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Canoe Yawl , Schooner , Ketch , Sandbagger Yacht , Sailboat , Boat Plans Plan PDF

155 Pages·1986·32.87 MB·English
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THE MAGAZINE FOR WOODEN BOAT OWNERS, BUILDERS AND DESIGNERS ALBERT STRANGE AND THE CANOE YAWL MAY/JUNE 1985 THE ARTS OF THE RIVERBOAT BUILDERS NUMBER 64 SPRING PAINTING AND VARNISHING $3.50 UNUSUAL BACKYARD BOATS $4.25 in Canada £2.50 in U.K. Celebrating the quality and craftsmanship of one of the most enduring art forms that exists today: the Wooden Boat. AUGUST 8-11,1985 NAVY PIER, CHICAGO The Chicago International Wooden Boat Festival will feature some of the finest products, builders, dealers, collectors, and periodicals related to the boating industry. For exhibitor information contact Keith Church by calling or writing 600 North McClurg Court Chicago, Illinois 60611 (312) 787-6858 I had a close call recently. I came dangerously close to making some purely subjective judgments about people who own boats made of other materials. (Not that pleasure boats of any material can be seen objectively.) I must say, however, that it was a little startling. I mean, I've done my best to appreciate the fact that wooden boats are not for everyone, and that glass boats, for instance, are not inherently bad boats. I've asked only that wooden boats be considered, not canonized. After all, it is such a personal matter. And, since I hope to avoid being judged for my personal preferences, I must obviously practice tolerance myself. On the other hand, I'm not immune to questioning. When I'm in a harbor or anchorage where there are lots of skiffs and dinghies made of aluminum and glass, I can't help wondering why anyone would have one of those things when they could so easily have one of cedar, or mahogany, or glued plywood. To my narrow mind, it would look bet- ter, it would feel better, and it would engage me. (And at this point I'd be precariously close to making a judgment.) Sounds a little fanatical, doesn't it? No doubt, my counterparts in the Brotherhood of Other Materials ask the same question about me: why would I have something built of wood when it could be otherwise? There seems to be an unavoidable parallel with religion, which I like, because it removes the need to defend my preferences. Or so it would seem. In fact, there are intolerant factions who occasionally challenge my beliefs: why wooden boats? And when I answer that it's because I love wooden boats, I often get stares of disbelief (or is it re- strained amusement?). But I feel an intolerance. There was a time when the wood in boats made little difference to me. It wasn't until I began to appreciate its beauty and diversity that I became one of its champions. And I realize that there are many who have no desire to understand it, and who prefer to appreciate it their way—from a distance. I accept that what may be pleasure to me will seem work to another, and vice versa. Maybe it's more like religion than I've thought. In the early days, when people asked if we were try- ing to make wooden boats a religion through the magazine, I was appalled. I certainly wasn't, and in fact, didn't believe they deserved that sort of misunderstanding. Well, maybe boats are a religion. Not wooden boats, but boats. Wood is just one of the denominations. Perhaps our commitments, as strange as they seem to others, would be better accepted if others saw the differences as denominational. After all, most of us are perfectly tolerant of various religious customs. Wooden boat folks simply wor- ship at a different altar. What a comfortable notion. But, what a responsibility. It means that I have to be especially careful of those subjective judgment tendencies, or I've come no further than history's most infamous persecutors. So while I won't elaborate upon the judgments I nearly uttered, I will say that I came close. I thought you ought to know. I'll try and set a better example. 2 WoodenBoat/64 WoodenBoat Number 64 May/June 1985 SHEILA, one of Albert Strange's many beautiful designs, page 19. DYON/George Carey 40 The symbol of summer for four generations Albert Strange and the Canoe Yawl SHEILA Michael Burn 49 The emergence of the small yacht in turn-of-the- century England Quick Steps for Spring Painting, Part II 58 Anne and Maynard Bray The second weekend: tackling the work from the deck up Building the Belles of the Western Rivers/Jack Custer 64 A rare glimpse into the world of steamboat Constant Camber panels ready to construction become a strong and shapely dinghy. page 83. TROUT UNLIMITED: The Compleat Fly Fisherman 70 Peter Lentini Ten years' worth of thought on the "proper platform" PILGRIM'S Progress Pete Johnson 76 Dennis Holland's new Baltimore clipper, a long labor of love Bagging the GULL, Part I 83 Jim Brown, John Marples and Dick Newick Constant Camber goes mono! The Careful Creation of MELE KAI, Part II/James L. Meriam 92 The completion of a lovely double-ended cruising boat A photographic record from the days of steamboats, page 64. Editor's Page 2 Designs 98 Letters 4 Book Review 106 Fo'c's'le 11 Wood Technology 108 On the Waterfront 13 Boatbuilders 117 Calendar of Events 32 Boat brokers 129 In My View 35 Classified 135 Video Review 38 Index to Advertisers 152 Cover: TROUT UNLIMITED, a fly fisher- man's fantasy realized. page 70. Photo by Marty Loken. 