the 2016 Course Catalog
Transcription
the 2016 Course Catalog
A C C E S S TO E X P E R I E N C E WoodenBoat School 2016 WoodenBoat School Campus Our Working Waterfront Mountain Ash Student House WoodenBoat School Workshops Farmhouse Student Housing DEAR FRIENDS T HANKS FOR TAKING the time to look through this, our 2016 course catalog/ website. WoodenBoat School has been presenting “hands-on” classes for 36 years, and we’ve been fortunate to watch our program evolve into an experience that is both unique and special to so many of you: unique for its vast array of course offerings in boatbuilding, seamanship, and related crafts in which we honor the tradition, history, and craftsmanship of our maritime heritage; special because of the feeling of community that exists here each and every week throughout our entire season. Our staff, instructors, and students are people of many ages, of diverse backgrounds, from all over the world, all sharing a common interest in boats and boating. You will have endless opportunities to learn new skills, new ways of doing things, and have a wonderful time in a truly inspiring environment. An outstanding faculty is eager to share their vast knowledge and experience. Students learn by doing using hands and minds together. You’ll be encouraged to ask questions, work hard and learn, challenge yourself, stay up late or wake up early, and be creative. Our 64-acre saltwater campus located on the coast in Brooklin, Maine, is a place where land, sea, and a big beautiful sky come together and help provide each individual an easy place to relax and enjoy oneself. It’s a place where new friends easily become old friends. A friendly staff, good food, comfortable accommodations, plenty of peace and quiet, and a fleet of beautiful boats to use on our waterfront all make for a pretty remarkable education center. So, check out what we have to offer you this season, and come join us for an experience you’ll cherish for the rest of your life! C O N T E N T S Sailing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Kayaking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Boatbuilding and Woodworking . . . . . . 13 Related Crafts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 2016 Off-Site Courses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 2016 Family Week. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Staff ..................................... Registration Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 front cover photo © R J Leighton MAINE AUGUSTA BROOKLIN PORTLAND NH Atlantic Ocean Rich Hilsinger Director 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com BANGOR CANADA MA 2 55 | (207) 359-4651 BOSTON SAILING H OW TO C H O O S E T H E B E S T WAT E R F RO N T C O U R S E F O R YO U We receive many inquiries from individuals who are thinking about joining us on the water, yet are unsure which course(s) to sign up for. While there are certainly different things to consider, we’re confident that we can help you choose the best course to suit your needs. All of our Sailing courses focus on becoming a sailor, which means much more than just learning to sail. Each course takes a “hands-on” approach, and the majority of class time will be spent in boats on the water. Our instructors are fine sailors themselves, each possessing good judgment and a knack for instilling confidence in a positive environment. Our classrooms are beautiful, wooden sailing and rowing craft that are a pure joy to step aboard. Our waters offer some of the finest sailing and cruising in the world. WoodenBoat School’s Sailing program has something for everyone, beginner to experienced. A wonderful introduction to the art of sailing is our very popular ELEMENTS OF SAILING course, offered throughout the season. For practical reasons, step two could be repeating ELEMENTS with another set of instructors. It is easy to forget information from one season to another, especially if you don’t have access to sailing where you live. The next step would be ELEMENTS II. Our CRAFT OF SAIL, SKILLS OF COASTAL SEAMANSHIP and SEA SENSE UNDER SAIL selections get more experienced students out on an exciting array of larger sailing vessels. And, for those folks looking for a unique “liveaboard” experience, we offer COASTAL CRUISING SEAMANSHIP, CRUISING THROUGH THE WATCHES, CRUISING IN TANDEM and SAILING DOWNEAST. You’ll also find excellent opportunities to gain experience in coastwise navigation and kayaking. So, take your time and read through these pages slowly. Please keep in mind that we’ll be glad to help you with any decisions that may prove difficult; just get in touch with us. Choosing the appropriate course brings not only the exhilaration of learning new skills, but the satisfaction of time well spent for everyone involved. WO O D E N B OAT ’ S F L E E T O F S M A L L C R A F T 28'6" 19'6" 18'8" 18' 16' 17'8" 16' 16' 15'11" 15'11" 15'11" 15'11" 15'11" 15' 11" 15' 11" BELFORD GRAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Friendship sloop SWIFTY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Caledonia yawl MACKINAW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .gaff ketch GERONIMO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Westpointer SHEARWATER . . . . . . . . . . .double-ended ultralight BABSON II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .outboard skiff WHISP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .sailing skiff SHENANIGANZ . . . . . .Fenwick Williams catboat DOVEKIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Herreshoff 12½ WE 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Herreshoff 12½ SEAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Herreshoff 12½ ALLENE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Haven 12½ CRACKERJACK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Haven 12½ CONNIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Haven 12½ FOX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Haven 12½ 14'9" 14' 14' 14' 14' 12' 12' 12' 12' 12' 11'6" 11'6" 10' 9'6" 7' 7" AMERICAN BEAUTY . . . .Whitehall pulling boat SKYLARK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .sailing dinghy WILD ROSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Maine Coast dory SHIMMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Biscayne Bay sharpie sloop WINSLOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Saturday Cove skiff WHIMSEY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Beetle Cat ELATER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Beetle Cat JESSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Catspaw sailing dinghy PICCOLO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .sailing canoe FERN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fiddlehead, double-paddle canoe RACHEL and ARETHA . . . . . . . . . .Shellback dinghies CHARLOTTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tom Hill ultralight GOOD COOKIES . . .Constant Camber rowing skiff