Raid Finland in a Whitehall

Raid Finland Raid Finland Raid Finland

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This is how to have real fun – take a boat that can row AND sail to Finland and join a Raid!

Many of the other boats are traditional, the photos are very nice but take a look at the video clips because they’re even better. I bet they enjoyed their evening meals after after all that hard work!

http://www.whitehallrow.com/articles/raid_finland_2005.php

How to build a canvas canoe




Canvas canoe

Here’s another terrible temptation for all you winter-time boat dreamers.

I imagine you’d have to be pretty hardy to build a canvas canoe using real canvas these days, but people use Dacron painted over with a seal. I’m pretty sure there will be something on the techniques involved at Duckworks at www.duckworksmagazine.com, as the Duckmeister is himself a canvas canoe fan.

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I think also you might have to think a bit about this author’s suggestions about the kinds of wood you might use for various components – ‘thin oak’, for example, might now be replaced with ply of some kind.

Still, I there’s enough information here to build a fun and very retro little boat Continue reading “How to build a canvas canoe”

An 18ft sharpie drawn by Reuel Parker

Mack Horton sharpie Mack Horton sharpie Mack Horton sharpie

Send this link to interested friends: https://intheboatshed.net/?p=521

By now, dear reader, you will know that I have a strange affliction in which almost every day something grips my stomach and says: YOU must BUILD a sharpie NOW!

I guess it’s partly because I’m not terribly skilled in the carpentry department, and however elegant they may be, sharpies always look a lot easier to build than any round-bottomed boat.

It’s a bit like that moment when you buy your first house and walk into a DIY shed. Young and impressionable, you look around, size up the hardware and the free instruction leaflets, and all of a sudden you’re thinking ‘I could install a new back door and put in a central heating system system while I’m at it – and everything I need is here in front of me, right now. I CAN do anything if I want to! DIY sheds are of course meant to make any man feel that way. They even fill them with a syrupy love song soundtrack to remind us we can do it all for our partners…

The idea that I have the power to build a sharpie is only one of the reasons I get gripped by them. Another is that I read Howard Irving Chappelle’s book American Small Sailing Craft far too early in life – I wasn’t yet 40, and it had a terrible and long-lasting effect. And yet another is that they can be such elegant boats, despite their relative simplicity.

Here’s a sweet example of one of these boats. It’s an 18ft sharpie that many sharpie enthusiasts read about first in Reuel Parker’s The Sharpie Book. In this case it was built by a chap called Mack Horton, and a very nice job he has made of it.

Anyway, I’ve included it here partly because I’m nuts about sharpies, and partly because that warm blue sea and water is really attractive when viewed from Southern England in February!

Mack Horton builds a sharpie here:
http://mackhorton.com

If you don’t know about Reuel Parker, the source of Mack’s plans, click here:
http://www.parker-marine.com/parker2_2.htm

Are there any other Brits out there with a liking for sharpies? If so, why not comment below and get in touch? We could form an underground movement…

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