Obsession
Someone
posted a bit on a boating forum that implied that S-glass wasn’t all that good
a product. It may well have been a heavy
handed attempt at sarcasm but it really riled me up, to the point that I
responded. One of the initial phrases was “Having built a number of wood and
foam strip canoes”. After I cooled off a bit I wondered, “How many boats have I
built over the years”.
Quite as few as it turns out. I sat down and tried to reconstruct more or less in order what I’d built and came up with thirty five. Really, that many? Yes probably so.
Here’s the list with a few comments as I go. Numbers are more or less in sequence, but there is some overlap in places.
(1) First Canoe, 65 years ago at the tender age of 16 I decided to build a real boat rather than the multitude of models built up to then. Steam bent ribs over a mold, covered with fine screen wire and then fiberglassed ~ 10 oz cloth and polyester resin. 15’ +/- long a little twisted and tender I paddled it for a year or so and then traded it for a go cart. Raced the go cart for a while until twin engines and transmissions made me non competitive.
(2) Hydroplane. I missed the racing so I built a step hydroplane designed by William Jackson. 10’-8” LOA as I remember ¼” plywood resorcinol glue and a zillion screws. My girlfriend at the time (we’ve now been married 61 years) soaped every single screw thread. Raced in a strip pit against mostly Minimaxes.
(3) Marriage, college and parenthood slowed boatbuilding down for a while but I did manage to make a board sailer which was unremarkable until the daggerboard trunk sprung a leak and it became remarkably heavy.
Graduated with an Architectural degree and we moved to Houston and bought a used Lone Star 13 sailboat which we used for a couple of years until we got our first powerboat, 15’ Starcraft Tristar with a 75 hp Evinrude which we skied and camped with for years.
About
that time I bought a pickup truck load of ½” Klegecell foam in 32” x 48” pieces
left over from the build of a 65’ trimaran in Galveston.
(7) As an indication that I’d not learned much on Monomania I built a 15’-8” canoe just like the big boys were doing at the time. Build a form, add a layer of fiberglass over form, vacuum bag some foam to glass using epoxy/microballon mix, fair the foam and then glass the outside. Boat turned out nice, did need a thwart as the glass was not quite stiff enough by itself. It was light and we enjoyed it for years and gave it to my father-in-law when his Grumman canoe’s weight became a little too much for him to load and unload.
My
own personal boats in that area included:
(9) A wildly asymmetrical foam core sit on top (before there was such a thing) midsection was @ 58% back from bow. Equal volume above and below waterline; 2” freeboard and a “bulletproof rudder” from which I learned a fundamental fact about Mother Nature and Murphy.
(13) Rowing Shell Bill Collins who introduced me to the wild and weird world of the TWS was a real proponent of row rigs, I designed one for him and then took a hand at rowing myself. 21’ wood stripper, the decks were double matched cedar from a plank of extremely variegated light and dark cedar. I used the boat enough to be comfortable with it but I really preferred seeing where I was going and sold the boat.
(16) Granddaughters boat Another Rendezvous project, Canoe Club wanted a demo and I didn’t have any projects at hand so I whipped up a 7’10” canoe built on a single 2x4 strongback and stripped for the Rendezvous and finished it later. Granddaughters ~ 6 and 2 at the time sat in it a couple of times and that was it. Son still has the boat.
(17) Bionic Log. My ten minutes of fame ;-) The next Rendezvous Don Cash a videographer with Texas Parks and Wildlife, was directed to me since he was looking to do a segment on wooden canoe building. I was thinking about building a sit on top to do the Junior Water Safari so we agreed that I’d do the build first class and he’d video the process and and produce a segment for the Texas Parks and Wildlife PBS TV show. The name came from an encounter with a small kid when I was first trying out #14 at Lake of the Woodlands and was sitting straddle the boat with my legs in the water contemplating balance and a boy on the bank said “Oh mister, where did you get that log”.
(19) El Dorito The next year I designed and built a 12’ wood strip canoe for the same client to be the backdrop for a display exhibit of their products in England. I liked the name, all small boats in Belize are called dories and it was a small boat; nobody else cared for the name.
(20 to 25) EasyB El Dorito was almost perfect in the sense that it handled well and there were just a few little tweaks to I wanted to do to the shape so I finally designed and built a boat that didn’t whisper “I’d be just a little better if……”. First a 12’ version wood core daily paddler followed by a 14’ version, foam cored for some expedition style trips. Both boat plans (full size frame patterns) used to be available free on Duckworks. Then there were two wood strippers that I built for friends that insisted on having a boat built by me. Both were done on the 14’ form, one mahogany and has never been wet as far as I know and the other only used occasionally. Finally (I think) a 12’ wood stripper after the tornado so I would have something to paddle, followed by a foam strip version which is better suited to the very rocky environ we now live in.
Colorado 100 boats
(27) After designing an untold number of racing canoes over the years primarily for the TWS I’ve come to know and recognize the competitive zeal in my clients and also recognize I don’t have it; my obsession is providing them with the best tool I can. But I love paddling. When the Colorado 100 race began there was an Adventure Class and Chuck Leinweber called and said why don’t we do it? So we did. Quick and dirty I made a 24’ tandem sit on top covered with polyethylene shrink film made for winterizing boats. Worked fairly well but film came loose from the frame in a couple of places and we sank on a training run a mile or so from the take out. A quick recovering with aircraft fabric allowed us to run in the race but it was a little iffy.
