudimentary pulleys—it nation of “play” in the steering. Second, rope steering
doesn’t seem right to give them the proper nautical uses simple components. And third, it is adaptable for
name of turning blocks—were barely strong enough a variety of steering setups.
to do their jobs. Steering for inboard motor installa-
tions tended to be built with stronger components, Steering play—I have compared the slack in doz-
but these could be expensive to buy and to install. ens of push-pull and hydraulic systems by measuring
A newer push-pull cable system can be installed how far the rim of the steering wheel travels before the

Above—One advantage of a rope-steering system is that it can be used with a variety of steering devices. By running the rope
around a drum on a shaft, as shown on page 50, standard wheel steering can be used. In this garvey designed by the author,
however, a stick-steering system uses inexpensive shop-built components and keeps the after cockpit clear.

48 • WoodenBoat 227

RopeSteering_FINAL.indd 48 5/21/12 10:21 AM


Top right—A shop-made quadrant (also shown in
drawings on page 52) attached to an outboard motor’s
carrying handle keeps steering rope angles steady and
tension constant at all steering angles, mimimizing
“play.” Middle right—A steering rope wound around
a drum on a steering wheel shaft, properly tensioned,
has little “play.” Bottom right—The taller of the garvey’s
two control sticks is for rope steering, and the tiller
rope spring mounted under the coaming at left tensions
the line. The garvey’s shorter, inner stick connects by
rod to the shift and throttle.

BryAN GAGNer
motor or tiller begins to move. All of them had 1" or
more of play in the steering wheel, most had 11/2", and
some more than 2". No one would accept this amount
of play in their automobile steering, yet it seems to be
almost universal in powerboats.
In push-pull cable systems, play is mostly caused by
the bends that the cable must make on its way from the
helm to the motor or tiller. Cables are constructed with
an outside casing covering a movable wire core. To
reduce friction, the core can’t fit too tightly within its
outer case. The core presses against the outside of
bends in the push mode, then moves to the inside
of bends when it is pulled. The more bends the cable
must make, the more slack there is in the system.
Hydraulic systems are also subject to slack steering,
although with less play than in cable systems, usually
about 1/2" to 1" for a 16"-diameter wheel. In these sys-
tems, expansion of the hoses under pressure is the cul-
prit. The longer the hose, the more slack is felt. Using

HArry BryAN
Kevlar-wrapped hoses can minimize the problem,
although at greater expense.
In contrast to these systems, carefully designed
steering using low-stretch yacht rope can have almost
no slack at all.

Simplicity—The second reason to consider rope


steering is to simplify the technology. This is not to say
that the scheme will have fewer components, but like a
gaff rig compared to a marconi rig, the parts are easier
for the boat owner to construct or repair. If you are the
type of person who is prepared to do your own main-
tenance, rope steering can be less expensive as well as
longer lasting than the alternatives.

Adaptability—A third motive for considering


rope steering is to increase design options. Both push-
pull cables and hydraulic hoses are engineered for
use with a rotary helm—a wheel. It is therefore diffi-
cult to adapt them to alternatives such as stick steer-
ing. In this system, a vertical stick, or whipstaff, usually
extends above the coaming and works with a fore-and-
aft motion. Stick steering can free up valuable cockpit
space. This directional control was once common on
BryAN GAGNer

both yacht club launches and workboats, but its use


need not be limited to these types. I have found that
stick steering is easier to build and has less expensive
components than rotary helms.

July/August 2012 • 49

RopeSteering_FINAL.indd 49 5/21/12 10:29 AM


Drawing 1—Components of a rotary helm
1. Steering wheel
2. Oil-impregnated bronze bearing
3. Rope drum
4. Cable tie to secure rope
5. Shaft

HArry BryAN
Constructing a Rope Steering System lock to lock, that the wheel will make. The range for
today’s push-pull cable and hydraulic units is from two
Wheel Steering —The usual arrangement for to four rotations of the wheel. For boats under 30' long,
wheel steering relies on a shaft set in bearings and I find that between two and two-and-a-half rotations is
turned by a wheel fitted to one end of the shaft. The about right. If the drum is too small in diameter, with
steering rope is wrapped around a drum mounted in many turns of the line round it, the wheel will have to
the middle of the shaft. Sometimes, a sprocket takes the be spun around a lot when docking or maneuvering
place of the drum, and a short length of chain engages through a crowded anchorage. If the drum is too large
the sprocket while the rope attaches to the ends of the in diamter, with too few turns of the line, making slight
chain. These units, called bulkhead steerers, can be course adjustments is difficult.
purchased, but they are expensive, often more than To calculate the diameter of the working part of the
$500. Wilcox Crittenden used to make a simple unit drum—not counting the lips worked into each end to
with a galvanized wheel, a wood drum, and bearings, keep the rope from sliding off—you will first need to
and it may be possible to find one second-hand. This know the distance the rope will move in turning the
article, however, is directed to those who wish to build rudder or outboard from full right to full left. For a
their own systems at a considerable saving in cost. two-rotation, lock-to-lock system, the drum diameter
Drawing No. 1 shows a 3/4" shaft with one end will equal the distance of rope travel divided by 6.28
tapered to have a keyway and also threaded for a nut (which is 2 × π). The diameter of the rope chosen will
to secure the steering wheel. For freshwater use, a change the effective diameter of the drum, and since
steel shaft will do. If the boat is intended for use in I recommend 1/4" rope for this system, you will need to
salt water, then stainless steel, bronze, or brass would subtract 1/4" from this calculated diameter to get the
be better. Good, inexpensive bearings can be made final dimension of the drum.
of wood blocks bored out to accommodate sleeve If you wish to avoid the math, you can estimate that
bearings. Such bearings are made of a porous, oil- for a common tiller length or quadrant radius of about
impregnated bronze. They will last for years without 8" to 10", the drum diameter can be 11/2". The old Wilcox
lubrication and are easily replaced. Crittenden drum was 3" in diameter in order to accom-
The drum, which in this case is made of aluminum modate wire rope. If you use a drum this large, you will
turned on a lathe, must be fixed to the shaft, which need to lead the steering rope through single turning
I’ve done here using two large set-screws. The steering blocks attached to the outboard or tiller in order to
rope, in turn, must be fixed to the drum, in this case reduce the too-quick “action” a larger drum will give.
using a common plastic cable tie run through a hole
bored through both the drum and the shaft. Stick Steering—A helm for stick steering is usu-
The diameter of the drum and the length of the til- ally easier to design and construct than a wheel-steering
ler’s swing at the rudder or outboard motor determine system. To steer while standing up, the top of the stick
the minimum number of turns that the line must take should be 30" to 36" above the cockpit sole. If you will
around the drum, and also the number of rotations, often steer while sitting, you can simply grip the stick

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lower down on its shaft, or, as an alternative, you could rope has changed the equation, and I have come to
make the stick shorter and devise a grip extension for prefer it over any other choice.
use when standing. The steering stick’s pivot will be on For a boat up to 25' long and up to 30 hp, 1/4"-diam-
the cockpit sole, or perhaps on the chine log if the boat eter braided rope will have more than enough strength
has one. A guide, usually made of wood, will be needed and will work with much-smaller-diameter steering
alongside the coaming to support the stick in moving drums and sheaves than those required for use with
fore and aft for steering but prevent it from moving side wire rope. A double-braid polyester, such as New Eng-
to side. land Rope’s Sta-Set, has just enough “give” to keep slack
The distance the top of the stick (the grip) will move out of the system without feeling spongy.
while steering must be decided. A short “throw” may It is still possible to buy pulleys meant for plastic-
make the helm too stiff and too sensitive. Too much covered, wire-cored cables. Their sheaves are large in
throw will be uncomfortable, especially if the helms- diameter and accommodate rope up to 1/4" in diame-
man will be sitting most of the time. I have found that ter. Even though such pulleys are inexpensive, I pre-
30" is about right. fer using sailboat blocks because they are stronger and
With the movement of the top of the stick decided the rope cannot slip off the sheave. Sheaves should
upon, it should be apparent that any other point on have a minimum diameter of 11/2". I used to think that
the stick will have less movement. Find the point on the blocks swinging on a pad-eye or shackle would intro-
stick that has the same length of movement required duce play into the system, so I went to the extra trou-
by the tiller or outboard (see drawing No. 2). This will ble and expense of using solid-mounted blocks. I have
be the point where the rope will be attached. I attach since observed that this is not so, and now I use flexibly
the rope to the stick with a simple clamp made of brass mounted blocks, which align themselves.
half-oval, as shown, for minimum stretch and so that it If an off-center wheel-steering console is used, both
can be adjusted if need be. parts of the steering rope usually run as a pair to the
nearest side of the boat. Here, two turning blocks
Rope and Turning Blocks—Regardless of whether change the ropes’ direction so that they lead aft under
you plan to use wheel or stick steering, there is no the side deck or coaming. At the transom, two more
need to use wire rope. The large-diameter sheaves—3" turning blocks redirect the ropes toward the center of
minimum—that would be required for using wire would the boat. One part runs directly to the motor or tiller,
assure an expensive installation, as would sheathed and the other passes to the opposite quarter, where
stainless-steel or bronze cables. Those materials used to it reeves through another turning block before being
be a good alternative to natural-fiber rope, which made off to the motor or tiller. Be sure that the lines are
stretched and shrank significantly with changes in mois- led properly so that a right turn on the wheel translates
ture content. Today, however, more stable synthetic yacht to a right turn for the boat.

Drawing 2—Whipstaff or stick steering helm


1. Steering stick—3/4" hardwood:
11/4" at bottom, 13/4" at rope connection, 1" at top
2. Spring
3. Rope clamp—made from half-oval brass
(also shown in detail at top right)
4. Guide
5. Pivot (also shown in detail at bottom right)
6. Rope
HARRy BRyAN

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1. Rudderstock
2. Steering rope A
3. Steering rope B
4. Quadrant

HArry BryAN
Drawing 3—Quadrant on rudderstock Drawing 4—Tiller with “T” as alternative to quadrant

If the wheel-steering console is mounted on the Connecting to an Outboard —The old wire-
centerline, the ropes can lead down to two turning blocks rope-and-pulley system made its connection to an out-
directing them aft beneath the cockpit sole through holes board motor at the center of the carrying handle a
bored in the floor timbers. Two more turning blocks near few inches forward of the transom clamps. This point
the transom will redirect the ropes outboard to turning acts as if it were the end of a short tiller arm pivoting
blocks at either quarter, thence to the motor or tiller. at the outboard’s center of rotation. Large outboards
For stick steering, one part of the rope will go were made with fittings on the handle to accommodate
straight aft to a turning block, then directly to the tiller turning blocks on each side, thus giving a two-to-one
or motor, while the other will go forward a short dis- mechanical advantage.
tance to a turning block before running aft to go past This system is subject to the same variable tension as
the stick, through another turning block at the quar- a tiller without a quadrant on a rudder-steered boat.
ter, then across the boat and through another turning Play in the steering of such an arrangement can be min-
block at the opposite quarter before ending at the tiller imized by placing the quarter blocks carefully. They
or motor. Usually, with a starboard-mounted stick the should be directly abeam of the motor attachment point
lines are led so that pushing the stick forward turns the when the motor is midway between straight ahead and
boat to port, and pulling back turns to starboard. hard over. It is a good idea to add a spring to the steer-
ing rope to take up slack when steering and to allow for
Connecting to a Tiller—Powerboat rudders stretch when tilting the motor clear of the water (see
usually have a short metal tiller if the rudderstock is drawing No. 5). Springs called “tiller rope springs,”
inboard of the transom. Outboard-hung rudders which have the proper tension for this purpose, are
often have a short tiller extending through a cutout in available from marine supply stores. These springs
the transom. If the steering rope runs directly from change the tension in the rope to compression in
the quarter turning blocks to the end of the tiller, the the spring, making them much less likely to fail
rope’s tension will not be constant throughout its than tension springs.
range of motion. In most cases, the quarter blocks will A quadrant can also be made to fit an outboard
be aft of the tiller’s forward end. When the helm is motor, allowing more latitude when placing the quarter
hard over, the distance from a quarter block to the til- blocks. This will be particularly useful if the outboard is
ler then on to the other quarter block is shorter than mounted in a well, since a quadrant allows the steering
when the tiller is amidships. The usual method for rope to come from the quarter turning blocks at a con-
eliminating this problem with an inboard rudder is to stant angle, so that the well only needs small holes for
use a quadrant mounted on the rudderstock instead the steering ropes to pass through. The photo on page
of a tiller (see drawing No. 3). 49 shows a quadrant fitted to a 20-hp Honda outboard.
If you have an outboard rudder, you may find it dif-
ficult to install a quadrant that clamps or bolts to the Drawing 5—Tiller rope spring
tiller. An alternative, shown in drawing No. 4, can be
constructed to accomplish the same result. Attaching a
crosspiece to the tiller’s inboard end makes a T-shape
that allows the steering ropes to be connected some dis-
tance from either side of the tiller’s centerline. As the
tiller swings to port or starboard, the T introduces a
jog in the steering rope, thus taking up the slack that
would otherwise occur. The length that the crosspiece
HArry BryAN

needs to be—that is, the distance the rope is connected


out from the centerline—can be found by making a
mockup on the shop floor.

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Stick Steering for a 23' garvey
BRyAN GAGNER

For a garvey that needs ample carrying capacity for passengers and goods, stick steering keeps the cockpit as clear as can be.

T
ROUT was designed to be used as a general util- Steering lines connect to the engine through a quad-
ity boat for a large freshwater fishing camp that rant. Because nothing “modern” was to be seen, the
is inaccessible by road. In frequent communica- shift and throttle are controlled by a second, shorter
tions with the architect designing the camp for the cli- stick that operates a single-lever engine control located
ent, I came up with a design that would meet a wide under the after starboard hatch.
variety of needs. The boat had to be capable of car- The hull’s V-bottom below the chine is laminated
rying 10 to 12 adults when used as a ferry, but it also of two layers of Northern white cedar, laid on oppos-
had to be capable of carrying a 55-gallon drum of fuel ing diagonals, while the topsides are traditional riveted
or an all-terrain vehicle. Wheelchair access was also a lapstrake. The V-sections forward allow for dry, reason-
priority. To accommodate these loads, I settled on the ably soft progress upwind against a chop while the rock-
traditional garvey hull, with a wide foredeck. A hinged ered keel gives good maneuverability at low speed and
ramp at the bow mates with a purpose-built dock, while assures easy powering when loaded.
removable secondary ramps lead from the foredeck to We had ample time for sea trials before delivery. This
the cockpit sole. included carrying (in a calm anchorage) 18 adults and
A workboat feel was wanted, and to that end the children. Even with this load, TROUT felt stable and
hull is painted a semigloss brown, while surfaces to be had a good reserve of freeboard. The ramp, although
walked on are unpainted Northern white cedar. Galva- kept short in order to mate with the dock, also worked
nized pipe stanchions support cargo restraining lines well on a steep beach. A longer ramp should give easy
and synthetic manila line serves as a sheer guard. access to almost any shore. Though designed as a work-
For this boat, stick steering was the most practical ing vessel, she also fits my definition of a good picnic
way of maximizing the working area of the cockpit. boat. —HB

The quadrant itself is made from two layers of 1/2" MDO push-pull cables and hydraulics will undoubtedly assure
plywood and has provision for adjusting the length of their continued market dominance, a safe, reliable, low-
the ropes, as well as a release lever to give the system tech steering system that has no play can be custom-
the slack necessary when tilting up the outboard. The built in the boatshop. In a world where fewer and fewer
motor’s tilt lock is located directly under this release things are designed to be repaired by the consumer, at
lever, so it is unlikely that the operator will forget to add least some people will find rope steering an appealing
slack before tilting. If the outboard has a remote power concept.
tilt, it would be wise to add a spring in the rope. In any
case, the slight stretch in the braided polyester line will Contributing editor Harry Bryan lives and works off the
prevent damage to the system if the slack-lever is not grid in Letete, New Brunswick. For more information, con-
deployed. tact Bryan Boatbuilding, 329 Mascarene Rd., Letete, NB,
Although the availability and ease of installation of E5C 2P6, Canada; 506–755–2486.

July/August 2012 • 53

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The Seaclipper 10

All smiles, Stephanie Evans of Oakland, California, puts a Seaclipper 10 through its paces. The 10’ LOA, epoxy-plywood
trimaran is designed by John Marples.

ABNER KINGMAN

by Jim Brown

W
hat is it about the Seaclipper 10 trimaran, the laugh. And when half a dozen of these whimseymarans
wooden-hulled 10-footer that John Marples get together, it’s a regular Soap Box Regatta and an
first developed while living in the Puget Sound intuitive laughing gas for big kids.
area, that makes even seasoned sailors laugh with joy? Marples, who lives in California these days, conceived
Well, maybe it’s the whimsy of the thing, the proverbial his Three-Meter Class in 1979 as a trainer. He had
one-horse open sleigh, o’er the waves we go, laughing noticed that many of his clients for bigger cruising boat
all the way. More likely, it’s because they’re sailing in designs were beginning sailors, and he realized that
tiny boats that they literally put on like a body sock, they needed something small to build first—something
settle into like a reclining chair, and command with all that could kick-start their building skills and their
fours from the very pit of their pituitaries. When thus sailing confidence. Something that could be built in
kicked back, with just their heads above the deck, their maybe just a hundred hours and for just a thousand
vantage point on the hydrosphere is so low down that dollars (see “Building the Seaclipper 10,” page 58).
it seems to them that they’re driving a 90-footer in a “This was a tall order,” Marples says. “I wanted stu-
North Sea gale. But they know they’re not, and so they dents to be totally free of sailing’s usual gymnastics so

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A trimaran for the pure joy of sailing
that they could really learn the elements of playing all these foils to generate their inherent propulsive force
the angles between wind, water, and machine. So, to upon the cockle and its cargo.
let the poor kid—big or little—really concentrate on Off they go! All at once the biped is required to
sheeting and steering, it had to be a boat that did not crane its vision forward, reach behind, steer counter-
require hiking out. That meant going multihull, but I intuitively, duck beneath a swinging boom, and knee-
couldn’t ask the oldsters to be squatting on a trampo- jump side-to-side to keep the liquid from slopping in
line. It had to have a sit-in cockpit like a kayak, and that the cockle to displace the gas therein. Simultaneously,
meant a trimaran.” the greenhorn sailor must keep track of how the rela-
tive motions of gas, fluid, and cockle are responding

S
ailing, in and of itself, is not exactly intuitive. directionally to said propulsive force.
Beginners of any age are asked to manage a vehi- For steering, Marples relied on feet, which are
cle that gains its mobility from the movements of inherent to bipeds but often underutilized by sailors.
two cosmic fluids, one at least 600 times denser than Foot-pedal steering (see “Armchair Sailing,” page 56),
the other, both of them in motion at widely varying as used in aircraft and many kayaks, could free the
speeds and directions relative to one another as they student from both the gymnastics of hiking out and
slide across their common interface. the tyranny of the tiller, leaving both hands free for
Now, put a gas-breathing, terra-firma biped squatting trimming sheets.
in the bilge of half a cockleshell that is buoyed up by the

B
dense liquid to hold it largely in the gas. Then, to this ecause racing several boats together greatly
cockleshell affix a large supple airfoil upward into the speeds learning, the Three-Meter trainers were
gas and two small rigid hydrofoils downward into the intended to race. So Marples started an open
liquid and allow the relative motion of the two fluids on class with a tight rule: Boats could be no longer than

With no tiller to tend and no need to hike out, the pilot can give full attention to the set of the sails.
ABNER KINGMAN

July/August 2012 • 55

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Armchair
Sailing
W
ith foot-pedal steering, gone is the
tyranny of the tiller, which permits
only one-handed hauling on the
sheets, occasionally assisted by the helms-
man’s teeth and accompanied by a snake wake.
Moreover, the hands are free for many other
tasks, like using binoculars, folding the chart,
taking pictures, donning foulies, spreading
peanut butter—all while guiding the craft
with the toes.
Armchair sailing also seats the pilot com-
fortably, mostly down out of the wind and with
the head well below the boom. The eyes are
forward, and no calisthenics are required to tack, All of the rigging is led to a cockpit console to be within
jibe, or simply stay aboard. In this position, the pilot easy reach of the pilot, who has both hands free for line
can relax—even snooze—while sailing far with min- handling. The daggerboard, too—the top of which is just
imal fatigue. With the resulting comfort, security, visible between the console and the forward crossbeam,
and relaxation, the armchair sailor is free to kick or aka—is also within easy reach.
back and allow the boat to take him on its trip.
ABNER KINGMAN
There are trade-offs: When steering by foot pedal,
the pilot is confined to a central location and pre- main on center, lodged in a cam cleat right above
vented from using body weight for stability, so the the pilot’s thighs, where it can be quickly released
boat itself must be inherently stable. Even then, it by yanking upwards. Headsail sheets, if the boat has
cannot be driven as hard as, say, a trapeze-equipped them, also should be arranged to permit hauling
dinghy or full-blown beach cat, both of which depend hard on each with both hands.
largely on a scampering crew to prevent capsize. Of The foot pedals—complete with heel braces—
course, the armchair sailor also can hot-dog his boat should adjust for a wide range of leg lengths. The
in a blow—although not quite so hot—and there is pedals should suspend vertically down from over-
some loss of the thrills of hiking out with foot straps, head or up from the cockpit sole. Heel braces should
showing off one’s abs, and balancing the boat in that be distinct enough to permit the pilot to relax his
ride-’em-cowboy mode. On the other hand, the arm- upper legs with bent knees while steering from the
chair sailor is down so close to the water, often able ankles most of the time. For hard-over helming, the
to drag both elbows, that the sensation of speed can pedals should allow full leg extension or retraction.
be even more extreme than when cantilevered from Heel braces also are used to jam one’s back against
a flying hull. good lumbar support when hauling sheets. The
The armchair sailor can maneuver the craft cables should be taut and friction free, allowing the
adroitly. By hauling sheets overhand with both arms toes to feel the steering with the same sensitivity as a
at full extension or retraction, tacking and jibing hand on a tiller.
can be performed easily and repeated very rapidly. For the physically challenged, either a mechani-
Downwind sailing in particular permits full boom cal lift or some muscular assistance is necessary for
haul-ins and payouts, using both arms as giant shock boarding, but once ensconced in the cockpit, where
absorbers at the “ jibe-ho!” moment, all while retain- one cannot fall out, even paraplegics can sail these
ing complete control of the boat’s course with the boats, steering by hand. Steering ropes that pass the
toes. This capability suggests developing racecourses pilot’s sides on their way to the pedals can simply be
for downwind “giant slalom” legs. grasped, or optional whipstaffs could be rigged on
The boat has to be adjusted to the individual. each side (see “Rope Steering for Powerboats,” page
The seat height should be at least slightly above feet 48). Steering and trimming by hand are almost as
height. Adjustable seat height can allow one’s elbows easy as when using the foot pedals. With the sheet
to swing behind the seat back for long-arm hauling stop-knotted at a close reach, rank beginners—and
on the sheets, this while retaining proper armrest even quadriplegics rigged with a harness to steer by
height for minimal neck and shoulder stress. the shoulders—can be turned loose to zip around
The sheet leads should be arranged with the and get back by themselves. —JB

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Left top—Rigging can be as simple as just a single sheet for
the mainsail, but an outhaul, boom vang, and downhaul can
be added for finer control. The trimaran can also fly a simple
spinnaker, which requires only a halyard, plus one sheet
and one foreguy per side. This is the “dashboard” for MICRO
MOXIE , the original prototype Three-Meter, built in 1979 in
Port Orchard, Washington. Left to right, jam cleats control
the spinnaker port sheet, spinnaker port foreguy, spinnaker
halyard, outhaul, mainsheet, boom vang, downhaul,
spinnaker starboard foreguy, and spinnaker starboard
sheet. Middle left—The rudder is hung on a false transom.
Freeing its downhaul and pushing on both foot pedals lifts
it clear of the water. The rudderhead line holds the rudder
up when launching or retrieving. Left bottom—Foot pedals
hinged to the underside of the foredeck provide strong and
simple steering control via ropes connected to a yoke at the
rudderhead.

10', no wider than 8', but of any depth. Monohulls are


allowed, but hiking out is not. The Marples boats are
designed for solo sailing, with a crew weight of roughly
200 lbs, but the cockpits have handled some really big
guys, like 6' 6" and 280 lbs. Boat weight is not specified
but ranges from about 150 to 200 lbs. To ensure that big
kids can compete on an equal footing with the lighter
JOHN MARPLES

little kids, the class has a minimum gross racing weight


of 385 lbs for the boat and crew combined. So, to com-
pete, some small sailors are obliged to carry ballast.
Sail area is limited to 60 sq ft, with no headsail except
an optional spinnaker. The ’chute is normally set from
a bag in the cockpit, and because the mast is unstayed,
setting and dousing the ’chute is not obstructed by
standing rigging. Because of the trimaran’s wide beam,
no spinnaker pole is necessary or allowed.
With hulls of this capacity, the blazing speeds of
longer multihulls cannot be expected, but again, top
speed is not intended here. Rather, the objective is ease
of learning. For absolute neophytes, handling can be
reduced to a single-string mainsheet. With intuitive
foot-pedal steering—push the right pedal to go right
and left to go left—the student has both hands free to
ABNER KINGMAN

trim the sail. As experience is gained, the rig can be


developed to have as many as nine strings to pull: five
for the spinnaker (a halyard and two guys each side)
plus four for the main (sheet, outhaul, downhaul, and
vang). All these lines emerge from fairlead holes in the
full-width dashboard right in front of the pilot. There
they engage in labeled cam cleats, and their tails drape
into the pilot’s lap, where nothing can foul them. In
addition, all controls are hidden from view below the
level of the cockpit sides, so one competitor cannot crib
the tweakings of another.
The rudders in these boats are mounted on a false
transom that is hinged laterally at the top of the
true transom. In this way, the rudder can kick up with-
out exposing any vulnerable pieces. A rudder down-
haul is led through the transom via a conduit to
ABNER KINGMAN

emerge on the stern deck just aft of the pilot’s shoul-


der. To completely retract the rudder, the downhaul is
released and both foot pedals are pushed forward at
once. The blade is easily removed for trailering.

July/August 2012 • 57

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JOHN MARPLES
The Seaclipper 10 is an outgrowth of the Three-Meter Class that designer John Marples initiated for simple and
inexpensive sail training.

Building the Seaclipper 10:

JOHN MARPLES

Working in his small shop, Marples developed the Seaclipper 10 to be easily built using 1/4” plywood, which fit in the tight
space because the outer hulls, called amas, and the crossbeams, called akas, were designed to be easy to remove.

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The Three-Meters have an unstayed “bendy”
mast with a luff-sleeve mainsail, which has no
halyard. Ideally, the mast is made from three
segments of aluminum tube, which can be
disassembled to fit inside the boat, but for
economy a single 16' length will serve just as
well, if not quite as conveniently.
Because these 8'-wide boats do not have
to be folded or disassembled for trailering,
their crossbeams are normally made of
1 1/2"-diameter aluminum pipe. If compact
trailering or shipping becomes necessary,
JOHN MARPLES

the boat can be quickly disassembled by


removing bolts from bonded-in T-nuts.

T
he boats sail well, tacking dependably
Racing, a great way to learn, proved not only instructive but an awful and steering crisply even downwind
lot of fun for the early owners of Marples’s 10’ trimarans, built using the in waves, and they readily achieve 7
Constant Camber construction method. The first fleet took root in the or 8 knots, roughly half again the speed of
Puget Sound area. non-planing dinghies of their size. A rank
beginner can go out alone with no more
instruction than “don’t try to sail directly into
The daggerboard trunk is robustly mounted between the wind.” Anyone can get back to the beach without
the hull’s bottom and deck, between the pilot’s legs. the neophyte’s usual yelling, rescues, and embarrass-
The daggerboard itself emerges through the deck just ment. Even blown tacks and wild jibes in strong winds
forward of the dashboard, easily within reach. When are of little consequence, and this absence of intimida-
removed from the trunk, the board is long enough to tion gives positive reinforcement to learning more.
span the distance between the crossbeams, where it Frostbiting—that venturesome sailing on fine but
may be stowed when the craft is nosing into a beach. cold winter days—is encouraged by the minimal risk

A study in simplicity
J ohn Marples originally designed the Three-Meter
trimarans to be built using the Constant Camber
method, using vacuum-bagging to streamline the
cold-molded method of construction (see “Bagging the
Gull,” WB Nos. 64–65). The early boats were built this
way in the mid-1980s, but vacuum-bagging seemed to
impose a steep learning curve on the owner-builder,
and as a result the class found little traction at first.
In the early ’90s, Marples developed a simplified sheet-
plywood version, called it the Seaclipper 10, and plans
for that version have been selling worldwide. One con-
centration of boats was in Marples’s then-home region
in Puget Sound, where in the mid-’90s roughly half a
dozen boats regularly arrived at laid-back gatherings.
For economy and availability, the Seaclipper version
of this 10-footer is built entirely of 1/4" plywood—an
extremely rugged thickness for so small a boat. Ram-
ming docks and channel markers, and even minor col-
lisions with other boats of the class, are usually survived
JOHN MARPLES

with no more than a big surprise. Framing lumber is


from the local lumberyard, and the narrow, dory-like
hull forms have easy bends.
Assembly is by the stitch-and-glue method, which is
as simple as boatbuilding gets. The boats are epoxy- Constructed using taped-seam epoxy-plywood construction,
coated inside and out, making them rugged and the trimaran hulls are light and strong. The glued-in amid-
durable. —JB ships trunk accommodates the foil-shaped daggerboard.

July/August 2012 • 59

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Not only is the Seaclipper 10
easy to sail, it’s also easy to
live with. Here, designer John
Marples drags the boat via a
purpose-made cart onto a trailer

ABNER KINGMAN
for transport. Because the boat
is 8’ wide overall, it doesn’t need
to be dismantled for trailering

of capsize, and by the ’biter’s body being down out of Suddenly, the laughter was mixed with more atten-
the wind. Of course, for that type of sailing adequate tion to finesse, which is what the boat was meant for,
gear is assumed, perhaps complete with a motorcycle and in time several of our crowd would make signifi-
helmet and full faceplate, and with a piston bilge cant cruises or become successful racers in the intense
pump fastened to the trunk and plumbed to discharge F-boat regattas,” in larger trimarans. (Marples also
overboard. Now you can take on the North Sea. designed a larger version of the 10-footer; see “The Sea-
clipper 20,” below.)

A
lthough the Three-Meters are easy to sail, it has “I’m satisfied that these Three-Meters really do per-
become evident that these trimarans are not form as trainers, but they train you in the truth about
easy to sail well. “Most boats that are easy to sail sailing: There’s a whole lot to learn, and if you want to
are rather ho-hum for anything else,” Marples says. get good, it takes lots of patience and practice.”
“They don’t show a distinct response to tweaking, and Well, practice is easy when it’s fun, and the best evi-
so don’t encourage learning. And most boats that sail dence of fun is laughter. Oftentimes, the grandest gig-
really well are not easy. They make rather drastic physi- gles heard from the practicing Three-Meter fleet are
cal demands and so can be discouraging especially to surprised remarks made by floating passers-by. Like, for
beginners and the not-young.” instance, “Hey, those are adults in those boats.”
Nevertheless, as the Three-Meter class developed
Jim Brown, a longtime contributor to WoodenBoat, is the designer
momentum, some of the sailors became competitive. of the Searunner series of ocean cruising trimarans, the inventor of
Because trailering was so easy, they raced on lakes, the Constant Camber construction method, and the co-founder of
bays, sounds, and on more challenging courses to keep OutRig! The Modern Multihull History Project (www.outrig.org), a
the interest up. “We thought we were getting pretty private initiative that collects, preserves, and disseminates the history
good,” Marples says, “until Jack Christiansen, our local and lore of modern seafaring multihulls, their creators, and their
sailmaker, showed up for a regatta and blew us all away. crews. He lives in Foster, Virginia.

The Seaclipper 20
T
he Seaclipper 20 (reviewed in WB No. 217) is to arrive in March to “break her in.” During a week of
the latest of a series of eight simple, inexpen- sailing and celebrating, some wordy wag exclaimed,
sive trimarans that John Marples designed to be “This is not just ésprit de corps, this is joie de vivre!”
owner-built. At WoodenBoat School in 2011, Marples As with the 10-footer, the Seaclipper 20 is a sheet-
and I worked with seven highly motivated (some said plywood, get-it-done special, but it has some unusual
frenzied) students to build one, and she was about 85 features:
percent complete when we launched her nine working • Simple and economical “swing-wing” crossbeams
days later. allow easy folding for trailering, motoring in narrow
Purchased by student Val Cox for the price of mate- waters, berthing, camping aboard, and storage. The mast
rials to that date—$2,400—she was hauled off to Key can be up or down, since folding does not affect the rig.
Largo, Florida, where Cox has a canal-side home. He • “Combo Steering” uses a standard tiller but also
completed her just in time for the whole class, save one, allows foot-pedal steering from either of two cockpits.

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ANNE BRAY

VAL COX
Left—With the Seaclipper 20 design, Marples translated
the concepts of the 10-footer into a boat capable of more
adventuresome cruising, even accommodating a dome tent
set up on deck. Left top—In 2011, Marples and the author
led a course at WoodenBoat School to build and launch the
trimaran in two weeks. Above—Val Cox, one of the course
students, bought the boat, took it home to Florida to finish it
out, and reunited most of the class for a maiden sail in early
2012.