BIG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nutshell sailing pram LITTLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nutshell sailing pram C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 3 SAILING ELEMENTS OF SAILING I & II Learn to sail courses that emphasize seamanship, instill confidence, and are fun. ELEMENTS I Jane Ahlfeld & Robin Lincoln — June 26-July 2 (Women Only) Jane Ahlfeld & Rich Naple — July 3-9 Sue LaVoie & Rich Naple — July 10-16 Sue LaVoie & Martin Gardner — July 17-23 Jane Ahlfeld & Annie Nixon — August 7-13 (Women Only) Rich Naple & Annie Nixon — August 14-20 ELEMENTS II Martin Gardner & Rich Naple — July 24-30 Martin Gardner & Robin Lincoln — August 21-27 Since early in WoodenBoat School’s history, we’ve had the great pleasure and satisfaction of introducing thousands of students to the joys of sailing. Our ELEMENTS courses continue to be among our most popular offerings, often bringing students back, year after year, for more sail training. Anyone can learn to sail, but these courses cover much more than that; our experienced instructors immerse each student in the art of seamanship. Our emphasis is on the skillful handling of small craft and building confidence in one’s abilities. These come from practice, and more practice. Sailing can provide a lifetime of fun and recreation, but it also requires some basic knowledge and experience. We have observed that the quickest and best way for folks to learn the fundamentals of sailing is by starting out in small boats. Our program will get you onto the water quickly, safely, and fully prepared. Under the calm and knowing guidance of our seasoned instructors, you’ll learn the essentials —sailing dynamics, boat rigging and spars, and safety precautions —followed by practical lessons on sailing techniques. Daily hands-on exercises and drills will take students through getting underway, maneuvering through the points of sail, keeping a course, tacking, returning to a mooring and dock, and much, much more. You’ll learn to rig our boats. We have various craft here that are suitable for the most timid and the most adventurous of students. Your on-the-water-classroom for the week will be our fleet of Herreshoff and Haven 12½s—keel/centerboard daysailers that are a pure delight to sail safely. Above all, we want to take the drama out of sailing—it is a safe and enjoyable sport, and our heavy emphasis on seamanship should go far toward ensuring this goal. You’ll definitely have fun this week! When the wind is fickle, you’ll practice rowing and sculling. There will be daily classroom lessons about charts and navigation, safety equipment and weather conditions, knot tying and heavy-weather strategy. Our instructors focus their entire summer on our fleet and waterfront facility; their “sea sense” is highly tuned, and experiencing that may be the biggest lesson of all. In our ELEMENTS II course, students who have some prior small-boat sailing experience will have the chance to refresh their own “sea sense” and finetune their boating skills. You will work toward handling our vessels competently and confidently. Solo sailing will be encouraged, and a variety of more challenging tactical/navigational exercises will be presented. If you’re a graduate of ELEMENTS I, this is the perfect second step in your mastery of sailing. Essentially, this course is about sailing, sailing, and more sailing! Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 4 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com ELEMENTS II QUALIFICATIONS Becoming a sailor takes time (more than one Sailing course, we can promise), and it takes work. To ensure that you not find yourself “in over your head” in our ELEMENTS II course, we ask that you have recently completed our ELEMENTS I course, or have equivalent experience: you should feel reasonably comfortable sailing a small boat from a mooring or dock, and returning her safely, using crew to help. Improving your sailing skills will ultimately increase your enjoyment of the sport. If you have any questions regarding your abilities, please give us a call. “I am a student who came to your ELEMENTS OF SAILING course with much anxiety and fear of sailing. Your instructors and waterfront staff did such an amazing job that I am so sad to leave. But, I am departing a confident and excited person who can’t wait to learn and practice more about sailing. It was an incredible week!” M.E.T., GILBERT, SOUTH CAROLINA | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S THE CATBOAT OPEN BOAT CRUISING The pleasures of a distinct American sailing craft. The skills for adventuring. Martin Gardner — August 7-13 Catboats have been around forever and are as much a part of America’s history as the Model T Ford or the Wright Brothers’ first flight. These shallow-draft, broad-beamed, centerboard boats with a single mast right up in the bow have played an important role among American working and pleasure craft. The earliest examples of these vessels were found sailing in New York waters. As the type spread into New England, changes were made to accommodate not only the different conditions encountered along these open coastlines, but also the different fisheries in which they would be employed. They eventually garnered the attention of sailing enthusiasts and became popular as a racing class, youth sail trainer, family daysailer, and cruising boat. Catboats are, as L. Francis Herreshoff said, “one of our most romantic types” and survive today as pleasure boats—very pleasurable boats—simple, roomy, comfortable, and when properly handled, very well behaved. This course combines practical skills with some fun, relaxed voyaging. We’ll use catboats large and small—from 12' Beetles to a 21' Crosby. We’ll rig them, sail them, reef them, and moor them. We’ll learn how to let them take care of themselves, to self-steer, and to heave-to. We’ll pick exciting destinations for day trips, sail to them, anchor, and explore local waters and islands. We’ll cover all the basics of seamanship with particular emphasis on navigation, using tools ranging from the lead line to the iPad. Catboats lend themselves to relaxed sailing, and we’ll make a point of soaking up the beauties of the Eggemoggin Reach and other local waters as we cruise under plenty of canvas. