I mean a dinghy, or a little Flying Junior, Banshee, centerboard daysailer?
I wanna see what you've got.
I'm missing my skerry.
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I mean a dinghy, or a little Flying Junior, Banshee, centerboard daysailer?
I wanna see what you've got.
I'm missing my skerry.
Attachment 4569
At 32 pounds, the strip plank Wee Lassie built by David Barrett is the lightest. Henry, the Corgi, was three pounds heavier.
Ants
I found this Penobscot 14 in a neighbor's garage. The neighbor's godfather gave it to him. He can't find the title for either the boat or the trailer but is talking to the family - if he can find the paperwork I'll probably buy it. I've been jonesin' to get a little boat for a long time.
There's also an OK Dinghy up in Petaluma that is only $350. I'm tempted to go have a look if this P14 doesn't pan out.
Attachment 4571
Attachment 4570
The strip plank kayak (at 50 pounds) is a one-off version a well-designed Mariner Max kayak. The rotomolded Jackson Rogue kayak (at about 65 pounds) is better suited for bouncing off the rocks in the Kern River whitewater.
Interestingly, these two kayaks have opposite turning chacteristics. The Rogue turns on the inside edge while the Mariner Max turns on the outside edge to go in the same direction.
Photo taken at Nimpkish Lake on Vancouver Island.
Ants
Attachment 4572
This McKenzie River drift boat goes up in weight to about 170 pounds. The pointy end is not the bow. The broad end goes downriver first. The rocker allows the boat to pivot easily in standing waves. Great platform for fly fishing - stable as a dock. The oars are used to turn the boat and pull away from rocks and other obstacles.
I was visiting Idaho a few weeks ago and every fourth car seemed to be towing a drift boat. Really made me want one.
Oooh...that strip planked wee lassie is pretty...
so is the Penobscot 14....eeeeeeeeeeee.......
Well, if we're counting kayaks then here is my #3 boat....the orange one. I think my son abandoned the red one in Washington DC somewhere.
Attachment 4574
That Penobscot 14 is a BEAUT!
The drift boats are like the pickup trucks of river travel, easily holding 1,000 to 1,500 pounds of cargo. The experienced river folk take pride in how few oar strokes they use in a river run. However, shift of weight without rowing and edging a hard chine to nudge the boat are all parts of the game. For lighter sailboats, the concepts are not much different.
Attachment 4575
Attachment 4576
A couple of sabot dinghies fit right into the mix. One was a standard daggerboard sabot. The second was found on the beach at the headlands of Dana Point and named Lost and Found. Lost and Found was reworked with a t-seat and larger deck. I forgot my tape measure and lost several inches at the gunwale beam and added some to the length. Lost and Found was towed to La Paz as part of the 1998 Baja Ha Ha group.
Ants drift dory takes me back quite a few decades to my childhood in Springfield, Oregon - the McKenzie River runs just north and the McKenzie Pass which the river runs down is to the east. My great uncle had a Woodie Hindman Mckenzie Dory and fly fished the river. As a young boy I sometimes went along as "super cargo" - sitting midships while Uncle Howard and his fishing buddy took turns fishing and rowing - using split bamboo rods and home-tied flies. It was exciting and my introduction to being on the water. I held the woven creel.
The McKenzie River Dory Ants has is a flat bow model - with a wider bow than my uncle's boat. The boat in the picture below is more traditional with a narrower bow (notice the anchor on the bow). Yes, my uncle kept his boat in "yacht" condition, varnishing and painting during the long Oregon winter. he didn't have the fancy caned "dude" throne, though.
The original McKenzie River Dories were double ended variations the surf dories used along the Oregon Coast and beach launched. They were shorter, about 14 feet or so. In the mid 1940s, when " fishing dudes" (the term was derisive) had money to pay for a guide to take them fishing the wider bow allowed a comfortable seat and stability to stand.
The McKenzie Dory (as opposed to the flat bottom Rogue River Dory) has a continuous rocker, so it can spin on a dime. The guide/rower keeps the pointy stern upstream, rowing against the current to slow the bow to allow for the dude to cast into pools alongside the main flow. It's a one-way trip with the relentless current carrying the boat downstream. Going through the rapids, the guide spins the boat so the pointy stern points downstream; at the rapid's bottom he spins the boat, begins to row back upstream while the dude casts into the pool below the rapids.
Great memories.
Attachment 4577
Wow! A lot of beautiful boats!
Trinket, a 6'-6" canvas covered dingy, purchased by my younger more impetuous self (age 20 ish) from a summer camp that I had worked at in the Berkshire hills in western Mass. I stored in my parents cellar, years pass, I move to California, the inquiries about when am a going to get my boat out of the cellar cease after 20 years, it has become an accepted fixture in the house. Two years ago my mom passes, the house must be emptied. I inquire about the cost of shipping it to the west coast, ($2K+), I resolve to donate it to a worthy marine trade school.
A month later, I look out on my driveway one morning, there it is. No explanation. No note. I suspect my middle brother. We have a family history of surprising each other, showing up un-anounced on birthdays etc.
Attachment 4578Attachment 4579
Gauntlet thrown down. I have been nibbling around the edge of accepting the challenge. It was made by the Penn-Yan Boat Co. of Penn Yan NY, it was originally canvas covered, but the abuse it was receiving at the YMCA camp had stripped this away. Without the canvas it leaked copiously, but I remembered enjoying rowing it. Each oar stroke seemed to be able to get her up on a plane, for about 1.5 boat lengths before she settled back in the water.
Now that I've copped to own this "trinket", I sure the SSS community will inquire, frequently, if I've made any progress in the restoration....? Probably the fire beneath my derriere needed to get me started.
Chris & FUGU
Awwww. Can I sit in front?
I spy a couple cracked ribs under the center thwart (starboard side) but that's to be expected, and is probably the cause of the large crack at the turn of the bilge. I'd get a forward thwart back in it, to avoid cracking any more as you move it around. Then maybe take it to Gordie Nash for his opinion. He has a shop at Rutherford's in Richmond (near Marina Bay).
My neighbor (with the Penobscot 14) is off getting married so I haven't heard from him. Before long he'll be hearing "Dear, what are you going to do with that boat?" and we can move forward.
Since I didn't have the opportunity to grow up near the McKenzie River, my option was to buy Roger Fletcher's wonderful book, Drift Boats & River Dories. I guess was enthusiastically inspired, since I bought Ray Heater's personal boat two weeks later. I picked up the boat near Mt Hood one afternoon when the temperatures were in the mid-50's. I had a permit for the Deschutes on the following day. Overnight, the temperature dropped below freezing and stayed there for a week. No time on the water on those conditions for a newbie.
Next year, the McKenzie was rowed. I remember doing a voluntary 360 turn on top of a standing wave. Wow!
Attachment 4584
Attachment 4585
This wherry version is the expedition ( decked) wherry by Chesapeake Light Craft. The okuome plywood is a good building material, but as a varnished finish it seems rather boring to me. My alternative was to overlay the deck with incense cedar that cut at the now defunct Mt Whitney Lumber Company and recycled out of the house building materials.
Attachment 4586
The overlays are done, so the final hull finishing needs to be completed. Slow projects! Who is watching the calendar?
Ants