• A standard 7' dome tent can be erected on the Sea-


clipper 20’s platform, secured with its rain fly to resist
JOHN MARPLES

high winds, hot sun, cold snaps, and biting bugs. Cus-
tomizing the tent by cutting out its floor in way of the
footwell allows the crew to sit comfortably, and a 2' × 3'
table can even be secured to the raised daggerboard.
• The thick, flat bottom of the main hull, sheathed
• All specified plywood, framing, and crossbeam in polypropylene cloth set in epoxy, not only endures
lumber is available at any lumberyard. repeated beachings but also accommodates the use of
• All fastenings and hardware for the crossbeams, skids, rollers, trailer bunks, flatbed trailers, and direct
rig attachments, and sheet leads are of inexpensive on-the-hard storage.
galvanized steel. Depending on the owner-builder’s focus and will-
• Any of several “beach cat” rigs (or other readily ingness to scrounge, costs and building times can vary
available rigs) can be fitted. Spars, sails, and standing widely. Based on early evidence, the Seaclipper 20 mate-
and running rigging for these rigs are commonly rials cost about $6,000 and it takes about 1,200 hours to
available second hand. A Hobie 16 rig is recommended. build. —JB

July/August 2012 • 61

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BENITO
Discovered on YouTube,

PETER ChAMPION (BOTh)


built by Skype
by Bruce Stannard

T
he idea of building a custom cruising boat for carved and painted toy fishing boats sent to him from
an owner living far from the building site is a faraway Denmark by his godmother. With their sweeping
tough assignment, since such a project requires sheerlines and sturdy wheelhouses, the traditional style
myriad small details to be discussed and fussed over and proportions of the miniature North Sea trawlers
between the owner and builder. But Peter Kass and his embodied the handsome good looks that were to
team at the John’s Bay Boat Company in South Bristol, encourage his lifelong passion for honest working
Maine, recently completed the magnificent 44' cruis- vessels. In his 20s he restored, designed, and built
ing lobsterboat BENITO in just that way. Owner Will several of the shapely 26' gunter-rigged Couta Boats
Baillieu, you see, lives at Cape Schanck on Australia’s that had been the mainstay of Victoria’s fishing fleet
Mornington Peninsula, but thanks to the wonders of throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries (see
the Internet, he was able to keep a hand in the building WB No.137). And although he kept a weather eye open
of his dream boat—a project that had taken root in his for an opportunity to acquire a traditional Tasmanian
childhood—from the other side of the world. fishing smack or ketch still working the waters of Bass
As a small boy growing up at seaside Sorrento on the Strait, a suitable boat never hove into view.
southeastern approaches to Port Phillip in southern After a distinguished sporting career as an Olympic
Victoria, Baillieu amused himself with a tiny fleet of oarsman and as a member of AUSTRALIA II’s AMERICA’s

Above—When Australian Will Baillieu decided he wanted a Maine lobsterboat, he came to Maine to have one built. Tracking
the details of the project via Skype, Baillieu worked closely with builder Peter Kass while living on the opposite side of the
planet. Inset—While BENITO, as the new boat is called, is built to the tough standards of a Maine lobsterboat, her interior
layout is for cruising for a family of four.

62 • WoodenBoat 227

BENITO_FINAL.indd 62 5/18/12 3:52 PM


like finding a genuine Maine lobsterboat and import­
“Sometimes you just have to go with ing it to Australia. I asked Sally, ‘Are you up for a trip to
Maine?’ ‘Sure,’ she said, ‘when do we leave?’”
your gut feeling and take a step into the
B
aillieu had read about Peter Kass in WoodenBoat
unknown, otherwise nothing interesting some 20 years before (No. 115). “I contacted him
through his website,” he said, “and asked about
happens. It’s called trust, and it has to AGAMENTICUS. He was quick to respond with informa­
tion about the boat and suggested the best way to find
go both ways.” —Owner Will Baillieu out more about her was to speak directly with her owner,
Ed Grant, the lobsterman who works her in the unshel­
tered waters off Boon Island, Maine. Ed and I spoke by
Cup–winning crew, his focus shifted to wooden motor­ email. He could not have been friendlier or more infor­
boats. He bought ROUGH UP, a Cheviot 32 launch mative, and he clearly loves AGAMENTICUS. She is his
designed and built at Tim Phillips’s Wooden Boat Shop second big Kass boat, and he was happy to share infor­
at Sorrento on lines inspired by the Downeast Maine mation with a stranger from the other side of the world.”
lobsterboats. But, with two small children in tow, it In April 2010 Sally and Will Baillieu flew from
soon became clear that a bigger boat was needed if the Melbourne to Boston, a 12,000­mile journey via Los
Baillieu family were to pursue its shared interest in Angeles and New York that took them an exhausting
offshore cruising among the islands of Bass Strait. 36 hours. They rented a car and began a two­week trip
In the winter of 2009 while he was browsing online
for Maine lobsterboats, Baillieu came across a video
clip showing the 2008 launching of AGAMENTICUS, BENITO in her home waters
the 42­footer designed and built by Kass for lobster­ of Port Phillip in southern
man Ed Grant of York Harbor, Maine. Will called to his Victoria, Australia. Here,
wife, Sally: “Quick, come and look at this….” It was like BENITO runs near Point
watching a dream sequence suddenly flicker into life on Nepean, the entrance to
the screen. Set to an up­tempo guitar track, the video Port Philip. Beyond lies
showed precisely the kind of boat he had in his mind’s BBass Strait and 200 miles
eye. But more than that, the clip also showed the pride tto the south, Tasmania.
in craftsmanship shining in the eyes of the smiling men Inset—
Inset—The boat was set
who had built the boat as well as the shared delight evi­ up with serious cruising in
WILL BAILLIEU

dent among the lobstermen who had gathered to wish mind. The smoke head seen
her well. “I was enthralled by the boat,” he says, “and here is plumbed to a cozy
by the tiny window it opened on life in Maine. I gradu­ wood stove in the saloon
ally embraced the idea of doing something really crazy, (see photo, page 67).
PETER CHAMPION

July/August 2012 • 63

BENITO_FINAL.indd 63 5/18/12 3:48 PM


WILL BAILLIEU (BOTH)
Will Baillieu
each other’s company. AGAMENTICUS was pretty won-
was researching
derful too. Although it was a gray afternoon with occa-
lobsterboats online
sional drizzle, the Grants took us out for a trip up the
when he came
coast to Nubble Light at Cape Neddick. Ed keeps AGA-
across a video clip
MENTICUS in absolutely immaculate condition. She
of the launching of
may be a working lobsterboat, but she is scrubbed spot-
AGAMENTICUS, a
lessly clean and fitted up forward in luxurious fashion
Kass boat built in
for cruising. The moment I saw this beautiful boat and
2008 for Ed and Rosie
stepped aboard, I was immediately hooked. The feel,
Grant (inset, flanking
sound, smell of a wooden boat is unlike anything else. I
Sally Baillieu).
knew from that moment on that I would never be happy
The boat was, for
with a fiberglass boat. I looked at Sally, and she could
Baillieu, a distillation
tell what I was thinking. After that wonderful, unforget-
of everything he’d
table afternoon cruise with those two beautiful people,
been wanting in a
the next logical step was to meet Pete Kass.”
new boat.

T
he Baillieus found the John’s Bay Boat Com-
pany—with its small, shingled shop and marine
up the winding coast roads that were to take them all railway at the water’s edge and the Kass family
the way north to Halifax, Nova Scotia. The idea was to home behind it—hidden among the trees near the mid-
meet boatbuilders and look at lobsterboats along the coast Maine town of South Bristol. There, Will Baillieu
way. “The northeast coast of America is spectacularly found he had an immediate rapport with Pete Kass.
beautiful and very romantic,” he said, “and to our Aus- “Pete is a strongly built man with a ready smile and a
tralian eyes, Maine is pure magic. The places we saw deep but soft voice,” Will said. “He showed us the 24'
were so beautiful and the people so wonderful. We saw gunkholer he was building for himself. Wooden boat
it as wooden boat heaven. We looked at all the boats shops are always irresistible for me, and Peter’s shop was
and boatyards and tiny lobster towns, and we took hun- fascinating. There were lots of big old machines with
dreds of photos, but in the back of my mind I was think- photos and calendars tacked up, a big old woodstove
ing that I would probably never find a good wooden for heat, and plenty of lumber racked out to dry.”
boat, and if I did it would be way too expensive. Then In their discussions, Peter Kass was candid enough
there would be all the problems importing one into to admit that for the first time in 30 years he did not
Australia with our strict quarantine laws. have an order for another boat. The global financial
“On the other hand, I was determined not to go up crisis had spread gloom and doom across America, and
the Maine coast without seeing the beautiful AGAMEN- money had simply dried up. Nobody was ordering new
TICUS. Ed Grant’s wife, Rosie, agreed to meet us in the boats, and once he finished the 24-footer, Kass told
Stonewall Kitchen in York, and after coffee she took us him, he faced shutting up the shop.
down to meet Ed on the boat at York Harbor. We hit Out on the slipway Baillieu found another beau-
it off with the Grants right away. They are a wonder- tiful Peter Kass creation, the 42' lobsterboat SALLY
ful couple, so friendly and informative and so happy in ROCHELLE , which was hauled out for a paint job. He

64 • WoodenBoat 227

BENITO_FINAL.indd 64 5/18/12 3:48 PM


W
was drawn to this boat, just as he had been to AGAMEN- ill and Sally flew back to Australia with their
TICUS. “When it was time to leave,” he said, “Pete sent minds pretty well made up. Even so, they were
us north to Camden, where he arranged for us to see both well aware of the downside. “There was
another of his boats, Chris Page’s ABIGAIL & CARTER . so much potential for this thing to run off the rails,”
Once again, here was a boat that took my eye.” From Will said. “How could we manage it from 12,000 miles
Camden, the Baillieus drove to Nova Scotia, visiting away? How well did we actually know Pete Kass, and
numerous builders of both fiberglass and wooden boats what if everything went wrong? What about the logistics
along the way. On that leg of their journey, they met a and costs of getting the boat back home to Australia?
young lobsterman, Chris Eager, who made them fresh What if the overall cost blew out beyond our means?
lobster rolls from his morning’s catch. “He owned a What if the exchange rate moved against us? There are
medium-sized boat,” Will said, “which was the second always lots of reasons for not doing something, but in
boat Pete Kass had ever built. He told me all he ever the end I was not looking for excuses. I was looking
wanted to do was be successful enough from lobstering for positives. Sometimes you just have to go with your
to get himself a full-sized Kass lobsterboat. We didn’t gut feeling and take a step into the unknown, otherwise
mention that we knew Peter Kass, but simply listened nothing interesting happens. It’s called trust, and it has
while this young man spoke admiringly of Pete and to go both ways.”
described his boats as ‘the Cadillacs of the Sea.’” Baillieu felt good about Kass. His personal and pro-
It was a description they would hear again and again. fessional reputation seemed unblemished. Atlantic lob-
Things were beginning to gel in Baillieu’s mind. “I’m stermen raved about his boats. Will had fallen hard for
almost 60,” he said, “and sometimes it takes a bit of old all the Kass boats he had seen. Pete didn’t have a boat
age and experience to recognize when you have an on order, so the timing was right. The exchange rate
opportunity staring you in the face. Many would miss for the Australian dollar was great. There were lots of
it, but I couldn’t help feeling that if I didn’t take this things saying “yes.” At that point Will says he reminded
chance, I might regret it for the rest of my life.” himself of his own motto: Nothing Happens Unless You
Make It Happen! “And so,” he said, “we decided to go
ahead. I rang Pete and said we wanted him to build us a
SALLY ROCHELLE boat. He replied, ‘Well, you sure will make a few people
helped to seal happy around here.’ I asked how he wanted to formal-
Will Baillieu’s ize our agreement, and he said he normally did that
faith in Pete with a handshake. I suggested we shake hands over the
Kass’s work. phone. That was good enough for Pete, and the deal
Chris Eager was done. We could sort out the details later.”
(inset) did, too;

P
he told the eter Kass lifts the lines of his lobsterboats from
Baillieus that his own half models. He agreed to stretch one
Kass’s boats of his 42-footers to 44' for the Baillieus and later
were “the arranged for naval architect Spencer Lincoln to do
Cadillacs of some scale drawings from the half model to help plan
the sea.” the layout. Early on, Pete had suggested that they could
WILL BAILLIEU (BOTH)

July/August 2012 • 65

BENITO_FINAL.indd 65 5/18/12 3:48 PM


SAM MurfITT
In September 2011, BENITO slid down the railway at
John’s Bay Boat Co. She was subsequently delivered on

WIll BAIllIeu
her own bottom to Baltimore, Maryland, where she was
loaded onto a ship for transport to Australia. Inset—The
John’s Bay crew admires BENITO, pre-launch.

communicate via Skype and discuss things face-to-face Will says he was even able to watch the seasons come
as construction progressed. Although Pete is not par- and go through the Skype camera, which was upstairs
ticularly computer savvy, his teenage daughter, Annie, in the Kass family’s home. “I could see a window behind
showed him how to go about it. “Our Skype sessions Pete when he sat at his desk,” he said, “and except for the
were pretty regular,” Will recalls. “One of us would dead of winter when it was dark and they were covered in
email the other and suggest a time. It was nearly always snow, I could see something of what it was like outside.
five in the morning in Maine, which was eight in the The face-to-face contact made an enormous difference.
evening at our home on Cape Schanck. Pete is an early I could see if Pete was tired or worried or happy. I felt a
riser, and he liked to get the sessions done so he could very important physical contact with him and the boat. I
walk across to the shop before his crew arrived. don’t think I could have done the project without it.”
“At first we would spend up to two hours at a time Will received by email scanned, handwritten invoices
going over the details. I usually wrote a list of items to for each fortnight’s work, with details of every purchase
be discussed, and Pete did the same. We became bet- and all hours worked. “I think Nina was the one doing
ter at it, and soon the sessions were more like an hour all the accounting,” Will said, “and it certainly made it
each time. We covered everything, and lots of decisions easy to keep track of the progressive cost. Pete always
were made via the Skype camera. I lost track of the gave me warning if there were larger items coming up
hours that were put into following up every decision. so I wouldn’t get too much of a shock. Along the way
There was an enormous amount to be done to keep there were some hiccups and changes of plan, but I
pace with Pete’s building schedule. I seemed to be for- always felt that Pete was in there batting for us. Some
ever parked at the computer, searching suppliers and things we asked for he said he could not buy because
prices, writing emails, and making orders. Pete’s wife, the price was just too high. He spent a lot of time find-
Nina, took lots of digital photographs, and these were ing alternatives that would be better or less expensive.”
emailed to me. If I needed to see something in particu- The next time Baillieu saw Kass was in April 2011,
lar, I requested it and Nina photographed and sent it. about halfway through the project. “I had followed
I really wanted to be there, and indeed, if I had been a everything closely up until then through Nina’s photo-
single man I couldn’t have stayed away. But the Skype graphs,” he said. “I thought I knew it pretty well, but
sessions were a pretty good compromise given that I nothing prepared me for what I saw when I walked
was needed at home with my family.” through the shop door. The boat looked enormous, far

66 • WoodenBoat 227

BENITO_FINALrev.indd 66 5/23/12 3:05 PM


T
bigger than I had imagined. But I know from experi- he Baillieus returned to Maine for the launch-
ence that boats seem to shrink after you have owned ing in late September 2011 and stayed for two
them for a while, so I just walked around, awestruck by weeks. “There was an absolute hive of activity
this beautiful wooden vessel. At that stage I did wonder around Pete’s yard,” Will recalls. “The boat filled the
whether I had bitten off more than I could chew.” entire shop, so much so that I had to squeeze past. It
Will’s ten-day visit was spent going over details with wasn’t until the day that we actually lowered her out of
Pete. “We marked out the wheelhouse arrangement,” the shed that I saw her for the first time in her entirety.
he said. “I chose equipment. I made decisions on every- As I watched the boat slowly emerging from the shop
thing from paint to upholstery and deck hardware. into the drizzling rain, I could feel my heart pounding.
Pete and I drove to Rockport to look at equipment. We My eyes went immediately to her sheerline to see if
visited Alex Martin, who would make the mast, galley she was a looker, and then that wonderful warm feel-
benches, and bow rails. We mocked up the wheelhouse ing of happiness rose up inside me when I saw that
seating and ended up basing it on the measurements of Peter had indeed got it exactly right. I should never
the booths at the tiny Harborside Café in South Bristol, have wondered. She was stunning.”
where we enjoyed many a grilled haddock sandwich. At the very beginning Kass gave Will Baillieu an
“The Grants came up to South Bristol from York estimate of the projected cost and the time of con-
one day, and Pete Kass produced a half-bushel of fresh struction. “The boat came in on time, on budget, and
clams that he and his foreman, Sam Jones, steamed in way beyond expectations,” Will said. “No one can ask
a pot over the huge woodstove. We sat around in the for more than that. I have never had any reason to
shop that afternoon with great friends, a trestle table regret the trust I placed in Pete Kass, and I hope he
full of food, and the fresh clams. Sally and I felt as can say the same about me.”
if we had been adopted as family members. I looked Over 100 people, mostly Kass boat owners and
around and thought, Life does not get much better their families and nearly all lobstermen, came for the
than this. It was so much more than a boatbuilding launching five days later at high tide. Will Baillieu
SAM MuRfITT

exercise. We ate lobsters and clams together and went was up on the bow when his wife christened the boat
walking to look at the bird life. We learned about the with champagne, and he only just managed to scram-
history of the place. We met many of the other Kass ble back to the helm as the boat hit the water. “My
boat owners, and we received generous hospitality. mind went blank at that point,” he said. “I thought,
The whole experience was life-changing. We both ‘What do I do now?’ Then one of Peter’s guys said very
feel we have left a piece of our hearts in South Bristol. calmly, ‘Let’s get her started!’ I gave a long blast on
There is certainly a large piece of Maine gracing the the twin air horns and fired her up. It was so exciting
waters off Sorrento.” to be driving the new boat. She felt just great.”

BENITO’s helm station, and a glimpse below. While Kass primarily builds workboats, his shop is no stranger to this level of finish. In
fact, many of his lobsterboat customers use their boats for pleasure, too, and finish them to a high standard.

PeTeR CHAMPION

July/August 2012 • 67

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BENITO BONITO
What’s in a name?
W

WIll BAIllIEu
hen the Portuguese pirate Benito Bonito
successfully plundered shipping off the
Pacific coast of South America in the
early 19th century, he was not alone. British pri-
vateers also preyed upon Spanish treasure ships The shrinkwrapped BENITO shortly after being unloaded
homeward-bound with their plunder from Peru- from the ship that carried her to Australia.
vian temples. Bonito is said to have seized an
English ship that had previously taken a Span-
ish prize whose treasures included an enormous Peter Kass now has five years of orders lined up for new
golden cross encrusted with precious gems. The boats (see accompanying article). “Maybe the chance we
booty was eventually brought to Port Phillip, the took with our decision to build BENITO at John’s Bay had
vast bay in southern Australia where the City of some bearing on this,” Will Baillieu says. “I like to think
Melbourne now stands. we helped, because high-quality wooden boat building
Queenscliff is a small town at the entrance to businesses are fast disappearing everywhere, and life-
Port Phillip Bay. In Benito Bonito’s time, the area time experience like Pete’s can never be replaced.”
around Queenscliff was a wild landscape inhab-

A
ited only by Aboriginal tribesmen. An escaped week after the Baillieus returned home to
convict, the Englishman William Buckley, who Australia, Pete Kass and two of his crew, Andy
had lived with the Aborigines for some 30 years, Dickens and Andy Angelico, took the boat 600
watched and listened as the foreign-speaking miles south to Baltimore in a window of good weather.
pirates brought boxes ashore and buried them. There they prepared the boat for shipping, overseeing
Bonito sailed on to continue his piracy but was a lift to the dock and then cleaning and shrink-wrapping
killed soon after in an action with a British man- her after she was secured in a custom-built steel cradle.
of-war. Buckley told his story to the first white The boat was then loaded inside a roll-on, roll-off cargo
settlers at Queenscliff, and since that time there ship and taken through the Panama Canal and across
have been countless unsuccessful searches for the the Pacific, a six-week trip that ended in Appleton
treasure. The searches are still going on. Dock, Melbourne. There she was lowered into the Yarra
The Baillieu family started life in Australia as River still in her white shrink-wrap and towed to
humble fishermen in 1854, when Will Baillieu’s Hobson’s Bay, where she was unwrapped and her engine
great-grandfather James, a seaman, jumped ship started. “That,” said Will Baillieu, “was a truly amazing
in Port Phillip. Sixteen children were born in the feeling. A great day to remember.”
tiny family cottage at Queenscliff. One of them
was Baillieu’s great-uncle Willy, a prize fighter Bruce Stannard is a regular contributor to WoodenBoat.
and government boatman who left home to seek
his fortune in Melbourne. Years later when Willy
returned a wealthy man, the suspicious local The Baillieu family aboard. Will is behind the camera.
fishermen began to speculate that he must have
found Bonito’s treasure. The rumors were given
credence by Willy’s friendship with a strange old
man, Giovanni Carrosini, known locally as Kero-
sine Jack, who was said to have been left ashore as
a boy to guard Bonito’s treasure. It was believed
that one of Jack’s many tattoos held the key to the
secret location of the buried treasure.  
Years ago, when Baillieu was building a Couta
Boat at Newhaven on Phillip Island, a couple of
local fishermen came into his shed uninvited
and proceeded to look the boat over in silence.
As they were leaving, one of them turned to Will
and asked, “What are you going to call her, Benito
Bonito?” The name of his beautiful new boat is a
WIll BAIllIEu

sardonic wink and a nod in the direction of that


hoary old chestnut. —BS

68 • WoodenBoat 227

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Catching Up with Peter K ass by Matthew P. Murphy
Thirty years of wooden lobsterboats Photographs by Sam Murfitt

T
hree years ago, for the first winter since open- the shop had had only a few repair jobs, Kass and his
ing its doors for business in 1983, John’s Bay Boat wife, Nina, spent the bulk of that season building their
Co. didn’t have a new-boat customer. “In the own 24' lobsterboat of Kass’s design, and by spring-
winter of 2009–10, we basically closed,” says Peter Kass, time, as that boat neared completion, “we had people
the company’s founder. “I had to lay everyone off.” The knocking on the door for repair.” And then Will Bail-
recession had hit the South Bristol, Maine, shop, and lieu came calling from Australia with an order for a 44'
hit it hard. yacht (see article, page 62), and the company’s fortunes
I visited Peter Kass at his shop in April this year, just suddenly reversed. Kass hired back his crew, Sam Jones
days after the launch of his 63rd boat—a beautifully and Andy Dickens, launched his own boat, and put his
proportioned 38-footer called DELUSIONAL . I hadn’t shoulder to the wheel on new orders. He also hired two
spoken with Peter since the autumn of ’09, when he more crew: Andy Angelico and David Severance. Today,
called me with the grim forecast for the coming winter. John’s Bay Boat Co. is again thriving, with orders for
During our recent visit, Peter seemed undaunted, in seven boats to build—six of them working lobsterboats
retrospect, by his shop’s uncharacteristically slow pace of at least 42' LOA , and the other a yacht in the 36'–38'
three years previous, recalling that “We had a nice win- range. And there’s an inquiry for another yacht from a
ter. I didn’t expect to enjoy it as much as I did.” While potential customer in Austria.

Above—Peter Kass, proprietor of John’s Bay Boat Co. in South Bristol, Maine, recently received his 70th lobsterboat order.
The Company has been in business for 30 years.

July/August 2012 • 69

Kass_07.indd 69 5/18/12 2:43 PM


Which means that, when this current run of orders seeking work. In his travels, he visited the Harvey Gam-
is complete, Kass will have launched 70 wooden boats age shipyard in South Bristol, which was soon to begin
in just over 30 years, and most of them will have been construction of the schooner APPLEDORE II. The keel
ordered by famously discriminating users of working would be laid on January 1, and Kass was offered a job
wooden boats. This raises several questions: How did a on the building crew, which he accepted without hesi-
kid from landlocked Arlington, Massachusetts, come to tation. “That was a good opportunity,” Kass says. The
be one of the premier builders of wooden lobsterboats pace of the work was fast, and the vessel was launched
on the Maine coast? Why do some experienced fisher- in August that year. “It was going to be all steel draggers
men favor wooden hulls over fiberglass ones? And what after that,” Kass said of Gamage’s future work, “and I
is it about a Kass lobsterboat that makes it so...so right didn’t have any interest in those.” So he went to Goudy
from every angle? and Stevens in East Boothbay.
In its 80-odd years of business, Goudy and Stevens

P
eter Kass finished high school in 1977. He was (see WB No. 166) built everything from Alden yachts to
good with his hands, but didn’t care for the class- Navy minesweepers, and specialized in sawn-frame ves-
room, and was considering enrolling in a boat- sels. In Kass’s short time there, he learned invaluable
building school when he found work in the Urbanna, lessons by repairing “a lot of big ol’ wooden draggers.”
Virginia, shop of Joe Conboy. “Joe offered us work From Goudy and Stevens, Kass went to work in the
experience instead of us having to pay for school,” Kass Round Pond, Maine, shop of Bruce Cunningham,
says of the gang of young “apprentices” in that shop. building a 31' Atkin cutter that would circumnavigate
“We were such cheap labor that he had us straightening the globe. He did a lot of repairwork on the side, and
nails when things were slow.” But this youthful group— built three peapods. With his skills honed, his confi-
“cons,” they called themselves in deference to their dence boosted, and his nascent customer base estab-
employer’s surname—also built and repaired boats, lished, he one day declared: “I could do this myself.”
and learned the ways of a working boatyard. “Prime shorefront was already pretty expensive,”
Armed with these months of experience and itching Kass says of the Maine real-estate market in the early
to be an “ex-con”—to try something else—Kass spent 1980s. Looking out over the small, spruce-fringed bay
that year’s Christmas holiday driving the Maine coast that his 5 acres abut, he smiles the smile of a contented

Peter Kass in the shop. John’s Bay lobsterboats are framed in white oak and planked in Maine cedar.

70 • WoodenBoat 227

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Peter Kass lobsterboats have become so popular with Stonington, Maine, fishermen that they rate their own division in the
town’s annual lobsterboat races. Here, three Kass boats vie for the finish line.

man and says, “But you could buy this backwater stuff Kass says. In fact, Kass’s design aspirations caused a rift
pretty cheap. Best deal of my life.” Up went a shop, between the two men, though the division was healed
and down went a set of inexpensive skids leading into by the time Lowell died in 1997.
shallows of John’s Bay. How did he learn, then? Was it purely by observation?
By books? “Observation,” Kass said. “That’s the key to

“W
e built a lot of little boats,” Kass says of his it. If you see a nice boat, study it. See why it’s nice.” Kass
first three years in business. These ranged has clearly studied a lot of boats, and seen why they’re
from a Whitehall pulling boat to a 24' nice. His designs are beautifully proportioned, and are
cruiser. “Our first big break was a 42' Carroll Lowell finely detailed without being overwrought. During our
lobsterboat in 1986.” Carroll Lowell was the grandson visit, I asked him if he could distill the elements of a
of Will “Pappy” Frost, roundly considered to be the Kass boat, but soon realized that I was asking him for
dean of Maine lobsterboat builders—a mantle Car- a formula that doesn’t exist. A typical Kass boat has a
roll assumed with the establishment of his Even Keel carefully eyed sheerline, a perfectly proportioned “eye-
Marine in Yarmouth, Maine, in 1963, where he built brow” overhang protruding forward of the pilothouse,
to the designs of his brother, Royal—and later, in the a flared bow, a gentle tumblehome aft, and a low-slung
1980s and ’90s, to his own designs. Like Kass, Lowell trunk cabin that fits so well it looks as if it grew there. It
had been born in Massachusetts—in Medford, just 3 has custom metalwork, including bow chocks cast to a
miles from Kass’s hometown. In 1986, Lowell had an pattern Kass developed when he couldn’t find aestheti-
inquiry for a 42-footer, but didn’t want to take on so cally and functionally appropriate stock hardware. It
large a project. He nominated Kass for the job, because also has a Kass-designed rudderport, designed to not
Kass’s work had impressed him over the past several loosen under load and start leaking. But a Kass boat is
years. That boat, SHARON ROSEANN, was launched something more than the sum of these things. There’s
on a railway Kass built at his shop in 1984, and is still a transcendent whole here, a look and style developed
working from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, with the by an intuitive grasp of proportion, detail, and func-
original owner’s son. tion that wasn’t absorbed in a classroom, but rather was
On the heels of that first boat came a 38-footer, learned though experience, through the hands.
DESERET, for John Karbott in Massachusetts. It wouldn’t Kass struggled with my question about the elements
be long before Kass began designing boats himself. Did of his boats for a moment, and then we let it go. Per-
Carroll critique his early designs? I wondered. “No,” haps a better way to determine what draws a person

July/August 2012 • 71

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to a custom wooden lobsterboat designed and built by there are seven Kass boats in the robust Stonington
John’s Bay Boat Co. is to ask the customer. fleet, including that of Bob Williams’s son, John Wil-
liams—a 41-footer called KRISTY MICHELLE built in

N
athan Jones, Kass tells me, says he’d be out of 1994. And soon there will be several more, including a
business if it weren’t for his move from a fiber- 44-footer for John Williams, which will be the next boat
glass hull to a Kass-built wooden boat. It’s a built at John’s Bay.
common sentiment for Kass’s working fishermen cus- Although we didn’t get into actual numbers, given
tomers, who outnumber his pleasure-boat customers the custom nature of his work, Kass was frank about
considerably. The reason is simple: A wooden boat, his position in the lobsterboat market: “We cannot
these fishermen say, is easier on the body than a fiber- compete with a fiberglass boat with stock molded
glass one. parts. But for a high-end custom-finished ’glass boat,
Bob Williams of Stonington, Maine, had always we’re about the same.” Naturally, thoughts then turn
had wooden boats before buying a fiberglass 35-footer to the differences in maintenance between the fiber-
about two decades ago. “I thought, less maintenance...,” glass boat and the wooden one. Kass maintains a num-
he recalls of that decision to transition to ’glass. But, ber of the boats he’s built—as well as lobsterboats
“it bothered my legs. You get a lot of vibration [from built elsewhere. He dismisses concerns over the cost
the engine], and wood absorbs the vibration. Fiber- of this being excessive. “It’s $5,000 for a shave and a
glass transmits the vibration. You get a hum at different haircut in the spring,” he says. He also notes that the
rpms of the engine. It bothers many guys’ legs,” he said, seakeeping abilities of his wooden boats allow extra
observing that he’s seen this often in fishermen as they fishing days in conditions that might jar the bones of
reach age 50. a person working a fiberglass hull, and this offsets the
“I was desperate for a wooden boat. I hunted around cost of maintenance.
for secondhand ones. I was going to have a fellow on The planking in a John’s Bay lobsterboat is of cedar,
the island [Deer Isle] build a boat, and I got the cedar and it’s Maine grown. Despite anecdotal reports of
and oak together. Then I learned about Kass. I hauled diminished quality of timber over the years, Kass says
my material down there in 1989, and he built mine that that it’s actually been consistently good over all the
winter.” That boat, JAMIE K , was the first Kass boat to years he’s been building, and it remains so now. The
fish out of Stonington. “‘I was reborn,’” Kass recalls same appears to be true for the white oak, of which
Williams saying of the boat’s effect on his health. Now Kass has enough stockpiled for the keels, frames, stems,

MY DIVA , built by Peter Kass in 2004, is run by Joel Billings of Stonington, Maine. Here, with spectators aboard, she’s
attending the 2011 Stonington lobsterboat races.

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MATTHEW P. MUrPHY

Peter Kass’s latest launching, the 38’ DELUSIONAL , lying at the Harvey Gamage Shipyard in South Bristol, Maine; she’s
receiving her finishing touches from the John’s Bay crew.

and other timbers of two more 42-footers. This he gets Keurig coffeemaker. “We don’t usually do Corian coun-
from a sawmill in Connecticut. Some of his boats are tertops,” said Kass as he pointed out galley details.
given shaftlogs of angelique, rather than of white oak, We poked our heads into the engine space, which
if they’re to be run in areas where marine borers—the was operating-room clean. Later, while standing on the
dreaded teredo and gribble—wreak their havoc. “We float as we regarded the boat’s shape, Kass directed my
used to line the shaftlogs of the boats,” says Kass, “but attention to the exhaust port in the transom. “You can
it’s easier to just use a resistant species.” buy one off the shelf,” he said, “but with the transom
The decks of Kass’s boats vary with their intended rake it’s going to be the wrong angle. Why not weld a
use and the tastes of the owners. For many, Kass flange onto a piece of pipe and get just the right angle?”
rips vertical-grain Douglas-fir dimensional lumber That’s what he’d done here, not because he had to, but
into planks for stable and durable laid and caulked because it’s just a little bit better this way.
decks. Other decks are built of plywood and epoxy. That, it seems, is Peter Kass’s point of difference:
And still others—including his own—are built of laid People buy his boats because he takes the time to build
iroko, a species that he says “would fool a lot of people them a little bit better than they have to be. Some
that it’s teak”—while costing about one quarter the fishermen buy them because they’re easy on the body.
board foot price of the better-known species. Kass is And other owners buy them because they’re a good
resourceful—but he is so in the name of quality, and value and rewarding to maintain. But I think Peter was
not at the expense of it. on to a deeper truth when he looked at the new boat,
smiled, excused himself for sounding boastful, and

K
ass’s resourcefulness became most evident when said, “They’re good looking.”
we visited aboard the newly launched DELU- “It’s an emotional response, isn’t it,” I asked rhetori-
SIONAL , which was floating at the docks of the cally.
Harvey Gamage Shipyard, just steps from the shed that And he said, “I think that’s a big part of the reason
housed the job that brought Kass to Maine all those years people buy them.”
ago. Kass is an even-keeled man, but his tempo increased
as we approached the boat. We visited below, where I was Matthew P. Murphy is editor of WoodenBoat.
surprised and delighted at the level of fit and finish—
varnished mahogany deckbeams, shower, bolted-down An earlier article on John’s Bay Boat Co. appeared in WB No. 115.

July/August 2012 • 73

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IN FOCUS

The 88' ketch SINCERITY was designed by Vincenzo Baglietto and built by the Baglietto yard in Italy in 1928.
Refurbished in 1998 (see WB No. 188) and sailed for years from Oslo, Norway, she now hails from Camden, Maine.

