Family Boat Build, Solar Eclipse, Garibaldi Coast Guard.
What do these all have in common? Please stay tuned...
During the Toledo Wooden Boat Show this year, the popular Family Boat Build featured the Tango Stand-Up-Paddleboard.
We built three SUPs in four days, a new design for everyone involved. Anyone familiar with building wood airplanes would recognize the method - the boards even resemble a wing.
The builders ranged from a local shipwright and his niece, to a group of Job Corps teens, to the new Toledo City Manager, who confessed he had very little wood-working experience.
That's the challenge that makes this weekend project so much fun. Everyone walks away with a unique creation they can use with pride.
Definitely one of the highlights of Doryman's year.
The show was very intimate this year. Being one of the very first geological locations in the USA to experience the recent total eclipse of the sun, we all expected a deluge of tourists, but the Oregon coast was very quiet, considering the moment. You know I like it that way - quality over quantity is the Doryman way. By now, you've all heard eclipse stories. My only observation - it's very strange to see twilight approach, with the sun in the east.
And, oh yes... in the tiny coastal town of Garibaldi, Oregon, there is an old boathouse at the end of a long finger pier, which once housed a United States Coast Guard Lifeboat station. A local group has formed the Garibaldi Cultural Heritage Initiative, to preserve this historical maritime asset. How cool is that?
As it turns out, these fine folks have many ambitious plans to enliven the structure as an asset for the community, which currently include building five kayaks to be used by visitors and the community at large. Serendipity brought the Garibaldi Cultural Initiative to these pages, and Doryman is privileged to have been asked to mentor the build. To say this is an honor is an understatement. I made a quick stop in Garibaldi to see the site yesterday.
I'm very excited. What a week it's been.
Expect to hear more about the Garibaldi Cultural Initiative and Pier's End in the next couple months.
Showing posts with label Toledo Wooden Boat Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toledo Wooden Boat Show. Show all posts
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Friday, August 21, 2015
Family Boatbuilding
For the third year running, The Toledo, Oregon, Wooden Boat Show hosted a kayak build for it's family boatbuilding event. I was there to mentor the builders and what a great group we had. None of the participants had ever built a boat before, though they must have had transferable skills because all of the kayaks turned out very nice.
This design by Leo Newberg is simple yet elegant. We do not provide kits for this build so the entrants learn basic skills such as spiling off a mold and fairing a plank. The lofting and building jig are done before-hand so the builders can start early Friday before the show. We constructed four kayaks this year, down from the overwhelming six we turned out last year. This allowed Gus Loomis, Rick Johnson and me to provide more in depth instruction to a very receptive group.
In a video interview with the local high school, I was asked why I'm involved with this volunteer effort. Over the past forty years as a boat builder, I have had the good fortune to learn from some truly amazing artists, a process that continues to this day. I think of an opportunity such as this as a chance to give back to the community of builders and designers that have given me so much.
Perhaps some of the participants will take away a new passion along with fresh skills.
Rick and Gus are exemplary boat builders who share my love of building. It's a joy to work with two such talented artisans. Thanks to them and the Port of Toledo for inviting me to participate in this event.
Next to us was a group of kids along with their parents building Phil Bolger's Elegant Punt, from Dynamite Payson's book, Instant Boats. I've often admired the simple utility of these tenders.
Waiting for the first launch.
A neighboring paper mill produces waterproof packing cardboard and sponsors a design/build contest and race. My favorite was an entry from local ribs and burgers restaurant, Pig Feathers.
Pig Boat swims!
Photo by Ralph Grutzmacher.
My good friend Darrell touts himself as a ship's carver. This year I bought a carving of a seahorse to add to my collection from this eclectic artist.
Next, I'd like to own this beautiful rendition of a sea turtle. Darrell has studied with Northwest First Nation carvers for inspiration in his work. Saving up my pennies for this one!
More photos of this event can be found at Andy Linn's Toledo Community Boathouse.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Toledo, Oregon Wooden Boat Show, 2013
Whew! Just recovering from a long weekend at the annual boat show in my home port. This show happens every third weekend in August and it's always a lot of fun in the sun, on the water. Of course there are the boats, many of which were created by their owners. The live music is excellent, the food is very good, there are activities for kids, demonstrations of kayak skills and paper boat races. The last is completely insane. Toledo is a mill town and the paper used in making the boats is a water resistant packing material donated by the mill. The rest is up to the imagination. I'm afraid that to get the full effect, you have to visit the show.
My cruising dory, Mistral was in the thick of the action, at her usual mooring and I talked myself hoarse in three days, visiting friends from near and far. Our Teak Lady sailboats were in action, giving rides up and down the slough and the Toledo Community Boathouse provided rowing and paddling craft for free, to all comers.
I asked some friends to help take photos, which you can find on Doryman's Flickr site. You will recognise many boats from previous years as well as newcomers to the fleet (some of us just can't quit building).
