A handsome Humber keel

Humber Keel engraving

Humber Keel engraving

This is one you could hang on a wall – and I hope some of you will.

I recently found this lovely engraving of a Humber keel in a very old book, and I’ve made the downloadable file extra-large to try to make sure it will print out nicely. Perhaps some of you will find a suitable spot for it.

For more posts relating to the Humber and its vessels:
Dove
More of Roger Davies classic marine paintings
A barge with a Viking-style square sail

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Cooke on the rule of the road, and the dinghy

Chapter XV: ‘You will find the regulations printed in extenso in any nautical almanac, and when you see that they fill a good many pages you will probably be aghast at the thought of having to commit so much to memory.’

Cooke Cooke Cooke

Cooke Cooke

Chapter XVI: ‘It is true that we had not much more than an inch of freeboard, but fortunately nobody sneezed and so we made the journey in safety.’

Cooke Cooke

Want to comment or add something? Email intheboatshed.net: gmatkin@gmail.com

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Seamanship for Yachtsmen Chapter headings:

Chapter I Introduction
Chapter II Small Cruising Yachts
Chapter III Getting under Way
Chapter IV Getting under Way (continued)
Chapter V Seamanship under Way
Chapter VI Seamanship under Way (continued) Continue reading “Cooke on the rule of the road, and the dinghy”

The first Light Trow skiff is launched

Launch of Onawind Blue

Launch of Onawind Blue Launch of Onawind Blue Launch of Onawind Blue

The launch of Onawind Blue

Ben Crawshaw launched his Light Trow this weekend to wide acclaim – not least on the Tarragona beach where Onawind Blue first began to fulfill her destiny. Here’s a quotation from his excellent and entertaining weblog, The Invisible Workshop:

‘As the last wave of a big set broke we ran forward and into the surf, Onawind Blue’s bows skimmed over the sea and smashed through the white water. As we got out of our depth I hopped in and stood to the oars. OB responded immediately and her bow rose high over the next wave. She pulled away like a thoroughbred amid whooping and cheers from the beach and then we were on the outside and I evened up my stroke and headed out to sea.

‘She was a joy to row, comfortable, settled, surefooted and fast. Later people commented that they couldn’t believe how rapidly I was reduced to a speck. A smooth straight wake with no white water and no eddies spread behind us like a ribbon over the sea.’

It’s well worth visiting The Invisible Workshop, not least for the snatch of video, which clearly shows the kind of water Ben and his boat were so happy in, even on their first time out.

For more on the Light Trow and its ancestor the Fleet Trow:
‘Phwoar!’, says Light Trow builder Ben Crawshaw

Download the FREE BOAT PLANS for the Light Trow plans here:
http://www.duckworksbbs.com/plans/gavin/lighttrow/trow.zip

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