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The 72' ketch EILEAN was designed an built by Fife in 1936, and relaunched in 2009 after a two-and-a-half-year restoration.
She’s owned by the watch company Panerei, sponsor of the Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta. “It’s such a commitment to
classic yachting,” says Cory Silken, “for a sponsor to find a boat and have it restored.”

Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta


Photographs by Cory Silken
Text by Matthew P. Murphy

C
ory Silken began shooting classic yachts profes- Opera House Cup in Nantucket, the following year.
sionally in 2001 but had discovered cameras Editorial and advertising commissions followed.
years earlier when he was in the eighth grade. In the spring of 2003, he attended and photo-
“I came to photography through the Boy Scouts,” he graphed his first Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta, and
says. “It was a great way to show family and friends hasn’t missed the annual event since then. Antigua
where I was going and what I was doing. I blame my Classics,” says Cory, “is certainly a special event. A lot
parents for the sailing. I’ve been sailing since I was of the people down there are liveaboards...and there
less than nine months old—first on the southern Mas- are more larger yachts than at other classic yachting
sachusetts coast, and later in Newport, Rhode Island.” events.”
During his college years, Cory drove a launch in Antigua, a former British colony, is a sort of cross-
Newport, and later worked on the vintage 12-meter roads, for it attracts sailors and classic yachts from
sloops INTREPID and HERITAGE. Those sailing jobs both Europe and North America. “It seems to be the
were his entree into the world of classic yachts, and event,” says Cory, “that classic yachts look to as the
he’s never looked back: He was graduating college debut for a restoration or new construction.” On the
with a degree in economics just as the dot-com bubble following pages are just a few of the hundreds of
was bursting, so realized he “wasn’t missing any oppor- images Cory made at the 2012 Antigua Classic Yacht
tunities there.” He opened his photography business Regatta—and a small sample of the 55 boats that
right out of college and shot his first regatta, the 2002 sailed in the event.

July/August 2012 • 75

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IN FOCUS

Above—DORADE, Olin Stephens’s


breakthrough 52' yawl, debuted
her new spars and fresh
refurbishing at this year’s Antigua
Classics. At press time, she’ll
have just finished the Bermuda
Race, and will be preparing for the
Transpac.

Above—LONE FOX, a 65' teak-hulled ketch,


was designed by Robert Clark and built
in 1957 by the Scottish yard Alexander
Robertson & Sons. Her original owner was
Col. Bill Whitbread, original sponsor of the
eponymous around-the-world race (now the
Volvo Ocean Race).

Right—Alexis Andrews had the Carriacou


sloop GENESIS built in 2005 (see WB
No. 221), and has helped to lead a
resurgence of interest in the type with
his books Vanishing Ways and Genesis.
A photographer in his own right, he was
also one of Cory Silken’s first customers.
Andrews is at work on an arresting film
on the history and legacy of these boats, a
trailer for which may be viewed
at woodenboat.com.

76 • WoodenBoat 227

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IN FOCUS

Above—The Fife cutter TUIGA was shipped to Antigua for this year’s Classics regatta—her first.
“Obviously,” says Cory Silken, “this is not a boat you could take out for an afternoon cruise with
a couple of friends.” She finished second in class, bested by the Fife yawl MARIELLA and, in a
true act of sportsmanship, her crew stood and saluted MARIELLA’s during the prizegiving.

Above—The Gannon & Benjamin–built, Nat Benjamin–designed schooner JUNO sails to leeward of the first-rule 12-Meter
yawl KATE. JUNO was launched in 2003. KATE was launched in 2006 as a yellow sloop, and profiled in WB No.197.

Cory Silken recently opened a gallery in Newport, Rhode Island. For details, visit www.corysilken.com.

July/August 2012 • 77

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The Ranger
Class

A wholesome sloop from Sydney by John D. Little

ELISA KREY
T
he soaring sails of Sydney’s Opera House and designer Cliff Gale was happy to give a set of plans to
the distinctive “coathanger” bridge are icons of anyone who asked for them. At least twelve Rangers have
this Australian city’s harbor. A yachtsman who been built—one of them fairly recently—and there are
appreciates wooden boats might well add a third item rumors (hard to pin down) of one or two more that
to that list: the Ranger-class sloop. Everyone who sails may have been built without acknowledgment.
on the harbor knows the Rangers. Generally around This isn’t a strict one-design class; no two of these
24' long, with signature raised decks, large cockpits, boats are exactly alike. RANGER , for example, was
generous beam, heavy displacement, gaff rig, and vir- launched with a centerboard, as was VAGRANT, built in
tually no overhangs, they are not exactly greyhounds 1935. They were the only two centerboarders, and both
of the sea. In fact, I have heard them described, affec- were later converted to have fixed keels, in side-by-side
tionately, as “tubby.” Yet there is a mystique surround- projects in Vic Hoyle’s boatshed at Drummoyne, on
ing them that you normally associate with far more Sydney Harbour. In the early 1950s, Cliff Gale changed
glamorous yachts. RANGER’s lug rig to gaff.
RANGER , the boat for which the class was named, RANGER bears sail number A1, and has raced with
was launched in 1933 off the beach in front of Billy the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club (aka the Amateurs;
Fisher’s yard at Botany Bay, and rigged with a standing see sidebar) for 78 years. She has always been cited as
lug mainsail and a non-overlapping jib. In the years to the first of the line, but that, as we shall see, is a subject
come, her racing success begat new constructions, and of some argument.

Above—The Ranger-class sloop CheRub (A4) in her element on Sydney harbour, Australia. The class debuted in 1933 with the
launch of the eponymous RANGeR.

78 • WoodenBoat 227

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PETER GROuT COLLECTION (BOTH)

Cliff Gale designed RANGER (A1) for cruising, motoring,


fishing, and exploring. Here, he motors the boat on Cowan
Water, 17 miles north of Sydney. Little did he know that this
boat, launched with a lug rig (left), would give rise to an
iconic racing fleet in Sydney.

canoes made of unbleached calico stretched over light


wooden frames. Their centerboards were fashioned
from purloined metal display boards. The signs adver-
tising FRY’S COCOA were highly prized, being closest to
the right shape and size.
Cliff took part in his first canoe race when he was eight.
At ten he was crewing in 6' skiffs, tiny versions of the famous
Australian 18' skiffs (see WB No. 222). He graduated from
those boats to 8- and 10-footers—the latter being freakish
and notoriously difficult to handle. Their masts were over
20' high, and they carried 16' bowsprits and 18' booms.
Their spinnaker poles were as long as 22', and it took five
highly skilled sailors to keep them from capsizing.
As Cliff grew up he spent long hours rowing around
the harbor, tracking pieces of wood to see how the

R
acing was the last thing on Cliff Gale’s mind tides behaved. Local knowledge gained this way would
when he designed RANGER . He wanted an all- become a big factor in his later success as a racing skip-
round boat—one that would be good for fish- per. When he was 14 he started making model sailboats
ing, motoring, picnicking, short hops, and exploring in order to teach himself yacht design. He told his son
the east coast river systems. Bill that he’d made 150 of them, and after five years of
Although he had no competitive ambitions for it, he knew all he needed to know. At age 21 Cliff bought
RANGER , Cliff did love his racing, and he was very his first boat, the 17' LORELEI. Two years later he joined
good at it. He was born in 1886 at the harborside sub- the Amateurs and began his long and successful racing
urb of Balmain. The first boats he built were sailing career with that club.

July/August 2012 • 79

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RANGER, under her present-day gaff rig, on
Sydney Harbour with Bill Gale at the helm.
She’s raced with the Sydney Amateurs for
78 years.

Roger, took over. Roger died in 1994. Bill


is now 85. RANGER has not missed a sea-
son to this day. Even now, she still does
very well in her traditional division.

S
imon Sadubin, a respected Sydney-
based wooden boat builder (see
WB No. 197), owns a later Ranger
named ETRENNE, built in 1946. He has
done extensive research into RANGER’s
genesis, and points out that if you look
at WANDERER and KAROO, you can
trace the evolution that culminated in
RANGER in 1933. WANDERER was a 26'
raised-decker that Cliff sold soon after
launching because she did not perform
as well as he wanted. His next boat,
KAROO, was a 20' centerboarder, created
because Cliff wanted a boat that he could
nose up onto the beach instead of having
to anchor and row the family back and
forth in the dinghy. “She’s a classic Gale
shape,” says Sadubin, “a lovely, dishy, Syd-
ney Harbour shape, with more of a skiff
influence than RANGER .”
KAROO still survives as a raised-deck
launch. In her day she had a reputation as
a nimble sailer, but her flush deck limited
her accommodation. Sadubin speculates
that Cliff used her as a starting point,
ELISA KREY

keeping the shallow-draft centerboard


configuration, and adding the raised
deck that had been such a success on
WANDERER . Sadubin says that “RANGER
Cliff owned 27 boats in his lifetime. Four of them— is a bigger, deeper version of KAROO. The deeper ’mid-
VAGABOND II (ca. 1915), WANDERER (1921), KAROO ship section has more deadrise than KAROO and is a
(1930), and RANGER (1933)—he designed himself. For more powerful shape. This gives the hull more inter-
other sailors, he designed MALUKA , a larger version nal accommodation. This easy ’midship section blends
of RANGER , and MATHANA , a RANGER derivative, for
ocean cruising. Bill Gale also remembers a steel boat,
a little smaller than the 35' MATHANA , that his father
designed just after World War II. None of Cliff’s boats What Is a Scratch Boat?
satisfied him, however, until he launched RANGER in
1933. She incorporated all of the ideas he had been
forming over nearly half a century. “This one really is
W hen dissimilar boats race against each other,
the slower boats are given a time allowance
to compensate for differences in potential speed.
A1,” Cliff famously declared. The elapsed times of these boats on the race-
When RANGER was launched, Cliff was skippering course are “corrected” at race’s end, in order to
the Fife Eight-Meter JOSEPHINE in Royal Sydney Yacht determine the winner. Any of a number of rules
Squadron races. In his three years with that boat, he may be applied to calculate this time difference,
never lost his scratch position (see sidebar). When his but every fleet, no matter what rule it sails under,
stint with JOSEPHINE ended he had no other boat to has a so-called “scratch boat.” The scratch boat is
race, so he turned to RANGER. For a humble cruising the fastest boat in the fleet, and thus has no time
boat, RANGER turned out to be remarkably successful in allowance; its elapsed time on the course is equal
competition. Cliff raced her continuously with the Ama- to its corrected time. —Eds.
teurs from 1937 to 1966, with a break during the war.
When Cliff retired, Bill, and occasionally his brother,

80 • WoodenBoat 227

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Ranger lines show a combination
of elements that make the class
both seaworthy and fast: A fine
entry, firm midship sections
for stability, and steeply rising
buttock lines for clean water
flow aft. She was designed by
instinct and eye using a carved
half model.
SIMON SAdUBIN

with buttock lines which rise up well to the transom to boats from half models, which he shaped by eye. Bill
release water easily. KAROO was full-bodied up forward, Gale has the half model of RANGER and also a set of
which is very much the basis for RANGER.” plans that he believes were drawn by a friend of Cliff’s,
As was common practice in the 1930s, Cliff built his the naval architect Archie Barber. Simon Sadubin and
fellow shipwright Ian Smith lifted the lines off the half
model and off RANGER herself. By comparing these two
sets of lines with the plans reputedly drawn by Archie
Barber, Sadubin has been able to speculate on how
the design further evolved during RANGER’s construc-
tion, for the actual boat differed slightly from the half
model. The model shows a flush-decked hull. The plans
show the actual raised-deck profile. The shape was then
further refined during construction as Billy Fisher set
up her molds, as it was common in those days for owner,
designer, and builder each to put in their ideas during
construction.
RANGER is typically credited with being the first of
the line. However, according to records in the Austra-
lian National Maritime Museum, a near sister, MALUKA ,
was launched in late 1932. RANGER was launched the
following year. If you define a Ranger as the standard
24-footer, then you could argue that RANGER was the
prototype for the boats to follow. On the other hand,
there’s no denying that the quite-similar MALUKA
was the first boat of the series to be launched. It’s a

While RANGER is roundly credited with being the first boat


JOHN JEREMy

of the class, MALUKA, seen here, was launched first, in 1932,


and is 4’ longer than the standard Ranger. Her voyaging
adventures in the 1930s are legendary.

July/August 2012 • 81

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The Sydney Amateur Sailing Club
The fleet of Rangers lined up at
the docks of the Sydney Amateur
Sailing Club.

It was described by the Sydney


Morning Herald as “a most com-
modious 60' × 40' and well
appointed building, certainly
the best boatshed in Sydney.
It is of two stories, being con-
structed of wood and iron and
has two splendid balconies…
the two larger balconies will
be found of great convenience
for the hanging and drying of
sails.”
Bennelong Point was too
valuable to remain long in

jOHN jErEMy
the hands of a humble sail-
ing club. Soon after the club-
house was completed, a letter
from the Colonial Secretary

I
f you want to race a traditional boat in Sydney, informed them that the land was required for the
the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club is the one to development of Circular Quay, the site of today’s
join. A strong fleet of classics exists happily here ferry terminus. The club unhappily accepted £650
alongside their modern counterparts. The club- compensation and began looking for another site. It
house is an unremarkable structure at Mosman Bay, turned out to be a very long search. It was not until
one of Sydney’s most exclusive suburbs. The origin 1962 that the club purchased The Cremorne Club
of the Amateurs, however, was strictly blue collar. and an adjoining boatshed at Mosman Bay, opposite
The club was founded in 1872 by a bunch of rec- Bennelong Point.
reational fishermen who would sail to a renowned As clubhouses go, the Amateurs’ is not fancy; it
bream and snapper ground in Middle Harbour, could easily be mistaken for a private home. There
known as The Blackwall. To make life interesting, are no slips, and boats are hauled on an old-fashioned
the “Blackwall Boys,” as they were called, would race slipway whose days are numbered due to today’s strict
home, often wagering a few shillings on the out- anti-pollution laws—though the club has approval for
come. They eventually began calling themselves the a modern hardstand to replace this feature. There
Blackwall Sailing Club. are only a few paid staff, and much of the mainte-
These open-boat enthusiasts, along with a sprin- nance is carried out by volunteers. Nowadays, nobody
kling of yacht owners, eventually began holding cares what members do for a living.
dedicated races, and in October 1872 they formed The membership has remained steady for decades
The Sydney Amateur Sailing Club. There were other at around 400. Cliff Gale, who was an honorary life
more elaborate yacht clubs in Sydney, but almost all member, is often held up as an exemplar of the
the open-boat racing in the late 1800s was carried club’s spirit. In one notable incident, he and another
out by the Amateurs. Eight years after the club’s member, Stanley Spain, leading the rest of the fleet,
founding, in an effort to limit the expense of hav- were beating to the finish in a howling westerly when
ing paid professionals aboard racing boats, the rules Cliff’s tiller broke. Stan immediately luffed up and
were amended to exclude “all fishermen, oystermen, threw him a spare tiller, shouting, “See if this fits.”
boatbuilders, sailmakers and persons gaining or It did, and they raced on neck-and-neck. Cliff just
having gained their living on the water…” beat Stan to the finish, but instead of crossing the
The club’s early meetings were held at various line, he sailed on the wrong side of the committee
hotels around the city, but in 1879 the Amateurs were boat, allowing MISCHIEF to get the gun. Telling the
granted land at Bennelong Point, where the Sydney story in 1950 on the occasion of Cliff’s retirement
Opera House now stands. Four years later a club- as Commodore, Stan Spain commented, “Nothing
house financed by members’ donations was built. more need be said.”

82 • WoodenBoat 227

Ranger_FINAL.indd 82 5/21/12 5:18 PM


The Intuition of Cliff Gale

C
liff Gale spent all of his 81 years around salt
water. He left school at 11 and eventually
became a dental mechanic—a dental techni-
cian in modern parlance. He had a poor grasp of
mathematics and no formal training in yacht design,
yet he had an uncanny ability to look at a boat’s lines
and sail plan and alter them to improve performance.
A celebrated case was the 32' yacht HOANA . In
the staggered starts of the Amateurs A-class races,
in which slower boats are sent off ahead of faster
ones, she was so slow that her rating had her starting
14 minutes ahead of the scratch boat. Owner Lex

PETER GROUT COLLECTION


Buckle asked Cliff if he could make her go faster.
Bill Gale remembers that whenever his father went
to look at a boat he would take a sheet of cardboard
and a stick of chalk with him. “He’d get someone to
hold up the cardboard and he’d draw an outline on
it and say, add this, or else he’d draw on the hull and
say, cut away here.”
The club handicapper, Walter Dendy, warned Cliff Gale at the helm of RanGeR.
Cliff not to take on HOANA . “We’ve all tried, and
the boat just won’t go,” he said, but Cliff went ahead
anyway. After some tweaking below the waterline, Within a month, HOANA , with Cliff skippering,
he told her owner she must have a new suit of sails. went from a handicap of 14 minutes to scratch. “It
The sailmaker strongly disagreed with Cliff’s ideas, was all intuitive,” says his proud son, Bill. “It was by
but Cliff quietly insisted that they be cut his way. the seat of his pants.” —JL

discussion that generates some heat among Ranger northern headland of Sydney Harbour, they noticed a
owners. boat that had been driven hard against the rocks and
At 28', MALUKA is bigger than a standard Ranger. was sinking. While attempting to rescue the two men on
Cliff Gale designed her for the Clark brothers, a cou- board, VAGRANT also struck bottom. The three Lang-
ple of ex-graziers, as ranchers are called in Australia, mans had to abandon ship but were quickly rescued by
who had moved to Sydney and wanted to do some a passing naval vessel. Although VAGRANT was badly
ocean cruising. Which they did: 3,400 nautical miles damaged, the insurers elected to rebuild her. Shortly
to Cooktown in northern Queensland and return, fol- after she was relaunched, Langman’s father was posted
lowed by a cruise to Lord Howe Island, 370 miles east to far northern Queensland. So the boat was sold.
of the Australian mainland. On the return leg they “I remember the day she sailed away,” he recalls. “I
recorded in their journal that “the wind became excep- started crying then, and I think I cried for a month.”
tionally strong.” The jib shredded, and they were forced About 20 years later, in 1993, Langman woke up one
to heave-to under storm sail and sea anchor. Despite night after having a vivid dream about VAGRANT.
having green water filling the cockpit, the boat came He supposes he must have caught a glimpse of her
through unscathed. on the harbor recently. He tracked down the owner.
Next the Clarks attempted to sail to Tasmania. In When Langman told VAGRANT’s owner who he was,
Bass Strait they were battered by another storm, and the owner replied, “I knew you’d get in touch with me
MALUKA was driven ashore. They cut off the keel, one day.”
patched the hull, refloated her, and limped round to VAGRANT was in a sorry state. She had rot, broken
the Snowy River where they patched her back together. frames, and maladies that readers of this magazine
After a refit in Sydney, they tried again a year later and have heard many times. These days Sean Langman
made it to Hobart and back. owns a thriving group of boatyards and shipyards oper-
ating in three states. Back then he was struggling to

S
ean Langman is a world-class helmsman best build the business. He was sailing Olympic classes,
known for skippering state-of-the art maxi-yachts. skiffs, and ocean racers, but he’d never lost his emo-
When he was growing up, the family boat was a tional attachment to VAGRANT, and getting her back
Ranger named VAGRANT. In the winter of 1973 Sean, held deep significance for him. “It was a real turning
then aged eleven, and his brother Rory, nine, set off point in my life. I’d had my business then for 10 years.
with their father, Peter, to sail from Pittwater down the I knew about hard work. I just had this belief that I was
coast to Sydney, a 17-mile passage. As they rounded the working toward doing what I’d always wanted to do. For

July/August 2012 • 83

Ranger_FINAL.indd 83 5/21/12 5:18 PM


joHN jEREMY
CHERUB (A4) was launched with a lug rig, but this was converted to Bermudan in the 1960s, and then to gaff in 2007. Under
the latest rig, she is faster around the course than she was in earlier years.

The Virtues of Gaff Rig

C HERUB was built by Billy Fisher in 1948 for


a well-known yachting writer, Lou d’Alpuget.
At first she had a lug-rigged mainsail, just
as Cliff Gale had originally designed for RANGER .
D’Alpuget soon replaced it with gaff rig. In the early
jib up to 20 knots. With a Bermudan rig, with its
high center of effort, it will just heel over and dig
a hole.”
In 2007 CHERUB’s latest owners, Peter Scott and
Mark Pearse, converted her back to gaff. Before set-
1960s he asked the naval architect Alan Payne to tling on the exact dimensions of the rig they con-
design a Bermudan rig. Under the new rig, CHERUB sulted Payne’s nephew, David Payne, to make sure
was beaten by RANGER more often than not. After the boat would balance, bearing in mind Lexcen’s
a few more years, d’Alpuget asked Ben Lexcen (see underwater modifications. David gave the rig his
WB No. 205) for help. Lexcen cut away a big sec- okay but suggested they lengthen the bowsprit. Says
tion of deadwood aft to reduce wetted surface and Scott: “The boat always had quite a bit of weather
make the boat come about faster. He made the rig helm. The first time out with the gaff rig she bal-
taller and added lead bulbs to either side of the exist- anced beautifully. You could take your hands off the
ing keel to counter the increased heeling moment. tiller going to windward.”
The alterations made CHERUB the faster of the two Under her new rig (or should we say her old
boats, in all but strong winds. one?) the boat is minutes faster around the buoys.
Bill Gale maintains, as did his father, that a full- Formerly, they would have to think about reefing at
bodied heavy boat like R ANGER needs a gaff rig, 15 knots, as the boat would start to heel over and
with its low center of effort, to drive her. “You can slip sideways. Now they regularly sail in 30 knots
carry full main in R ANGER with a number three without a reef. —JL

84 • WoodenBoat 227

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ELISA KREy
This interior view of KILKIE shows the spartan though spacious accommodations of the Ranger-class sloop—as well as the
heavy scantlings. Built in 1940, KILKIE is perhaps the most original of today’s Rangers.

me it was a pivotal time. VAGRANT gave my life a lot of well. The rig was converted to cutter, and since the
meaning, so I worked extra hard.” minimum length for the race was 30', they tacked a
Langman’s shipwrights restored VAGRANT to pris- removable “knee” onto the bow.
tine condition. He raced her now and then with the On race day a heavy southerly wind opposing a strong
Amateurs, having some close tussles with Bill Gale and south-setting current was stacking up big, steep waves.
RANGER. After ocean racing at the highest level, this was The first night out, two maxis broke their masts. The
good fun. He was already in love with Rangers when Bill following day, another competitor sank. MALUKA fin-
informed him that the legendary MALUKA was for sale. ished eighth on handicap and beat half a dozen mod-
Sean Langman bought MALUKA in 2005. The bilge ern boats home. It was an amazing result, and the boat
was full of oil, the engine had had it, the hull needed had given them not a moment’s concern. At the dock
refastening. MALUKA was, in Langman’s words, “a bas- in Hobart, Langman pumped out only half a bucket of
ket case.” He’d read the Clark brothers’ journals about water from the bilge.
their trip to Hobart 10 years before the first Sydney to Since then, MALUKA has emulated the Clark broth-
Hobart race, and thought it was a great story of human ers’ trip to Lord Howe Island, complete with a horrible
endeavour. “I thought, I wonder if we could do that, gale where she was thrown onto her beam ends. Lang-
take a 28' boat in the actual race? Let’s get this thing in man is unrepentant about the contemporary methods
the 2006 Sydney to Hobart.” he used in the boat’s refit. He doubts if she would have
With the race deadline nine months away, the ship- survived the sea voyages, especially the one to Lord
wrights set to work. They reframed the entire hull and Howe Island, without them.
installed two extra stringers. They put in an extra-large

T
maststep and ran laminated ring frames under it. They he Sydney-based architect John Crawford is also
added a full bulkhead and sheathed the hull in triaxial a Ranger fanatic. In 1991 he bought VALIANT,
fiberglass. The cockpit was reduced in size for safety built in 1939 by Hoyle Brothers. When Crawford
at sea. The boat’s draft was increased by 6" and the purchased her, she had spent her later years gently
rig made taller with a roached gaff mainsail set on a pottering about Sydney Harbour and Pittwater. When
carbon-fiber mast. The gaff was of carbon fiber as Crawford started racing her with the Amateurs, the

July/August 2012 • 85

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JOHN JEREMY
VANITY, launched in 2001, is the latest addition to the Ranger fleet. Here, while reaching in 45 knots, her crew seems
unconcerned about foulweather gear.

other Rangers were all being upgraded with contem- Wooden Boat Festival, without incident. Crawford reck-
porary gear to make them more competitive. “Everyone ons that she has everything he wants in a boat. He espe-
was moving ahead, he recalls. “There were lightweight cially enjoys the simplicity. The forward third of the
rudders, aluminum gaffs, folding propellers…. After boat is for sail storage and a head; the next third con-
our first foray with bigger sails and winches and modern tains two bunks, a few shelves, and not much else; and
gear, she started to crack up. That’s when we wheeled the after third is a commodious cockpit with two quar-
her into the shed.” ter berths tucked under its seats. True to the original
The shed was in Langman’s boatyard. VALIANT was concept, Crawford has kept things simple; although he
rebuilt and emerged good for another half a century. installed some essential electronics for the Hobart trip,
By now Crawford had decided that Rangers had every- he took them out as soon as he returned home.
thing he wanted in a boat. It wasn’t too hard for Lang- John Crawford’s obsession with the class continues:
man to persuade him to build a new one. He recently bought PENGUIN, a Ranger in poor condi-
VANITY was the result of the persuasion, and she tion. He didn’t need another boat, but wanted to make
is yet another evolution of the Ranger concept. Lang- sure that this one doesn’t die through neglect, and is
man first took the lines off the original half model of actively seeking an owner prepared to restore her.
RANGER . He then pulled four boats out of the water: Langman entered MALUKA in the 2012 Sydney-to-
RANGER , KILKIE , VAGRANT, and CHERUB. When he Hobart contest with his 18-year-old son skippering and
compared their shapes, he discovered that none of the elder Langman navigating. They had hoped to set
them matched the half model, although VAGRANT and a new record—the youngest skipper sailing the old-
KILKIE were identical to Archie Barber’s plans. “Out of est boat—but Jessica Watson of solo-circumnavigation
all the boats, RANGER actually sits apart,” says Lang- fame also competed, and she was younger. MALUKA
man. “ VANITY has what I saw as the best features of all finished last, but her performance in that race against
the boats.” her modern rivals is of little consequence to the legacy
VANITY, launched in 2001, is 24' on deck and not as of Cliff Gale’s inspired design. Rangers have become
full underwater as RANGER . She’s a bit slimmer for- much sought after, but they rarely change hands. They
ward. She was strip-planked and sheathed with fiber- are an ideal boat for their intended purpose, which is
glass. She’s deeper than RANGER , and the weight saved not to race or make epic voyages. No, Gale’s intent with
through wood-composite construction meant they RANGER was simply to spend time in quiet pursuit of
could place half a ton more ballast in the keel. Her gaff enjoyment on Pittwater or Sydney Harbour. And by that
rig is controlled with modern winches and jammers. measure, it’s hard to beat a Ranger.
Not surprisingly, she is about five minutes faster than
RANGER around the Amateurs’ courses. John D. Little is a regular contributor to WoodenBoat. He wrote
In 2008 VANITY sailed to Hobart and back for the about the fleet of Halvorsen motor cruisers for WB No. 218

86 • WoodenBoat 227

Ranger_FINAL.indd 86 5/21/12 5:19 PM


DESIGNS

Shore
The ICW Liner48
and
Gunkholer
A Dick Newick
monohull cruisers
Shoal-draft
Commentary
Commentary by by
Mike O’Brien
Robert W. Stephens
Designs by the Atkins
and Jay Benford

H ere we have two, or we might


say several, easily built shoal-
draft cruising boats.
Fifty years ago, Jay Benford, then
a young boat designer, appren-
ticed himself to John Atkin. While
employed at Anchordown, he became Shore Liner
quite taken with Shore Liner, a 24'
flat-bottomed sailing skiff that Atkin
and his father, William, had drawn
years earlier. When Benford later
struck off on his own, this memory
“provided inspiration” for a new
design: the 22' Gunkholer.
Shore Liner came to life after Com-
mander Ed Hanks had approached
the Atkins with ideas and sketches
for a shoal-draft cruising sloop.
Although the designers and client
apparently chose a flat-bottomed
hull for reasons of simplicity and
low cost, few other hull types can
match its performance in extremely
shallow water. Great initial form sta-
bility lets Shore Liner stand up to
plenty of sail as she makes her way
across the flats.
The Atkins drew a hull with
considerable rocker (convex longi-
tudinal curvature) to its bottom.
This helps minimize turbulent Gunkholer
cross-flow at the chines, and allows
more docile steering in calm and
rough conditions. Back aft, rocker Shore Liner’s compact sloop rig, of sail at all times. We should con-
serves to clear the run, which with its mainsail of extraordinarily sider the three sets of reefpoints,
reduces hydrodynamic drag to the low aspect ratio (the foot measures specified for both the mainsail and
benefit of speed and control. As nearly as long as the luff), provides headsail, as more than affectations.
builders of the Chesapeake bateau plenty of power with relatively little For lateral resistance, the Atkins
learned long ago, a hint of dead- heeling force. This arrangement drew a pivoting centerboard.
rise (V-shape) to the after bottom allows for a short, simply stayed mast The trunk that houses this board
might prove yet more effective, but that will be easily made. For best bisects the main cabin, but it
that configuration would increase performance and safety, this boat seems just the right height to sup-
structural complexity. wants to carry just the right amount port the dropleaf table. Of course,

July/August 2012 • 87

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DESIGNS

Shore Liner
Particulars
LOA 24'
LWL 22'
Beam 9'
Draft 1'
Sail area 363 sq ft
Displacement 3,000 lbs

William and John Atkin’s 24’ Shore Liner, with a draft of only 12”, sails easily across the flats. She stands up well to her
low and powerful sloop rig. Broad decks provide lots of sprawling space, and the raised deck amidships lets us lean back
comfortably in the cabin.

the skeg, rudder, and hard-chined drawing table, the family ties to they provide ample opportunity for
hull also help to keep Shore Liner her slightly larger cousin from the showing off in the harbor…partic-
from sliding off to leeward. Atkin office will seem apparent. Of ularly if we fit our Gunkholer with
This hull’s ample 9' breadth course we’ll notice the gaff-headed tandem centerboards.
allows for a comfortable double mainsail in place of Shore Liner’s Judging by the relative size of
berth way forward. The center- jibheaded main, and that dog- these tandem boards and their
board trunk partly divides the berth house certainly stands apart from extreme separation, we might sus-
at its head. Whether this separa- the older boat’s raised-deck amid- pect that Benford drew them so as
tion proves desirable would seem ships. But these cruisers share com- to avoid intrusion into the accom-
to depend upon the situation. Two mon intent, and they sail on similar modations. The forward center-
sumptuous chairs sit on either side hulls: flat-bottomed, beamy, and board trunk hides under the foot
of the main cabin, and we’ll find shoal-draft. of a V-berth, and the after trunk
the galley and head amidships hard If, for some reason, you don’t fits below the self-bailing cockpit.
against the main bulkhead… about want to build a gaff-rigged sloop, In return for an unobstructed
as far as can be from the berth. please read on. Designer Benford interior and fine control of bal-
That’s good. offers us a choice of six differ- ance under sail, we will need to
The “flush deck seats” at the ent rigs, three lateral-resistance raise the after board as we come
cockpit offer comfortable platforms arrangements, and two hull shapes. about.
for afternoon naps and all-night In general, the ketches provide For sailors with less concern about
sleep in pleasant weather. greater control but with higher draft, Benford has drawn an optional
materials cost. These split rigs let fixed keel for this flat-bottomed hull.

I f we come across a sloop-rigged


Gunkholer from Jay Benford’s
us easily back out of slips downwind
without the aid of an engine, and
Thus built, Gunkholer will require
at least 30"-deep water in order to

88 • WoodenBoat 227

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DESIGNS

Gunkholer
Particulars
Flat bottom V-bottom
LOA 22' 22'
LWL 20' 20'
Beam 8' 8'
Draft 1' 4" – 2' 6" 3'
Sail area 199 – 330 sq ft 310 sq ft
Displacement
(cruising trim) 4,750 lbs 4,500 lbs

Jay Benford’s 22’ Gunkholer offers alternatives. The construction profile above shows
framing for a sheet-plywood boat. The section (right) describes a plank-on-frame hull.
We can choose from several design options (below): cat-rig with tandem centerboards,
cat-ketch with fixed keel, gaff-sloop, gaff-ketch, ketch, and V-bottomed cutter.

float, and she won’t take the ground toilet) to our left. A nice seat/berth are simple, yet striking, boats that
bolt-upright. sits to the right. The open view in will look fine in any company. We
If we hold thoughts of sailing off- most directions should prevent any can build them in the backyard
shore, we might build the V-bottomed notion of claustrophobia. A good- either plank-on-frame or of sheet
variant of this design. With its small sized V-berth rests up forward. In plywood. Then they will take us
self-bailing cockpit, tiny ports in an alternate layout, half of that bed to the best places: a hidden salt-
place of picture windows, and full gives way to a locker and generous marsh creek off the Chesapeake; a
keel ballasted with more than 1,200 sail stowage. coastal Maine cove that dries out at
lbs of lead, this topsail cutter will Gunkholer offers so many half tide; or the unwanted, hence
ease our minds as the shoreline options that we might consider it a deserted, corner of almost any
drops below the horizon. It does, custom design at the low price of anchorage.
however, share little with its center- a stock plan. We can mix rigs and
board sisters other than the “Gunk- hull shapes and lateral-resistance Mike O’Brien is boat design editor for
holer” name, as this boat draws 3' devices. But some combinations WoodenBoat.
and dries out at an angle that would might better remain on the draw-
do credit to a tough ski trail. ing table. For example, let’s not Shore Liner plans from Atkin & Co., P.O.
Box 3005, Noroton, CT 06820; www.atkin
Benford, who has a particular drop that tall topsail-cutter rig into boatplans.com. Shore Liner Drawings cour-
genius for designing imaginative the shallow centerboarder. Yet most tesy of WoodenBoat Books, from Practical
yet workable accommodations, matches will work fine. For relaxed Small Boat Designs, by John Atkin.
gave this little cruiser a simple and (read lazy) sailing, I’d like to stick
pleasant arrangement. In the main the cat-ketch rig into the flat- Gunkholer plans from Benford Design
cabin, under the doghouse, we find bottomed tandem-board hull. Group, 29663 Tallulah Lane, Easton, MD
the galley and a seat (which hides a Shore Liner and Gunkholer 21601; 410–745–3750; www.benford.us.