Speaking of building, a real highlight of this show is the Family Boat Build. Starting on Friday, each group begins their boat, which was a kayak this year. By Sunday afternoon, the boats are launched and tested by the proud owners. This little fifteen foot kayak is so appealing, I'm going to build one myself. The hull is already begun. It will be the annual winter boat build, here on Doryman, so stay tuned
My cruising dory, Mistral was in the thick of the action, at her usual mooring and I talked myself hoarse in three days, visiting friends from near and far. Our Teak Lady sailboats were in action, giving rides up and down the slough and the Toledo Community Boathouse provided rowing and paddling craft for free, to all comers.
I asked some friends to help take photos, which you can find on Doryman's Flickr site. You will recognise many boats from previous years as well as newcomers to the fleet (some of us just can't quit building).
Speaking of building, a real highlight of this show is the Family Boat Build. Starting on Friday, each group begins their boat, which was a kayak this year. By Sunday afternoon, the boats are launched and tested by the proud owners. This little fifteen foot kayak is so appealing, I'm going to build one myself. The hull is already begun. It will be the annual winter boat build, here on Doryman, so stay tuned
Electric Tug from doryman on Vimeo.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Teak Lady, Che Hon splash
The beautiful little yacht that is Che Hon has hit the water this summer with a complete work-over. It's been two years since we had this fine diminutive vessel in the water and back then, she still had no rigging. She had been out of the water for twenty years and it was a milestone just to have her take-up and float.
At that time, her decks were in pretty poor condition - no rot, but they leaked so much we were concerned lest she sink over the winter. Well, now her decks are in much better condition, her broken mast has been repaired and she has been refinished from stem to stern.
Che Hon was donated to the Port of Toledo (Oregon) by Bob and Claire MacDonald of Spokane, Washington. Until recently, it has not been clear what a jewel she is. She has brand-new sails and all the standing rigging necessary, plus a lot of gear required for extensive use. (Thank you, Claire and Bob!)
Here we see her sitting proudly beside her sister ship, Ma Zu. (Che Hon has her mast painted light tan.) As you can see, the differences between the two are slight. The Teak Lady is a racing class, so all the boats are very similar. As a boatbuilder, I can see the boats are not identical - a slightly different stem shape, more camber in one deck over the other, so they are not twins, but you might need to either know them well, or see them side by side to tell the difference.
In a couple weeks, we will see them both under sail at the Toledo Wooden Boat Show. Then their characteristics will shine. Che Hon has a set of white sails and Ma Zu is rigged in tanbark. Having had a hand in the restoration of these wonderful little yachts, I'm very excited to see them with their wings spread.
Kudos to the volunteers of the local Teak Lady Society for their commitment to bringing these two boats back to life and insuring they live for many more years! Thanks a lot, fellas, it's been a pleasure working with all of you.
A local painting class uses Che Hon as a subject as she hangs in the sling, getting her sea-legs.
Nice likeness.
Doryman in his element, making beautiful boats even more lovely.
The last four photos courtesy of Curt Warner (volunteer extraordinaire). Thanks Curt!
Labels:
che hon,
mazu,
teak lady,
toledo boathouse,
Toledo Wooden Boat Show
Monday, August 20, 2012
Dark Moon
On the western horizon, during a brief period between sunset and moonset, the astronomical new moon, or dark moon, occurs at the moment of conjunction in ecliptic longitude with the sun, making our moon invisible from Earth.
For many this may mark the beginning of a new month, while for some of us on the central Oregon coast last weekend, it heralded the eighth annual Toledo Wooden Boat Show.
For the first time since this show began, Doryman did not display any boats but spent the weekend visiting and riding on other people's boats.
Here we see him giving pointers to Jerry and Ely who are members of the Teak Lady Society, committed to the maintenance and upkeep of the Port of Toledo's two classic Teak Lady sailboats, MaZu and Che Hon.
These fellows spent the entire weekend giving free sailboat rides.
Good job, if you can get it!
There were all the usual suspects and a few new faces in a crowd that was having a lot of fun despite the occasional threat of rain (which never happened).
Here, two dories duke it out for a photo finish at the end of an all comer's race. The girl on the left won.
My favorite from this show is Mark's brand new Lightning racing dinghy, built in the strip plank method.
There was also Gus Loomis' fresh-from-his-shop CLC Skerry.
Bob and his brother Dick Mitsch built and newly launched an Iain Oughtred Whillyboat.
And Chuck Gottfried christened his Kingfisher rowing scull after a couple years of painstaking and detailed effort.The hull is made of 3mm mahogany plywood with decks of heat shrunk Dacron and weighs only 40 pounds.
There were lots of old friends and new. I'd like to thank them all for a great time on the water!
A special thanks to Chuck and Shay who let me crew on their Bristol Channel Cutter, Baggywrinkle. That's me hanging in the ratlines.
As promised, the slideshow:
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