Subscribe to comments – intheboatshed.net is now a little more social

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We’d love to have more comments and discussion here at intheboatshed.net – social networking is now such a big part of many people’s daily life, that we think regular intheboatshedders should also have better ways of communicating with each other.

A small step in that direction today is a gizmo that allows readers to subscribe to comments – when you make a comment now, you will be able to subscribe to particular comment streams, so that you know when comments are added to a post of particular interest. I’d guess this will be useful to anyone interested in knowing about responses to a comment they’ve made.

Another innovation that many will find easy to follow is the Recent comments box in the left-hand column. So get commenting, and come back to see what the others are saying!

And still another is the introduction of Gravatars – little 80 by 80 pixel images that you can use to represent yourself when you comment. It could be a photo or drawing of yourself, or your boat, or whatever – but please play nicely children! Go to http://gravatar.com to set yours up.

Why not tell us what you think of all this using the comments link below? Is it a step in the right direction – or is it pants?

Gavin

We want to hear your story too!

Cutty Sark figurehead Don Street and Liza Copeland Small gaffer Petrel makes for home

Zulu Springwell Harrison Butler Z4 for sale in Dumbarton Paddling a Canadian canoe

Do you have a link, a topic or a project, a service or a query you would like us to put up a post about?

Are you an owner, a designer, a boatbuilder or restorer?

Do you have an interesting boat for sale? (Including brokers at no cost.)

If so, we’d love to hear your story. What you send can be long or short, we don’t care, so long as it’s likely to be of interest to readers of intheboatshed.net. And of course we just love photos!

Please send your suggestions to us at gmatkin@gmail.com.

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Boadicea at the Boat Show

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200-year old smack Boadicea at the Boat Show

200-year old smack Boadicea at the Boat Show 200-year old smack Boadicea at the Boat Show 200-year old smack Boadicea at the Boat Show

200-year old smack Boadicea at the Boat Show

200-year old smack Boadicea at the busy London Boat Show

I took a trip to the London Boat Show yesterday. I try to keep away, but some times the pilgrimage is inevitable. This year I was asked to spend some time signing my book Ultrasimple Boatbuilding on the Kelvin Hughes stand, and since this would be a completely new experience, I duly trotted along and took my camera.

At 200 years old this year, Boadicea is fabulous and I sensed a real buzz about her around the Show that was exemplified when I asked for directions from some chaps on the stand belonging to the GRP dinghy manufacturer Comet. ‘Oh yes,’ said one of them. ‘Boadicea’s down there and she’s bloody marvellous.’

For more on Boadicea, check http://www.boadicea-ck213.org.uk .

Book signing, it turns out, isn’t so much an event as a test of determination and endurance. The author sits or stands by a pile of his books talking to people who come by and show an interest. Some authors take a commendably positive view of all this and introduce themselves and their book to everyone they can. More timid souls like myself simply chatter amiably with whoever passes by.

I have to say I didn’t expect to meet many people interested in building my simple plans for small boats at a show focusing on sailing big seas in commensurately large boats, and that was how it turned out. Most I spoke with commended home boatbuilders but had no wish to become one, and I couldn’t help reflecting that this was a wonderfully English view.

Nevertheless, the Kelvin Hughes people reported that in the background Ultrasimple Boatbuilding was selling at a steady if slow rate; in the end, I think it’s clear that the big market is in the USA.

Making the trip to the Show brought some other bonuses, too. A few people with interesting boat stories dropped by the Kelvin Hughes stand, and I was lucky enough to meet both globe-trotting cruising author Liza Copeland and Don Street of Iolaire fame, and Atlantic rower Sally Kettle. Needless to say, all their books are available from the Kelvin Hughes website http://www.bookharbour.com .And finally, visitors to the show had an unusual close-up view of the Cutty Sark’s famous figurehead in a short nightie and holding the tail of the Tam O’Shanter’s horse. She makes an intriguing and impressive sight, but there’s something terribly sad about the thought of her separated from the rest of her ship.

Don Street and Liza Copeland Cutty Sark figurehead

Don Street of Iolaire fame, cruising author Liza Copeland, and the Cutty Sark’s sad figurehead

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