July/August 2012 • 89

Designs227_FINAL.indd 89 5/17/12 2:21 PM


Why Specific Gravity, Not Density?
by Richard Jagels
Figure 1 Basic Specific gravity (gb ) Figure 2 Density and specific gravity are plotted with increasing moisture content—

I n my columns, I usually for Selected Woods from oven-dry to 70%. Change in specific gravity mirrors reduction in wood strength
provide specific-gravity val- 1.1 with increasing moisture content, while density does not. (Modified from Siau, J.F. 1995.
ues for wood rather than den- Lignum Vitae Wood: Influence of Moisture on Physical Properties. Virginia Tech.)
sity. Readers might wonder 1.0 Water at 4ºc 0.9
why. The answer is rather com- ipe
plex—but quite important— 0.9
0.8
so I’m devoting a column to
the subject. greenheart 0.8 y (g/cc
)
0.7 Densit
Density is defined as the Tropical Oak

g. or Density
mass per unit volume of an 0.7 Specifi
object. Mass and weight as c gra
Black Locust 0.6 vit y
defined by physicists are two Angelique 0.6 White Oak
different things, but for our Teak White Ash
Longleaf Yellow Pine 0.5
purposes of defining the den-
0.5
sity of a solid object at rest in y (g/cc
)
True Mahogany Douglas-Fir (Coastal) Densit
Earth’s gravitational field, Spanish Cedar 0.4 Bald Cypress 0.4
we often use the terms inter- Specific gravity
changeably. Specific grav- Okoume 0.3
ity—or relative density—is most 0.3 Western red Cedar 30% approximately equals
Northern White Cedar
often defined as the ratio of fiber saturation point
the density of a material to 0.2 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
the density of water at 4oC. At Balsa Percent Wood Moisture Content
this temperature, water has 0.1
a density of 1,000 kilograms
per cubic meter (Kg/m3) or
1 gram per cubic centimeter (g/cc). By commerce, from mining to maple syrup harbor, their plan was to dump the
convention and convenience, we refer- production. lumber close in and then tow it ashore.
ence 1 g/cc of most solid materials to Although doing away with units and Astute readers may already have guessed
the same volume of water. Thus, any creating a globally understood measure the disastrous outcome—as the crew
object that has a specific gravity of less may be compelling enough, an even more watched in horror, the wood rapidly
than 1.0 will float in water, but above 1.0 important justification for using spe- sank to the deep ocean floor. Air-dry
it will sink. cific gravity can be made for materials Borneo ironwood has a specific gravity
Because specific gravity is simply a that are porous to moisture, especially that averages between 0.96 and 1.08, but
ratio, it has no units. Water, the elixir if the material not only absorbs and it can be as high as 1.2.
of life, is well known in all societies and loses water, but also shrinks and swells By knowing the specific gravity of
cultures. Thus, if we say that a chunk while doing so—like wood. commonly used woods, boatbuilders can
of iron has a specific gravity (G) of 7.8, Bricks and concrete blocks are porous readily compare an unknown wood to a
anyone would know that it is nearly eight to water but don’t change dimensions favorite such as oak or cedar. I find it
times heavier than water, and therefore with moisture uptake or loss. When stat- useful to create a vertical graph, as in
won’t float. Density, on the other hand, ing the specific gravity of these kinds of figure 1. This can be made fairly large
has units, and these are expressed differ- materials, the moisture content should and hung on the shop wall. Over time,
ently in various parts of the world. In the be noted. Wood and other hygroscopic you can add new woods and instantly see
United States, we often express density materials not only absorb and lose mois- how they compare with already familiar
in pounds per cubic foot (lb/ft3) even ture but also increase or decrease in ones. For convenience, I put imported
though, to be correct, the units should be volume with moisture content changes. woods, most of them tropical hardwoods,
slugs/ft3, since pounds are really a mea- This adds additional complexity. on one side and native woods on the
sure of force rather than mass. In Canada other. Recently, I had to predrill a teak
and Europe, density is measured in kg/ Usefulness of G handrail for lag bolts. I didn’t have any
m3, or if specific weight is being measured, Knowing the specific gravity of a par- scrap teak to test for optimal hole size, but
the units are Newtons/m3 (N/m3). ticular wood gives us considerable use- a quick look at the chart showed me I
Thus, one of the advantages of using ful information, and may even avoid could use ash as a reasonable surrogate.
specific gravity rather than density is our economic heartache. I’m reminded of This let me test a couple of drill bit sizes
ability to have universal understanding a story connected to a 4-acre island in before finally drilling holes in the teak.
without having to laboriously convert Penobscot Bay, Maine. The Coast Guard
from one system of units to another. decided they wanted to automate the Predicting Strength
Historically, specific gravity came into lighthouse and build a wooden platform Based on many research studies, we
common usage in the 17th and 18th to serve as a landing pad for helicopters know that density is an excellent pre-
centuries as mining operations became bringing in maintenance crews. They dictor of wood strength—the relation-
larger in scale and metals of different purchased a load of Borneo ironwood ship is nearly linear. However, this
densities were routinely being separated. (Eusideroxylon zwageri) and shipped it relationship holds only for wood den-
Today, specific gravity is widely used in to the island. Since the island had no sity that is measured for dry wood.

90 • WoodenBoat 227

WoodTech227_AD_FINAL.indd 90 5/23/12 11:56 AM


If we measure wood density at vari- are not that unusual. If we just use a con- reduction. And between fiber-saturation
ous moisture contents (MC), we find servative 50% MC for white ash wood as it point and maximum MC, both G and
that at MC = 0 (or our best estimate of comes directly from the living tree, mea- strength in bending mirror each other
zero, which is oven-dry weight) density sured density would be about 830 kg/m3, by remaining constant.
provides a reasonable estimate of wood yet the strength would not be any differ- Figure 2 shows graphically how den-
strength. However, as we add moisture ent than wood at 30% MC, both of which sity and specific gravity track in oppo-
to wood, the measured density increases, are much less than wood at 12% MC. site directions for two woods that at 0
because the mass increases by a greater To avoid these kinds of confusing and MC (oven-dry weight) have coinciding
fraction than the volume. So density at erroneous density-to-strength relation- densities (in g/cc) and specific gravities.
the fiber-saturation point, about 30% ships, wood scientists have chosen to use As moisture is added, the density and
MC, is significantly greater than at, say, a measure known as basic specific grav- specific gravity lines diverge. While spe-
12%—yet we know that wood at 12% MC ity (Gb) which is determined using the cific gravity tracks the changes in wood-
is stronger than at 30% MC. volume of green wood and the weight of strength properties, density diverges
Let’s look at an example. White ash oven-dry wood. This is the G value you farther and farther from a value that
at 12% MC has a modulus of rupture will find in the mechanical properties mirrors wood-strength properties. From
(MOR) in bending of 103,000 kilopas- tables in the Wood Handbook for green the graphs, we can see that the discrep-
cals (Kpa), while at 30% MC or “green” wood, while G12 (green volume and 12% ancy is greatest with high-density woods
conditions, MOR in bending is only MC) is provided for dry wood. Although (0.65 vs. 0.35).
66,000 Kpa—a strength reduction of this is the most widely used standard, So far, I have only talked about total
more than 35%. Yet if we measure wood some design specifications for wood use a density and specific gravity of a block of
density, we find it is about 675 kg/m3 at specific gravity based on oven-dry weight wood, but much of that volume is occu-
12% and increases to 715 kg/m3 at 30% and oven-dry volume (G0). The National pied by air or water. Next issue we’ll
MC. So while strength has decreased by Design Specifications for Wood Construction explore this inner air and water space in
a third, density has increased by about uses G 0 for strength properties, but for trees and boatbuilding woods.
6%. And this situation gets even worse nail withdrawal they use G12.
as the moisture content increases above If we return to the white ash example Dr. Richard Jagels is an emeritus professor
fiber-saturation point because while and check the Wood Handbook, we find of forest biology at the University of Maine,
water is being added, volume remains that G for white ash at 12% MC is 0.60 Orono. Please send correspondence to Dr. Jag-
the same. and decreases to 0.055 at the green con- els by mail to the care of WoodenBoat, or via
The sapwood in some trees can dition. Unlike density, this decrease in e-mail to Assistant Editor Robin Jettinghoff,
exceed 200% MC, and levels above 100% G from 12% to green tracks strength robin@woodenboat.com.

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July/August 2012 • 91

WoodTech227_AD_FINAL.indd 91 5/23/12 11:56 AM


LAUNCHINGS

Edited by Robin Jettinghoff

T hese pages are dedicated to sharing news of recently


launched new boats and “relaunched” (that is,
restored or substantially rebuilt) craft. Please send
color photographs of your projects to: Launchings,
WoodenBoat, P.O. Box 78, Brooklin, ME 04616, or

RALPH MoRANG
e-mail us at launchings@woodenboat.com.
Include the following information: (1) length on
deck; (2) beam; (3) type, class, or rig; (4) boat’s name;
(5) names and contact information (include e-mail or Above—In December 2011, the nonprofit Gundalow Company
phone) of designer, builder, photographer, and owner; launched PISCATAQUA , a 64' 9" × 19' gundalow, a shallow-
bottomed lateen-rigged barge, that will become a floating
(6) port or place of intended use; (7) date of launching classroom on the Piscataqua River between New Hampshire and
(should be within the past year); (8) brief description of Maine. Harold Burnham based her design on drawings of the last
construction or restoration. commercial gundalow, the FANNY M (1886), while Paul Rollins
led a crew of professionals and volunteers in her construction.
See www.gundalow.org for more information.

Left— BELLA is a strip-planked 14' 11"


outboard launch built by Phil Padovano
and designed by Paul Fisher of Selway
Fisher Designs. The 1⁄2" western red
cedar planking is ’glassed and epoxied,
and accented with a cove stripe of white
cedar. Padovano plans to commute in
BELLA between Carrabelle and Dog
Island, Florida. Plans are available at
LAURA CARUTHERS

www.selwayfisher.com.

Below—In August 2011, instructors Jim Brown and John Marples


led seven students at the WoodenBoat School in building their
Seaclipper 20 trimaran design. The amas on this 20' design
swing in, reducing the 15' 6" sailing beam to an 8' 6" trailerable
width. In March, the class reassembled in Key Largo, Florida,
at the home of the owner, Val Cox, to launch MICE NUTS
(meaning something too insignificant to hold up progress in
the shop). Plans are available at www.searunner.com.

SUSAN CoRKUM-GREEK

Above—Seven students at the Picton Castle Bosun School built


this 16' × 6' 1" lapstrake Cross Island Skiff during a two-week stint
at the Dory Shop in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. Instructor Jay Lang-
LEYLA MUSA

ford took the lines for this skiff from a derelict hull. The crew
planked this boat with silverballi on hackmatack naturally grown
frames. For more information, see www.doryshop.com.

92 • WoodenBoat 227

Launchings227_FINAL.indd 92 5/17/12 1:56 PM


Below—John Waltman of Shelter Island, New York
started building this 16' × 29" double-paddle canoe
over 30 years ago. Recently his neighbor, David
Olsen, stepped in to assist with construction, and
they launched the boat in September 2011. The 5⁄16"
western red cedar planking was fastened with cop-
per rivets. This 1933 L. Francis Herreshoff design is
featured in Sensible Cruising Designs.

DON STUCKE, JR. AND SR.


Above—Donald Stucke, Sr. and Jr., each launched a boat in 2011. Don, Sr. (pic-
tured above), built DORMOUSE, an Iain Oughtred–designed Wee Rob canoe
(12' 10" × 28" ), for paddling Cape Cod’s waters. Meanwhile Don, Jr., built a skin-
on-frame Chuckanut 12 kayak (12' × 30" ), designed by Dave Gentry, to paddle
in western New York. Wee Rob plans are available at www.woodenboatstore.com
and Chuckanut plans at www.gentrycustomboats.com.

CHRISTOPHER SPALDING
Above— OSPREY is a 14' 6" × 5' 6" Little Moby skiff built by Bob Spalding and
designed by Charles Wittholz. Spalding built her hull with plywood over oak
frames, and ’glassed throughout. He eliminated the center thwart making
it easier to move about the boat. The Spalding family will cruise in OSPREY
MARILYN OLSEN

near Cotuit, Massachusetts. Plans are available at The WoodenBoat Store,


www.woodenboatstore.com.

Below—David Vangsness spent eight years building this Key Largo


runabout, a Ken Hankinson design. Named ELISABETH II after
his wife, Elisabeth number 1, this 19' × 6' 1" boat is powered with
a 4.3 L, GM V-6. Dave cold-molded the hull with two layers of
plywood on mahogany frames; the final layer is solid mahogany.
Plans are available at www.glen-l.com.
IAN PETERSEN

Above—Australian Rob Ballard named the Norwalk Islands


Sharpie he built ROUTE 66 to honor her American heri-
DAVE VANGSNESS

tage, designer Bruce Kirby, and Rob’s own American tours.


ROUTE 66 is a 23' LOA cat-ketch, with a 7' 9" beam, and
draws 1' with the centerboard up, 4' with it down. Rob sails
her in Corio Bay, Geelong, Australia. Kits are available at
www.straydogboatworks.com.

July/August 2012 • 93

Launchings227_FINAL.indd 93 5/17/12 1:56 PM


LAUNCHINGS

Below—star yachts, Bristol, england, has launched eskDale , a


new andrew Wolstenholme–designed Bristol 27. Powered by a
52-hp turbo diesel, the 27' 4" × 7' 4" eskDale has a top speed of 12
knots. her hull was strip-planked with yellow cedar, sheathed in
’glass and epoxy. her owner, Dudley Fishburn, will use her on the
river thames and the isle of Wight. see www.staryachts.co.uk for
finished boats.

Peter ChesWorth
Below—the international Boatbuiding training College (www.
ibtc.co.uk.) in lowestoft, england, just built the 23' 4" aleXan-
Dra shaCkleton, a replica of the JaMes CairD, now displayed
at Dulwich College, london. ernest shackleton and a crew of
five sailed the JaMes CairD from elephant island, antarctica, to
south georgia, in 1916. Modern adventurer tim Jarvis will be re-
enacting that voyage next year. see www.timjarvis.org.
hui Jiang

Above—Joe slusher built this stornoway 14 sailing dinghy


with okoume plywood planking over plywood and
Douglas-fir frames, then covered it with epoxy and ‘glass.

nat Wilson
he trimmed nutMeg with mahogany and made the tiller
from ash. this Paul Fisher 14' × 5' 9" design displaces 300
lbs. Joe sails nutMeg in the Potomac river in Washing-
ton, DC. Plans are available at www.selway-fisher.com.

Below—Joseph hawksby and his son, Joseph Jr., built Zo-Zo


from plans by Jacques Mertens (www.bateau.com). they taped
and epoxied plywood panels together to make the hull, a
Prameke 7' 8" design. Zo-Zo has a 4' 8" beam, carries 35 sq ft
of sail, and weighs 85 lbs.—just about the same as the golden
retriever for whom she was named.
roslyn engleDoW

Above—graeme Dennett built this long Point skiff, ross &


Denise haWksBy

Mary, and then drove 4,000 km (~2,500 miles) to deliver it to


his son ian and his family in Western australia. graeme used
a variety of woods including meranti, merbau, jarrah, hoop
pine, australian beech, alpine ash, and marine plywood. Plans
by tom hill are available at www.thomasjhillboatdesigns.com.

94 • WoodenBoat 227

Launchings227_FINAL.indd 94 5/17/12 1:57 PM


...AND RELAUNCHINGS
Below— Dave Bradley of Brooklin, Maine, owned MISCHIEF
from 1935 until his death a few years ago. MISCHIEF, a
1926, 27' S-boat designed and built by N.G. Herreshoff,
then went to Steve White, owner of Brooklin Boat Yard.
White’s crew replaced the frames, sheerstrakes, floors,
fastenings, transom, deck, and some planking; and restored
the original rig. MISCHIEF has a new owner who will race
her in Newport, Rhode Island.

MAC SCHuEPPERT
Above— SHAMROCK III is a 1962, 17' 2" Thompson SeaLancer
recently restored by Keith Kolberg and Richie Hall at Yacht Resto-
rations in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. They reinforced the stringers
and replaced the transom, seats, deck, and windshield. Owners
Tom and Mac Schueppert replaced her motor and enjoy puttering
around Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.
BROOKLIN BOAT YARD

Below—HYDRA , a 30' International 210 designed by Ray


Hunt in 1945 and built by Graves Yacht Yard in 1963,

JAN MASON
recently underwent an extensive refit at MFN Boat Works
in Palm Beach, Florida. This included adding a retractable
carbon-fiber keel/rudder and bowsprit, teak decks, four
watertight compartments, and a hinged carbon fiber mast; Above—After buying a used 14' Philip Rhodes–designed Bantam
and redesigning the cockpit seating and backrests. For in 2010, Steve Mason started a six-month restoration that included
more information, contact hydra@mfnmail.com. rebuilding the centerboard trunk, replacing the plywood sides,
adding wider rails, and building a new mast. He believes the boat
dates from the 1950s. MAGIC is 14' long, 5' 6" wide, and carries 125
sq ft of sail. Mason sails MAGIC in northwest Florida.

Hints for taking good photos of your boat:


1. Please shoot to the highest resolution and largest size
possible. Send no more than five unretouched images on a
CD, and include rough prints of all images. We also accept
transparencies and high-quality prints.
2. Clean the boat. Stow fenders and extraneous gear below.
Properly ship or stow oars, and give the sails a good harbor
furl if you’re at anchor.
3.  Schedule the photo session for early, or late, in the day to
take advantage of low-angle sunlight. Avoid shooting at high
noon and on overcast days.
4. Be certain that the horizon appears level in your viewfinder.
5.  Keep the background simple and/or scenic. On a flat page,
objects in the middle distance can appear to become part of
your boat. Take care that it doesn’t sprout trees, flagpoles,
smokestacks, or additional masts and crew members.
6. Take many photos, and send us several. Include some action
shots and some of the boat at rest. For a few of the pictures,
turn the camera on its side to create a vertical format.
We enjoy learning of your work—it affirms the vitality of the wooden
TOM PRICE

boat community. Unfortunately, a lack of space prevents our publishing


all the material submitted. If you wish to have your photos returned,
please include appropriate postage.

July/August 2012 • 95

Launchings227_FINAL.indd 95 5/17/12 1:58 PM


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REVIEW
PRODUCTS • BOOKS • VIDEOS • STUFF

G.L. Watson
The Art and Science of Yacht Design
G.L. Watson: The Art and Science of Yacht Design, by
Martin Black. Published by Peggy Bawn Press, c/o
Copper Reed Studio, 94 Henry St., Limerick, Ireland;
www.peggybawnpress.com; 2011. 495 pp., hardcover,
89 Euros.

Reviewed by John Rousmaniere

W
ho is the greatest of all yacht designers?
That question rolls through the mind dur-
ing moments of rest and speculation, such
as when nursing a beer in the company of other sailors,
or when reading the book under review here. The ques-
tion is impossible to answer. First, the pool is very large.
There are 525 biographies in the Encyclopedia of Yacht
Designers that Lucia del Sol Knight and Daniel Bruce
MacNaughton edited and W.W. Norton published in
2006. Some of those names are well known (at least to
some of us), but most of the people were, at best, one-
hit wonders. They might have benefited from the advice
that James A. McCurdy, a fine naval architect and a
multi-hit wonder, once offered a romantic fellow who
wanted to design boats for a living. Said Jim, “I would
advise having a good long talk with one’s investment
banker.”
When John Hattendorf asked me to be the yachting
editor of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Maritime History, I up to the balcony of the New York Yacht Club’s model
addressed the “greatest designer” issue by waffling. The room and pointing out the half model of Watson’s 1891
history is long and diverse, with too many rating rules DORA , which in her profile, proportions, and name
and other idiosyncrasies for any one designer to be is a dead ringer for Olin’s 1930 DORADE . The fact is, for
king. I came up with a quartet of crown princes: George a period of some 75 or 80 years the ideal ocean racing
L. Watson, Nathanael G. Herreshoff, Olin Stephens, yacht was designed on the Watson model, with a deep
and, most recently, Bruce Farr, who developed the first keel derived from the ones he developed when he was
successful light-displacement boats of many sizes. Each just starting out in the 1870s, when external ballast was
took design as he found it and improved it. Sometimes extremely rare. With their deep lead, narrow beam, and
there were overlaps. Olin Stephens delighted in going large sail areas, these boats had the stability, low wetted

July/August 2012 • 99

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Woodenboat RevieW

VALKYRIE II (left) and VIGILANT, 1893 AMERICA’s Cup,


race 2.

“bears traces of the anxieties inevitable to his


profession.” Very likely, his anxieties were typical
of any exceptionally talented and highly stressed
person working at a peak level of performance
with many exasperating clients with whom he
felt obliged to sail. Watson tactfully referred
to one of them, the hyper-demanding Kaiser
Wilhelm II, as a “spirited owner.” What Watson
thought about the Earl of Dunraven he did not
say in public, even as Dunraven’s jaw-dropping
statements and bizarre behavior risked under-
mining Watson’s relationship with potential cli-
surface, and sailing power that defined many of the best ents in New York.
boats into the 1960s. Martin Black recounts Watson’s Along the way, Black tells of some breathtaking
great career in the new book, G.L. Watson: The Art and excitements. One is the famous last race in the 1893
Science of Yacht Design. AMERICA’s Cup, when the defender VIGILANT overtook
Watson’s first contribution to U.S. yachting can be Dunraven’s VALKYRIE II as spinnakers blew out right
summarized in one word: MADGE . The latest and most and left. Another, a year later, is the horrific collision
successful of the many small, heavily ballasted Watson on the Clyde in which VALKYRIE II sank with the loss
cutters that raced in his native waters of the Clyde Estu- of a crew member. Happier are the descriptions of the
ary, in Scotland, when she was shipped to New York in beauty that routinely came off Watson’s drawing board.
1881 she very quickly persuaded Americans that they no The royal yacht BRITANNIA was one of those vessels for
longer had to sail beamy, dangerous skimming-dishes. which the word “sleek” was coined. Olin Stephens used
The rating rule was soon changed to encourage ballast to tell the story of how in 1931 (nearly 40 years after BRI-
keels. Here is a good place to say that Black, better than TANNIA was launched), his wife, Susie, took one look at
many yachting historians, appreciates the importance her and instructed him, “Buy me one of those.” While
of rating rules in yacht design. A long appendix on the book has no lines plans (which will follow in another
them helps all readers realize that fact, while encourag- publication), the many photographs make absolutely
ing Americans to understand something of the old Brit- clear Watson’s seeming inability to draw an ugly line.
ish habit of identifying a boat’s size by something called Watson’s eye for a steam yacht was especially prized.
a “ton.” (Another long appendix serves as a catalog of Borrowing features from Scottish clipper ships, he devel-
Watson designs.) oped a characteristic appearance with a clipper bow;
Black has chosen a straightforward strategy of a sweet sheer sweeping aft to a narrow, graceful, and
storytelling, organizing the book chronologically rather meticulously detailed fantail; and a low house capped
than by the type of boat or prestige of the race. We are by aft-sloping stacks and one or two masts. In his last
alongside Watson as he learns and develops his craft, years, Watson belatedly realized that these astonishing
sometimes even between races on the Clyde, whose har- steam yachts could provide him rewards that had long
bors, shoals, and yacht clubs become familiar friends as escaped him in the decades when he made his name
the story advances. with racing yachts. Long after his premature death,
Over time, the impecunious shipyard technician a Scottish yachting writer reported a conversation in
becomes the successful designer of small racers and, which Watson said this: “The designing of cruising-
eventually, the man behind AMERICA’s Cup challeng- sailing yachts provides a man with bread, that of racers
ers and some of the handsomest steam yachts you’ll ever with bread and butter, and that of steam yachts with
see. Alas, we also observe Watson literally laboring to bread and butter—and jam.”
death as he turned out 432 designs until he died at a Watson should have been permitted more jam. But
mere 53 in 1904. “I am still desperately hard at work,” at least we have the rest, and we have the record in this
he wrote W.P. Stephens while the 1895 AMERICA’s Cup fine book.
challenger VALKYRIE III was under construction, “and
don’t see my way to any clear holiday for a good bit yet, John Rousmaniere is the author of numerous books on sailing and
while I feel the want of it badly.” His exhaustion some- yachting history, and is a regular contributor to WoodenBoat. His
times led to mistakes, among them a miscalculation of the history of the New York Yacht Club will be reviewed in the next issue
of this magazine.
AMERICA’s Cup challenger THISTLE’s waterline length in
1887 that enraged the New York Yacht Club. This book is available in the United States from Howland & Co.,
Among the many provocative quotes that Black has 100 Rockwood St., Jamaica Plain, MA 02130; 617-522-5281; and
gathered in his exceptionally thorough research is one in Scotland from McLaren Books, 22 John St., Helensburgh, Argyll
by a journalist saying that Watson, in his early forties, & Bute, G84 8BA; www.mclarenbooks.co.uk.

100 • WoodenBoat 227

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Woodenboat RevieW

VASA
A Swedish Warship

VASA: A Swedish Warship, by Fred Hocker. Medströms


Bokförlag, publisher, Artillerigatan 13, Östra Blockhuset,
11451 Stockholm, Sweden. 2011. English language dis-
tributors, Oxbow Books, England, and The David Brown
Book Co., United States; see www.oxbowbooks.com.
Hardback, 212 pp., £30/$48.

Reviewed by Tom Jackson

E
ver since her uppermost futtocks broke the sur-
face when she was raised from the bottom of
Stockholm Harbor in 1961, the warship VASA has
captivated the world. The 64-gun ship famously heeled
excessively in perfectly fair weather, took water through
her lower gunports, and sank less than a nautical mile
into her maiden voyage in 1628. VASA has been con-
served and examined for 50 years, and her story is no less
captivating today.
The analysis continues. Like many such discoveries
in nautical archaeology, the publication of findings has
seemed a long time in coming. The science is complicated
and time-consuming; the more significant the find, the
longer it takes, and VASA is among the largest. The first

July/August 2012 • 101

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Woodenboat RevieW

Creating The Ship’s Half Model ...


VASA’s color scheme
was “bright, almost
vulgar....”

volume of a long-antic-
ipated compilation,
VASA I: The Archaeology
of a Swedish Warship of
1628 was published
in 2006 (also avail-
able through Oxbow
Books), with three
more volumes yet to
come. In the mean-
Since 1790 the
half-hull has
W hen the artistry time, American archae-
ologist Fred Hocker,
becomes the mastery who is editing the series, has also produced a fine single-
been used to volume account of VASA for a general readership. VASA:
study hull design.
of form. A Swedish Warship fills a longstanding need.
Today it has become Those who will want—as I do—to know about the
a possession to be
arrangement of futtocks, the sequence of construction,
details of scantlings, and the fastening schedule, will
cherished a lifetime.
not find satisfaction in the new book. Those details are
For further details 9214 15th NW
more likely to come in subsequent volumes of the series,
please visit our Seattle, WA 98117 which will cover, in order, armaments, engineering, and
(206) 789-3713 onboard life. I’m especially watching and waiting for
web site.
www.halfhull.com that third volume.
Hocker’s new book is a fine presentation of the
ship and her history, cleanly written and well illus-
trated. He includes shipyard history in good detail.
Lake Pontchartrain Basin The section on early salvage is fascinating, and fore-
MaritiMe MuseuM shadows the complications of her eventual recovery.
presents the He draws extensively on historical documents, and
historical artworks and modern photographs of the
23nd Annual ship enhance his text. A multi-page foldout shows, in
mercifully large size, photographs of her spectacular
Wooden Boat Festival beakhead, with its lion figurehead, and of her tran-
som, where the most stunning examples of the ship’s
famous carvings reside. These are grave and serious
images of dark, monochrome wood. But archaeology
has also divined which areas were gilded and the com-
position of paints used for every one of VASA’s hun-
dreds of sculptures. More photos show close-up the
museum’s 1:10 scale model accurately painted to rep-
resent the colors of the original ship. It’s a gaudy spec-
Madisonville, tacle, by modern tastes—the ship was tarted up like
Louisiana the most raucous circus wagon or amusement park
carousel imaginable, with sculptures painted vibrant
Saturday & Sunday colors over a background as bright red as the worst
kind of lipstick.
October Hocker’s summation of the sinking is well informed
13 & 14, 2012 by primary-source documents ranging from confused
and contradictory construction contracts to inquest
For Boat Registration testimony. One fascinating detail, for example, is that
Information
Call 985-845-9200
before the ship left the dock, the captain had 30 men
run back and forth from side to side, which by itself
caused enough heeling that an admiral halted the dem-
Visit www.lpbmm.org or
onstration. “It is also clear that most of the participants
www.woodenboatfest.org
understood what had happened, and that key people

102 • WoodenBoat 227

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Woodenboat RevieW

were aware of the problem well before the ship sailed,”


Hocker writes. “The line of questioning shows clearly
that this was not an investigation of the facts, but like
many government inquiries, was political theater, an
attempt to fix the blame.” Purveyors of Quality
Hocker identifies the primary problem as a lack
of hull-form stability, the ship being too narrow—
Shipwright Products
although not wildly out of line with other ships of her Bronze Hardware
day—and not deep enough. But in addition, the heav- Copper nails
ily built upper structure put weight in the wrong place Tufnol BloCks
porTs & ligHTs Distributor for
because shipwrights concerned about supporting the
oakum, pine Tar shipmate stoves
novel second gundeck reacted with massive scantlings, davey & Company
overbuilding the structure and adding weight high in Caulking CoTTon
Handforged Clipper Canvas
the hull. Perhaps due to different measurement sys-
sHipwrigHT Tools
tems used by Dutch and Swedish builders, she was built
heavier to port than to starboard, Hocker has said, Volume disCounTs shop.woodenboat.org 360.385.3628 ext. 101
though it’s not addressed in the book. Six rulers were
found aboard her, some to the Swedish 297mm, 12" sys-
tem and some to the 281mm Dutch 11" system, though
no two matched perfectly. VASA was a military procure-
ment fiasco, but naval architecture as a science did not Shipmate Stoves
exist in her day.
Hocker points out where myths have been dispelled “Always Reliable...
as well. VASA was planned to have two gundecks from fair weather
the start; this was not a change of mind midway through or foul.”
construction. And her design wasn’t unduly warped by
the king’s ideas, as earlier suspected. She would have Several model & color choices
Hand-built in the USA
been the most heavily armed warship of her time had
she succeeded. Still, Hocker reports that calculations
show the weight of the guns to be only 5.1 percent of her
displacement.
On my way to Raid Sweden in 2005, I had the rare priv-
ilege of tagging along while Hocker led two divers from
another excavation through every part of VASA from
sterncastles to beakhead to bilges. More than any other
historic ship I have seen, VASA caused the hair on the
back of my neck to stand up and a shudder to run right
through me. It was a direct connection to the past that
I’ve never felt so intensely before or since. The rococo dec-
orations get a lot of attention, of course, but other details
caught my eye: The only existing example of whipstaff
steering, for example. Bundled sails, which took a decade
to unfold, with clear details of 17th-century marlinespike
work. The intact longboat. Detailed medical histories of
some of the recovered dead, and even forensic recon-
structions of their faces. VASA’s completeness is simply
astonishing.
What surprised me more than anything else was her
ample headroom belowdecks. Compared with, say, with • Davey of London bronze, • Caulker's & Bosun's • Ording wooden blocks
supplies and traditional Meissner bronze winches
the USS CONSTITUTION or the HMS VICTORY, where rigs, decks, and cabins rope, twine, & cordage StaLok bronze turnbuckles
head-ducking is routine, I could barely reach some of of all descriptions and much more...
VASA’s beams. The only deck that felt at all cramped
was the orlop. Hocker notes that this headroom put
not only the guns but all that overbuilt structure, too,
higher than necessary.
Hocker brings the ship and her times to life. My
thirst is slaked for the moment, but I’m still going to
watch for that volume on engineering.

Tom Jackson is WoodenBoat’s senior editor.