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Prior sailing experience required for this course. Geoff Kerr — August 28-September 3 Beach cruising is an exciting step beyond daysailing. Maybe you’d like to cruise the Maine Island Trail, participate in the annual Small Reach Regatta, or do some extended cruising. With simple skills, basic equipment, and modest boats, one can spend an overnight or an extended expedition voyaging in reasonable comfort, relative safety, and engaging adventure. Doing so in a trailerable, beachable boat opens up dazzling parts of the world to exploration and enjoyment. This course is designed to introduce you to beach cruising with hands-on experience using time-tested boats, gear, and techniques. This course will be based onboard NED LUDD and SWIFTY, two of Iain Oughtred’s versatile Caledonia Yawls. Instructor Geoff Kerr will share his knowledge gleaned from many years of sailing and camp cruising with NED in Penobscot Bay and beyond. You will learn and practice a wide variety of real-world cruising skills and tactics. Days will be filled with trip planning, keeping an eye toward weather, tides, and currents; practical navigation using a chart and compass; rowing, sailing, reefing, and beyond; anchoring, beaching, and getting ashore; communications; and safety. Each day will start with a planning session for that day’s adventure, choosing a destination and routes to maximize adventure and your opportunities to stretch your experience. You’ll land frequently, with a major stop midday for lunch, island exploration, and the chance to try to keep your boat where it belongs. These island sessions will also allow for demonstrations and discussions of provisioning, camping gear and strategies, and access to and stewardship of beach cruising grounds. Afternoon return passages will be by different routes, taking full advantage of the wonders of Penobscot Bay and the everchanging conditions. Students will return to campus in time for dinner and to recharge for the next day. All you’ll need to bring with you are your enthusiasm for small-boat sailing, your sense of adventure, and your foulweather gear (just in case). A list of personal gear and clothing will be provided upon registration. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. You should come to the course with at least intermediate sailing skills. We’d also like you to realize that while this is not a survival course, it will be an active one. We’ll be planning and making daily passages, rowing and sailing as it happens, come sun, rain, fog, or calm. We’ll be in and out of boats repeatedly, with wet feet and no docks. It might be hot, it might be cold, it might be wet…it will be fun. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 5 SAILING COASTWISE NAVIGATION SEA SENSE UNDER SAIL Knowing where you are on the water. Experience the true joy of sailing with a lifelong sailor. Rich Naple — June 19-25 Except in the smallest bodies of water, the sailor is helpless if he or she lacks the age-old skills of piloting and dead reckoning. Even in the clear waters of the tropics, vigilant eyeball navigation is not enough to keep a vessel off the reefs. Along Maine’s coast of cloudy waters, sharp rocks, and sometimes thick fogbanks, only a fool would get underway without a good understanding of how to use charts and instruments to navigate a safe voyage. For these reasons, basic piloting is taught in all our Seamanship classes. The goal of this course is to give students a really thorough understanding of and facility with, the subject— approaching it both “academically” and on the water. You’ll start with charts, the fundamental tool of the navigator. Modern charts present an incredible amount of information, and to really utilize it all—to continuously visualize the connection between the chart and your spot on the water—takes skill and experience. Rich will help you acquire both. You'll learn about symbols, scales, specialized charts, and more. You’ll examine compasses— types, azimuths, lubber lines, the confusions of deviation and variation. Parallel rules and dividers will become your friends as you learn the techniques of plotting courses, LOPs, and fixes. You’ll move on to more advanced procedures such as running fixes, compensation for set and drift, bow and beam bearings, circles of position, and the six-minute rule. You'll go boating a lot in this course, putting your lessons into practice and getting skillful with the tools. You’ll use traditional and reliable instruments like the compass and leadline, and you’ll get your hands on electronic devices like depthsounders, Loran, and GPS. A day or two of fog will be welcome, but barring that, you’ll work under an airplane pilot’s training glasses to experience running blind. The beauty of this course is that it provides the ideal blend of the theory and practice of coastal navigation. By week’s end, you should be able to enjoy the niceties of piloting and relax more with your boat on the water. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. 6 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com On board the 50' Gaff-Rigged Sloop VELA Havilah Hawkins — September 4-10, September 11-17 Havilah “Haddie” Hawkins has been sailing and fooling around in boats throughout his life. His father, Havilah “Buds” Hawkins designed, built, sailed, and skippered boats his entire life and was a well-known fixture in the wooden boat community. It’s no wonder salt water quickly found its way into Haddie’s veins. WoodenBoat School is excited to offer students a one of a kind opportunity to sail and learn from this master mariner on board the beautiful 50' gaff sloop of his own design, VELA. This will be a glimpse into the lure of sailing—a week full of seamanship, skills afloat, sound advice, and storytelling under sail. You’ll learn how to control VELA on all points of sailing, how her sails work, their trimming, the forces involved, dealing with wind shifts, picking up moorings, anchoring and laying to. Haddie will also share his thoughts on the practical aspects of running and maintaining a large vessel, and running a safe ship. Students will also learn about navigation, the weather and tides, the visual signs you should watch for, coastal geography and geology, marine life, sea conditions, and using common sense. Above all, this will be a wonderful occasion to enjoy the fun and rewards of sailing. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore.a “This was a fantastic week that far exceeded my expectations. I now feel confident at the helm and I’m ready to sail my own boat. And I can’t wait to pass this knowledge to my kids! I’ll be back. I couldn’t be more happy with this entire experience. Thank you so much!” K.G., WILLOUGHBY HILLS, OHIO | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S THE SKILLS OF COASTAL SEAMANSHIP Seamanship, night sailing, and exploration aboard PATIENCE B. Andy Oldman — June 26-July 2 In this course, Andy Oldman provides experienced sailors with a unique opportunity to sharpen their boat-handling skills in the challenging and intriguing environment of the Maine coast. We will begin with a review and practice of handling Andy’s lovely and widely traveled boat, the 36’ ketch PATIENCE B, under sail and power. Andy continually emphasizes safety, fitness, and the constant vigilance required for coastal piloting. Students will refresh and practice their knowledge of chart navigation using hand lead and compass, electronic sounder, radar, and GPS. You will then sail off on courses for explorations and island landings. During one of the island landings we will demonstrate setting up and using a portable outhaul mooring for one of our dinghies. On your days of exploration the class