64/WoodenBoat 3 Dear WoodenBoat, With regard to two of the subjects covered in your excellent WB No. 63, a comment for each: I used foam-covered paint roller sleeves for years before I discovered how useful they are in applying paint. (I've destroyed hundreds of them in the snuggle to apply epoxy smoothly.) They are also a godsend to someone trying to paint his topsides alone. I apply the paint first with the roller and brush it out carefully with a badger brush. Contrary to the Brays, I finish- stroke from the dry surface of the hull into the wet edge. I just can't seem to avoid showing the marks of the brush where it first contacts the paint if I go the other way. The roller allows me to apply much more paint without sags, and since I can go more quickly, I don't have to use as much thinner, which also improves hiding. I'm not sure why the roller allows the application of more paint without sags. I think it has to do with the brush stroke's tendency to "trip" the painted surface, and perhaps it works similarly to the recourse of brushing out the paint vertically. The rollers I use are the ones commonly sold by the epoxy manufacturers like Gougeon Brothers. They are bright yellow, the foam is about 1/8" thick, and they're called "Tiz Twins." They're not worth cleaning up if you're using them for epoxy, but if you're using them with regular marine paint, they'll last a whole spring session. Roll out the most of the paint, wrap them in waxed paper, and tuck the excess into the ends. They'll keep soft that way for a week or so. And while we're at it, for super fair- ing ability from your disc sander, stick a piece of Formica on the foam pad with contact cement, and stick your sandpaper to that. Turns it into an honest tool, uninfluenced by the varia- tions in hardness of the surface you're working on (for convex surfaces only). In reference to Tom Wylie's remarks about cold-molded boats using veneers over strip planking, this method is par- ticularly suited to traditional craft re- engineered for cold molding. Older designs can almost always afford the extra weight of the method (compared to veneers over stringers or solid ve- neers), because the result is still lighter and stronger than the original con- struction. In the wine- and champagne- glass sections of the classics, a solid inner layer is very helpful for laminat- ing veneers into the tuck at the stern 4 WoodenBoat/64 and into hollow garboards. Thanks for getting me to think about haul-out time. Nothing so focus- es the mind as a disc sanding in the morning. David C. King Port Townsend, WA Dear WoodenBoat, My renewal notice sits on my desk collecting dust. While I appreciate the wealth of practical information con- tained between the magazine's covers, I have grown weary of the creeping assertion that anything less than a tra- ditional wooden boat automatically curtails personal growth and self-ful- fillment. Boatbuilders and/or owners need not be insecure about the medium used in their craft. It is shortsighted and counterproductive to purposely foster separateness among people. Respect and example are far superior as teachers than are rhetoric and assertion. Words cannot express the sense of "freedom" I felt when I opened the latest issue of WB to the article on Arno Day. Finally, in just an ordinary trade magazine geared to ordinary folks, an editor had the depth and the vision to ask questions of himself and others. Questions that heretofore had been the sole property of pundits, priests, phi- losophers, and other elite hucksters. For me Jon Wilson, Peter Spectre, Mason Smith, and Arno Day have in this article transcended the mundane questions of something versus some- thing else, and have asked the impor- tant question: What motivates a per- son to be him/herself? Often in the editor's column, there is mention of personal expression, the search for meaning. I support WoodenBoat's effort to foster understanding between a man and himself. That Arno Day could break his pattern of self-con- tained anger and share his hurt, with us, has opened the door to true free- dom. How many of us can now come forward and acknowledge our pain and the defenses we have built around it which we cleverly hide behind our intolerance of other's shortcomings? Yes, Arno, my father yanked tools from my hands, and when I couldn't make my son listen, I yanked tools from his hands. I have had helpers quit, they thinking I was difficult, I thinking they were inadequate. The result was the same, though, as I felt misunderstood. It took courage to print this article, 64/WoodenBoat 5 Surely the one who enjoys most the beauty of a strong and smooth boat, is the one whose own hands have made it so. All over the world professional and amateur posites. WEST SYSTEM products are useful for boatbuilders have discovered the advantages of many applications beyond new boat