Toll Free Direct 1.866.577.5505 • New Bedford, MA • www.RWrope.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 103

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Woodenboat RevieW
Custom Woodworking for Marine Applications
Exotics and Domestics
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inconel 600, 625 Chrome Plated Email: ccfast@localnet.com

Reviewed by Kevin D. Porter

W
hen I needed to replace the bronze straps run-
ning under the wooden maststep of my 1952,
28' Winthrop Warner sloop, I faced a chal-
lenge. I’d set aside a long piece of 41⁄2"-wide bronze flat
stock, 3⁄8" thick, for the purpose, but had no way to accu-
rately rip it into the required 11⁄4" width of the straps. I
was considering a metal-cutting bandsaw blade—which
would have worked fine—but then my friend Dan
Crete told me to consider a non-ferrous-metal-cutting
tablesaw blade.
(207) 236-3561 www.gambellandhunter.net So, I went to a local lumberyard with a good tool selec-
tion and, lo and behold, found a blade by the tool man-
ufacturer Freud for cutting laminate and non-ferrous

Boat Schools
metals. I’ve been a woodworker and boat carpenter for
most of my adult life (I’m 42), dabbling in metalwork-
ing projects as needed. But I was ignorant of the fact
List Your Programs With Our New Online Service that my tablesaw and chop saw could become precision
WoodenBoat is launching a new, free tools for cutting bronze. Dan’s suggestion was intrigu-
listing program for boat schools. ing. I bought the blade, and installed it in my 10" table-
Simply go to www.woodenboat.com/boatschools and saw equipped with a zero-clearance insert. With some
follow the instructions in the FAQ. skepticism as to how this blade would work on my for-
Readers are welcome to join the site at any time to midable-looking chunk of bronze, I rigged up proper
search for programs of interest to them. It may take a stock-holding devices to keep the piece against the table
few months for this service to be complete. and the fence, as one would do when ripping wood strips.
Donning safety glasses and hearing protection, I ripped
WoodenBoat Publications
41 WoodenBoat Lane, Brooklin, Maine 04616 away. The results were fantastic. It was like ripping really
207-359-4651 www.woodenboat.com

104 • WoodenBoat 227

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Woodenboat RevieW
What’s your motivation?
Fine Craftmanship
The bronze wear strip let into
this knock-down saloon table’s
Learning from the Best
leg was cut to width on a Preserving History
table saw. New Techniques
Pushing Limits
hard wood, and the noise Community
level was reasonable. In short
order, I had two strips of 3⁄8"
Granting occupational
× 11⁄4" bronze, with astound-
degrees in wooden
ingly clean, finished edges,
boatbuilding
ready for the bending stage
of the operation. New Certificate Program
Since then, I’ve done in Sailmaking & Rigging
several projects using
threaded-bronze rod, and Financial aid may
instead of breaking out be available to those
the reciprocating saw and who qualify
clamping the rod in a vise,
I set the rod against my Call today to receive
tablesaw’s miter gauge and NORTHWEST an information packet
cross-cut it on the tablesaw SCHOOL of   WOODEN 360-385-4948 or
(a chop saw would work BOAT BUILDING sm info@nwboatschool.org
just as well for this). The
results of this operation are
so good that I often don’t w w w. n w b o at s c h o ol . or g
have to worry about a tortured, burred, thread end to Port Hadlock, WA
file clean. Since I’ve discovered this blade, I’ve used
it in a number of interior-joinery projects requiring Located on port Townsend Bay
bronze wear-strips let into pieces of furniture. I’ve also
cut piano hinges to length, yielding a better cutoff
end than that provided by the factory. These projects
would have required far more finishing and handwork
had they been cut on a bandsaw, or with a hacksaw.
In some cases, I could have purchased the required …the World’s Finest Oars and Paddles, since 1858.
dimension, but at greater cost than cutting it from Handcrafted in Maine, used all over the world.
wider raw stock. • Oars and Paddles
The blade’s kerf is 3⁄32", so there’s likely to be a little • Wooden Masts and Spars
more loss than with a bandsaw blade—but not much • Bronze Rowing Hardware
more. Regardless of that, the straight cuts and fine • Adirondack Guide Boat Oars and Hardware
finish of the tablesaw blade are good trade-offs, in my • Boat Hooks
opinion. The cutting operation produces bronze chips, • Wooden Flagpoles
• The Shaw & Tenney Whitehall
not unlike thickness-planer shavings in appearance. It’s
wise practice to turn off your dust collector when saw- www.shawandtenney.com
ing bronze with this blade, because those chips may be PO Box 213, Orono, Maine 04473 – 800-240-4867
hot—especially as the blade grows dull; it seems that
mixing them with a pile of dry wood shaving could be
disastrous, but that’s something I don’t care to test. I
have a growing stash of these offcuts squirreled away for
a casting operation.
I could imagine using this blade on a variety of other
projects, including chainplates, tangs, aluminum spars,
and anything requiring long, straight, fine-finished
edges, or clean cutoff ends.

Kevin Porter is a woodworker in Penobscot, Maine.


Numerous manufacturers offer table- and chop-saw blades for cutting
plastics and non-ferrous metals, and they’re widely available through
tool stores and online retailers. Kevin tested the Freud Diablo 10",
80-tooth blade, which retails for $55–$60.

July/August 2012 • 105

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Woodenboat RevieW

Build a summer full of memories...


books Received

More Faster Backwards: Rebuilding DAVID B , by Christine


Smith. Published by Old Heavy Duty Publishing, P.O.
Box 1431, Bellingham, WA 98227. 302 pp., softcover,
$19.95. ISBN: 978–0–615–54089–4. In 2004, Christine
and Jeffrey Smith found the neglected DAVID B, a 1929 work-
boat, on Lopez Island, Washington; this is the story of the sub-
sequent eight-year renovation.
Making Wood Tools: Traditional Woodworking Tools You
Can Make in Your Own Shop, by John Wilson. Published
Shirley Pyle in her CLC Sassafras canoe, built at Glbbs - Summer 2011
by Home Shop Book, 406 E. Broadway Hwy., Charlotte,
MI 48813, www.shakerovalbox.com. 244 pp., hardcover,
...and your own boat! $39.95. ISBN: 0–9729947–4–2. How to make several planes,
a bow saw, spokeshave, adze, and other tools, as well as shop
Chesapeake Light Craft and Custom Workshops furniture like a workbench, tool trays, sawhorses, vises, and
for families and friends. more; clear pictures, materials lists, and step-by-step directions
make it look easy.
Building BADGER & the Benford Sailing Dory Designs,
by Jay Benford and Pete Hill. Published by Tiller Pub-
lishing, 29663 Tallulah Ln., Easton, MD 21601, www.
Great Lakes Boat Building School tillerbooks.com. 192 pp., paperback, $25. ISBN: 978–1–
888671–28–5. Part 1 is an illustrated step-by-step documen-
Les Cheneaux Islands, Michigan tation by Pete and Annie Hill of the construction of their 34'
906.484.1081 Benford Sailing Dory BADGER ; the remainder is a catalog of
www.greatlakesboatbuilding.org Benford’s sailing dory designs.
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show Love Letters to City Island, by Fay Jordaens with Tom Nye.
Published by Fay Jordaens, 132 Jenny Lind St., Netcong,
NJ 07857. 224 pp., softcover, $45. ISBN: 978–0–615–
59273–2. Images and stories of the designers, boatbuilders,
yachtsmen, and those who work on the sea around City Island,
New York.
Patrol and Rescue Boats on Puget Sound, by Chuck Fowler
et al. An Images of America book published by Arca-
dia Publishing, 420 Wando Park Blvd., Mount Pleasant,
SC 29464, www.arcadiapublishing.com. 128 pp., paper-
back, $21.99. ISBN -13: 978–0–7385–7581–0, ISBN -10
0–7385–7581–X. Page after page of black-and-white photo-
graphs portray the history of military PT boats, Coast Guard
craft, and more.
Big Water, Little Boats: Moulty Fulmer and the First Grand
Canyon Dory on the Last of the Wild Colorado River, by
Tom Martin. Published by Vishnu Temple Press,
P.O. Box 30821, Flagstaff, AZ, 86003, www.vishnu
templepress.com. 240 pp., paperback, $24.95. ISBN:
978–0–9795055–6–0. If you enjoyed reading about GEM
and the cataract boats in WB No. 219, you’ll love this story of
her daredevil owner.
A Chronology of Boating on the Navesink River: Navesink
Maritime Heritage Association, by Hendrik F. Van Hem-
men. Published by the author and Navesink Maritime
Heritage Association, P.O. Box 6498, Fair Haven, NJ
07704, www.navesinkmaritime.org. 96 pp., paperback,
$35. ISBN: 978–1–4507–5192–6. Explores a variety of boats
of the New Jersey Shore: oyster garveys, Shrewsbury packets, Sea
Bright Skiffs, Jersey Speed Skiffs, and even the Six-Hour Canoes.

106 • WoodenBoat 227

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Woodenboat RevieW

The Man Who Thought Like a Ship, by Loren Steffy. Part


of the Ed Rachal Foundation Nautical Archaeology
Series. Published by Texas A&M University Press, John
H. Lindsley Building, Lewis Street, 4354 TAMU, College
Station, TX 77843-4354, www.tamupress.com. 196 pp.,
hardcover, $35. ISBN: 978–1–60344–664–8. The author’s
father led a team in Cyprus that reassembled 6,000 ancient
wood fragments into the Kyrenia Ship, the first ship in the
world, as the author puts it, ever to be constructed twice, and
essentially giving birth to the field of nautical archaeology.
The Bucket Book: A Celebration of Megayacht Racing, by
Alessandro Vitelli et al. Published by Concepts Pub-
lishing, Inc., P.O. Box 1066, Bridge Street Marketplace,
Waitsfield, VT 05673, www.conceptspublishinginc.com.
248 pp., hardcover, $65. A gallery of stunning photographs of
superyacht Bucket Regattas, where fun, safety, and camaraderie
are more important than winning.
Cornell’s Ocean Atlas: Pilot Charts for All Oceans of the World,
by Jimmy and Ivan Cornell. Published by Cornell Sail-
ing Ltd., 50 Great Russell St., London WC1B 3BA, United
Kingdom; www.cornellsailing.com. 120 pp., paperback,
$84.95. ISBN: 978–0–9556396–5–4. Complete set of updated
charts based on meteorological satellite observations in the last
20 years.
The BOREALIS: A True Story about Living Aboard While
Restoring a 90-Year-Old Wood Boat, by Lonnie Dee Rob-
ertson. Published by the author at welcometolonnie
deeandjinnasworld.com. 460 pp., paperback. ISBN:
978–1–4750315–3–9. Two musicians take on the challenge
of restoring an Alden sailboat. WHERE TRADITION MEETS PERFORMANCE
DVD
Traditional Boat Geometry, by Warren Williamson. Pub-
THE VINTAGE SERIES
lished by the author at www.idezineit.com. 8 hours, DVD,
$89.95. ISBN: 978–0–615–54470–0. The author employs
Rhino CAD to demonstrate and explain geometric concepts
necessary for traditional boat construction.

New from WoodenBoat Books:


Classic Classes, by Vanessa Bird. Published by Wooden-
Boat Books, P.O. Box 78, Brooklin, ME 04616,
w w w.w o o d e nb o a t s t o r e.
com. 160 pp., hardcover,
$24.95. ISBN: 1–934982–
07–5. A field guide to over
140 well-known class boats.
Each spread presents one boat
The new Vintage Series from New England Ropes
class with brightly colored pho- includes: Vintage 3-Strand, Vintage Sta-set, and
tographs, profile drawings, Endura Braid Classic.
particulars, descriptions, plans
availability, and contact infor- Both Vintage 3-Strand and Vintage Sta-Set are made of 100% Polyester
while Endura Classic has a 100% Dyneema® SK75 core with Polyester
mation for the class association. cover. All 3 of these lines combine the uncompromising performance you
An index, sail insignia guide, expect from New England Ropes with a natural look that meets the needs
and the division of the book into dinghy, Olympic, and and the refined tastes of the traditional sailor.
yacht classes, makes the class you are seeking easy to find. For more information on The Vintage Series and our comprehensive Marine
product line please visit our website at www.neropes.com!
NEW ENGLAND ROPES • 848 AIRPORT ROAD • FALL RIVER, MA
800-333-6679 • NEROPES@NEROPES.COM • WWW.NEROPES.COM

July/August 2012 • 107

Review227_AD_FINAL.indd 107 5/23/12 5:57 PM


Check out the
new, improved
WoodenBoat.com
Sign up for free to share photos,
videos, and connect with other
wooden boat enthusiasts.
WoodenBoat
PO Box 78, Brooklin, ME 04616
www.woodenboat.com

WBdotComFP_227R.indd 108 5/23/12 3:01 PM


CALENDAR OF EVENTS Compiled by Robin Jettinghoff

East Continuing through september 1


Friendship sloop Events
is in the morning and late afternoon
each day. Lamoine State Park, 23 State
Continuing through september 2 Various harbors, New England Park Rd., Ellsworth, ME 04605, 207–
Beetle Cat Events Events include the southwest Harbor 667–4778, or Tom Jackson, P.O. Box 96,
Various cities, Massachusetts Rendezvous, Southwest Harbor, Brooklin, ME 04616; tom@woodenboat.com.
The Leo J. telesmanick Maine, July 14; Pulpit Harbor 19–22 Vintage Model Yachting Days
Championship, now in its 90th year, Rendezvous, North Haven, Maine, Marblehead, Massachusetts
will be held at the Bass River Yacht July 17; Friendship sloop society National regatta hosted by the Marble-
Club in South Yarmouth on August 50th Homecoming Rendezvous and head Model Yacht Club. John Snow,
4 and 5. The Chatham Yacht Club Races, Rockland, Maine, July 19–21; U.S. Vintage Model Yacht Group, 78 East
Regatta takes place the same weekend Marblehead Regatta, Marblehead, Orchard St., Marblehead, MA 01945;
in Chatham. On August 18 and 19, Massachusetts, August 11–12; and a 781–631–4203; www.swcp.com/usvmyg.
the annual arey’s Pond Catboat rendezvous during the Gloucester
schooner Festival, September 1, 20–22 alexandria Bay Vintage “User”
Gathering in Pleasant Bay will strive to Boat show
gather 120 catboats for the Guinness Gloucester, Massachusetts. Event
information, Friendship Sloop Society, Alexandria Bay, New York
Book of Records. Later, check out This is a fun show; boats don’t
the 49th annual Westport Labor Day Friendship, ME 04547; www.fss.org.
need to be perfect to be judged, or
Regatta in Westport on September 2. Continuing through september 11
win. Held at the City Dock. Event
Event information, New England Beetle Northeast Wooden Canoe Heritage
information, Kevin Tifft, 315–482–4803,
Cat Boat Association, c/o Beetle, Inc., association activities
or TIShow@officeliverusers.com. Sponsored
3 Thatcher Ln., Wareham, MA 02571; Various locations, Maine
by Thousand Island Chapter-ACBS, P.O.
508–295–8585; www.beetlecat.org. Planned events are Oquossoc
Box 800, Alexandria Bay, NY 13607;
sportsman Day in Oquossoc, on
Continuing through september 2 www.1000islandsacbs.club.officelive.com.
August 14 and Oquossoc Day with
WoodenBoat Classic Regatta series a boat parade on August 25. Event 21 Wooden Boat Festival
Various places, New England information, Bob Bassett, Chapter Head, Toms River, New Jersey
Races are on July 21–22 at the Northeast Chapter, Wooden Canoe A judged event at Huddy Park, with
Larchmont Yacht Club (www. Heritage Association, P.O. Box 111, 21 nautical vendors, marine artists, and
larchmontyc.org) in Larchmont, Day Rd., Vienna, ME 04360; 207–578– family boatbuilding. Event information,
New York. The Corinthian Yacht 0876; kpboatbarn@yahoo.com. Gary Micco, 908–303–1710, micco1@
Club Classic Yacht Regatta will be comcast.net. Sponsored by Toms River
on August 11–12 in Marblehead, Continuing through september 9
Exhibit: “On Guard! semper Paratis Seaport Society, P.O. Box 1111, Toms
Massachusetts (www.corinthianclassic. River, NJ 08754; 732–349–9209;
org), followed by the Opera House In Newburyport 222 Years”
Newburyport, Massachusetts www.tomsriverseaport.org.
Cup in Nantucket, Massachusetts
(www.operahousecup.org), on Opening July 17 at the Custom House 21–22 antique Boat show
August 19 just after Nantucket Race Maritime Museum of Newburyport, Hammondsport, New York
Week. Bristol, Rhode Island (www. exploring the breadth and capabilities The 30th annual show hosted by
herreshoff.org), hosts the Herreshoff of the Coast Guard service. Event Wine Country Classic Boats, ACBS
Classic Regatta on the weekend of information, Custom House Maritime Chapter. Event information, Jack Young,
August 24–25, while neighboring Museum, 25 Water St, Newburyport, 315–694–7420 or keukajack@yahoo.com.
Newport (www.moy.org) is home MA 01950; 978–462–8681; Sponsored by Wine Country Classic Boats,
to the Museum of Yachting Classic www.customhousemaritimemuseum.org. www.winecountryclassicboats.com.
Yacht Regatta on September 1–2. July 21–22 Lake Champlain small Boat Festival
Event information, WoodenBoat Classic Vergennes, Vermont
Regatta Series, c/o Bill Doyle, Performance 1 Willard Hanmer Guideboat Race Demonstrations of boatbuilding,
Research, 25 Mill St., Newport, Saranac Lake, New York lectures, the Lake Champlain
RI 02840; 401–848–0111; bill@ This is the 50th year of this race, Three-Mile Challenge Race, and a
performanceresearch.com. and organizers plan to display over cardboard-and-duct-tape regatta.
50 guideboats. All Adirondack Event information, Lake Champlain
Continuing through august 16 guideboats welcome. Event
Various Events at the New Hampshire Maritime Museum, 4472 Basin Harbor
information, Chris Woodward, Rd., Vergennes, VT 05491; 802–475–
Boat Museum Woodward Boat Shop, 3 Hanmer Ave.,
Various towns, New Hampshire 2022; www.lcmm.org.
Saranac Lake, NY 12983; 518–891–
The New England Vintage Boat 22 Keuka Lake Regatta
3961; www.guideboats.com
auction is on July 21. The non-judged Hammondsport, New York
alton Bay Vintage Boat show is held 14 s.s. Crocker Memorial Race This regatta re-creates the regattas
at the Alton Town Docks from 9 Manchester by the Sea, Massachusetts from the 1920s. A chicken barbecue
a.m. to noon on Saturday, August Sponsored by the Manchester follows the event. Event information,
11. The Boathouse tour on Lake Yacht Club and the Manchester Fred Mayer, 607–569–9314 or JOFR@
Winnipesaukee is on Thursday, Harbor Boat Club. Event information, earthlink.net. Sponsored by Wine
August 16. Event information, New Carl Doane, Crocker Memorial Race Country Classic Boats,
Hampshire Boat Museum, P.O. Box 1195, Committee, 24 Woodholm Rd., www.winecountryclassicboats.com.
397 Center St., Wolfeboro Falls, NH Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA 01944; 978–
27–29 Finger Lakes annual Boat show
03896; 603–569–4554; www.nhbm.org. 526–9636; www.sscrockerrace.com.
Skaneateles, New York
Continuing through september 11 14 Blackburn Challenge This judged show on Skaneateles
Maine Windjammers activities Gloucester, Massachusetts Lake will include more than 80
Various harbors, Maine A 20-mile race for rowing boats, many boats. Event information, Jack Gifford
Attend the Windjammers Music of them, alas, not of wood. Sponsored at 315–703–7531 or jmgiff@verizon.
Festival the week of August 6, Camden by Cape Ann Rowing Club, P.O. Box 333, net. Sponsored by Finger Lakes Chapter,
Windjammer Weekend on September North Andover, MA 01845; Antique & Classic Boat Society, 1734
1 and 2, and the season-concluding www.blackburnchallenge.com. Lake Rd., Webster, NY 14580; 585–265–
WoodenBoat sail-In the week of 19–21 small Reach Regatta 1518; www.flc-acbs.org.
September 11. Maine Windjammer Lamoine, Maine 27–29 MacKenzie Boat Club Rendezvous
Association, P.O. Box 317P, Augusta, More than 50 small craft of the Small Oak Bluffs, Martha’s Vineyard,
ME 04332; 800–807–9463; Reach Regatta will be sailing off Massachusetts
www.sailmainecoast.com. Lamoine State Park. Best public viewing At the Oak Bluffs Marina. Event

July/August 2012 • 109

Calendar227_FINAL.indd 109 5/17/12 10:25 AM


CALENDAR

information, Carolyn Schofield, The eRR itself will be August 4. Event 860–569–5948 or Charlie Raymond,
cschofield1941@verizon.net. Sponsored information, Eggemoggin Reach Regatta, 413–562–8442. Bay State Woodies
by the MacKenzie Boat Club, 23 Rayfield P.O. Box 333, Brooklin, ME 04616; Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat Society,
Rd., Marshfield, MA 02050; 781–223– www.erregatta.com. www.baystatewoodies.org.
8014; www.mackenzieboatclub.com. 3–5 Antique Boat Show & Auction 17–19 Presque Isle Bay Messabout
28–29 Antique and Classic Boat Rendezvous Clayton, New York Erie, Pennsylvania
Mystic, Connecticut Now in its 48th year; view over 100 A TSCA Small Boat Festival with
A gathering at Mystic Seaport for antique boats exhibited dockside. presentations, fireworks, cardboard
restored classic boats built before Event information, Margaret Hummel, boat regatta, and more. The city’s
1965. Boat parade on Sunday. mhummel@abm.org at 315–686–4104. Celebrate erie festival is going on at
Event information, Mystic Seaport, 75 Sponsored by Antique Boat Museum, 750 the same time. Sponsored by Bayfront
Greenmanville Ave., P.O. Box 6000, Mary St., Clayton, NY 13624; 315–686– Center for Maritime Studies, 40 Holland
Mystic, CT 06355–0990; 860–572– 4104; www.abm.org. St., Erie, PA 16507; 814–456–4077;
0711; www.mysticseaport.org. www.bayfrontcenter.org.
3–5 Mahone Bay Pirate Festival and
28–29 Lake Winnipesaukee Antique and Regatta 2012 18 National Boat Building Challenge at
Classic Boat Show Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia Belfast Harbor Fest
Meredith, New Hampshire Children’s activities, skirmishes Belfast, Maine
At the town’s public docks. More than between pirate ships and more. Teams receive plans, building
100 boats on display. Event information, Sponsored by Mahone Bay Wooden materials, and workspace; and compete
Bill John, john1948@metrocast.net or 603– Boat Festival, P.O. Box 609, Mahone for cash prizes. Event information, David
569–5824. Sponsored by New England Bay, NS, B0J 2E0, Canada; Crabiel, 207–322–5805. Belfast Harbor
Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat Society, www.mahonebayclassicboatfestival.org. Fest, P.O. Box 74, Belfast, ME 04915;
www.necacbs.org. www.belfastharborfest.com.
28–29 Lunenburg Wooden Boat Reunion 3–13 Up the Bay Chesapeake Bay Oyster
Buyboat 2012 Reunion Cruise 18–19 Antique and Classic Boat Show
Lunenburg, Nova Scotia Kingston, New York
Hosted by the Fisheries Museum Various Cities, Maryland
The cruise starts in Crisfield, Includes an in-water boat show, judging,
of the Atlantic. See marine trade and displays at the Hudson River
displays, demonstrations, and lots and visits the ports of Solomon
Island, Annapolis, Chester River, Maritime Museum. Event information,
of racing. Event information, Michael David Price, oldboat@gmail.com. Sponsored
Higgins, michael@coveyisland.com. Chestertown, and Rock Hall.
Event information, David Wright, by Hudson River Chapter, Antique &
To participate in the Reunion, Angela Classic Boat Society, www.acbshrc.com.
Saunders, saundad@gov.ns.ca. Sponsored info@oysterbuyboats.com, or Kevin
by Lunenburg Wooden Boat Reunion, Flynn,brokerage@flynnco.com. Sponsored 18–19 Antique Marine engine exposition
B0J ZC0 P.O. Box 1363, Lunenburg, by Chesapeake Bay Buyboat Association, Mystic, Connecticut
NS, Canada; 902–634–4794; www. www.oysterbuyboats.com/cbba.html. A celebration of steam, gas, and
lunenburgwoodenboatreunion.com. 4 Naples Antique and Classic Boat Show diesel. Mystic Seaport, 75 Greenmanville
Naples, Maine Ave., P.O. Box 6000, Mystic, CT
29 Red JACket Youth Sailing Regatta 06355–0990; 860–572–0711;
Rockland, Maine The 19th annual show on Naples
Causeway. Related events leading www.mysticseaport.org.
Young sailors from Penobscot Bay
sailing programs compete in races up to the show include Long Lake 25 Antique and Classic Boat Rendezvous
starting at 11:30 a.m. The public is and Sebago Lake cruises, and a Lake George, New York
welcome to watch the races and join benefit ride for Camp Sunshine. At the village docks. Event information,
the post-race barbecue. Hosted by The Event information, Jeff Murdock, 207– Tom Carmel, underwriterssurvey@verizon.
Apprenticeshop, 643 Main St., Rockland, 655–7510, mountainviewwoodies@gmail. net, 914–248–6413. Sponsored by
ME 04841; 207–594–1800; org. Sponsored by Mountainview Woodies Adirondack Chapter, Antique & Classic
www.apprenticeshop.org. Classic Boat Club of Maine, P.O. Box Boat Society, P.O. Box 1377, Clifton Park,
271, Naples, ME 04055; NY 12065.
29–4 NSSA Annual Schooner Race Week www.mountainviewwoodies.org.
Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, Canada 25–26 Antique and Classic Boat Festival
Start the week with the Heritage 4–5 Wooden Lightning Get together Salem, Massachusetts
Cup Schooner Race as part of the Syracuse, New York To be held at the Brewer Hawthorne
Lunenburg WoodenBoat Reunion, on Low-key racing exclusively for 19' Cove Marina, with classic boats of
July 28 and 29. Other races continue Lightnings built of wood. Restoration all kinds. Event information, Pat Wells,
through the week. Event information, help and ramp or hoist launching. Antique and Classic Boat Festival, 16
Nova Scotia Schooner Association, Hosted by the Onondaga Yacht Club. Preston Rd., Somerville, MA 02143; 617–
www.nsschooner.ca. Event information, Craig Thayer, 315– 666–8530; www.boatfestival.org.
882–6798. Sponsored by Wooden Lightning
31–August 1 Melville Marathon Get Together; www.lightningclass.org. 31–Sept. 3 Gloucester Schooner Festival
Mystic, Connecticut Gloucester, Massachusetts
A 24-hour reading of Moby-Dick 10–11 Lake Champlain Maritime Festival Historic schooners and replicas will
aboard the CHARLES W. MORGAN. and Antique and Classic Boat Show race on Saturday and Sunday, deck
To reserve a space, contact Central Burlington, Vermont tours, fireworks, and a parade of
Reservations at 860–572–5331. Mystic The festival is jointly sponsored by the sail. Sponsored by Cape Ann Chamber
Seaport, 75 Greenmanville Ave., P.O. Box Lake Champlain Antique & Classic of Commerce, 33 Commercial St.,
6000, Mystic, CT 06355–0990; Boat Society and the Lake Champlain Gloucester, MA 01930; 978–283–1601;
www.mysticseaport.org. Maritime Museum. Event information, www.capeannvacations.com/schooner.
Mike O’Brien, mobrien@lcmfestival.com
August or www.lcacbs. Lake Champlain Maritime September
Festival, 9 Taft St., Essex Junction,
1–4 eggemoggin Reach Regatta Week 1–7 Schooner Racing
VT 05452; 802–482–3313; www.
Castine, Camden, and Brooklin, Maine Gloucester and Provincetown,
lakechamplainmaritimefestival.com.
On Wednesday August 1, the Massachusetts
Castine Yacht Club will host a Fife 11 Baystate Woodies Boat Show Immediately following the Gloucester
Symposium. Feeder races start with Northampton, Massachusetts Schooner Festival, the Fishermen’s
the Castine Classic Yacht Race from At the Oxbow Marina on the Cup Race on September 4, starts in
Castine to Camden on August 2, Connecticut River. Judged show with Gloucester Harbor at noon and
and the Camden Feeder Race from river cruise, raffle, and barbecue. finishes in Provincetown. The Rhodes
Camden to Brooklin on August 3. Event information, John DeSousa, 19 Fishermen’s Series Races are on

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September 5 and 6. The week finishes Door County Maritime Museum, 120 N. Antique & Classic Boat Association, 533
with the Long Point Schooner & Madison Ave., Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235; W. Grand Ave., Port Washington, WI
Yacht Race on September 7. Sponsored 920–743–5958; www.dcmm.org. 53074–2102; 262–284–3650.
by The Great Provincetown Schooner 4 Classic Boats on the Boardwalk
Race, 333 R. Commercial St., P.O. Box July Traverse City, Michigan
559, Provincetown, MA 02657; 508–487– Lots of classic boats on display at
SAIL; www.rovincetownschoonerrace.com. 6–8 Antique and Classic Boat Show
Gravenhurst, Ontario the Boardman River Boardwalk.
7–9 Shuffle Off to Buffalo Event information, Laura White,
Over 100 boats on public exhibit at
Buffalo, New York 517–669–2029, or lswhitern@aol.com.
Muskoka Wharf. Event information,
A judged antique and classic boat Sponsored by Water Wonderland Chapter,
Rita and Paul Adams at adamsfw@
show at the Buffalo Launch Club, Antique & Classic Boat Society, 2521
sympatico.ca. Sponsored by Antique &
Grand Island. Event information, Rich Chippendale Dr., Kalamazoo, MI 49009;
Classic Boat Society, Toronto, P.O. Box
DeGlopper, richdeglopper88@gmail.com or www.wwcacbs.com.
675 Canada Post, 169 The Donway West,
716–-946–7246. Sponsored by Niagara
Don Mills, ON, M3C 2T8, Canada; 4 Boats at the Barns 2012
Frontier Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat
416–299–3311; www.acbs.ca. Hickory Corners and Richland, Michigan
Society; www.oldboatsbuffalo.org.
14 St. Clair Antique & Classic Boat Show Presentations at the Gilmore
8 Premiere Lake Quinsigamond Car Museum, then to the Gull
Antique & Classic Boat Show St. Clair, Michigan
In-water show on the St. Clair River Lake Country Club to launch
Worcester, Massachusetts the boats. Event information, www.
At the Regatta State Park. Hosted by at the Municipal Marina. Event
information, Patrick Chaps, 810–326– GilmoreCarMuseum.org or Chuck Nagy,
Regatta Point Community Sailing and Kalamazoo Antique Auto Restorers Club,
Bay State ACBS. Event information, Art 3575, or patrickchaps@yahoo.com.
Sponsored by Michigan Chapter, Antique P.O. Box 532, Oshtemo, MI 49077; 269–
Rubino, 508–885–3400. Sponsored by Bay 373–2826, crn007@comcast.net.
State Woodies Chapter, Antique & Classic & Classic Boat Society, www.michacbs.com.
Boat Society, www.baystatewoodies.org. 21 13th Annual Wooden Keels & Vintage 11 Ottawa International Antique and
Wheels Classic Boat Show and Cruise
8–9 2012 Traditional Sailing Craft Manotick, Ontario
National Regatta Indian Lake, Ohio
A non-judged classic boat and car Historic, antique, and classic boats
Solomons, Maryland will be on display alongside the Long
Annual model yacht regatta for show at Russells Point Harbor. Event
information, Jim Foeller, j.foeller@me.com, Island Locks on the Rideau Canal.
vintage sailing model yachts. Event Event information, Ray Saunders, 613–
information, John Snow, U.S. Vintage or 614–325–0840. Sponsored by Indiana
Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat Society, 749–4396, or rjsaunders@sympatico.ca.
Model Yacht Group, 78 East Orchard St., Sponsored by Manotick Classic Boat Club,
Marblehead, MA 01945; 781–631–4203; www.indianaacbs.com
P.O. Box 948, Manotick, ON, K4M 1A8,
www.swcp.com/usvmyg. 21 Antique and Classic Boat Show Canada; www.manotickclassicboatclub.ca.
8–9 Antique and Classic Boat Show Clear Lake, Iowa
At the seawall in downtown Clear 11 Les Cheneaux Antique Wooden Boat
Tuckerton, New Jersey Show
The gathering of classic boats is co- Lake. Welcoming classic boats of all
types. Event information, Cary Diekema Hessel, Michigan
sponsored by the Tuckerton Seaport Combined with the Festival of
and the Philadelphia Chapter of the at 641–891–5615, cdbodyshop@yahoo.
com or Curt Gause at 515–264–1372, Arts, this judged show is one of the
Antique & Classic Boat Society. Event largest antique wooden boat shows
information, Tuckerton Seaport, P.O. ccgause@msn.com. Sponsored by Clear
Lake Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat in the nation. Event information, Les
Box 52, 120 West Main St., Tuckerton, Cheneaux Historical Association, P.O.
NJ 08087; 609–296–8868; Society, www.clearlakeacbs.org.
Box 301, 105 South Meridian Rd.,
www.tuckertonseaport.org. 22 Lakeside Wooden Boat Show Cedarville, MI 49719; 906–484–2821;
15 Barnegat Bay Antique and Classic Lakeside, Ohio www.lchistorical.org.
Boat Show This largely on-land show is held at
Point Pleasant, New Jersey the 1870s Hotel Lakeside overlooking 17–19 Lyman Boat Owners All Classics
A judged show at the New Jersey Lake Erie. In conjunction with the Weekend
Museum of Boating. Free admission Ohio Plein Air artists’ painting Huron, Ohio
and parking. Stu Sherk, 610–277–2121 competition. Mame Drackett, mame@ A family-friendly celebration of classic
or Bob O’Brien, 732–295–2072. drackett.cc. Sponsored by Lakeside Wooden boats and vintage cars at the Huron
Sponsored by Barnegat Bay Chapter, Boat Society, c/o 5805 Wahl Rd.,Vickery, Municipal Marina. In conjunction
Antique & Classic Boat Society, P.O. OH 43464; 419–684–9804; with the Great Lakes Wooden Sailboat
Box 143, Bay Head, NJ 08742. www.lakesidewoodenboatsociety.com. Society. Event information, Lyman Boat
Owners Association, P.O. Box 40052,
15 Short Ships Rowing Regatta 28 Lake Superior Wooden Boat Show Cleveland, OH 44140; 440–241–4290;
Rockland, Maine Superior, Wisconsin www.lboa.net.
The Apprenticeshop and Rockland Held at Barker’s Island Marina.
Community Sailing co-host these Free to the public. Event information, 18 Antique and Classic Boat Regatta
small-craft rowing races. Awards contact Doug George, 612–889–9142, Buckeye Lake, Ohio
ceremony follows race. Event amazingskiff@msn.com. Sponsored by The 34th Annual Antique & Classic
information, The Apprenticeshop, 643 Woodies on the Water, 345 Canal Park Boat Regatta welcomes all boats to
Main St., Rockland, ME 04841; 207– Dr., Duluth, MN 55802–2315; 218– this judged show. Event information,
594–1800; www.apprenticeshop.org. 722–7884. Chuck Wadley 740–929–9941. Sponsored
by Buckeye Lake Chapter, Antique &
CeNTRAL August Classic Boat Society, 5109 Northbank,
P.O. Box 867, Buckeye Lake, OH 43008;
Continuing through August 5 3–4 Madison Area Antique and Classic www.buckeyelakeyc.com.
Summer events at the Door County Boat Show 18 Pewaukee Lake Antique and Classic
Maritime Museum Madison, Wisconsin Boat Show
Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin Includes Friday boat cruise to Pewaukee Lake, Wisconsin
On July 4, a new exhibit, “The War Wisconsin state capitol and governor’s At Lakefront Park, along with a
of 1812: Naval Battle for the Great mansion. Event information, Mark waterfront art fair, classic cars, and
Lakes,” opens, continuing through Walters, 608–224–0815 or waltswoody@ children’s events. Event information, Wil
November. The 22nd Annual Classic charter.net; or Andy McCormick, 608– Vidal, 262–695–2994 or wvidaljr@wi.rr.
and Wooden Boat Festival takes place 222–0018, or andy@mccormicklumber. com. Sponsored by Glacier Lakes Chapter,
on August 4–5. Event information, com. Sponsored by Glacier Lakes Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat Association, 533