will sail a course for, and chart, one of the tiny entrancing, secluded anchorages within a half-day’s sail of the school. These favorite places are often vaguely charted, so students can expect the charting of, and sometimes the entry into, these anchorages to involve an exciting mixture of fun and cooperation on the boat, in the tender, and ashore. You’ll assemble the basic data required to make a reasonably accurate hand-made chart by recording electronic and hand soundings, establishing land bearings, and making sketches. Weather permitting, there will be at least one long sailing day with dinner aboard in which PATIENCE B will be underway during twilight until you moor under sail at WoodenBoat. Twilight sailing will demonstrate the value and comfort achieved in planning, visualizing, and sighting the important waypoints along the intended course such as key islands, land silhouettes, and buoys. Safety and fitness issues will include frank discussions on seasickness, the challenges of moving about the deck at night and in rough weather, and methods and products available for rescuing a man overboard. Toward the end of the week, we will practice a man-overboard recovery while underway. There will also be extensive emphasis on developing one’s senses to the everchanging tidal and climactic conditions; how wave forms vary off major capes and outlying islands, and how in the fog those subtly changing wave forms may assist in navigation; we will also demonstrate how access to island beaches may vary dramatically according to the state of the tide. Complementing those skills, we will demonstrate techniques for anchoring and mooring under sail, the use of two or more anchors, and the use of a simultaneous pair of anchors. During a quiet morning or afternoon, we will also demonstrate and practice the use and magic of spring lines for docking and undocking. This is a wonderful chance to share Andy’s enthusiasm for, and knowledge of, various techniques used for entry into difficult anchorages and inter-island passages; twilight and night piloting; and hand charting and exploration of special, local anchorages. It’s a “must” for any sailor wishing to learn and improve the art of safe cruising. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. EAST, WEST, AND ISLAND EXPLORATION NEW A delightful blend of seamanship practices and selected yoga techniques for sharpening sailing skills and understanding nature’s ways while exploring local waters and islands. On board the 36’ KETCH PATIENCE B Andy Oldman & Madeline Otani Oldman — July 10-16 The Maine Island Trail (MITA) is a 325-mile-long waterway extending from Casco Bay in the west to Machias Bay in the east. The trail winds its way along the coast over saltwater rivers and quiet bays, around magnificent and exposed capes, and among islands large and small. It takes advantage of the existence of over 90 privately owned and state-owned islands and numerous public mainland sites along the route, using them for day visits or overnight stopovers where one can camp in a wilderness setting. Come share Andy and Madeleine Oldman’s enthusiasm for exploring, gunkholing, and navigating the MITA islands. The emphasis of this course will be to balance the skills and demands of island seamanship and to develop a deeper self-awareness with the incredible rewards of time spent ashore on these islands and islets. We will blend these experiences, thought processes, and the dexterity needed aboard into the yoga exercises, which will enhance coordination, concentration, confidence, and mindfulness, and complement good seamanship. The extent and range of exercises will be tailored to each participant and class to maximize and sharpen your focus, dexterity, balance, and other skills needed for successful coastal sailing. Practice sessions will be divided into no more than two 45-minute sessions ashore each day. Each day’s voyage will be planned, charted, and navigated by the class to reflect wind and sea conditions and the particular emphasis of the island selected for exploration. All participants will have the opportunity to learn as much as they wish about gaff rig, chart work, weather prediction, and electronic aids to navigation. The anchoring and landing process is often complex and exciting. At particularly challenging locations, we often make our own detailed charts of the island anchorage so that return visits may be repeated with safety and certainty. We will also discuss and problem-solve how in thick fog PATIENCE B may safely approach, anchor, and then make an ideal beach landing. Andy continually emphasizes safety, fitness, and constant vigilance required for coastal piloting. Students will refresh and practice their knowledge of chart navigation using hand lead and compass, electronic sounder, radar, and GPS. We will then sail off for island landings, exploration, and a true appreciation of nature. Tuition: $750 Note: Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach, or rocky shore. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 7 SAILING TALLSHIP SAILING AND SEAMANSHIP Learn numerous skills and sail handling aboard the schooner MARY DAY. Capt. Barry King & Jane Ahlfeld — July 17-23 WoodenBoat School invites you to join Jane Ahlfeld and Capt. Barry King for a week of experiential instruction aboard one of Penobscot Bay’s legendary tall ships, the schooner MARY DAY. Launched in 1962 and rebuilt during the winter of 1999/2000, the schooner is 90' on deck, 125' sparred length, displaces 96 tons, and carries 5,200 sq. ft. of canvas with more sails than any other windjammer on the bay. She is a big, pure sailing vessel, designed and rigged along the lines of a traditional coasting schooner, but built with comfort and safety in mind. During this “hands-on,” team-oriented course, students will have the opportunity to become integral members of the MARY DAY crew. Topics covered will include general seamanship, coastal navigation, and marlinespike seamanship. Students will be divided into teams to learn the skills that every sailor needs aboard any vessel. The crew of MARY DAY will expertly guide you in trimming and handling sails, steering, plotting a course, stitching a ditty bag, and going aloft (optional) to stow the topsails. On Friday, students will take command and utilize the skills they have been learning throughout the week. Like any windjammer cruise, we will get ashore each day to walk, stretch, and explore. There will be time at night to enjoy some traditional sailor’s songs and relax under the stars. Great food is the hallmark of any windjammer cruise to satisfy the hardiest appetites, including a Maine lobster picnic. The rhythm of shipboard life provides a unique environment to experience the sights, sounds, and smells of the Maine coastline. Most importantly, Barry and Jane bring humor, joy, and a relaxed atmosphere to the sailing experience. Join Barry, Jane, and the crew of the MARY DAY for a great week under sail discovering the workings of a traditional sailing ship. Tuition: $1,175 Note: This is a six-day course that begins and ends in Camden Harbor, Camden, Maine. All reservations should be made through the schooner’s office at 800-992-2218. www.schoonermaryday. com. There is space available for friends of participants who would rather not take part in the hands-on sail training. 