(28) Almost There After a year or two I started thinking about doing the Colorado 100 again and maybe go in my 14’ foamcore EasyB or build a new boat. My friend and aerobics instructor Sue VanNatta was a competitive marathoner and indicated she might like to try the race with me. I told her if she would definitely commit I’d build a tandem and we’d adventure race. She committed and I built a new 24’ tandem and we trained and ran a couple of years in Adventure class. Our team name was ‘Beauty and the Beast’ and my wife Susie was team captain ‘Keeper’. It was a grand adventure and Sue retired from canoe racing after two years to concentrate on marathons and ironman competition. Susie and I went to a surprise 50th birthday party for Sue a couple of years later and I got to speak about her heart of a lion as she was afraid of running the river at night but never faltered. Sue was gone from this plane of existence a couple of years after that with brain cancer, I miss her still.
(29)Paddling proa After a run with a friend, Jeff Jouett I sold the tandem and paddled several years in my 14’ EasyB. One year I got to thinking about how much less wake I’d pull if I had a smaller cross section hull with an outrigger so I built a 16’ skinny hulled thing with an outrigger and got it debugged enough to work but the gain was minimal and the risk of not finishing was greater so that was shelved, main problem was the old motor.
The Proas.
(30)ACDC Shorty Routh
had a messabout at Lake Conroe and one year he promoted a $50 sailboat race.
$50 won’t buy a lot of materials so I’m limited to two sheets of utility ply
but the minimal rules allow a 14’ max loa. The only way I can build a 14’
sailboat out of two sheets of plywood is a proa. So ACDC is done. ACDC doesn’t
win the race there’s little wind and an 8’ kayak with umbrella wins. But I
rebuild ACDC into a $100 craft and learn some of the quirks and advantages to
the type. I am hooked.
(31) P52 Designed for a competition in the still missed
Duckworks ezine for a Everglades Challenge boat, P52 received an honorable
mention in the design competition and was already under construction by that
time to participate in the EC with Chuck as my partner. We pulled out about 160
miles in with some broken framing in the float support. Repaired with sliding
beams instead of swing arms and a different sail rig I entered the second TX200
and was doing OK until the wind became too strong for the unreefable 48 s.f.
balanced club staysail and broke the mast. Rerigged with a reefable but less
efficient sail and rudders instead of a steering oar I finally finished the
TX200 and subsequently sold the boat.
(33)Nomad First class
this time, P52 had been built out of $10 utility plywood, but could cruise at
10-12 mph easily and hit 20mph with 35 s.f. on a shortened mast. Nomad was a
little bigger, 7.7 m loa vrs 6.99 built from rated okume and meranti plywood. Schooner rigged with two wingsails
and end mounted rudders that had worked well on BB. Boat was built with some
occasional help from friend John Wright. Then it came time to mount the wings, turned
out to be more of an issue than I’d thought. BB had been easy, lay the boat on
its side and slide the wing onto a stub mast. The stub masts on Nomad were way
up in the air. After some effort John and I got to where we could mount and
dismount the wings but it still seemed a little iffy. An initial splash at Lake
Somerville was unremarkable, there was no wind but the boat moved nicely with
its AD scull and the rudders were serviceable but difficult to raise and lower.
Subsequently Susie and I took the boat to the Port Aransas Boat Festival but
John had a previous commitment. I bowed to
some pressure and tried to mount the wings with some local help but the wind
caught the first wing and sent it flying along with the gin pole and associated
stuff. No one was hurt but I was seriously upset, someone could have been hurt.
I retired about that time and we moved to Lake Tenkiller in Oklahoma. After
building a house and settling in I advertised the boat for sale in Small Craft
Advisor and was surprised when it sold quickly. Before the new owner could pick
up the boat an EF2 tornado destroyed the boat along with our other boats, my
shop and did extensive damage to our new home.
(35) Questing Beast (QB) The question; “Do I have another major build in me?” Desire to do the Texas 200 again tipped the scales. No more wood, build was foam and fiberglass, 21’ long. My boats get shorter as I get older. Originally I was going to participate in the 2023 TX200 but supply chain issues “I know we show Gpet foam on our web site but we don’t have any and don’t know when or if we will ever get more” and the simple fact that I work a lot slower these days delayed participation until 2024. The boat is finally finished and I got to do the TX200 again, a satisfying trip, albeit shorter than planned.
Proafile ArticleWill there be a number thirty six? I don’t know. At the moment I’m looking forward to the little redo’s , improvements and enhancements to QB and using and tuning the boat to probably do a modified 2025 TX200 starting early at Magnolia Beach and spending some time in Seadrift watching the early racers finish the TWS. If there is#36 it would probably be a new Bionic Broomstick, there’s some lessons learned that might make a better boat and 3D printing would certainly expedite the wingsail control. OTOH a 12’ solo canoe, 21’ proa and a 19’ runabout should keep me occupied as long as I have the ability to enjoy same.
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