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W. Grand Ave., Port Washington, WI


53074–2102; 262–284–3650.
Hopkins, MN 55343–0011; 612–823–
3990; www.acbs-bslol.com.
WeST
25 Wooden Boat Show and Parade Continuing through September 3
Pentwater, Michigan SOuTh Master Mariners events
At the Pentwater Yacht Club on San Diego, California
the shores of Pentwater Lake. July The Annual Open house Barbecue at
Event information, Dave Peterhans, 20–22 Wheeler State Park Rendezvous and the Spaulding Wooden Boat Center
248–217–3974 or lpeterhans@sbcglobal. Boat Show is on July 21. The McNish Classic,
net. Sponsored by Pentwater Yacht Club, Rogersville, Alabama hosted by the Pacific Corinthian Yacht
P.O. Box 607, 205 South Dover St., The Joe Wheeler Boat Show held Club, is held July 28. The Chicken
Pentwater, MI 49449; 231–869–8921; at Wheeler State Park Lodge. Ship Cruise from Petaluma Yacht
www.pentwateryachtclub.com. Saturday luncheon cruise followed Club is from September 1 to 3. Event
by boat judging. Event information, information, Master Mariners Benevolent
25 Antique Outboard Motor Swap Association, San Francisco, CA 94109;
Meet and Auction Michael Hart, 901–831–0855, or
michaeljhart65@yahoo.com. Sponsored 415–364–1656; www.mastermariners.org.
South Haven, Michigan
The Wolverine Chapter of the by Dixieland Chapter, Antique & Classic July
Antique Outboard Motor Club brings Boat Society, www.acbs-dixieland.org.
its collection of antique motors to the 21 Cape Fear Community College 9-13 historic Boat Documentation
Michigan Maritime Museum. Event Wooden Boat Show Workshop
information, The Michigan Maritime Wilmington, North Carolina Astoria, Oregon
Museum, 260 Dyckman Ave., South Meet up with the Simmons Sea Introduces participants to the process
Haven, MI 49090; 269–637–8078; Skiff Club, or view the new boats of documenting boats, including
www.michiganmaritimemuseum.org. created by the students in the Cape collecting data, creating drawings and
25–26 Toledo Antique & Classic Boat Show Fear program. Sponsored by Cape Fear models, and producing reports. Event
Toledo, Ohio Community College, 411 North Front St., information, Lucien Swerdloff, Clatsop
Vendors, land and water displays, Wilmington, NC 28401; 910–362–7151; Community College, 1651 Lexington Ave.
and live music at the Toledo Yacht www.cfcc.edu. Astoria, OR 97103, 503–338–2301, or
Club. Event information, Scott Ramsey, lswerdloff@clatsopcc.edu.
Ramsey Brothers Restorations, 329 20th September 13–15 Maritime heritage Festival and
St., Toledo, OH 43604; 419–255–2628; 6–9 Charlotte Antique and Classic Boat Antique and Classic Boat Show
www.toledoboatshow.com. Show St. Helens, Oregon
Mooresville, North Carolina A family-friendly event with
September To be held at Queen’s Landing on demonstrations, two WWII vessels,
7–9 Dispro Annual Regatta Lake Norman. Event information, music, and a water-skiing show. Event
Honey Harbour, Ontario Ed Longino, 800–633–6224, or information, Chris Finks, finksinc@me.com,
At the Delawana Inn, Honey Harbour. boss@longinodist.com, or www. 503–998–0231. Sponsored by Columbia-
Open to the public; you don’t need charlotteantiqueboatshow.com. Sponsored Willamette Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat
to own a Dispro to attend. Event by Blue Ridge Chapter, Antique & Classic Society, 6465 S.W. Wexford Place, Portland,
information, John Storey, 705–684– Boat Society, 123 Mr. Johns Choice Rd., OR 97223; www.cwc-acbs.org.
9560, mstorey@cogeco.ca; or Joe Fossey, Hartwell, GA 30643–2365;
www.blueridgechapter.com. 23 eric erickson Oil Island Race
705–726–6600, jifossey@rogers.com.
Long Beach, California
Reservations, 800–335–2926 or karen@ 7–9 Reedville Antique and Classic Boat An easy-going race in Los Alamitos
delawana.com. Sponsored by Dispro Show Bay, followed by a barbecue raft-up.
Owners Association, 305 Duckworth St., Reedville, Virginia Sponsored by the Wooden Hull Yacht Club.
Barrie, ON, L4M 3X5, Canada. Come Saturday to see displays on Wooden Hull Yacht Club, 4219 Maury
7–9 Century Boat Club Thoroughbred land, boats on the water, a nautical Ave., Long Beach, CA 90807; 562–495–
Roundup flea market, and a boat parade. Event 4235; www.whyc.org.
Manistee, Michigan information, Clif Ames, 804–453–3506
At the Manistee Riverwalk. Not or macames@nnwifi.com. Sponsored 27–29 West Coast Wooden Kayak
limited to Century Boats. Free to by Tidewater Chapter, Antique & Rendezvous
public. Event information, Thomas Classic Boat Society and the Reedville Port Townsend, Washington
Holmes, thomasholm@sbcglobal.net Fishermen’s Museum, P.O. Box 306, This gathering at Fort Worden State
Sponsored by Century Boat Club, 7552 Reedville, VA 22539; 804–453–6529; Park for those who own, build, or
Sunset Circle, Almond, NY 14804; 607– www.rfmuseum.org. wish to build wooden kayaks, is
276–6468; www.centuryboatclub.com. free and open to the public. Event
7–9 Gathering of Boatbuilders
information, Joe Greenley, Redfish Kayak
7–9 Paddlers’ Rendezvous Guild, Tennessee
& Canoe Co., 153 Otto St., Suite G, Port
Killbear Provincial Park, Ontario At Hale’s Bar Marina & Resort.
Townsend, WA 98368; 360–808–5488;
For anyone interested in canoes and Organized and carried out by
www.RedfishKayak.com.
kayaks. Granite Saddle Campground members of the Glen-L forum. Open
overlooking Georgian Bay. Park fees to home-built boats of all types. Event 27–28 South Tahoe Wooden Boat Classic
apply. Event information, John Hupfield, information, Glen-L Marine Designs, 9152 Lake Tahoe, California
Lost in the Woods Boatworks, Fr 9, Rosecrans Ave., Bellflower, CA 90706; More than 70 boats expected at the
Harrison’s Landing, RR1, Nobel, ON, 562–630–6258; www.Glen-L.com. Tahoe Keys Marina and Yacht Club in
P0G 1G0, Canada; 705–342–1465; 14–15 22nd Annual Smith Mountain Lake South Lake Tahoe. Event information,
www.lostinthewoods.ca. Antique Boat Show www.tahoewoodenboats.com. Sponsored
8 Lake Minnetonka Antique & Classic Huddleston, Virginia by the Northern California/Lake Tahoe
Boat Rendezvous At the Mariners Landing Resort and Chapter, Antique & Classic Boat Society,
Excelsior, Minnesota Conference Center, Smith Mountain www.acbs-tahoe.org.
Held at Maynard’s Restaurant on Lake. September 15 is the public 28 McNish Classic Wooden Boat Race
the shores of Lake Minnetonka. A show date. Event information, Mike Channel Islands Harbor, California
judged show open to any and all Russell, 630–696–6052 or mikruss@ This race is a reverse pursuit race
vintage watercraft. Event information, aol.com. Sponsored by Smith Mountain whereby the slower boats start first
contact Clark Oltman, 612–210–5380 Lake Chapter–ACBS, P.O. Box 332, followed by the faster boats. Hosted by
clarkoltman@msn.com. Sponsored by Bob Moneta, VA 24121; 540–297–9202; the Pacific Corinthian Yacht Club, 2600
Speltz Land-O-Lakes Chapter, Antique www.woodenboats.net. S. Harbor Blvd., Oxnard, CA 93035;
& Classic Boat Society, P.O. Box 11, 805–985–7292; www.pcyc.org.

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August Museum, 1492 North Harbor Dr., San


Diego, CA 92101; 619–234–9153;
constructed from traditional
materials.” Many exhibitors, antique
3–5 Big Sky Chapter ACBS Boat Show www.sdmaritime.com. cars, and much more. Event
Lakeside, Montana information, Tony Goodhead, +44–
On Flathead Lake. Friday night September (0)1932–872–575 or tradboatentries@
reception at Classic Company Boat 3–5 Deer Harbor Wooden Boat yahoo.co.uk. Sponsored by Thames
Works, Saturday night dinner, Rendezvous Traditional Boat Rally, 3 Endsleigh
Sunday afternoon boat parade. Deer Harbor, Washington Gardens, Surbiton, Surrey KT6 5JL,
In partnership with Montana Regatta, boats on display, food, and England; +44–(0)181–390–1110;
Wooden Boat Foundation. Contact fun. Moorage reservations can be made www.tradboatrally.com.
Alex Berry, 406–471–2293, or alexb@ by calling Deer Harbor Marina at 360–
montanawoodenboatfoundation.org. 376–3037; otherwise, call Deer Harbor August
Sponsored by Big Sky Antique & Classic Boatworks 360–376–4056. Sponsored by
Boat Society, P.O. Box 503, Lakeside, MT 2–5 Risør Wooden Boat Festival
the Wooden Boat Society of the San Juans,
59922. Risør, Norway
P.O. Box 251, Deer Harbor, WA 98243;
Hundreds of boats of all types gather
10–11 Lake Tahoe Concours d’Élégance www.woodenboatsocietyofthesanjuans.org.
in the small city’s scenic harbor, with
Carnelian Bay, California 7–9 Port Townsend Wooden Boat Festival exhibitions, handcrafts, and music.
Held at the Sierra Boat Company. Port Townsend, Washington Event information, Tove Esnault or
Celebrating its 40th anniversary, More than 150 wooden boats, with Odd Sverre Aasbø, +47–913–87–355.
the featured class for 2012 is “Riva many activities including workshops, Sponsored by Risør Wooden Boat Festival,
Aquarama.” Event information, www. demonstrations, music, and races. Solsiden 8, Risør, 4950, Norway; +47–
laketahoeconcours.com. Sponsored by Liquid Sponsored by the Wooden Boat Foundation 3715–3070; www.trebatfestivalen.no.
Blue Events, 748 South Meadows Pkwy., & Northwest Maritime Center, 431 Water
Suite A9 No. 275, Reno, NV 89521; 10–12 Robbe & Berking Sterling Cup
St., Port Townsend, WA 98368; 360–
775–851–4444; www.liquidblueevents.com. Inner Flensberg Fjord, Glücksberg,
385–3628; www.woodenboat.org.
Germany
11 Frisco Antique and Classic Boat Show 8–11 Kachemak Bay Wooden Boat Festival Races for the 12-Meter, Eight-Meter,
Frisco, Colorado Homer, Alaska and Six-Meter classes. Sponsored by
At Frisco Bay Marina on Lake Enjoy children’s boatbuilding Flensberger Segel-Club, Quellental, 24960
Dillon. Event information, Bill Tordoff projects, demonstrations, and the Glucksburg, Germany; 49–4631–3233;
at amsiinc@cs.com. Sponsored by Rocky Pedersen classic rowboat races. Event www.fsc.de.
Mountain Classics Chapter, Antique & information, Kachemak Bay Wooden Boat
Classic Boat Society, 970–887–2210; 16–19 nation’s Cup for Classic yachts
Society, P.O. Box 97 Homer, AK 99603;
www.rockymountainclassics.org. Kiel-Laboe, Germany
907–235–2986; www.KBWBS.org.
Short races held on Friday and the
18–19 Lake Coeur d’Alene Wooden Boat traditional long-distance race on
Show EuRoPE & BEyonD Saturday. Enjoy good food, art, and
Coeur d’Alene, Idaho music as well. Event information,
On the boardwalk at the Coeur Continuing through August 19
www.german-classics.info. Sponsored by
d’Alene Resort, now in its 27th year. Baltic Classic Circuit
German Classic Yacht Club, c/o Wilfried
Free to the public. Event information, Various cities, Scandinavia and Russia
Horns, Kanalstraße 30, Kiel, D–24159,
Diane Higdem, 208–292–1635, or As part of the Baltic Classic Week,
Germany; 0431–76277; www.fky.org.
diane@cdachamber.com. Sponsored by from July 16–24 the yachts meet in
Coeur d’Alene Chamber of Commerce, 105 Västervik before sailing to Arkösund
N. First St., Ste. 100, Coeur d’Alene, ID and Trosa, all in Sweden. Then the September
83814; www.cdachamber.com. boats sail to Finland for the Pommern 8–9 Classic Boat Regattas
18–19 Toledo Wooden Boat Show Classic in Mariehamn on July 28 and Various Cities, Italy
Toledo, Oregon 29. Next Helsinki, Finland, hosts the Events this year include a Sailing
Wooden boats of all types will be on Champagne nicolas Feuillatte Baltic Regatta on Lake Maggiore in Cerro
display at this family event featuring Classic Master Cup from August 3 di Laveno on September 8–9, and
boats, music, food, and exhibitors. to 5, and the Viapori Cup Race on the Trophy of the Stars Regatta
Sponsored by Port of Toledo, P.O. Box 428, August 11. Finally, St. Petersburg for Arpège Sailing Boats in Venice
496 NE Hwy. 20, Unit 1, Toledo, OR Classic Week runs from August on the same weekend. Associazione
97391; 541–336–5207; 14 to 19 in St. Petersburg, Russia. Scafi d’Epoca e Classici, Registro Storico
www.portoftoledo.org. Event information, Olle Appelberg, olle. Nautico, Via Melegari 1, Milano, 20122,
appelberg@sailtrust.org. Sponsored by Italy; +39–02–7601–3988; www.asdec.it.
23–26 Vancouver Wooden Boat Festival Scandinavian Classic Yacht Trust,
Vancouver, British Columbia Hållsnäs Skräddarudden, Trosa, S 619 12–16 Dorestad Raid
Held on Granville Island, featuring 92, Sweden; 0046–8–559–21–830; Friesland, The Netherlands
boatbuilding demonstrations, United States, 440–499–5495; This year the trip starts in
races and family boatbuilding. Free www.sailtrust.org. Leeuwarden and heads east toward
admission. Event information,Vancouver Garnwerd. Crew spaces for those
Wooden Boat Society, 1490 Johnston St., July without boats are available. Event
Granville Island, Vancouver, BC, information, Dorestad Raid, Jan
22 Transat Classic 2012 Kuipersweg 8, Sneek, 8606 KD, The
V6H 3S1, Canada; 604–688–9622;
Douarnenez, France Netherlands; 0031–515–411–244;
www.vancouverwoodenboat.com.
A transatlantic race for vintage, www.natuurlijkvaren.nl.
23–26 Big Bear Lake ACBS Show modern classic, and neo-classic boats.
Big Bear, California Hull may be wood or other materials.
This is an informal, non-judged show. Race participants leave Douarnenez,
Event information, Charlie Brewster, France, on July 22 and sail to Cascals,
909–866–8769. Sponsored by Southern Portugal, eventually crossing the
California Chapter, Antique & Classic Atlantic sailing for Barbados. Transat
Boat Society, www.socalacbs.com. Classique Lagasse, Comet Organization,
31–3 Festival of Sail Ar Groas Coz, 29100 Kerlaz, France; You can find a more
San Diego, California 00–33–(0)2–98–51–82–68; detailed listing of these
A “tall ship” gathering, with a sail-by www.transat-classique.com.
of vessels of the Ancient Mariners 14–15 Thames Traditional Boat Rally
and other events at
Sailing Society on the opening day. Henley-on-Thames, England www.woodenboat.com
Event information, San Diego Maritime At Fawley Meadows, with “anything

July/August 2012 • 113

Calendar227_FINAL.indd 113 5/17/12 11:07 AM


Vintage Boats
KITS
and&serVices
PLANS
You are invited to attend the
2012 ACBS Annual Meeting and International Boat Show
September 21-22, 2012
Big Cedar Lodge on
Table Rock Lake, Missouri
www.TableRock2012.com

For more information on The Antique & Classic Boat Society, Inc. www.acbs.org Phone: 315-686-2628 Email: hqs@acbs.org

2011 Hacker-Craft 30 Sport


Like New Classic Mahogany Speedboat
Fully equipped with: “The Steinway of runabouts”
Vetus bow thruster
Port steering Only about ten hours from new
Hinged anchor lead w/anchor box Classic wooden boat styling
Finished mahogany engine compartment
Mahogany storage bin in engine 425 horsepower
compartment MerCruiser Horizon HO
Humminbird® depth finder/installed
Mahogany steering wheel
Igloo® ice cooler [970 cu. in.] recessed in Delivered new in June 2011
floor of aft cockpit and used twice by a
Stainless steel swim boarding bladder senior couple in LaJolla, CA;
installed [under swim platform] trade-in on a new Newell
CD/AM/FM stereo unit/ 4 speakers
[hidden installation] motorcoach
Engine hour meter
Mooring cover
No steps built into the sloped transom Karl Blade
16” teak swim platform Newell Coach Corp.
No railings on sloped transom Miami, OK
Taylor Sport windshield with hinged Current equivalent new MSRP exceeds $300,000
center walk thru Available for $229,000 918-542-3344
Heavy-duty two axle trailer

114 • WoodenBoat 227

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YNOT YACHTS TIMLESS BEAUTY & CLASSIC STYLE
T 412.337.2191

“How To” Restoration Videos As Seen On YouTube


Type in “brandotown” on YouTube
Eight 2-hour DVDs available — To order contact me at brandotown@comcast.net
Brandon Townsend • TOwnSend BOATwORkS, LLC
Custom Woodworking & Finishing • Specializing in Wood Boat Restoration
Cell: 586-713-7065 • www.townsendboatworks.com

The wooden runabout co.


Building and restoring fine wooden boats.
www.woodenrunabout.com

PHOTO: © B ILLY B LA CK
616-396-7248 CUSTOM BUILDS, DESIGN, REFIT & RESTORATION
4261 Blue Star Highway, Holland, MI www.ynotyachts.com

Chris-Craft 26´ SPL Racer

Lockpat II - 1931 40’ Hacker Custom Runabout V12 Packard 2025 cu.in. K-Class Raceboat V12 Packard

New Build: Amy Anne - 2011 30’ Morin Custom V12 BPM Miss Crude - Gold Cup Hisso V8

S ince 1971, we have offered complete restorations of vintage runabouts


and new boat construction. We have been selected by top boat collectors
around the world to restore and maintain some of the most sought-after boats in
existence. For those interested in buying or selling rare and collectible runabouts
and race boats, we now offer a brokerage service. New Build: 28´ Electric Racing Launch

989-686-7353 www.morinboats.com morinboats@yahoo.com

July/August 2012 • 115

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HOW TO
REACH US
TO ORDER FROM OUR STORE:
To order back issues, books, plans, model kits, clothing, or our
catalog, call The WoodenBoat Store, Toll-Free, Monday through
Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. EST (Saturdays, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m. EST.)
1-800-273-SHIP (7447) (U.S. & CANADA)
207-359-4647 (Overseas)
24-Hour FAX 207-359-2058
Internet: http://www.woodenboatstore.com
Email: wbstore@woodenboat.com
July 21–22 Classics at Larchmont Race Week
Larchmont Yacht cLub, nY ON-LINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES:
www.larchmontyc.org Internet: http://www.woodenboat.com
lycclassics@gmail.com At www.woodenboat.com follow the link to WoodenBoat Sub-
scriptions to order, give a gift, renew, change address, or check
Aug. 11–12 Corinthian Classic Yacht Regatta your subscription status (payment, expiration date).
marbLehead, ma TO ORDER A SUBSCRIPTION:
www.corinthianclassic.org To order a subscription (new, renewal,
timmyd616@gmail.com gift) call Toll-Free, Monday through WoodenBoat is now
available in digital format.
bruce.dyson@comcast.net Friday, 5:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., PT: Go to
1-800-877-5284 (U.S. and Canada) www.woodenboat.com
Aug. 19 Opera House Cup 1-818-487-2084 (Overseas)
nantucket, ma Internet: http://www.woodenboat.com
www.operahousecup.org
TO CALL ABOUT YOUR SUBSCRIPTION:
info@operahousecup.org If you have a question about your subscription, an address
Aug. 24–25 Herreshoff Marine Museum— change, or a missing or damaged issue, call Toll-Free,
Monday through Friday, 5:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., PT:
Herreshoff Classic Regatta 1-800-877-5284 (U.S. & CANADA)
bristoL, ri 1-818-487-2084 (Overseas)
www.herreshoff.org
TO CHANGE YOUR ADDRESS:
Sept. 1–2 Museum of Yachting Classic Either call 1-800-877-5284 or write to our subscription depart-
Yacht Regatta ment (address below) AS SOON AS YOU KNOW YOUR NEW
ADDRESS. Please don’t depend on your post office to notify
newport, ri us. Please give us your old address as well as your new when you
www.moy.org notify us, and the date your new address becomes effective.
Sept. 15–16 Indian Harbor Yacht Club TO CALL OUR EDITORIAL, ADVERTISING,
Classic Regatta AND BOAT SCHOOL OFFICES:
Greenwich, ct Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., EST:
www.indianharboryc.com 207-359-4651; FAX 207-359-8920
Sept. 22–23 Greenport Classic Yacht Regatta
TO WRITE:
Greenport, LonG isLand, nY
For subscriptions: For anything else:
www.sailgreenport.org WoodenBoat WoodenBoat
Sept. 22–23 American Yacht Club Subscription Dept.
P.O. Box 16958
P.O. Box 78, 41 WoodenBoat Lane
Brooklin, ME 04616
rYe, nY N. Hollywood, CA 91615-6958 <woodenboat@woodenboat.com>
www.americanyc.org
Sept. 29–30 Heritage Cup OVERSEAS SUBSCRIPTION OFFICES:
hempstead harbour Yacht cLub, Australia and New Zealand
Australia New Zealand
LonG isLand, nY Boat Books
Dollars Dollars
31 Albany Street
www.heritagecup.org Crows Nest 2065 NSW
1 yr $55.00 $57.50
2 yrs $110.00 $115.00
Oct. 6–8 New York City Classics Week Australia
Telephone: (02) 9439 1133
3 yrs $150.00 $156.82
manhattan, nY Fax: (02) 9439 8517 · Email: boatbook@boatbooks-aust.com.au
www.myc.org Website: www.boatbooks-aust.com.au

Sponsored by Europe Holland/ United


Evecom bv Germany Kingdom
Postbox 19 1 yr EUR 39.50 GBP 35.50
9216 ZH Oudega (Sm) 2 yrs EUR 75.00 GBP 66.00
The Netherlands 3 yrs EUR 107.50 GBP 96.50
General questions should be addressed to Bill Doyle, 401-848-0111, Telephone: (0) 512 371999 (CE tax included)
bill@performanceresearch.com or Sara Watson, 401-451-0888, Email: WB@evecom.nl
sara.watson@woodenboat.com. Website: www.evecom.eu

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BOATBROKERS
MAGNOLIA is an exceptional vessel in both design and construction—a handsome ‘Alden’ Style
schooner capable of passages anywhere in the world in elegance and comfort with no sacrifice
56' Rollins
Schooner to structural integrity, built by Paul Rollin’s Boat Shop in York, Maine. Interior joinerwork
2008 includes frame and panel doors and cabinet faces made of select cherry and curly cherry
finished bright in high-gloss marine varnish. Overhead house beams, deck beams and carlin
caps are black locust and cherry finished bright with white for contrast.  
The current configuration sleeps
seven to eight adults.
Location: Cortez, FL
Price: $850,000
Contact: Sid Imes, Cell 662-352-9460
E-mail: sidsail@yahoo.com

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 117

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BOATBROKERS
David Jones Yacht Brokerage
Classic Wooden Boats
Metinic
P.O. Box 898, Rockport, ME 04856 Yacht
207-236-7048 Fax 207-230-0177 Email: classics@midcoast.com

www.davidjonesclassics.com
Brokers
124 Horseshoe Cove Rd., Harborside, Maine 04642 • 207–326–4411
—Located at Seal Cove Boatyard—

own “Java” the original casey- built concordia 39 yawl, built in 1938.
this legendary ray hunt designed yawl was extensively rebuilt in
2003, resulting in essentially like new hull and deck, carefully
preserving the original interior and such parts of the hull that
TIMBERWIND—1931 Pilot Schooner 96' LOA. were sound. original rig is completely refurbished. how often is
USCG approved for 20 overnight passengers. it that you can own such a piece of maritime history and yet be
Part of Maine’s history with great character and charm. confident that maintenance costs are predictable and manage-
$650,000 (ME). able? Unmatched value at $165,000. OFFERS ENCOURAGED

Wanted Quality wooden boats


for effective sales
david etnier Boat Brokerage
is seeking well-maintained wooden vessels to add to their freshly
(508) 255-0994 • 45 Arey’s Lane, Box 222 • S. Orleans, MA 02662 established mid-coast Maine sales operation. If you have worked hard
catboat@cape.com • www.areyspondboatyard.com to keep your fine craft up over the years, we believe that we should work
hard to find a new owner who appreciates your efforts. If you
are seeking to purchase a boat, we believe you should get honest
and prompt attention from a broker who not only knows boats but
also shares your passion for them.
For our current listings please visit us at:
www.woodenboat.com/business and Yachtworld.com.
Please contact David directly at: 207–522–7572
or david@etnierboats.com

1991 Landing School Fenwick 18´


2011 Steve Killing 24´ Runabout
with 1GM10 Yanmar diesel,
Cruiser with 300 hp Mercury V-8.
GPS chart plotter/Raytheon Radar.
$225,000.00
$26,000.00

1964 Daytona Boatworks TX-41 41´


2009 Arey’s Acorn Skiff
with twin 485 Detroit diesels.
$13,000.00
$75,000.00
w w w. a rey s p o n d b o a t ya rd . c o m
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

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BOATBROKERS
Devlin “Brokerage”
Affordable / Usable Boats
Previously owned Devlin’s at great prices!

© Neil Rabinowitz

2011 Pelicano 18 $49,000 2004 Surf Runner 25’ $125,000

Also listed are these used Devlin’s 1991 Surf Scoter 22 $58,000
1985 Nancy’s China 15’ Sprit-sloop $8,995
1994 Nancy’s China 15’ Gaff-sloop $6,950
Give Sam a call and he can tell you more
Devlinboat.com (360) 866-0164 All Devlin’s Proudly Made in the USA!

July/August 2012 • 119

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BOATBUILDERS
Elegant & fast – no wake
Rumery’s Boat Yard Your choice of deck and cabin layout
Biddeford, Maine 04005 Rumery’s 38
(207)282-0408
www.rumerys.com

A full service boatyard


Heated storage, custom construction
Repairs & restoration of wooden &
composite boats to 60 feet

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)*4503*$$3"'54."/4)*1
*OUSPEVDJOH3FVCFO4NJUIT5VNCMFIPNF#PBUTIPQ

3FTUPSJOHBOEDPOTUSVDUJOH
IJTUPSJDBOEDMBTTJDXPPEFOCPBUT

BOATBUILDERS
/FX4R'U#PBUTIPQ/PX0QFOt3PVUF 4PVUIFSO"EJSPOEBDLT

THE WATER IS WAITING


www.tumblehomeboats.com 518.623.5050
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 121

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25
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

P E N D L E T O
YACHT•YARD N years of elegance, simplicity & quiet!
BOATBUILDERS

R e b u i l d e r s o f C l a s s i c Ya c h t s
525 Pendleton Point Rd. • Islesboro, ME 04848
(207) 734-6728 • www.pendletonyachtyard.com Budsin Wood Craft, PO Box 279, Marshallberg, NC 28553
www.quicksilvermaine.com www.budsin.com 252–729–1540

TRADITIONAL
BOAT WORKS, INC.
New construction & repairs on wooden boats only
Custom marine
Masts and spars a specialty WoodWork
Superb craftsmanship by skilled professionals, at  Wooden boats
reasonable rates, in one of the few quality West Coast  lines
wooden boat yards. Fully insured, references. HardWare
marine Joinery
ALTAMAR California 32 #2
CURRENT PROJECTS:
(207) 299-5777
Call about Commissioning
• Rhodes 33’ THERAPY your next boat.

•  Knud Reimers 30 Square  63 Castine rd., orland, me 04472 WWW.ianJosepHboatWorks.Com


Meter VANJA VI
•  Luders designed/built 
commuter LAUGHING  
LADY                                                     
•  Nick Potter California 32
Giesler Boat Builders
Builders of finely-crafted traditional wood boats
#2 ALTAMAR

ALTAMAR and LAUGHING 18 models to
LADY are available as  choose from
projects; ask for details and 
estimates
– starting at
$2,000

Douglas Jones, 3665 Hancock Street, San Diego, CA 92110 USA B. Giesler & sons
705.724.2648
Phone or Fax: 619 542 1229 • doug@traditionalboatworks.net
www.gieslerboats.ca
www.traditionalboatworks.net sales@gieslerboats.ca

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“ YAC H T I N G A S I T WA S I N T EN D ED TO B E ”

32' Noank Schooner Restoration MATHIS &


MCMILLEN
MATHIS YACHT BUILDING COMPANY, LLC
YACHT BUILDING

Beetle Cat® Boat Shop


YACHTS, INC.
COMPANY, LLC FRACTIONAL YACHT OWNERSHIP
CLASSIC WOODEN NEW BUILDS RESTORATIONS & MANAGEMENT
Traditional wooden boat building and restoration CONTEMPORARY COMPOSITE HULLS
www.woodenyachts.com
from skiffs to 50' power and sailboats. www.mathisyachts.com
Sole Builder of the Beetle Cat Boat

New 12' Onset Island Skiff


Photos: Alison Langley
We offer
New Boats • Used Boats
• Storage • Parts
• repairs • Maintenance

BOATBUILDERS
Beetle, Inc.
3 Thatcher Lane
Wareham, MA 02571
Tel 508.295.8585
Beaufort, SC (Main Office) • 843.524.8925
fax 508.295.8949
Newport, RI 401.846.5557 • info@woodenyachts.com
Beetle Cat — Celebrating 91 Years www.beetlecat.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 123

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Celebrating 65 Years

Celebrating 65 Years
Storage available for the upcoming winter

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Celebrating 65 Years

Offering a full range of services since 1946.


Storage available for this winter.
BOATBUILDERS

Register your Crocker Design at


www.CrockersBoatYard.com
Manchester, Massachusetts • 888-332-6004
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Please Visit Our Website to


Register Your Crocker
www.crockersboatyard.com
Restoration
Manchester, Massachusetts • 888–332–6004 and Preservation of
Antique and Classic
Wooden Boats
C UTTS & C ASE 207.882.5038
S HIPYARD
a full-service boatyard
edgecombboatworks.net

DESIGNERS & BUILDERS


OF
FINE WOODEN YACHTS

SINCE 1927

P.O. BOX 9
TOWN CREEK
OXFORD, MD 21654
410-226-5416
www.cuttsandcase.com
info@cuttsandcase.com

124 • WoodenBoat 227

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Seal Cove Boatyard, Inc.
BOX 99 / HARBORSIDE, MAINE 04642
TEL: 207-326-4422 / FAX 207-326-4411

You Will Find Us


Personable, Knowledgeable
and Skilled in a Broad
Range of Services

Same Boat.
Folks...It’s the
That’s Right,
Railway
She’s Off the

APBY 20' CAT, 2009 SPENCER LINCOLN 38', 2010

BOATBUILDERS
DESPERATE LARK - Herreshoff, 1903.
In Our Care for Over 40 Years
APBY 14', 2011 APBY DAYSAILER, 2008

E-mail: sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com • www.sealcoveboatyard.com www.areyspondboatyard.com


See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Traditional Boat, LLC


Wooden Yacht www.mainetraditionalboat.com
Construction ~ Restoration ~ Repair 207-568-7546 • Unity, Maine
ABYC Certified Marine Systems

For Sale

MP&G L L C WOOD BOATBUILDING


YACHT RESTORATION

RECENTLY COMPLETED AMORITA


NY-30
Structural upgrades
to Newport 29 ROGUE
Maintenance and
engine work on Fay &
Bowen Golden Arrow Every Detail in a Custom Van Dam is
Handcrafted to be as Unique as its Owner.
SallyAnne Santos

CURRENT PROJECTS
Cabin, rig and
rudder work on
N.Y. 32 SALTY ~ Unlike Any Other ~
929 FLANDERS ROAD, MYSTIC CT 06355 www.vandamboats.com
TEL 860–572–7710 www.mpgboats.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 125

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Meet the builder
of your next
dreaM boat

Recent Projects 2011-2012


• Replace fantail on 65' 1931 Chesapeake
buy boat passenger vessel
• Re-frame re-plank, reef, and caulk 38'
1929 Matthews
• Total restoration and re-power Navy
motor whaleboat
• Awlgrip paint job on 45' motoryacht
• Re-fasten frame and plank work on
20 ton sailboat at
• These and many more projects in our The 21stAnnual
two locations, please call or e-mail to
inquire about restoring the boat that
you love.
BOATBUILDERS

• Other fine boats may be seen in person


or at www.cwbw.com
June 29-July 1, 2012
Mystic Seaport, Mystic, CT
435 Old Taughannock Blvd., Stay Informed:
Ithaca, NY 14850 607.272.1581 www.TheWoodenBoatShow.com

Let Us Build One For You


P hil Mitchell —
Wooden boat
restoration and
repair. All makes
cruisers, runabouts,
and sail. Major hull
work, small repairs,
refinishing.
Our Secret Cove 24 is an elegant 1920s-style cruiser with
hidden 25hp outboard—an easily-trailered classic with
amazing accommodations. See our website for details: ­— Call 865-603-1418 —
www.islandboatshop.com Knoxville, Tennessee
Nordland, WA 98358 – email Marty@islandboatshop.com www.restorationsbyphil.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

The West Point Skiff ®


Traditional pine strips and oak construction using SiBr throughout
16, 18 and 20 foot models available FREE E-Newsletter!
1. Go to www.woodenboat.com
2. Click
Stay in
touch
Nichols Boat Builder LLC – Richard Nichols, Builder
with ALL
300 West Point Road, Phippsburg, Maine 04562 we do!
www.westpointskiff.com (207) 389-2468

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KMI Hull #1 Services
Marine Carpentry
Under Construction and For Sale Lantana, FL 561–734–0012
Custom Boat Building
18' 6" with 6' 6" beam www.kelleymarine.com Interior & Exterior Refits
Cold-molded construction Teak Decks
4-cylinder diesel engine Painting & Varnish

D.N. Hylan & Associates Classic designs


rendered for the
Boatbuilders twenty-first
century

Visit our website

BOATBUILDERS
DHylanBoats.com
You might discover that
Custom Design
&
Construction
is well within your reach
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Maine’s Premier Wooden Boat


pulsiferhampton.com
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

July/August 2012 • 127

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KITS
KITS & PLANS
PLANS
Chesapeake Light Craft

1. 2. 3.