8 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com CRAFT OF SAIL Learn and enjoy big-boat sailing with a master. On board the 40’ Sloop TAMMY NORIE Joel Rowland — July 10-16 On board the 39’ Yawl MISTY Queene Foster — July 3-9, August 14-20, August 28-September 3 (for women only) On board 32' Gaff Sloop BUFFLEHEAD Daniel Bennett — July 17-23, August 21-27 CRAFT OF SAIL is for folks who have some previous sailing experience, whether it comes from a seamanship program or personal involvement with boats. The course is designed for those who want to improve their skills and confidence on the water, particularly in the context of a cruising-sized vessel. Subjects include sail theory, hull and rig balance, helmsmanship, piloting in clear weather and fog, approaching and leaving floats and moorings, knots and rigging, man-overboard strategy, handling ground tackle, crew management; and, with those of our vessels that have power plants, maneuvering under power, and the rudiments of auxiliary engines and navigation instruments. The seaman aspires to the mastery of many subjects, but the essence of the craft of sail is sea sense: the ability to tune in to a boat, the weather, and the crew, and apply good judgment so that all work together harmoniously. Our instructors understand this, and they will help you to acquire that sense by sharing their own experiences and by encouraging you to think and feel a boat through various real and “what if” situations. With a maximum of five students, there is plenty of opportunity to ask questions and try tricks at the helm. There are numerous sailing schools out there, but few offer experience in cruising/charter-sized vessels like these—and none that we know of offer instruction by such experienced sailors on such lovely yachts. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. “Thank you for one of the most exciting vacations I have ever experienced!” B.K., HOWELL, MICHIGAN | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S C R A F T O F S A I L B OAT S TAMMY NORIE is a 40' sloop designed by Kim Holman. Built to be both a comfortable family cruising boat and a blue-water voyager, she was constructed in 1969 at Whisstock’s Boatyard in Woodbridge, England. The boat was one of seven sister ships (known as the Whisstock Landfall 40s) built by the yard between 1958 and 1972. On her maiden voyage, owner Bud McElfresh and his family delivered TAMMY NORIE from England to Connecticut. She cruised in Long Island Sound and along the Eastern Seaboard with the McElfresh family until she was purchased in 1992 by Dr. Mike Rowland and delivered to Maine. She has since completed two more transatlantic voyages and has received constant maintenance and upgrades to her hull, cockpit, cabin, and rig. Owned now by Joel Rowland, TAMMY NORIE has been outfitted for coastwise sailing and charter work. She is a modern, beautiful, simple, and stable boat for anyone wishing to learn sailing skills while exploring the islands and bays of the Maine coast. MISTY is one of the famed 39' Concordia yawls built at Abeking and Rasmussen in Germany for the Concordia Company of New Bedford, Massachusetts. Designed by Ray Hunt and Waldo Howland in 1939, the 39s served as family cruisers and successful bluewater racers, and are known for their intricate construction details, beautiful proportions, and grace on the water. MISTY spent 45 of her 52 years on the Great Lakes in the care of one loving family who raced her successfully. She’s received excellent care over the years, and has never needed a major rebuild. Her layout and details are original. Her yawl rig provides many lines to pull to adjust her sails to perfection. MISTY is easy to sail in nearly all conditions, because no sail is too large to handle. NEW BUFFLEHEAD is a 32' gaff sloop designed and built by Bud McIntosh in 1966 as his personal boat. Shaped full above the waterline and hollow below, BUFFLEHEAD is swift, safe, and easily driven. She sails well in light breezes, stays stiff in stronger winds, and when calm, her quiet two-cylinder, 13-hp engine gets her to her destination. She is an ideal vessel for the Maine coast, nimble and predictable, with a comfortable cockpit, simple rig, wide side decks, and a cozy cabin. VELA, a 50' straight-stemmed, gaff sloop, was designed by owner/skipper Havilah Hawkins and built in 1996 by the Wooden Boat Co. in Camden, Maine. Sporting a single headsail and a large mainsail—800 sq ft on a 35' boom—VELA is a pleasure to sail in all wind conditions. Lazyjacks and lifts enable the huge mainsail to be easily handled by only two people. Comfortable, seaworthy, and well balanced, this beautiful boat provides a perfect classroom for students who will learn how to work with the wind and sea, not against them. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 9 SAILING CRUISING THROUGH THE WATCHES Voyaging safely and confidently under sail. COASTAL CRUISING SEAMANSHIP A week’s cruising on the coast of Maine. On board the 39' Ketch ABIGAIL Hans Vierthaler — July 17-23 Why do people cruise in sailboats? Today there are probably at least as many people cruising for pleasure in sailboats as there were professional American seamen in the heyday of commercial sail. The ingredients have always been there for a most relaxing, rewarding way of getting away from one’s usual surroundings into a whole new world, one confined to the immediate horizon, the nearest landfall, and the secure dimensions of a sailboat. For those of you contemplating what it is like and how to make an overnight or extended trip along the coast, or an ocean voyage, this week with Hans will shed plenty of light on the subject. We offer this opportunity to the experienced, large-boat sailor wishing to advance his or her skills in the areas of coastal piloting, navigation, sail-handling, watch-keeping, safety at sea, and much more. In addition to the topics covered in our COASTAL CRUISING SEAMANSHIP courses, the centerpiece of this liveaboard course will be journeying overnight to a destination. Students will be able to immerse themselves in the daily routines of a traditional sailing vessel, while learning how to choose and plan a long-range destination appropriate for weather and tide conditions, safety considerations, standing a watch, and nighttime piloting. The moon will be moving towards its fullest stage during this week, and we hope to take full advantage of it and experience the thrill of moonlit sailing. The week will start with Hans explaining the various systems, instrumentation, and sail configurations aboard his beautiful 39' ketch ABIGAIL. After spending the first night in a secluded anchorage, Hans and his