The past week went by fast, finishing each day too tired to blink. I'll try to catch up. With the lofting done, we cut and assembled the frames right on top of the lofted diagrams.
Six of the frames are designed to have bulkheads for hatches. These we build right into the frames, sliding them into a pre-cut rabbet.
We put tape down on either side of the scarf joint this time to make for far less clean-up. It works nicely.
We took the side-panel pattern Janek and I created last week on the strong-backed boat, translated it to numbers, then translated it back onto our side panel blank, just to see if our numbers worked. They did.
With two identical side panels cut out, marked, and pre-drilled, we began the free-form assembly. Stem, then ribs 6 through 10.
So much easier than doing it in order with ribs 10 through 6. Then the back end of the boat--ribs 5 through 1, and the transom.
Oops. Someone computed the transom angles wrong. You'll have that.
Luckily the cuts were too big and not too small. On we go.
Night four: scarf and glue up all chines and gunwales. A veritable clamp storm.
At this point we have to wait for a few things to dry or cure on that boat, so we shift our attention to the completed hull. Time to begin the finicky process of decking.
To make supports for flat decking where it meets a curved, sloped hull, we have to cypher out strange curved landings.
Each weekday the burrito truck gets a longer line of repeat offenders.
Back on the new hull we jam-fit the inner chines. These guys are so good you couldn't get a piece of paper between the ends of those chines and the stem and transom. And on goes the bottom.
And roll her right-side up. After clamping on the gunwale we tinker slightly with the sheer line and Bryan does the terrifying job of cutting the sheer.
And back to hull number one, cutting landings, dado-ing in gutters, chiseling, sawing, notching and cursing now and then.
And on go the second boat's gunwales. This one gets walnut gunwale blocks.
Mr. Quinn carves the curve in the top of the stem.
Chisel, chisel, notch, notch notch.
I try to quit around five each evening but these guys just stand around and stare at the boat. They ask questions. They make me tell stories. The keep putting beers in my hand. And then it's six. Or seven.
Day eight, our final sprint is on. The burrito truck doesn't come on Saturday, so Shane prepares the most outrageous fish tacos, with yellowtail he caught in Baja last week. Wow.
And as the day, and the course, draw to a close, we raffle off our girls at cost. Two more hapless victims get suckered into the highly impractical world of being wooden boat owners. On a mountain. In the desert. Two truly magnificent boats, I might add. I could not be prouder of the work these gentlemen have done.
I guess the fish tacos were karmically strong, as Shane wins the decked dory.
And I win the chance to go to bed early and sleep for thirteen hours.
Hi, I discovered your blog a few months back, you've sure birthed a lot of pretty boats. These new Briggs boats look great! I recall an earlier post where you mentioned picking out some Port Orford Cedar while you were in OR, is this the best way to get it in the SW? (I'm in CO). I am having a hard time sourcing Port Orford or Alaska Yellow Cedar to replace some planks on a 1920s PNW clinker dory I am currently restoring. Do you have any lumber yards or sources in our region you could give me?
ReplyDeletethanks,
Levi
I don't have any local sources. I would advise talking to Bear Creek Lumber. They have a wide variety of regional wood and are reliable.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bearcreeklumber.com/species/portorcedar.html
Also in Colo. Nothing local. I had some shipped from one of the two below, can't remember which:
ReplyDeleteEast Fork Lumber for Port Orford $5-6 per BF 541-572-5732
http://eastforklumber.com/
Bear Creek Lumber
Joe Hammer
Bear Creek Lumber, Inc.
bearcreeklumber.com
866-457-3008
425-495-9393
Thank you both for the info! have been in touch with Bear Creek and a few others but I will also contact East Fork
ReplyDelete