4. 5. 6.

Build your own wooden boat! Award-winning kits for kayaks, rowing boats, and smallcraft. Choose from 90 models!

1805 GeorGe Ave. AnnApolis, MArylAnd | 21401 | 410.267.0137 | clcboAts.coM


See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

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See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Build Your Own Boat


Thousands have, using plans from the most respected
name in boat designs for amateur builders since 1953.
Glen-L Marine Designs offers over 300 designs in
KITS & PLANS
sail, power and row from 5' to 55' that YOU can build.
• Full-Size Plans, • Inboard Hardware
Patterns & Kits • Raptor® Products
• Boatbuilder Epoxy • Books & DVDs
and Supplies • Bronze Fastenings
• Steermaster Cables • Free Newsletter & More
Our online customer support community is second to
none. Experienced builders log in every day to help
you. Visit us online and see. Better yet, join us!
www.Glen-L.com/WB
Glen-L Marine Designs
9152 Rosecrans Ave. Bellflower, CA 90706 855-262-1317
Use key code WB128 for 10% off purchases thru Sept. 1, 2012!

July/August 2012 • 129

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FiberglassSupply.com
Materials: Kits and Plans:
• Vacuum Bagging Supplies • 11’ Hollow Wooden Stand Up
• Epoxies Paddleboard, Kit Only
System Three® • 18’ Hollow Wooden Unlimited
WEST System® Paddleboard, Kit or Plans
MAS® Epoxies • Surfboard Frame Kits for Strip
• Reinforcements Plank Surfboard Building
Fiberglass Cloths • And More!!!
Carbon Fiber Check us out at:
Aramids
• See our Full Catalog Online
www.fiberglasssupply.com
Burlington, Washington - www.fiberglasssupply.com - Toll Free 877.493.5333 - Fax 360.757.8284

Instructions • Plans • Materials


Canoe, Kayak & Small Boat Kits
Classes with Ted Moores
Plywood Kayak Kits
Wooden Boat Restoration
Custom Building
G
FEATURIN
ALL full length
Peterborough, Canada
bead & cove strips

705-740-0470 Convenient
www.bearmountainboats.com international shipping

Experience the difference our quality makes


KITS & PLANS

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

130 • WoodenBoat 227

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oughtred Wemyss rowing skiff kit

Kits for Okoume plywood planking with traditional


the designs of precut scarfs and hull molds CNC machined by
Paul Fisher
Duck Trap Blue
Iain Oughtred Hill,
Crayke Windsor Maine
For pricing & ordering: gardner@hewesco.com • 1-207-460-1178
www.cnc-marine-hewesco.com For kit details: www.jordanboats.co.uk
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

Your complete source for


cedar strip building
Plans • Strips • Epoxy • Seats
Fiberglass • Varnish or COMPLETE KITS!

KITS & PLANS

Bristol, New Hampshire


603-744-6872
www.newfound.com
July/August 2012 • 131

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CLASSIFIED
To place a Classified Ad, visit our website www.woodenboat.com
or call our Classified Ad Manager at (207) 359–7714.
Deadline for the September/October issue: July 6, 2012

JOHN M. KARBOTT BOATBUILDING.


Custom wooden boat building and
repair. Lobsterboat styles a speciality.
WoodenBoat School instructor. Mem-
ber Massachusetts Marine Trades
Association. 789 Rocky Hill Rd, Plym-
outh, MA 02360. Phone/fax 508–
224 –3709, w w w.by-the-sea.com/
karbottboatbuilding.
D&H FINISH CARPENTRY AND
WOODEN BOATS. Traditional styles
cold-molded for efficient ownership. THE DORY SHOP—Custom-built
MI, 810-287-0745. small boats and Lunenburg dories
since 1917. Oars and paddles too.
Call 902– 640 –3005 or visit w w w.
doryshop.com.

SATTER’S RESTORATION—Tradi- RATTY’S CELEBRATED QUOTATION


tional wooden canoes and boats 10 1⁄ 2' & 12' SK IFFS —Traditional with original illustrations featured
restored. Quality woodwork, bright- handcrafted plywood/oak, epoxy on our shirts and bags. 301–589–9391,
work, repairs. Branchville, NJ, 973– bonded, stainless-steel screws. Rug- www.MessingAbout.com.
948–5242, www.sattersrestoration. ged but lightweight. Easy rowing and
com. towing. Stable underfoot. $1,150 &
$1,500. Maxwell’s Boatshop, Rockland,
HADDEN BOAT CO.—WOODEN ME. 207–390–0300, jmax@midcoast.
boat construction and repair to any com.
size; sail and power. 11 Tibbetts Lane,
Georgetown, ME 04548, 207–371–
2662.

MCLAUGHL
AN IN
MI A career path is a journey
DA

JR

EST. 1970 of many steps.


.

S.N. SMITH & SON, boatwright/ Take your first one here.
CO
timber framer. Annual maintenance, RPORATIO N
restoration, and building to 45'. Our
goal is to make wooden boat owner-
ship predictable and enjoyable. P.O.
. .
Custom Cold-Molded Boats and Yachts to 40'
41 years of experience DMCBoats.CoM

Box 724, Eastham, MA 02642, 978–


290–3957, www.snsmithandson.com. REPAIR, RESTORATION, STORAGE,
and SURVEYS. Low overhead and
SALT CREEK BOAT WORKS, St. low rates, 35 years exper ience. www.themichiganschool.org
Petersburg, FL — Specializing in MICHAEL WARR BOATWORKS,
new construction to 30'. Materials + Stonington, ME, 207–367–2360.
$40 per hr. 30 years experience, LEARN BOATBUILDING at The
great references available. 727–821– LOW ELL BOATS — COMPLETE Boat School—America’s oldest, com-
5482, saltcreekboatworks.com. E-mail wooden boat restoration services and prehensive, waterfront, affordable
craig@saltcreekboatworks.com. marine surveying. GARY LOWELL, boatbuilding school in Eastport, Maine.
Greensboro, NC, 336 –274 – 0892. Focus on wood, composites or both!
www.lowell.to/boats. GI Bill benefits available. 207-853-
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show 2518 or 207-853-0990, www.theboat
school.net.
MI A MI, FORT L AUDER DA L E,
FLORIDA KEYS—30+ years experi-
ence building, repairing, and restor-
ing boats. Quality workmanship, with
composite construction expertise. School
References. Call 305 – 634 – 4263, SAIL MAINE ABOARD MAINE’S one- and Two-week courses in
SALT POND ROWING —Special- Boatbuilding, Seamanship, and
305–498–1049. rmiller35@bellsouth. oldest windjammer, “Lewis R. French.”
izing in glued plywood lapstrake and Related crafts
net, www.millermarinesystems.com. Enjoy great sailing, lobsters, new
strip-plank construction. Rowboats, June–September
light dories, and recreational shells. friends, and fresh air (no smoking). —Offsite winter courses also offered—
Designs by John Brooks, Joel White, Sailing from Camden, 3-, 4-, and 6- For a complete catalog:
Joe Thompson. Also rowing supplies: day cruises with only 22 guests, May– WoodenBoat School, P.o. Box 78,
oars, leathers, oarlocks, gunwale October. Capt. Garth Wells, P.O. Box Brooklin, ME 04616, Tel: 207–359–4651
guard, etc. www.saltpondrowing.com. 992 W, Camden, ME 04843. 800– or view the online catalog at
469–4635. www.schoonerfrench.com. www.woodenboat.com
Sedgwick, ME, 207–359–6539.

132 • WoodenBoat 227

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CLASSIFIEDS

RESCUE MINOR 20' MOLD with


plywood stations on excellent strong-
back. Ready for boat construction,
$5,000. mm2660@aol.com.

TRADITIONAL BOAT GEOMETRY—


This instructional video explains COMMISSION WATERCOLOR or
lofting, creating a lines drawing, and
Oil Portrait of your treasured boat
developing geometry for traditional by D.Hellums, classically trained,
wooden boats. http://idezineit.com/ award-winning artist. Submit photo-
index.html. graph or on location. Any size, framed,
ready to hang. 713–443–0962, dale_
NAVTECH MARINE SURVEYORS’ hel@yahoo.com.
course. Sur veying recreational/
commercial vessels. U.S. Surveyors THE FINEST WOODEN POND sail-
Association, Master Marine Surveyor ers. Free brochure: 1–800–206–0006.
program. FL, 800–245–4425. www.modelsailboat.com.

ELEGANT SCALE MODELS. Indi-


vidually handcrafted custom scale
model boats. JEAN PRECKEL,www. CATALOG OF 40 SIMPLE PLYWOOD
REBUILT CHRIS-CRAFT 6-cylinder preckelboats.com, 304–432–7202. boats, $4. JIM MICHALAK, 118 E.
engines: K, KL, KBL, KFL, KLC, M, Randle, Lebanon, IL 62254. www.
ML, MBL, MCL. Assorted V8s. Mitch jimsboats.com.
LaPointe’s, www.classicboat.com.
952–471–3300.
the
woodenboat show HERCULES ENGINE PARTS
Model M, ML, MBL, K, KL
june 29 - july 1 ATKIN ILLUSTRATED CATALOG—
HERCANO PROPULSION, LLC
135 pages, with more than 300 Atkin
Business Hours: M-F 8:30-4:30 EST designs. Famed Atkin double-enders,
Phone: 740-745-1475 rowing/sailing dinghies, houseboats,
Fax: 740-745-2475
and more. $15 U.S. and Canada ($22
LOBSTERING UNDER SAIL. This US for overseas orders). Payment:
hardworking ancestor of the Friend- U.S. dollars payable through a U.S.
ship sloop was utilized by the lobster- bank. ATKIN BOAT PLANS, P.O.
mystic seaport m e n o f Mu s c o n g u s B a y. O u r Box 3005WB, Noroton, CT 06820.
apatkin@aol.com, www.atkinboat
plank-on-bulkhead kit makes a dra-
www.thewoodenboatshow.com matic display model. Can be radio- plans.com.
controlled. Visit our gallery of ship See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

models. BlueJacket Shipcrafters, 160


E. Main St., Searsport, ME 04974.
800–448–5567, www.bluejacketinc.
com.

THE BOAT INSURANCE STORE.


Insurance program for wooden boats.
LAWRENCE FOX AGENCY, 1–800–
553–7661. Our 50th year. www.boat
JAMES WHAR R AM DESIGNS —
insurancestore.com. FREE—L.F. HERRESHOFF 11' 5"
World-renowned, safe, seaworthy
frostbite dinghy (design No. 54)
catamarans, 14'–63' to self-build in
building molds, located in Lottsburg,
BOAT COLLECTION—Old Town VA. To be transported by the recipi- ply/epoxy/’glass, from plans that are
and Penn Yan beauties for the finest ent. See L.F. Herreshoff, “Sensible “a course in boatbuilding.” wharram@
boathouse or restaurant. 207–322– Cruising Designs.” cmj1006@earthlink. wha r r a m.com, web shop: w w w.
7070. wharram.com.
net, 804–529–5003.
BOAT KITS—PLANS—PATTERNS.
World’s best selection of 200+ designs
on our web site. Boatbuilding sup-
plies—easy-to-use 50/50 epoxy resins/
glues, fasteners, and much more.
1-800-762-2628 Free supplies catalog. Clark Craft,
WWW.HAGERTYMARINE.COM 716–873–2640, www.clarkcraft.com.

July/August 2012 • 133

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CLASSIFIEDS

Jordan Wood Boats


P.O. Box 194, South Beach, OR 97366
541–867–3141
www.jordanwoodboats.com
******************
Distinctive Boat Designs
SHELLBOATS.COM—Sailboat kits, Meticulously Developed and Drawn
For the Amateur Builder
handcrafted in Vermont. Check out
our web site, or call 802–524–9645.

BU I L D N.G . H E R R E SHOF F ’S
COQUINA, 16'8" sailing and rowing
boat. Under license from MIT’s Hart
CRADle BOAt
BABy tenDeR
BeACh CRuiSeR Nautical Collection, Maynard Bray
FOOtlOOSe
and Doug Hylan have produced a
builder’s package for both amateur
LEARN HOW TO BUILD your own and professional builders. PLANS—
cedar-stripped boat. Plans for din- 11 sheets of detailed drawings for
ghies, canoes, row, sail, paddle, out- both cedar and glued-plywood lap-
board. www.compumarine.com. AZ, strake construction. $200 + $10 S&H
520–604–6700. U.S. ($30 international). CD—550
photos and text describing all aspects
of construction. $50 + $10 S&H U.S.
GEODESIC AIROLITE DESIGNS— ($20 international). Free download-
Westport Dinghy, 8'10"; beam 431⁄2"; able study plans and information
weight 29 lbs. Stow-aboard yacht about kits, bare hulls, and completed
boats are available at www.dhylan- WO O D E N B OAT M AGA ZINES —
tender. Forget outboard, rows easily! Issues 1–226. Missing 134 and 190.
Monfort Associates. 207–882–5504, boats.com. Send check or money
order to: Coquina, 53 Benjamin River Includes speciality issues. $350. FL.
www.gaboats.com. 321–779–2348.
Dr., Brooklin, ME 04616.
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
LONGTIME WOODEN BOAT FAN
offers 75 books, 70 magazines; 36"
ORCA BOATS—Strip/epoxy canoes
runabout model kit; signs, etc. A-1
and kayaks, plans, materials, courses,
condition. Asking $2,500 or best
repairs, and restorations, BC. www.
offer +shipping. Call Pete, 317–242–
orcaboats.ca, 604–312–4784.
9498.
28 DESIGNS IN OUR $12 BRO -
CHURE, includes: rowing and sailing
skiffs, dories, prams, lake and river
boats. Plans and instructions for 13'6"
• 4'11" Nez Perce outboard (above)–
SMITHSONI AN INSTITUTION $50. Ken Swan, P.O. Box 6647, San
Plans from the National Watercraft Jose, CA 95150. 408–300–1903, www.
Collection, H.I. Chapelle drawings, swanboatdesign.com.
Historic American Merchant Marine
Survey, etc. Send $20 check to Smith- TOLM A N A L A SK A N SK IFFS —
sonian Institution for 250 -page V-bottom stitch and glue plywood
catalog to: Smithsonian Ship Plans, skiffs in three models from 18' to 24'. IMAGINE THE PRIDE and Satis-
P.O. Box 37012, NMAH-5004/MRC Plans are $40, and kits start at $2,970. faction you’ll feel gliding over the
628, Washington, DC 20013-7012. www.saltwaterworkshop.com, 207– water in the “classic” wooden boat
w w w.americanhistory.si.edu/csr/ 837–0236. YOU created. Leave a voicemail
shipplan.htm. See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
24/7—877–913–2116, for your FREE
“Consumer Guide to Building Your
NEWFOUND WOODWORKS, INC.— Dream Boat.” www.Glen-L.com.
Cedar Strip Canoe, Kayak, and Row-
boat Kits. Complete kits or order CLASSIC BOATING MAGAZINE—
plan sets to build yourself; cedar The most popular and complete
strips, epoxy, fiberglass, tools, seats, publication on antique and classic
and accessories. Sign up for our e-mail boats. Subscription $28, Canada $36
newsletter. Go to www.newfound. USD, overseas $78. Samples $5,
com for all the info. 67 Danforth Canada $7.50, oversea s $12.50.
Brook Rd., Bristol, NH 03222, 603– WANTED: MARINE CARPENTER/ Classic Boating, 280-D Lac La Belle
744–6872. Boatbuilder; Finish Varnisher—Excel- Dr., Oconomowoc, WI 53066. 262–
lent opportunities with an iconic and 567–4800.
growing builder of mahogany boats,
located in one of the nation’s best WOODENBOAT ISSUES 1–133 —
recreational regions. See details at: First 88 in binders. Eight never opened.
hackerboat.com, “employment oppor- Also, 39 issues of Boatbuilder, 1987–
tunities.” 1994. Make offer: 360–598–4413.
THE GREAT LAKES BOAT BUILDING
School is seeking a full-time, year-
round instructor with 10 years expe-
C AJ U N PI ROGU E - JON BOAT- rience in traditional and wood/epoxy
SKIFFS. Paddle, row, motor or sail. composite wooden boatbuilding.
Designed for first-time builders. Kits See www.greatlakesboatbuilding.org
and plans. www.unclejohns.com, or for complete position and contact
call 337–527–9696. information.

134 • WoodenBoat 227

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 134 5/24/12 10:17 AM


CLASSIFIEDS

CANOE HARDWARE: 1⁄2", 11⁄16", 7⁄8"


canoe tacks; 3⁄8" oval brass stembands;
clenching irons; 3⁄16" bronze carriage
bolts; canoe plans; clear white cedar.
Catalog $1. NORTHWOODS CANOE
CO., 336 Range Rd., Atkinson, ME
04426. Order, phone 888–564–2710,
SHAW & TENNEY, Orono, Maine— fax 207–564–3667.
Traditionally handcrafted spruce
masts and spars since 1858. 1–800–
240–4867, www.shawandtenney.com.

FINELY CRAFTED WOODEN SPARS;


hollow or solid. Any type of construc-
tion. ELK SPARS, 577 Norway Drive,
Bar Harbor, ME, 04609, 207–288–9045.

T H I S 20' C H R I S - C R A F T WA S
stipped in four man-hours. Envi-
ronmentally friendly paint stripper.
JASPER & BAILEY SAILMAKERS. For more information, call 800–726–
Established 1972. Offshore, one-
EPOXY-PLUS MARINE EPOXY, GL 4319. E-mail us at sales@starten.com,
design, and traditional sails. Sail
10 glue, and ESC 20 putty—A complete or visit our web site, www.starten.com.
repairs, recuts, conversions, washing
premium epoxy system at discount
and storage. Used-sail brokers. 64
prices. Free supplies catalog. Clark LeTONKINOIS. All-natural varnish.
Halsey St., P.O. Box 852, Newport, RI
Craft, 716-873-2640, www.clarkcraft. Centuries-old formula. Long-lasting,
02840; 401–847–8796. www.jasper beautiful finish. Extremely user-
com.
andbailey.com. friendly. A merican Rope & Tar,
877–965–1800 or tarsmell.com.
Composite fasteners for:

TARRED HEMP MARLINE. Several Strip Planking


Cold Molding
styles; hanks, balls, spools. American Fiberglass Layup
Rope & Tar, 1– 877–965 –1800 or Foam Core Joining
tarsmell.com. Vacuum Infusion
RTM

STAPLES  NAILS  BRADS

 Completely non-metal See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

 No need to remove
 Sawable, sandable, planeable, stainable
 No galvanic corrosion/electrolysis
W W W.DA BBLER SA ILS.COM—
Traditional small-craft sails. P.O.  Bonds with thermoset resins
Box 235, Wicomico Church, VA,
22579. Ph/f a x 8 0 4 – 58 0 – 8723, STARS AND STRIPES PENNANTS.
dab@crosslink.net. www.raptornails.com info@raptornails.com Authentic historical design exquisitely
P (512) 255-8525 F (512) 255-8709 handcrafted in the most durable
DOUGLAS FOWLER SAILMAKER— fabrics. 4', 6', 8' and 12' sizes in stock—
Highest-quality, full-seam curved other sizes and designs by custom
sails since 1977. Traditional sails a E XC E P T ION A L BRON Z E a nd order. Custom design and fabrication
specialty. White, colors, and Egyptian Chrome Hardware—Windshield is our specialty. Also in stock, all sizes
Dacron in stock. 1182 East Shore brackets; navigational lighting; Tuf- U.S., state, foreign, historical, marine,
Dr., Ithaca, NY 14850. 607–277–0041. nol and ash blocks; fastenings, roves, and decorative flags, banners, pen-
and rivets; repair, building, and kit nants, and accessories. 77 Forest St.,
materials; oars, paddles, and rowing New Bedford, MA 02740. 508–996–
accessories; decals, apparel, and 6006, www.brewerbanner.com.
BRONZE CAM CLEAT with plastic traditional giftware. www.tender-
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
ball bearings and 1 ⁄2" fastening cen- craftboats.com. Toll-free phone:
1

ter distance. BRONZE WING -TIP 800–588–4682.


NAVIGATION LIGHTS with glass
globe. Side mount, stern and steam-
ing. For our free catalog, contact us
at J.M. Reineck & Son, 781–925–3312,
JMRandSon@aol.com.
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

COPPER FASTENERS and riveting


tools, Norwegian and English boat
nails, roves/rivets, rose and flathead,
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
clench, threaded, decoration, and
more. 50+ sizes and types, 3⁄8" to 6".
H AV E TOOLS W ILL TR AV EL . Your leading source since 1987. FAER- MODERN MANILA. New Leoflex-X. Available in 316 Stainless Steel and Bronze
Wooden boat builder will build, ING DESIGN, Dept. W, P.O. Box 322, The latest rope technology. Looks
rebuild, or repair your project on East Middlebury, VT 05740, 1–800– great, works hard. American Rope www.newfoundmetals.com
& Tar, 1–877–965–1800 or tarsmell. nfm@newfoundmetals.com
site or in my shop. $20/hour. VT, 505 –8692, faering@together.net,
com. 888–437–5512
802–365–7823. www.faeringdesigninc.com.

July/August 2012 • 135

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CLASSIFIEDS

STOCKHOLM TAR. Genuine kiln-


burnt pine tar. It’s the Real Stuff.
American Rope & Tar, 1–877–965–
1800 or tarsmell.com.

BLOX YGEN SAV ES LEFTOV ER


Finishes. Preserve expensive varnish,
paint. www.bloxygen.com, 888–810–
8311.

PLANKING A BOAT? FOR TIGHT


seams, order the rugged, dependable,
no-hassle Conant Clamps I’ve been
making in my Maine shop for over
25 years. Three sizes—PC-2, for din-
ghies, opens to 1" ($35/ea); PC-1, the
12/24V CABIN FANS—Teak, cherry, most popular, opens to 2" ($48/ea);
or mahogany with brass/stainless PC-1L, the largest opens to 4", closes
brackets. www.marinecabinfans.com. See Us at the WoodenBoat Show to 1 1 ⁄ 2" ($55/ea). C ont act R ick
Conant, 207–633–3004; P.O. Box 498,
VACUUM-BAGGING SUPPLIES— Boothbay, ME 04537; rconant41512@
Fiberglass cloth, epoxy resins, water- roadrunner.com.
b a s ed L PU p a i nt s , a nd more.
Technical support and fast service.
www.fiberglasssupply.com or toll free: FeatherBow ® See Us at the WoodenBoat Show

877–493–5333.

FeatherBow® Jr. $17.95


SLOW-GROWING, OLD-GROWTH

FeatherBow® $29.95
white oak (Quercus alba), up to 50'
long and 42" wide. Longleaf pine
(Pinus pilustrus) out to 50' long. Old-
growth white pine, 22'–28'. Black
locust, American elm, and larch.
NEW ENGLAND NAVAL TIMBERS,
CT, 860–480–3402.
Build your own Strip Built Boat
FeatherBow.com • (860) 209-5786 PLANKING STOCK IN LENGTHS
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show TO 32'—angelique, silver balli, wana,
angelique timbers. Call for quotes.
SOFT COTTON FENDERS and clas- Gannon and Benjamin, 508–693–
sic knotwork. For catalog, send SASE 4658.
to: THE K NOTTED LINE, 9908 THE ORIGINAL SINCE 2001. The See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
168th Ave. N.E., Redmond, WA 98052- smallest composting toilet in the
3122, call 425–885–2457. www.the world! EOS, PO Box 5, Mt. Vernon, BOULTER PLY WOOD —marine
plywood 4' • 8' to 16', 5' • 10' to 20'
knottedline.com. OH 43050. www.airheadtoilet.com,
740–392–3642. — 1⁄8" to 1" okoume, sapele, meranti,
HAVEN 121⁄2 complete high-quality
THE BROOKLIN INN—Year-round teak, ash, khaya, teak and holly, teak
bronze hardware sets. See our display
lodging, fine dining, Irish Pub. Mod- and rubber. Lumber—Sitka spruce,
ad elsewhere in the issue. For our
ern interpretations of classic Maine teak, mahogany, green oak, ash,
free catalog, contact us at J.M. Reineck
dishes. Always organic/local. Winter cypress, fir, Spanish and red cedar,
& Son, 781–925–3312, JMRandSon@
Getaway: $155/DO, dinner, breakfast, teak decking—lengths up to 20'.
aol.com.
room, Nov–May. Summer rate: $125/ Milling services. Nationwide delivery.
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
DO (plus dinner). brooklininn.com, w w w.boulterply wood.com, 888 –
ME, 207–359–2777. 4BOULTER.

TALL SHIP—APPROXIMATELY
90' or larger traditional schooner or See Us at the WoodenBoat Show
square-rigger. To be used as spiritual
retreat for persons of all faiths in the
TE A K , M A HOGA N Y, PA DAUK ,
GENUINELY MARINE LED LIGHTS, form of a floating non-denominational
purpleheart, white oak, teak decking,
made by Bebi Electronics. w w w. sanctuary for seekers. Capt. Phil
starboard. Complete molding mill-
bebi-electronics.com, sales@bebi- Lacca will consider vessels of all types,
work facilities. Marine ply wood.
electronics.com. US Agent—R. Ford, and in need of repair for possible tax
Custom swim platforms. SOUTH
727–289–4992, rogersf@bebi-elec deduction on donated boats. Please
JERSEY LUMBERMAN’S INC., 6268
tronics.com. contact me at 617–794–4203.
Holly St., Mays Landing, NJ 08330.
Bantam air Hammer 609–965–1411. www.sjlumbermans.
CANVAS FOR DECKS and canoes. Boat riveting Kit com.
Natural, untreated. No. 10, 15 oz., n Designed for
96", $17.50/yard; 84", 14.50/yard, Copper Rivets HACKMATACK SHIPS KNEES—
72", $12/yard; 60", $9.50/yard. n Cuts Riveting Time up to 70% Architectural Knees. David Wester-
Minimum five yards, prepaid only. n Superior Pneumatic
gard, NS, 902-298 -1212, djwester
FA BR IC WOR K S, 148 Pine St., 800-521-2282 gard@gmail.com. www.westergard
Waltham, MA 02453, 781–642–8558. www.superiorpneumatic.com boatyard.ca.

136 • WoodenBoat 227

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 136 5/23/12 1:10 PM


CLASSIFIEDS

SPECIALIZING IN CLASSIC RUN-


abouts—Including Chris-Craft, Fay
& Bowen, Gar Wood, and Hacker.
Also a great selection of modern Elco
electric launches. Visit our virtual 42' ROYAL LOWELL LOBSTER-
showroom at www.hallsboat.com, or boat—Mahogany over oak, 3306
call 518–668–5437. Caterpillar engine, Very good condi-
CONCORDIA YAWL #103, “IRENE,” tion. 978–794–3129.
1966—Excellent condition with con-
tinual high level of maintenance. 1969, 42' GR AND BANK S —New
Dynel-and-epoxy decks and cabin-top. aluminum fuel tanks. Good hull and
Good recent sail inventory. Sea Frost mechanics. Located Mar yland.
WWW.DIAMONDTEAK.COM—True $22,000. 301–643–6476.
engine and AC refer. Full winter
teak wood. Planing, sanding available.
covers. Current owner 27 years. WA,
Quarter-sawn teak for decking; tongue-
$163,500. Douglascole7@comcast.
and-groove; veneer; custom work. Also
net, 360–961–6101. JUST COMPLETED 18' RUNABOUT
mahogany and Spanish cedar. High-
est quality. We ship worldwide. 215– —V6 Marine Power engine. Health
453–2196, info@diamondteak.com. requires sale. Will sell for cost of
engine and transmission, $12,000.
TEAK LUMBER FROM $7.50/bf and 503–364–2893.
teak decking from $.99/lf. Call ASI,
800–677–1614 or e-mail your require-
20' SLOOP “NIMPHIUS,” BUILT
ments to rogerstevens@asihardwood.
1987—Mahogany planking, teak
com.
deck, BMW diesel. Generally excel-
lent condition. A true little yacht!
ATLANTIC AND NORTHERN white
Maine. $25,000. Visit http://tinyurl.
cedar and reclaimed teak, f litch-
com/ 7nusv2d for more information.
sawn, wide boards, 16' lengths, mill- HARMONY 25 ELECTRIC Launch—
207–236–6282, malone@midcoast.
ing, premium quality, fair prices. CT, New cedar/epoxy construction to
com.
203–245–1781. www.whitecedar.com. 100-year-old design. Cruise in silence
for 40 miles, recharge overnight. BOAT COLLECTION—Old Town
GOOSEBAY SAWMILL & LUMBER Dennis Wolfe, 810–580–9404, www.
and Penn Yan beauties for the finest
—Family-owned and operated. 603– wolfeboats.com.
RHODES 30'4" LOA, 1958 SLOOP— boathouse or restaurant. 207–322–
798–5135, http://bit.ly/z1tpD4.
Fast sailing boat with many upgrades, 7070
rebuilt hull, main sail, roller-furling
DOUGLAS FIR; WESTERN RED jib, Atomic Four gas engine, two
cedar; western larch. Cut to order. berths, head, stove, sink, icebox,
Call John, 208–290–4359. wooden mast. Newcastle, ME, info@
fairtidefarm.com.

WHEELER 40', 1952 Sportfisher-


man—Twin diesels, excellent condi-
tion, located on Hudson River, NY.
$49,000. Details at w w w.wheeler 2009 18' BAY PILOT, ARCH DAVIS–
sportfisherman.com. design. 60-hp Yamaha, trailer. See
WoodenBoat’s Small Boats 2011.
1917 HERRESHOFF 121⁄2 —Profes- $12,500. 941–493–8436, lainebob20@
sionally maintained, excellent condi- verizon.net.
tion, successfully raced. 2001 Triad
trailer. Located MA. $16,500. 508–
560–0023.

1932 ALDEN/FENWICK WILLIAMS


Catboat Yawl—28' • 12'6" • 3'8", 38'
LOA. Built by Bigelow, Monument
Beach, MA. Cedar on oak, bronze
fastened, extensively rebuilt. Stand-
USCG HISTORIC MOTOR LIFE- ing headroom, sleeps five, large
boat—Designed for inshore surf and cockpit. Kenyon stove w/oven, Adler-
bar rescue. Self-righting and bailing, Barbour, B&G instruments, Garmin
103-hp 471 Detroit GM diesel. Only GPS, Autohelm autopilot. Kermath NEW 18' H A MPTON SLOOP—
1965, 42' TRAWLER. 6-cyl diesel, privately owned boat of its type for Sea Jeep engine, remanufactured Simple, beautiful, functional. See
4K generator. Undergoing restora- sale. Wet demo until end of Septem- spring 2011. Excellent cruising boat. WoodenBoat’s 2012 Small Boats. Cedar
tion, needs paint and cosmetic work. ber. Reduced to $150,000, www.capt L ocated Br a n ford, C T. A sk ing on oak, bronze fastened, Nat Wilson
TX, $27,000. Call for more details. ronscruises.com, 207–563–1387, capt. $25,000. 203–214–7300, or neilcarolt@ sails. $37,000. 207–323–4217, www.
Joe, 713–851–1702. ron@captronscruises.com. sbcglobal.net. odonovandole.com.

July/August 2012 • 137

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 137 5/23/12 1:19 PM


CLASSIFIEDS

GENUINE HERRESHOFF 11' Din-


ghy—Needs extensive restorative
work. $2,000 non negotiable. 207–
322–7070.

34' 1966 CURTIS APPLEGARTH—


Built Oxford, MD. Excellent condition.
New interior and electronics. Located
Rockhall, MD. Asking $12,000. For
more photos, e-mail kevindalton9@
gmail.com. 305–360–2654.