students will determine the best option for an extended cruise after listening to the weather, developing a “back-up” plan should conditions change, and laying out a watch schedule. Tuesday you’ll set off on your adventure. Designed to build the confidence of sailors who are seeking new challenges and wish to go beyond the boundaries of day sails from the WoodenBoat waterfront, CRUISING THROUGH THE WATCHES may help one prepare for eventual boat ownership and/or realize the dream of an extended cruise. Whatever your reasons for signing on for this course, you will find your captain an experienced and patient instructor, and eager to share his 20 years of experience sailing in the coastal and offshore waters of Maine. On board the 39' Ketch ABIGAIL Hans Vierthaler — August 21-27, September 4-10 Over the years we’ve learned that the best way to discover the pleasures and develop the skills of cruising under sail is to sail off in the right boat with the right skipper. This season we are again proud to offer three liveaboard courses on board a classic vessel. The 39' John Alden–designed cruising ketch ABIGAIL, with Hans Vierthaler as your instructor, is a beautiful example of a bluewater yacht, and a great vessel on which to learn about sailing. Designed to provide the maximum of comfort and seaworthiness, accommodating students in a safe, spacious manner. Hans Vierthaler is a seasoned, proven, and enthusiastic sailor who has spent a good portion of his life sailing and living aboard boats. He will create a custom-tailored course in which you will be patiently coached toward the next level in your sailing career—whether it be skippering a vessel on your own, or crewing with increased confidence, competence, and enjoyment. Everyone shares in the responsibilities of the cruise, including skippering, navigating, and cooking. There’s time, too, to savor the pleasures that cruising is all about— feeling a well-found vessel moving through a seaway, experiencing the peace and freedom of life at sea, and slipping into quiet anchorages each night. This is a rare opportunity to learn anything and everything you wish to about the complex subject of big-boat cruising, and we’re very pleased to have the chance to offer it to you. Tuition: $1,250 Note: Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. Tuition: $1,250 Note: Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. ABIGAIL is a lovely 39' ketch designed by John Alden in his later years and built by Seth Persson in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. Rugged yet handsome, this double-planked boat was originally launched in 1956. Having undergone both a structural and cosmetic restoration at Brooklin Boat Yard, ABIGAIL was relaunched in the summer of 1994. She is no stranger to the Maine cruising community and has also cruised the Caribbean during a brief period of ownership by an Italian count. Varied sail inventory gives ABIGAIL the versatility one needs for the changeable winds found on Maine’s coast, and a 4108 Perkins diesel is always available for those flat-calm days. Her spacious cockpit, wide decks, high bulwarks, standing headroom, and current electronics all contribute to a comfortable learning experience. 10 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S SAILING DOWNEAST CRUISING IN TANDEM Exploring the Great Wass & Roque Island Archipelagoes The pure simple joy of sailing and cruising. On board the 36' Ketch PATIENCE B Andy Oldman — July 31-August 6 On board ABIGAIL and MISTY Hans Vierthaler and Queenie Foster — July 24-30 In this course on board the 36' ketch PATIENCE B, Andy Oldman and three students will chart a course for the unsurpassed beauty of Maine’s Downeast cruising grounds and islands east of Mount Desert. We will visit and explore the Great Wass Island and Roque Island archipelagoes. Our itinerary, always subject to weather and sea conditions, will include Jonesport, Mistake Island Harbor, The Mudhole and Crumple Island, and on to Roque Island, famous for its cirque sand beach, and adjacent islands: Great Spruce and The Brothers. This course has an ambitious schedule, and students can look forward to extended days under sail with possible overnight sailing in the mix. Undoubtedly, the weather will vary, consisting usually of fine summer winds mixed in with some thick Downeast fog. Students will commence loading at noon on Sunday, and depart for Frenchboro in plenty of time to arrive before dark. At first light on Monday, PATIENCE B will depart for Moose Peak lighthouse and Mistake Island Harbor on Great Wass, and arrive by sunset. The return is timed to enjoy the spectacular scenery and sunset off Schoodic Point and Mount Desert as we head west to Frenchboro again for our final night at anchor. We will return in time to regale our fellow classmates with exciting Downeast tales at the Friday night lobster bake. Navigation, sail handling, maritime safety, anchoring, our own meal preparation, and island landings/exploration will occupy much of our time. Under sail we will have the opportunity to extensively use radar and a state-of-the-art chart plotter. On land, plenty of time is available for hiking, sketching, and photography. PATIENCE B has carried two families some 45,000 miles on two major open water passages, and is fully equipped and well found. She is spartan by contemporary yacht standards, filled with old-world ambiance and comfortable, cozy accommodations. Andy will communicate with the selected students to arrange basic meal planning, gear necessities, etc. well in advance of our departure. If you’ve ever wondered what it is like and how to make an extended trip along the coast, or an ocean voyage, this week with Hans and Queenie will shed plenty of light on the subject. We offer this opportunity to the experienced, large-boat sailor wishing to advance his or her skills in the areas of coastal piloting, navigation, sail-handling, safety at sea, and much more. Shipboard life and cooking aboard will also be part of this cruising experience. In addition to the topics covered in our COASTAL CRUISING SEAMANSHIP courses, the centerpiece of this liveaboard course will be cruising in the company of another boat and an extended group of sailors. Students will be able to immerse themselves in the daily routines of a traditional sailing vessel, while learning how to choose and plan a long-range destination appropriate for weather and tide conditions, and safety considerations. The week will start with Hans and Queenie explaining the various systems, instrumentation, and sail configurations aboard their beautiful vessels--Hans and his beautiful 39' ketch ABIGAIL, and Queenie and her gorgeous 39' Concordia yawl MISTY. After spending the first night in a secluded anchorage, both instructors and their students will gather together and determine the best option for the remainder of the week after listening to the weather, and developing a “back-up” plan should conditions change. Tuesday you’ll set off on your adventure. During the