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Minggu, 20 Maret 2016

Polaris by Sam Rabl



Sam Rabl is one of my favorite designers. Especially his designs for home builders. If youve been around here for a while, you may remember that my first fixed keeled boat was a Picaroon designed by Sam.









A Doryman reader wrote to me a while back to remind me that Sam Rabl also designed a slightly bigger boat built in plywood called a Polaris. He also had some questions about details, so I asked another faithful reader, whos an excellent historian, to do some research.











We are talking about a seaworthy boat here and even though Sam claims you can build it in your backyard does not mean its simple. This is a boat for a serious sailor and will take you anywhere you want to go.









But first youll have to pick your sail rig. Here we have no less than four options, including a hermaphrodite brig.






















Die Pläne und Offsets finden Sie hier:
A timeless design. The 24 foot Polaris.


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Rabu, 16 Maret 2016

Barkley Sound by Sail and Oar


For those of you who who are interested in gunkholing (and who isnt?), Id like to call your attention to a recent trip made by some purists at the sport.

Barkley Sound is on the southwest side of Vancouver Island, BC, Canada and a more wild and beautiful place would be hard to find.

The Sound falls within the traditional territory of the Nuu-chah-nulth people who have occupied most of the west coast of Vancouver Island for four thousand years, living a semi-nomadic existence. They spent part of the year in the protected islands and bays of the Sound, and the remainder of the year on the outer islands and shores exposed to the Pacific Ocean. Indigenous sites attest to their lifestyle before the arrival of Europeans, with stonewall fish traps, shell middens and terraced village sites remaining today.


Inside Barkley Sound is an archipelago called the Broken Island Group, which is where we find our intrepid sailors. The story of this trip unfolds in a series of postings on the Woodenboat Forum. You dont have to be a member of the forum to read and enjoy this tale.




The Cast:
Who are these happy sailors? Left to right:
Eric Hvalsoe (Bandwagon), Alex Zimmerman (Hornpipe), Tim Yeadon (Big Food) and James McMullen (Rowan).











The Scene.










Whats not to like about this?











...or this?










James filleting some fresh caught Ling Cod.










I hope these guys will let me tag along next year!






Thanks to James McMullen for the heads-up on this one, a truly exceptional trip!

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Senin, 22 Februari 2016

Friend Ship Canal Boat by Phillip Thiel

Speaking of launchings, my good friend and shipwright supreme, Rick Johnson, has been building a canal boat designed by Phillip Thiel of Seattle Washington. Rick will be docking this boat in Toledo, Oregon on the Yaquina River as a rental get-away. Should be a lot of fun - there is nothing like this, here on the Oregon coast, and if it goes well, Rick plans to build more.



The interior of the vessel is not finished yet and it has no propulsion, but Rick thinks it might be done by the end of summer, other work permitting. Hes tied the canal boat alongside his floating boat shop, to have it handy for those slack moments in a days schedule. Who am I kidding? Rick has been working on this project in overtime hours for over a year, with help from his two sons. Needless to say, hes a hard working, detail oriented man and this sweet little canal boat is proof.


Well be watching this project for updates.


Philip Thiel, naval architect
4720 7th Avenue NE
Seattle WA 98105 USA
Phil does not have email.




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Rabu, 10 Februari 2016

By Their Ropes Ye Shall Know the Measure of the Sailor

As an on-going project here on DoryMan, Ive tried to mitigate some of the confusion about nautical terms with the glossary found at the top of the sidebar to your right - spent much of today filling in new entries. In fact, until Im dazed and confused myself. If you find any mistakes, let me know.

How often have I seen that glazed look on the face of a passenger or crew, the blank stare of one who hasnt understood a single word uttered? In mutual desperation, I have even found myself lately referring to the right or left side of the boat and "that green rope near your right hand". (incidentally, Belle Starr has color-coordinated lines to facilitate communication. Im trying, really am.)

Like I said, this is a project with no end. Every new entry begs another. Not one definition is self-explanatory. A lexicographer must be a very special species indeed. Please, if you have something youd like to contribute, dont hesitate. For now well stick to English, though nautical language the world over is a beautiful flower, music of the sea.

Your friend, Michael
mbogoger (at) gmail



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Sabtu, 30 Januari 2016

A Mad Idea Fueled by Gin


It started with Camp Tipsy. Alex and I started talking about what we could build, what kind of floating contraption would excite us.  We were unequivocally unanimous in wanting something like a tiny cabin that floats.  Something that we could escape to.


Or maybe it started earlier.  Maybe it started with the river floats.  For years, Id built homemade rafts and floated down major American rivers with friends.
On that first trip, when I was trying to rustle up friends to join the adventure, heres what I wrote "This is not white water rafting. Were talking rivers with class zero rapids. A floating river. A lazy hot summer day eating found apples sort of river. These adventures remain low on specifics, high on general concept, mood, and emotion. Part of an experiment and a belief in the power of boredom to inspire."

In 2005, a few of us set out on a punk rafting adventure, building a raft out of found and scavenged materials and floating for a week, Huck Finn-style, on one of the largest fastest rivers on the continent, the Missouri.

We lived to tell the tale (barely), and so year after year, we took longer and longer adventures, floating a handful of rivers on completely ridiculous homemade rafts. After that first raft trip, we invited others, launching with whole punk raft flotillas. The experience has been life changing.


Alex and Jen and I were at Camp Tipsy and it was Happy Hour at our camp and we were drinking gin and tonics and maybe the alcohol contributed to our grandiose and ambitious scheming, or maybe, honestly, Ive always been that way.

Camp Tipsy Hot Tub by ropersf

We were looking at all the bizzaro floating contraptions and nautical imagining.  We didnt want to go fast or swing or be propelled by some Rube Goldberg propulsion system or even soak in a wood-fired hot tub, so much, at that moment, as we wanted to sit peacefully on our own floating front porch and watch the madness of the rest of the world.

We decided to make a floating cabin, a shanty boat. 


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Selasa, 26 Januari 2016

1959 C2 S S 34 by Swarbrick


We have discussed the S&S 34 before and also the model licensed for sale in the United States, the Palmer Johnson 34.  We dont know exactly how many of these popular boats have been built, only that in the first year of production at Winfield & Partners (later known as Aqua Fibre), 39 contracts were signed.


The boat shown here is yet another version, built by Swarbrick of Western Australia and designated as Sparkman & Stephens design #1959-C2.  The images shown are of a launch sequence of a new boat from the early 1980s.  We dont know exactly how many were built by Swarbrick at that time either.

Here is an interesting article from the Italian magazine Yachting Quarterly about the S&S 34 design in general, in Olin Stephens own words.


Any way, back to Swarbrick.  Did you know these boat are again in production and available from Swarbrick?  Heres a brief article about the subject from Cruising World magazine.  As always please double click for zoom.


More information can be obtained from the builders website by clicking here.

Principal Dimensions
LOA 33-6"
LWL 24-2"
Beam 10-1"
Draft 5-10"
Displacement 9,195 lbs
Ballast 4,800 lbs
Sail Area 484 sq ft
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