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Boat Building Academy student Ian Baird’s project to build a replica of the rare Dorset crab and lobster boat known as Witch of Worbarrow during his course is continuing apace, as it must to be be ready for the big launch on the 9th December.
For more posts relating to Witch and Worbarrow, click here.
Ian, who was a novice woodworker at the beginning of his nine month course at the BBA, has been commissioned to write three articles on his experiences for Watercraft Magazine. The first of his articles will be published in January 2011.
“The centreline structure went together reasonably simply, but the first three planks on either side were really difficult for a fledgling boat builder,’ he reports. ‘The garboard and plank above both return onto the keel and the stern post at an awkward angle and there was a good deal of steaming, rabbet altering and scratching of heads, but we got it right in the end. The third plank was a bit of trouble too, with a tight curve onto the transom, but we are now banging on a plank a day.’
Ian says there has been a lot of interest in Ian’s project: ‘We originally put out a press release to try and winkle out any information we could about the original boat’s life and times, but the response has been more than I could have hoped for.
‘Interest from Intheboatshed.net, local television news and local papers has reached an extraordinarily wide audience and many people have come forward with information and pictures for which I am extremely grateful.’
A pictorial diary of Ian’s project is available at the BBA website.
The launch of the BBA’s March 2010 project boats will take place in the harbour at Lyme Regis, Dorset, at 9am on Wednesday 9th December 2010.
Want to learn more about boatbuilding using the clinker technique? Try John Leather’s book Clinker boatbuilding at the revived intheboatshed.net A-store.
G'day Gavin. Is that the type of boat in the Turner painting of Lyme Regis. I could not find an image but the painting is in the US I think.
Do you mean this one Jeff: http://www.arts-wallpapers.com/english_masterpiec…
The pier could be the Cobb at Lyme, but the boats look bigger and heavier to me.
Gav
Hi Gavin, No. The pic Im thinking of has two heavy unrigged clinker rowed boats on the beach and I think a group of women with nets and fish baskets, I have a print here, somewhere but cannot find it. I may have gotten the title wrong of course.