week, students will have the opportunity to change vessels for the day to get a feel for how the other vessel performs under sail. It will be a wonderful chance to see how the other crew lives or sails, so to speak. Designed to build the confidence of sailors who are seeking new challenges, CRUISING IN TANDEM may help one prepare for eventual boat ownership and/or realize the dream of an extended cruise. Whatever your reasons for signing on for this course, you will find your captains are experienced and patient instructors, and eager to share their many years of experience sailing in the coastal and offshore waters of Maine. Tuition: $1,500 Note: Due to the extensive physical challenges of the trip, excellent physical condition, good balance, and agility are basic requirements for this voyage, along with previous large-boat sailing experience. Another traditional sailing vessel for a variety of our Seamanship courses is the William Hand–designed 36' cruising ketch PATIENCE B, launched in 1988. Harry and Martha Bryan and their two children spent three years lovingly crafting the gaffrigged boat and then sailed off on a 32,000-mile adventure that most folks only dream about. In 2000–2001, Andy, Madeleine, and Sumi Oldman continued the adventuring on PATIENCE B with a 20,000-mile voyage to France, the Mediterranean, the Atlantic islands, Brazil, Chile, and home to Boston via the Galápagos Islands and Panama Canal. PATIENCE B is not only beautiful to look at, but a great pleasure to sail. She is a proven bluewater sailer, dry, comfortable, handy, able, and reasonably quick if her crew treats her properly. The versatility of her rig gives her the ability to be sailed quite comfortably under any wind or sea condition. Tuition: $1250 Note: Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit small boats from larger craft, beach or rocky shore. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 11 KAYA K I N G THE PLEASURE OF SEA KAYAKING Expert guidance for enjoying paddling in all types of water. Perhaps nothing, absolutely nothing, conveys the joy of being afloat quite so purely as a kayak. Thus, WoodenBoat School offers you two outstanding opportunities in a world-class setting to learn and enjoy the art of this popular water sport. In a series of day trips, you’ll explore some of the most spectacular parts of the Maine coast. From the basics to tips on accomplishing more advanced sea kayaking skills, these courses and talented instructors will enable you to discover a new and exciting environment that beckons just off saltwater and freshwater coastlines everywhere. ELEMENTS OF COASTAL KAYAKING Mike O’Brien — September 4-10 Selecting an appropriate kayak; safety skills; basic gear and equipment; transporting kayaks; paddling strokes; launching and landing; nautical charts and navigation; capsize and recovery skills; and better understanding weather and sea conditions are a sample of the many topics covered in this fully comprehensive course. Good fun and a great education! Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit kayaks from beach or rocky shore. ELEMENTS OF RECREATIONAL KAYAKING NEW Mike O’Brien — August 21-27 In this easygoing introductory course, you’ll explore the same idyllic waters and islands visited by our ELEMENTS OF COASTAL KAYAKING course – but we’ll paddle stable, extra-wide kayaks at a comfortable pace. Those new to kayaking will find basic paddling strokes and other techniques more easily mastered aboard these friendly boats. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Students should be in good physical condition, have good balance and agility and the ability to enter and exit kayaks from beach or rocky shore. Note: Kayaks, paddles, sprayskirts, and life jackets will be provided by the School, but students are welcome and encouraged to bring their own if desired. “You have a treasure here. The staff, food, instructors, fellow students, your waterfront – everything made this a wonderful experience with like-minded souls.” S.M., BELMONT, NEW YORK 12 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING H OW TO C H O O S E T H E B E S T B OAT B U I L D I N G C O U R S E F O R YO U The key to deciding which class best suits your needs is to carefully read each course description, which incorporates much information about the course’s content and level of experience. We’ll also be glad to help you with any questions you may have after reading this catalog, and if need be we can put you in contact with our instructors. Choosing the right course means that you will be satisfied, appropriately challenged, and among others whose goals and abilities are similar to yours. Keep in mind that having some previous hand tool/woodworking experience will result in a much richer experience for anyone interested in one of our boatbuilding courses. For those lacking this experience, we highly recommend taking our INTRODUCTION TO WOODWORKING course or a basic carpentry class in your hometown before signing up for one of our boatbuilding classes. For those of you looking for a great introduction to traditional wooden boat construction, we recommend: FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING, INTRODUCTION TO BOATBUILDING, BUILDING A NORDIC PRAM, BUILDING THE OCEAN POINTER, BUILDING THE McKENZIE RIVER DORY, BUILDING A MAINE COAST PEAPOD, and BUILDING A DORY. If you are interested in a certain type of construction, there is plenty to choose from. You’ll find various courses in the following construction methods: plank-on-frame, plywoodepoxy, strip-plank, stitch-and-glue, and much, much more. You’ll also find a wide variety of courses in which a class or individuals will build canoes or kayaks. A fair number of students are interested in taking a series of courses, with a goal of becoming more proficient or even working toward a career in boatbuilding. We suggest considering the following sequence: LOFTING; FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING; BUILDING HALF MODELS; ELEMENTS OF BOAT DESIGN; then one or more courses that focus on a particular design or type of construction. Many of our shop courses are designed for beginning, intermediate, or experienced woodworkers; a wise choice based on skill level can determine how much you may benefit from the course. Again, take time to read each course description carefully. