BBA students build and launch a clinker Paul Gartside Skylark dinghy

Skylark - Jim Higginson. Photo - Emma Brice Skylark - Jim Higginson at centre.  Photo by Becky Joseph

This 14ft Paul Gartside-designed Skylark traditional clinker-built dinghy made by Boat Building Academy student Jim Higginson with help from fellow students Paddy Uniacke and Mark Bestford is planked in slow-grown Douglas fir, which was also used to construct its birdsmouth-style mast.

A similar 12ft Gartside-designed dinghy built by an earlier student caught Jim’s eye on a visit to the academy, and chose to build the boat partly for its looks and partly because of the range of skills it required to build. The boat is named Amethyst – the moniker was chosen by Jim’s grandfather, who kindly paid for the materials and got to take her out with Jim on board on student launch day.

See a photo log of the build of Amethyst here.

Not many students part with their first built boat, but Jim intends to sell the dinghy. (If any reader is interested in the boat, please send me an email at gmatkin@gmail.com and I’ll forward it on.)

Having graduated, Jim is now looking for opportunities to develop his skills, preferably through working with a traditional boat yard. [PS – I learn today – the 22nd – that Jim has now got a trial job at a traditional boat yard in Gloucester. Good luck Jim!]

Paddy successfully graduated as a seckhand on a Tallships Youth Trust voyage in 2007 and has since spent time working in Australia and New Zealand – one of his many and varied jobs included a stint at Freshwater Bay Shipwrights in Perth.

Like a couple of others in the same student cohort, Paddy left the BBA with a job lined up in a yard at Ipswich, working on the restoration of a Dragon. A keen traveller, Paddy eventually aims to take his skills to Canada and find boat building employment there.

Mark returned to England two years ago after serving in the Merchant Navy followed by 22 years in the Royal Navy.

On leaving the Navy, Mark worked in various roles including yacht skipper, sailing instructor and private charter skipper. He’s now setting up a business at Chesterfield, Derbyshire, that will offer offer boat management, and mobile maintenance, repairs, and support services for private owners and marine businesses covering the inland waterways, reservoirs and coastal areas of the UK.

As he says, there are many boat owners who do not have the time or facilities, or are physically unable to maintain their boats through the seasons, and the new company’s aim is effrectively to bring the boatyard to the customer’s boat.

To be called Boatwork, the business is also to have an artistic dimension, creating wall art made from reclaimed wood, including what he calls ‘Boathearts’ – elegant boat cross sections designed for use as wall decorations or sailing trophies, and made from offcuts left over following boat building work.

In addition, Mark is supporting a British Mini 6.50 Transat campaign, and has a website at www.boatwork.co.uk.

3. Boatheart - Photo by Mark Bestford

The Edge – a Mouseboat for teens and small adults

Mouseboats Yahoogroup member Tomasz has made me smile with his build successful build of my The Edge stitch and glue sailing dinghy design intended for teenagers and small – to medium-sized adults.

When I drew it, I described it like this: ‘designed to deliver the most fun I can squeeze out of a minimum of materials and construction work. In this case the main constituents are three sheets of 1/4in marine ply and a quarter sheet of 1/2in marine ply, some lumber and a sheet of polytarp’.

He describes it this way: ‘lively, fast and easy to steer. We did not observe her as tippy. You can easy climb into the boat from deep water.’

Well done Tomasz! I must say I particularly like the look of that lateen sail.

Plans for The Edge are at Mouseboats, and also at Duckworksmagazine.

 

Dale Appleton photos from the Geelong Wooden Boat Festival 2012

 

Dale Appleton dropped into the Wooden Boat Festival at Geelong, Australia the other day, and tells me he’ll send over a brief report soon. In the meantime he has put some photos on his Flickr account, including these of the newly restored Ruby Merle, a Port Philip Couta boat.

Dale reports that the restoration work is a fantastic job.

Noticing the leather on the gaff jaws, he had this to say: ‘A detail that struck me: kangaroo leather is the choice material for gaff jaws and other high wearing points. If you have ever seen two kangaroos fight, you will understand just why the leather is so tough.’

Nice shots Dale – many thanks for them! More photos of Couta boats taken by Dale can be found in an earlier post.