2005 TED BREWER-DESIGN, 21'7"


Cape Cod Cat—10' beam, draft 2'3". 13' 2008 BRIGHTSIDES HAND -
Yanmar 26M20 fresh-water-cooled liner—Westlake built, epoxy, stitch-
two-cyl diesel engine, 374-sq-ft gaff-rig and-glue. Two pairs oars, all spars
sail with cover. Raymarine autopilot, lines, and sail. Brass hardware, custom
VHF, 20-gallon fuel tank, boom tent, trailer. $4,600. lulu.guest@gmail.
porta-potti, shore power, two berth com, 604–886–7696.
22' SCHOONER, ATKIN HULL— leather cushions. Marine ply over oak
Custom rig, new North Sails, launched frame hull, ash interior, bronze ports,
2009. 5-hp Mercury outboard. CA, 26' 1972 MACKENZIE Cuttyhunk— skylight, solar fan. Dickinson propane
805–815–0315. New mahogany bottom, 250-hp, low heater, small galley, freshwater tank
hours, $9,500. Yarmouth, MA, call and propane stove, large cockpit seats
508–364–8060. with cushions. On trailer. New bottom
pa int. $12,0 0 0. 360 –754 –1063,
CLASSIC MOTORYACHT—1926, joecush@hotmail.com.
62' ELCO. Shown in WoodenBoat
No.171, March/April 2003, sketch
pg. 42. Survey one year ago June. 1964, 24' CARL ADAMS SKIFF—
Twin diesels. $500,000+ invested. Cedar on oak, Chr ysler Crown,
Northern C A, A sking $149,000, freshwater-cooled, stern controls,
415–887–9932. mahogany interior. 215-885-3220.

1952, 26' JONESPORT LOBSTER-


boat with new 265-hp GM Vortec
engine, and electronics, $24,000.
Pictures and specs: http://daneosco.
com/boat, 207–522–3582.

BUZZARDS BAY 19 SLOOP—Pete


Culler design, Landing School 1997.
Excellent condition, glued lapstrake
epoxy hull, teak deck, freshwater
1951 CHR IS - CR A F T DOUBLE - sailed, Triad trailer, located Seattle.
Stateroom 38'—Complete restora- $16,0 0 0. DM Bergey @msn.com,
THE APPRENTICE 15—Traditionally tion in 2001. Equipment includes: 425–646–9037.
built double-ended daysailer, designed twin Chris-Craft 283s, 5.0kW Kohler
by Kevin Carney. Cedar on white oak, generator, Heart Freedom 25 inverter, 17' W ITTHOLZ C ATBOAT with
lapstrake construction. Dynel deck, Cruisair reverse heat/air, Sealand trailer and outboard engine. In excel-
white oak trim. Sitka spruce spars. 32', 1935 RICHARDSON CRUIS -
Vacuflush, Polar fridge/freezer unit, lent condition. $9,000. Located
Nat Wilson sails. All bronze fastenings about—Two new custom 140 -hp
deck wash down, Clarion cassette/ Brooklin, ME. NJ, 201–569–3787 or
and hardware. Launched June 2011. motors, new fuel and electrical sys-
CD stereo, and amp. Bennett trim 201–568–1441.
$20,000. Apprenticeshop, Rockland, tems. GPS, custom teak swim platform.
tabs, water heater, with teak and holly
ME. 207–594–1800. Recanvased deck and cabin tops. Full
flooring throughout. This boat requires
See Us at the WoodenBoat Show cockpit enclosure, and much more.
no restoration work, and is ready for
See eBay for more pictures. $55,000.
many summers of enjoyment. Seller
geraldine9@optonline.net.
is looking for a caring new owner.
Asking $120,000 US/CAN. Contact:
thmcnabney@rogers.com.

38' PACEMAKER CLASSIC 1966, 1957, 20' GREW SEAMASTER Inboard


Hull #719—Flying Bridge sedan, Runabout. Lapstrake marine plywood
twin 350 Crusaders. In renovation, planking over steam-bent white oak 1969, 30' HEALEY SLOOP—Wm. C.
owner unable to complete. Many ribs. Comes equipped with four- Healey’s finest “Pago Pago.” Designed
items “new” onboard not installed. 48' HEAD BOAT—Cedar on oak, cylinder Buchanan inboard engine for single- and shorthanded cruising
Last haul, September 2011. Located riveted, heavily framed. 6 -71 GM. and double-axle trailer. Includes all in Florida Keys, and Bahamas. 3'10"-
in Deltaville, VA. Always shed-kept. Licensed and inspected. $38,000 or cushions. Vessel requires restoration draft, 10'10"-beam. 30-hp Perkins
$3,500 or best offer. 804–740–9539, best offer. 207–442–7616 or 207– and refinishing. As is: $1,500 or best diesel. Key Largo, $18,500, tropic
dougnorth@cavtel.net. 443–5764. offer. 1957grew@gmail.com. rover@mac.com.

138 • WoodenBoat 227

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 138 5/23/12 1:22 PM


CLASSIFIEDS

21' HERRESHOFF SLOOP—The LOW ELL’S BOATHOUSE SUR F


last wooden Marlin: 1947 (see Her- Dory 18'—Trailer, extras. Near mint.
reshoff Registry). Needs work; galva- $10,650 or best offer. 203–426–0885,
nized trailer. $6,600 non negotiable. bioenergetics@earthlink.net.
207–322–7070.
LUDERS 16 —Needs lots of work.
Located Murphy, NC. $2,500. 828–
644–5714, 207–276–5270.

34', 1977 CHARLES WITTHOLTZ


“DAWN” Motorsailer—See WoodenBoat
article. 4-53 Detroit diesel burns one
GPH at 8 knots, 7.5 Kw Onan gen-
erator. Only one ever built. Needs
cosmetics. Great boat, only $19,900.
1954, 21' MONTEREY EXPRESS 651–430–2132.
Cruiser Chris-Craft kit boat. Built
1964 by professional builder. 350 1969 LAPSTRAKE SAILING DINGHY
Chevy V8, and aluminum trailer. All LAKE UNION DREAMBOAT 1928,
built by AC Landamore—13'8" LOA;
hardware and goodies. $25,000. 42' —Excellent mechanical and SHE IS NOT A BOAT FOR JUST
beam, 3' draft with board down. Gaff
941–751–6713. structural condition. Isuzu diesel. anyone—For the right person, this
rig with new mast, trailer. “Amazon”
Beautiful boat, ready to cruise. is the chance of a lifetime to have
was inspired by Arthur Ransome,
$80,000. Seattle, 206–212–0568, www. an original Herreshoff Buzzards Bay
and is ready to sail. $15,000 or inter-
oursunshineboats.com. 15. You can’t get on the computer
esting trades. Lubec, ME. Contact
207–733–4442. and see her; you will want to come
and see her, sail her, and discuss
ownership of her. She’s in Watkins
Glen, N Y on one of the beautiful
f inger lakes. Call Ray Coleman,
814–258–7270 for arrangements.
35' CHEOY LEE ROBB—10' beam.
Custom-built for actor Lee J. Cobb
in 1963. Solid teak hull in excellent
condition. New Universal 35B-prop-
shaft; newer sails and upholstery! 1988 HACKER TRIPLE 35'—Fresh
Moored in Portland, OR. $38,500 or water boat. Built for movie “The
make offer. gdunlap@easystreet.net. Inlaws,” starring Michael Douglas.
Refinished with new, never relaunched
triple mahogany. 5200/West System
bottom frames, chines, keel, transom,
by Hacker Boat in 2011. Freshwater-
cooled twin 454 Crusaders with reduc-
tion gears. Tows well on triple-axle
trailer. $85,000 or best offer. George
Kreissle, Hampton Bays, NY, 941–
720–0758.

30' LYLE HESS BRISTOL CHANNEL HERRESHOFF ROZINANTE, 1983—


Cutter—1997, sistership to t he HAVEN 121⁄2 , 2005—Cold-molded Excellent condit ion, Hondura s
Pardeys’ famous “Taliesin.” Extraor- mahogany, with trailer, sails, full mahogany on oak, correct build.
dinary craftsmanship. Mahogany on cover, safety gear. Like-new condition. $37,500, WA. dcarv@comcast.net,
oak. Teak cabin and decks. Hull so $14,995 or best offer. For pictures, 425–894–2240.
fair many think it’s fiberglass. Amaz- specs, email harrytorno@telus.net.
ing teak and bird’s-eye maple interior. NEW, WOODEN NUTSHELL PRAM.
27-hp Yanmar. Well equipped: roller- 1952 TOW N CL A SS 16 SLOOP. 9'6", 100 lbs, carved oars, brass fit-
furling, storm trysail, spinnaker, Rebuilt in 2000. Very good condition, 28' L. FR A NCIS HER R ESHOFF tings. Sail, custom cradle included.
sea anchor, radar, chartplotter, auto- with trailer. $3,500, 207-332-3386. Rozinante—Built 1973 by Hank Joel White design. $3,000. Mystic,
pilot, wind vane, refrigeration, VHF, Chamberlin. Professionally main- CT, 860–974–0620
110V electrical, inverter, Force 10 tained; very good condition; six sails;
heater, Force10 stove/oven, windlass, small wood stove. Located Maine.
9' Fattyknees dinghy with sailing kit, $32,000. 207–326–4249, jdraber@
much more. Pristine, like-new condi- verizon.net.
tion. Asking $125,000. Web site www.
tigress-bcc.com. Call 650–868–0348.

1940, 19' CHRIS-CRAFT BARREL-


back—Meticulous, extensive restora-
tion just completed. Model M engine.
Bugatti windshield. New planking,
chrome, wiring, and leather. A “no
stone left unturned” rebuild. Beauti- 40 COVEY ISLAND LONGLINER
ful mahogany, 5200 bottom, custom under mid-life refit/conversion to
2011, 18' WEST POINT SKIFF— 2011 trailer. Very rare, absolutely stunning serious liveaboard trawler. Spencer
30-hp Evinrude E-TEC outboard with boat. View photos at Flickr.com; input Lincoln design. Built by Covey Island
tiller steering, and trailer. Turnkey MahoganyBoatGuy under “people” 14' “ SM A L L” DI NGH Y— FA ST, Boatworks. Cold-molded, wood epoxy,
operation, ready for the water now. search. Seattle, WA. $115,000 or best stable, meticulous construction. Tan- stabilizers, commercial engine and
$23,000. See www.westpointskiff.com offer. mdellplain@comcast.net, bark, trailer. See at Mystic. $6,600. drive. Nova Scotia, 902–875–1276,
for more information, 207–389–2468. 425–503–0710. 401–524–6048. www.novatrawler.com.

July/August 2012 • 139

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 139 5/23/12 1:11 PM


“SOPHIA” IS FOR SALE—Original
owner is offering 1965 Chris-Craft
Custom Ski Boat with 283F engine.
Low milage Eagle trailer, and custom
cover with side skirting. Last operated
in 2011; does not leak, and motor
runs strong. Restored in 1995, all
bottom screws replaced. This boat
only used in freshwater. $20,000.
970–819–8211. 47' C OLU M BI A R I V E R PI LOT
REDUCED—1970 VAGABONDIA Vessel, 1937—North Sea double-ended
38' Teak Ketch. Philip Rhodes design, trawler-type hull. 2" cedar over oak
Kinley Shipyard, Hong Kong. 11⁄4" frames, new planks, refastened, deck
teak planks on yacal frames. Well covering, new wheelhouse. Three-year
maintained. Motivated. $39,000. total restoration by Walt Schulz/Shan-
305–849–2458. non Boat Co. to new condition. Award
winner at Mystic 2010. Sleeps 4–6, stall
shower, new galley. Factory rebuilt
1953 HINCKLEY #881 36' SLOOP— Detroit 6-71 diesel, new electric, plumb-
Recent refit, all new frames. 2009 ing, fuel and water tanks, cushions,
Spirit of the Race award winner, windows, etc. Bow thrusters, Espar
Nantucket Opera House Cup. $45,000. 36', 1969 CHINESE OFFSHORE heater, inverter, windlass, stove, pumps,
Contact Chad, 305 –923 –4030 or Junk—Authentic solid teak construc- steering. New radar, GPS, depth, auto-
chudnut73@yahoo.com. tion, fore and aft masts. 106-hp Volvo pilot. Fascinating history, a rugged
diesel, head, galley, dinette, V-berth. sea boat. $200,000. RI, 401–253–2441.
2008 12' 3" R IF F LUG -R IG GED 300 gallons fuel, 500 gallons water. Full specs and photos available at
Daysailer—Gartside design. Cedar 1957 CHRIS-CRAFT 18' SEA SKIFF Needs minor TLC. Interesting history. www.pacific-pilot-polaris.com.
strip, West System, trailer. Asking lapstrake utility. New front deck, $34,900, 651–430–2132
$2,300. PA 570–326–1339. 29' COLUMBIA RIVER Bowpicker
upholstery, folding top, and side —“New boat” from old keel, built
curtains. Original 95-hp K engine 1998 by David Green, Warrenton, OR.
restored, 12-volt electrics. Freshwater Keel-cooled, 318 Chrysler, low hours,
family boat in use every summer. $10,000. 907–399–1966.
Complete and ready to go with cover
and tandem trailer. $9,000. 905–727–
8671 or john5cooper@yahoo.ca.

1937, 35.9' LOD “SEA W ITCH,”


A ngelman Ketch, hull #1. Docu-
20' CENTURY RESORTER 1954—
mented. Circumnavigated twice, won
Fully restored classic wooden speed-
Transpac, second 1949, first 1951,
boat. Original Graymarine engine.
corrected time. Gaff-rigged, new
West System bottom. Fully varnished
electrical wiring, navigation, paint
mahogany deck. The ultimate lake
and mahogany on oak, full lead keel,
boat. Asking $17,500. 610–787–2968,
Dynel-sheathed, 6' dinghy. Well main-
wpworth@comcast.net.
tained. WoodenBoat, March/April
1999. Titusville, FL www.heritech.
ORIGINAL HERRESHOFF 15 —
com/seawitch/sea_witch.htm.
Built in Bristol, RI, early 1900s. 25'
LOA, needs some refastening. $16,000.
Call Bob, 508–567–1185, rkbuffs@ FULLY RECONSTRUCTED 1927 “DEVA”—PRICE REDUCED FOR
aol.com. Alden 30' Malabar Jr. Yawl #326 -E quick sale! L. Francis Herreshoff
—A truly unique offering! Extensively design #65. The only one ever built.
reconstructed over seven years to the See the feature article in WoodenBoat
highest standards. Yanmar diesel. No. 157; and also see Herreshoff’s
Very well documented including The Common Sense of Yacht Design, p.
copious photos. Excellent survey. 269. This pedigreed ketch is a beau-
$99,500. E-mail Lou for details: muri tiful sight to behold, and sail. LOA-
gen46@hotmail.com. 3 6' 6", b ea m - 8' 6", d r a f t- 4' 9",
displacement- 16, 50 0 lbs. Fully
equipped. Located Brooklin, ME.
$58,000. 207–359–4651, carl@wood
1914 FAY & BOW EN SPEC I A L
enboat.com.
Launch 26'—Completely restored
and repowered in 1986. Rare award-
winning boat in excellent ‘show’
condition. Offered at $119,000. www.
hallsboat.com.

1974, 31' BAYHEAD FLYING BRIDGE


GREAT FUN! FLAT BOTTOMED —Complete restoration to entire
Skiff with a single sail. 11.5' • 54" all boat to include interior, exterior,
marine plywood that is safe and wiring, water systems, running gear 1959 FOR R E ST JOH NSON J R .
manageable in protected waters. and engines. This classic boat is water- 18' LAUNCH, BASED ON 1920’s Prowler 19'—Completely restored in
Handbuilt at Maritime Center. ready for offshore fishing trips or an Cushing “Imp” design—Built 2008, 2000, with original racing numbers.
Oars included. $3,000. Buffalo and overnight cruise. Additional photos perfect. Universal 25-hp flathead, New MerCruiser 350-hp engine with
Boston. 716–886–7429 or allanhaye upon request. Call 508–428–6900 or trailer. $18,000. Nordland, WA. 30 hours. Offered at $65,000. www.
@gmail.com. e-mail sales@crosbyyacht.com Details, www.islandboatshop.com. hallsboat.com.

140 • WoodenBoat 227

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 140 5/23/12 1:11 PM


1934 MARCONI-RIGGED 16' CAT- 1964 CELEBRIT Y SLOOP #575—
BOAT— Manual Swartz built. Com- 19' 9", cold - molded ma hog a ny.
pletely restored by Gannon and Restored using West System. Galva-
Benjamin. Trailer, new electric motor. nized trailer, $4,800. 609–466–0345.
$20,000. 508–693–1725.

C L I N K E R - BU I LT DEC K E D “OWL,” 34' ALDEN/CASEY CUTTER,


C a no e — Hull built with marine 1941—Completely rebuilt 1985 to
plywood, yellow cedar, mahogany, present. $50,000, Cannell, Payne &
gumwood. Ash frames, seats laced Page. jim@cppyacht.com, www.cpp
with rawhide babiche. Foot-operated yacht.com/wood.html.
rudder, and inlaid brass nameplates. ROYAL LOWELL 30' Wooden Lob-
Lovingly detailed, and in excellent FULL RESTORATION OF CUSTOM- ster Yacht—Cedar on oak, bronze
condition. $4,900 includes lateen 21' BOOTHBAY H A R BOR ONE- built 1962 International 500, 32' fastened. Available at present stage
sailing rig. 604–339–5025 or e-mail Design Sloop “Osprey”—Built by mahogany sloop. Over $140,000 of completion or with option for
georgevancouver@hotmail.com. WoodenBoat School in 2010 & 2011 invested, completion in 2011. May completion. $75,000. Traditional
under Eric Blake’s direction. Cold- consider selling when complete; WILL Boat, LLC, 207–568 –7546, w w w.
molded planking over steam-bent sell now to someone to complete mainetraditionalboat.com.
white oak frames, producing an inte- restoration and get exactly what they
rior identical to the original plank- want. Visit www.WhiteHawkForSale.
on-frame boats, but with the strength, com for info.
low maintenance, and durability of a
laminated skin. New spars, rigging,
and sails. Ballast keel, rudder, and fin
were transferred from the original
boat, so “Osprey” retains the low sail LIGHTNING #2963—“KTAADN” was
number (26) of the original. Great built in 1947 at Saybrook Yacht Yard,
boat for kids, with flotation compart- CT. Have official measurements and
ments forward and aft. This is a sister drawings. Restoration needed, but
to “Eight Bells” shown on the cover of sound. Cedar bottom. Complete with
WoodenBoat No. 199 and described sails. Call 607–869–3338.
within, as well as in Small Boats No. 1 NEW MAHOGANY RUNABOUT—
20' CHEBACCO CAT-YAWL, launched (2007), and was constructed over the Wood/epoxy construction, 85-hp
2004, excellent condition. Brazilian same building jig. Lovely to look at; a Subaru, new trailer, $24,900. More
mahogany, epoxy, light grey hull, joy to sail. maynardbray@gmail.com information, pictures, www.mahog
Sitka and cypress spars, fancy rope or 207–359–8593. anyheartthrobs.com. 615–890–9227.
work, carvings, and many extras.
$22,000, Yves Robichaud, ymr@rogers.
com, 506–532–3161.

Attention MarketPlace Advertisers:

H AV EN 12 1⁄ 2 , NEW—Joel W hite
design, cedar on oak, bronze fittings,
10 for $25
sails, full mooring cover. $15,000 MarketPlace advertisers are now eligible for a 10-word ad
firm. $17,500 with trailer. Jack at with a ‘link’ to their MarketPlace listing, placed in
401–625–5769.
WoodenBoat magazine’s classified pages for $25/issue.
Example: GOOSEBAY SAWMILL & LUMBER—Family-owned and
operated. 603–798–5135, http://bit.ly/z1tpD4.

Contact Tina Dunne, tina.dunne@woodenboat.com


or call 207-359-7714

“BADGER”—OUTSTANDING Her-
reshoff BB25 2001, built by Pease Boat
WoodenBoat MarketPlace
For Buyers and Sellers of Products and Services of Interest to the WoodenBoat Community
Works. Cold-molded with standing
back-stay, stored indoors, seldom used.
$145,000, offers encouraged. 508–
www.woodenboat.com/business
945–7800, info@peaseboatworks.com.

July/August 2012 • 141

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 141 5/23/12 1:11 PM


Order Form for Classified Ads
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Ads received after the deadline may be placed in the following issue
Issue Date — Mar/Apr May/June July/Aug Sept/Oct Nov/Dec Jan/Feb
Deadline — Jan 5, ’12 Mar 5, ’12 May 7, ’12 Jul 5, ’12 Sept 5, ’12 Nov 5, ’12

♦ Boats advertised for sale must have wooden hulls. ♦ Phone number = one word; email or web address =
one word. All else: a word is a word. WoodenBoat
♦ One boat per ad.
does not use abbreviations such as OBO, FWC, etc.
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WOODENBOAT CLASSIFIEDS P.O. Box 78 • Brooklin, Maine 04616


Phone: 207–359-7714, Monday thru Friday, 9am to 5pm • Fax: 207–359-7789
Email: classified@woodenboat.com
Place your ad online at www.woodenboat.com/wbmag/advertising.html

Rates expire November 5, 2012


142 • WoodenBoat 227

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 142 5/23/12 1:11 PM


Index to AdvertIsers
AdhesIves & CoAtIngs InsurAnCe
Entropy Resins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .entropyresins .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Heritage Marine Insurance . . . . . . . www .heritagemarineinsurance .com . . . 27
Epifanes North America . . . . . . . . . . www .epifanes .com . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover II
Gorilla Glue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .gorillatough .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
kIts & PlAns
Interlux . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .yachtpaint .com . . . . . . . . . . .Cover Iv Arch Davis Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .archdavisdesigns .com . . . . . . . . . 131
Marshall’s Cove Marine Paint . . . . . . www .marshallscovemarinepaint .com . . 34 Bear Mountain Boat Shop . . . . . . . . www .bearmountainboats .com . . . . . . . 130
System Three Resins, Inc . . . . . . . . . . www .systemthree .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Chesapeake Light Craft, LLC . . . . . . www .clcboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Tetra Teak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .tetramarine .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Dudley Dix Yacht Design . . . . . . . . . www .dixdesign .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
West System Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .westsystem .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Fiberglass Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .fiberglasssupply .com . . . . . . . . . . 130
Francois Vivier Architecte Naval . . . www .vivierboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
BoAtBuIlders Glen-L-Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .glen-l .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Adirondack Guide Boat . . . . . . . . . . www .adirondack-guide-boat .com . . . . 122 Guillemot Kayaks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .kayakplans .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
Arey’s Pond Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . www .areyspondboatyard .com . . . . . . . 125 Hewes & Co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .cnc-marine-hewesco .com . . . . . . . 131
B . Giesler & Sons Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .gieslerboats .ca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 The Newfound Woodworks Inc . . . . . www .newfound .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
Beetle, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .beetlecat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 Noah’s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .noahsmarine .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Billings Diesel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .billingsmarine .com . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Parker Marine Enterprises . . . . . . . . www .parker-marine .com . . . . . . . . . . . 131
Budsin Wood Craft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .budsin .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 Pygmy Boats Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .pygmyboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Cayuga Wooden Boatworks . . . . . . . www .cwbw .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 Redfish Custom Kayak & Canoe Co . . www .redfishkayak .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Choptank Boatworks . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .choptankboatworks .com . . . . . . . 127 Tippecanoe Boats, Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . www .modelsailboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
Crocker’s Boat Yard, Inc . . . . . . . . . . www .crockersboatyard .com . . . . . . . . . 124 Waters Dancing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .watersdancing .com . . . . . . . . . . . 130
Cutts & Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .cuttsandcase .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 West Satsop Boatworks, LLC . . . . . . www .westsatsop .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
D .N . Hylan & Associates, Inc . . . . . . . www .dhylanboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Devlin Designing Boat Builders . . . . www .devlinboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
luMBer
Anchor Hardwoods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .anchorhardwoods .com . . . . . . . . 104
Dutch Wharf Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .dutchwharf .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121
Joubert Plywood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .joubert-group .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Edgecomb Boat Works . . . . . . . . . . . www .edgecombboatworks .net . . . . . . . 124
French & Webb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .frenchwebb .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 MuseuMs
Haven Boatworks, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . www .havenboatworks .com . . . . . . . . . . 127 The Antique Boat Museum . . . . . . . www .abm .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Ian Joseph Boatworks . . . . . . . . . . . . www .ianjosephboatworks .com . . . . . . . 122 Cape Cod Maritime Museum . . . . . . www .capecodmaritimemuseum .org . . . 30
Island Boat Shop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .islandboatshop .com . . . . . . . . . . . 126 Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum . www .cbmm .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Kelley Marine, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .kelleymarine .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Columbia River Maritime Museum . www .crmm .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
McMillen Yachts, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenyachts .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 H . Lee White Marine Museum . . . . . www .hleewhitemaritimemuseum .com . 30
Moores Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboatrepair .com . . . . . . . . 126 Independence Seaport Museum . . . www .phillyseaport .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
MP&G, L .L .C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .mpgboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 Lake Champlain Maritime Museum . www .lcmm .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Nichols Boatbuilder, LLC . . . . . . . . . www .westpointskiff .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 Lowell’s Boat Shop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .lowellsboatshop .org . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Northwoods Canoe Co . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodencanoes .com . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Mystic Seaport Museum . . . . . . . . . . www .mysticseaport .org/visitbyboat . . . . 31
Pease Boatworks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .peaseboatworks .com . . . . . . . . . . 127 The Mariner’s Museum . . . . . . . . . . www .marinersmuseum .org . . . . . . . . . . 29
Pendleton Yacht Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . www .pendletonyachtyard .com . . . . . . . 122
Restorations by Phil Mitchell . . . . . . www .restorationsbyphil .com . . . . . . . . 126 PrInts & PuBlICAtIons
Reuben Smith’s Tumblehome Boats . . www .tumblehomeboats .com . . . . . . . . 121 Marine Artist Art Paine . . . . . . . . . . . www .artpaine .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Richard S . Pulsifer, Boatbuilder . . . . www .pulsiferhampton .com . . . . . . . . . 127 MotorBoats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Rumery’s Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .rumerys .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 WoodenBoat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
Seal Cove Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .sealcoveboatyard .com . . . . . . . . . 125 WoodenBoat E-newsletter . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
Stonington Boat Works, LLC . . . . . . www .stoningtonboatworks .com . . . . . . 124 sAIls
Traditional Boat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .mainetraditionalboat .com . . . . . . 125 E .S . Bohndell & Co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Traditional Boat Works . . . . . . . . . . . www .traditionalboatworks .net . . . . . . . 122 Gambell & Hunter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .gambellandhunter .net . . . . . . . . . 104
Van Dam Custom Boats . . . . . . . . . . www .vandamboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 Nathaniel S . Wilson, Sailmaker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Wooden Boat Shop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboatshopinc .com . . . . . . 124 Sailrite Enterprises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .sailrite .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Brokers Sperry Sails, Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .sperrysails .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Arey’s Pond Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . www .areyspondboatyard .com . . . . . . . 118 sChools & AssoCIAtIons
Concordia Yacht Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . www .concordiaboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . 118 The Apprenticeshop . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .apprenticeshop .org . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
David Etnier Boat Brokerage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 Center for Wooden Boats . . . . . . . . . www .cwb .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
David Jones Yacht Broker . . . . . . . . . www .davidjonesclassics .com . . . . . . . . . 118 Great Lakes Boat Building School . . www .greatlakesboatbuilding .org . . . . . 106
Devlin Designing Boat Builders . . . . www .devlinboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 HCC METC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tech .honolulu .hawaii .edu/marr . . . . . . 17
S/V MAGNOLIA/Sid Imes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 International Yacht Restoration
Metinic Yacht Brokers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .iyrs .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
S/Y MISTRAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .classic-yachts .de . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 The Landing School . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .landingschool .edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Sandeman Yacht Company . . . . . . . . www .sandemanyachtcompany .co .uk . . 117 Northwest School of Wooden
events Boatbuilding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .nwboatschool .org . . . . . . . . . . 24, 105
Westlawn Institute of Marine
Antique & Classic Boat Festival . . . . www .boatfestival .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Technology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .westlawn .edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Boatbuilding & Rowing Challenge . barc .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
WoodenBoat’s Directory of
Bayfront Maritime Center . . . . . . . . www .bayfrontcenter .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Boat Schools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Design Challenge IV . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
WoodenBoat School . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .thewoodenboatschool .com . . . . 14-15
Family BoatBuilding . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .familyboatbuilding .com . . . . . . . . 26
Madisonville Wooden Boat Festival . www .lpbmaritimemuseum .org . . . . . . . 102 vIntAge BoAts & servICes
Sultana Project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .sultanaprojects .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Antique & Classic Boat Society . . . . . www .acbs .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
Wooden Boat Festival . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Morin Boats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .morinboats .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
WoodenBoat Regatta Series . . . . . . . www .woodenboat .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Newell Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .newellcoach .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
The WoodenBoat Show . . . . . . . . . . www .thewoodenboatshow .com . . . . . . . 6-7 Townsend Boat Works . . . . . . . . . . . . www .townsendboatworks .com . . . . . . . 115
Wooden Runabout Co LLC . . . . . . . www .woodenrunabout .com . . . . . . . . . 115
hArdwAre & ACCessorIes YNOT Yachts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .ynotyachts .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
Atlas Metal Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .atlasmetal .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Barkley Sound Oar & Paddle Ltd . . . www .barkleysoundoar .com . . . . . . . . . . . 37 MIsCellAneous
Boatlife Division Of Life Industries . www .boatlife .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Atlantis WeatherGear . . . . . . . . . . . . www .atlantisweathergear .com . . . . . . . . . 1
CC Fasteners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .ccfasteners .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Beta Marine US Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .betamarinenc .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Hamilton Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .hamiltonmarine .com . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Diamond Teak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .diamondteak .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
J .M . Reineck & Son . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .bronzeblocks .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Half-Hull Classics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .halfhull .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
Keystone Spike Corporation . . . . . . www .keystonespikes .com . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Massachusetts Dept of Conservation . mass .gov/dcr/stewardship/curator . . . 39
New England Ropes . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .neropes .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 M/V Olympus Charters . . . . . . . . . . www .yachtolympus .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
R&W Traditional Rigging & Outfitting . www .rwrope .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Panerai . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .panerai .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Shaw & Tenney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .shawandtenney .com . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Saltwater Farm For Sale . . . . . . . . . . www .saltwaterfarmdowneast .com . . . . . 36
Top Notch Fasteners . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .tnfasteners .com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Schooners North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .schoonersnorth .com . . . . . . . . . . 101
West Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .westmarine .com . . . . . . . . . Cover III Wooden Boat Rescue Foundation . . www .woodenboatrescue .org . . . . . . . . . 34
Wooden Boat Chandlery . . . . . . . . . shop .woodenboat .org . . . . . . . .103 & 107 WoodenBoat Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www .woodenboatstore .com . . . . . . . . 96-98

July/August 2012 • 143

WBClass227_FINAL.indd 143 5/24/12 12:07 PM


ONDINE POCAHONTAS
A Cutter-rigged Atkin “Ingrid” A Yankee One-Design Sloop
Y ou may have read about these won-
derful boats in WB no. 221, and
believe me, they are indeed one of
the finest daysailers ever created.
POCAhOnTAS is one of four YOds
recently up for sale. (You can find
some of the others on Sarah
howell’s comprehensive web-
site, www.yankeeonedesign.
com.) Broken frames have
plagued these mahogany-
planked hulls since the
very beginning, and the
by Maynard Bray best fix i know of is to
replace the originals

KAThY BrAY
ndine lies afloat in Palatka, Florida, all rigged with slightly larger
and nearly ready to go. She’s been cared for by frames, kerfed and
the same owner for over 40 years, but his health and riveted. Besides need-
age require that this double-ended, Colin Archer–type ing new frames, this boat
cruiser be passed on. Although she’s been idle for has a rotted trunk cabin and few floor timbers that also
about three years, her sheathed, cedar-planked hull require renewal. her planking looks good, her sheer
should be worm-free, and according to her owner, her is fair, and her main deck has been sheathed in fiber-
upperworks have but two small areas of rot that need glass and is watertight. She’s afloat and rigged, and her
attention. (She was completely rebuilt in 1978, given a varnished spars look fine. She’s really quite origi-
new deck in 1983, and her hull was splined and epoxy- nal and complete, still having all her custom bronze
and-dynel sheathed in 1993.) hardware, so would
Like the other Atkin ingrids, Ondine was origi- make a great resto-
POcahOntas
nally a ketch, but her present owner converted her to Particulars ration candidate. At
a cutter, which among other things involved relocat- LOA 30' 6" under $5,000, she’s
ing the new mast farther aft. You can check out her Beam 6' 6" a bargain.
design (except for the rig) on the Atkin website. The draft 4' 6"
Sail area 312 sq ft For more information or
equipment list is long and includes usable sails, abun- to view the boat, contact
displacement 4,775 lbs
dant ground tackle, a sailing dinghy, and a couple of designed by W. Starling Burgess Chuck McGhinnis, Delta-
inflatables. Photographs indicate that Ondine has Built by Quincy Adams Yacht Yard, ville (Virginia) Maritime
been well cared for. She’s not free like some of the Quincy, MA, 1945 Museum, 804–776–7200
previous boats i’ve featured, but the asking price is or 804–694–6449 (cell).
reasonable.

MARION M, A 1932 Chandlery Lighter


For more information or to inspect OnDIne,
call owner Ralph Gibbs at 386–467–9211
or write him at 126 Peninsula Dr., Crescent

A
City, FL 32112. nd, finally, here’s a late arrival that’s in immediate jeopardy: South
Street Seaport Museum in new York City is actively seeking a good
Ondine home for the 1932 chandlery
Particulars lighter MAriOn M, 62' LOA ,
LOA 37' 6" 22' beam, 5' draft. The museum
LWL 30' acquired her for service as a
Beam 11' 4" passenger vessel, a duty she could
draft 5' 6"
yet perform after significant
displacement 25,000 lbs
Power 36-hp Volvo Md3B diesel
repairs and certification.
designed by William Atkin Contact Capt. Jonathan Boulware,
Built in nova Scotia by an unknown
builder, 1954
waterfront director, 212–748–8772
or jboulware@seany.org.

144 • WoodenBoat 227

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WestMarine226.indd 3 5/23/12 3:03 PM
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Interlux227.indd 4 5/22/12 9:01 AM

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