construc- building with wood and WEST SYSTEM*brand tion, including repair, modification, and epoxy. For the past 15 years, wood composite reconstruction. boats built with WEST SYSTEM products have proven to be effective racers and durable We invite you to assess wood composite con- cruisers that are low maintenance and do not struction and WEST SYSTEM products. Pro- suffer the problems usually associated with ducts and information are available from wood. WEST SYSTEM epoxy is often used with Gougeon Brothers, Inc. or the following fiberglass, Kevlar®, and graphite fiber com- distributors and their authorized dealers: "Trademark of Gougeon Brothers Inc., U.S.A. 6 WoodenBoat/64 and if we are willing to accept the chal- lenge of our trade, building and restor- ing boats, might we not accept the most basic challenge of all: making peace with ourselves so that we can go to the workplace with self-respect and openness to the growth pains of our fellow beings? Please renew my subscription. Leaf Myczack Collierville, TX Dear WoodenBoat, I am writing in hopes of using your magazine to help in my search for funding to engage in research and the publication of a concise and factual book on ship caulking. I would also like to include in this treatise the ship- building reminiscences of the numer- ous ship caulkers with whom I am acquainted. My intial rough layout would include interviews with the men still involved in the trade, information on tools and their evolution, and a discus- sion of their techiques, all illustrated with an abundance of both photo- graphs and drawings. I believe a study of this subject can provide an interest- ing look at ship and yacht building through the eyes of men who saw an age of caulking that will never be a part of our culture again. Since my own involvement with the trade has brought me in contact with a number of the older practitioners of caulking, I believe I am in an ideal position to make this project both a practical and historical text useful to both amateurs and pro- fessionals. My needs for the project are, simply put, information from your readership to help me secure the necessary finan- cial backing a project of this nature will require. My applications to the two funding outlets, The Maine Arts & Humanities Commission and The Maine Commission of Humanities, require that any funding that they have available comply with the N.E.A.H. guidelines, which rarely, if ever, fund individuals not attached in some way to an accredited institution. That is why I have decided to seek funding privately. I hope your readership will be able to suggest avenues which might afford me an opportunity to bring this proj- ect to a healthy start. Many thanks for your time and space. Eugene J. Scalzo Box 731 Waldoboro, ME 04572 Dear Meg, In the March/April issue, one of the photo captions in the interview with Tom Wylie identifies ALERT as 64/WoodenBoat 7 Tom's personal boat. Tom did refer to "my ALERT" in the interview, but he was actually referring to it as one of his designs. ALERT was designed by Tom, built by C & B Marine of Watsonville, California, and is owned and sailed by Mike Lingsch of San Rafael, Califor- nia. Mike, by the way, is quite expe- rienced as a crewman in Pan Am and SORC competition. My apologies for not clarifying the owner of ALERT in the article. Taylor Chambers Ben Lomond, CA Dear Mr. Wilson, Thank you very much for the truly enriching article on Arno Day by Mason Smith. I was so impressed with the article that I am considering taking his class, as I, too, love lines and lofting.... Dave Herz Steamboat Springs, CO Dear Sir, On behalf of the 95% of British boatbuilders who chose not to exhibit at the Southampton Boat Show last September, I must take issue with your correspondent who assumes the boats exhibited there were representative of the current U.K. wooden boat building scene. From a builder's point of view, it would appear the U.K. boat show cir- cuit is primarily for the benefit of the show promoters, rather than the ex- hibitors, and I, for one, would be unwilling to pass the disproportion- ately high cost of exhibiting on to my customers. During the past seven years of trad- ing, we have received a diverse range of commissions to design and build small craft and yachts, in wood, and I am bound to say that our style and build- ing methods have their roots most def- initely here in Britain, and not in the U.S.A. Apart from the long heritage of yacht building in the English Lake District dating back to the 1790s and beyond, there has been continuous activity throughout the U.K. in the development of small-craft design and construction, reflected to some extent by the wide range of racing and sailing dinghy classes that have flourished since the 1880s. The most substantial part of this activity remains undocu- mented for publication, with a few notable exceptions, but this does not mean it does not exist. The vast majority of well-established British boatbuilders have developed their own styles, in the best nautical tradition, taking into account local sea 8 WoodenBoat/64

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