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 13 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING LOFTING The theory and practice of classical boatbuilding. Making sense of all those lines and numbers. Greg Rössel — Wade Smith — Warren Barker — Thad Danielson — June 5-18, July 3-16, September 4-17 June 19-July 2 July 17-30 August 7-20 FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING is the core curriculum of our boatbuilding courses and our most popular offering. This series deals generally with the whole craft of boatbuilding, specifically with wooden boats, and most specifically with plank-on-frame small craft. We tend to build difficult boats in these classes—round-bilged, carvel and lapstrake-planked types—because if you can build one of these, you can build almost anything. Ideally, each class will start one boat, work at planking another, and finish a third. The emphasis is always more on learning than on pushing through a project. Each session combines daily discussion periods with an abundance of practical work. Usually you’ll start out talking about boat plans and design, and how to develop a project plan. An explanation of lofting will follow, and everyone will get a chance to give it a try on the lofting table. (See LOFTING, as follows, for a complete treatment of this subject.) From there, it will be a continuous stream of boatbuilding lessons, both at the blackboard and on the workbench: how a body plan comes together; the meaning of a fair line; various types of small-boat construction; the right tools for the job at hand, and how to use them; different methods for planking a boat; discussions on fastenings, glues, woods, etc.; the tricks of steam-bending; techniques of lamination; and much more. Molds and patterns are picked up, and stems and transoms assembled. Planking, fastening, caulking, fairing, fitting seats and risers, knees and breasthooks— each operation is carefully explained and supervised. You’ll find yourself working on your own and alongside others, on real boats or just for practice. If your class happens to finish a boat, you’ll launch it, and that is some fun! You’ll finish this course with a better understanding in your mind—and in your hands—of the boatbuilding process. FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING is open to everyone, although woodworking skills and familiarity with tools and with the language of boatbuilding really help students to get the most out of it. Tuition: $1,200 two-week course Greg Rössel — June 26-July 2, August 28-September 3 Without question, lofting is an essential skill for the boatbuilder. Once you’ve mastered it, you can at least start to build any boat for which there are plans. Moreover, you’re going to be able to interpret plans and better comprehend the shape of the vessel, and what the building process will be. Also without question, learning lofting can be intimidating and/or frustrating. Lofting is complex, and there are numerous ways to go about it. Lofting takes time and concentration, and a good teacher really helps (see WoodenBoat Nos. 110 and 111). Greg thoroughly understands and enjoys lofting; and he has taught it repeatedly and in a variety of settings. He has a clear idea of how to present it, and how to help you master it. In this week you’ll discuss the written material that Greg has developed, build half models, and— in teams—loft several small craft. We have a couple of boats in mind, but it is also possible that some students in the course can bring in their own plans (call us). Tables of offsets, diagonals, buttock lines—all will be demystified and will become for you the wonderful tools they are for understanding, discussing, and building boats. By the end of the week, you should be able to visualize, lay down, and talk boat plans with the best of them. This course is meant to dovetail with the two-week FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING courses, three of which Greg will also teach, and in which one of the lofted boats will probably be started. If there is time, you’ll also take lines off a classic round-bottomed boat and draw up a set of lines. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $53 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 14 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S NEW ELEMENTS OF BOAT DESIGN COMPUTER DESIGN Learn the principles and process—then practice on your own design. Understanding capabilities and advantages of the computer in your own boat design work. John Brooks — August 14-20 Clint Chase — July 10-16 Would you like to understand how to design your own boat or gain a better grasp of how design affects a boat’s performance? Would you like to better read and comprehend the hull line drawings? Would you like to explore the relationship of construction methods to hull design—which works well with what shapes? Would you like to think, eat, sleep, and discuss boats for a solid week? If so, you’ll find this challenging and fun course with talented boatbuilder and designer John Brooks to be right up your alley. Whether you want to get a taste of the design process, be able to put your ideas on paper, or start down the road to becoming a professional designer, this course will allow you to accomplish several things. You’ll dispassionately analyze the science of what makes a boat float and move, while gaining an understanding of the role art plays in boat design. You’ll learn what makes a boat seaworthy or not; performance oriented or not; and buildable or not. And you’ll start creating your own design, mainly working on the preliminary and lines drawings, as much as time allows. Before taking pencil to paper, you will research the type of boat you want to design, discuss your initial ideas with John, and learn how to start drawing on your own, using basic drafting skills plus learning new ones required for drawing boats. Various building methods will be explored, from traditional to modern. Any technique can be used for each student’s own “dream boat,” from plank-on-frame to vacuum-bagged and epoxied veneers reinforced with exotic materials. You will learn how to back up your project ideas with sound engineering principles, hydrostatics, and scantlings that reflect the intended use and life of the boat. You’ll also learn about the intricate interplay of various views in a set of plans as John demonstrates how a half model goes together. Students will explore various methods and approaches to designing a boat, from ancient to cutting edge, and have a chance to pick the ones that work best for you. Students need not have any previous experience with boat design or mathematics; just a keen interest will do. The main focus of the course will be on understanding the concepts and principles that play a part in boat design and in developing an eye for aesthetics. In spite of modern technology, designing boats is still as much an art as it is a science. The eye and judgment of the designer are still the most important ingredients in any design. You will leave Brooklin with a whole new understanding about boats and a new group of friends to share them with! Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. What is computer-aided design (CAD)? How does one use CAD to loft on a computer? How is a 3D model built? Can we use the computer to do more advanced calculations? What would one need to cut with a CNC machine? By the end of this course with designer/boatbuilder Clint Chase, students will have a better appreciation of these essential questions and some of the answers. Moreover, you will end up with a toolbox full of computer skills and a 3D model of your own boat hull! Clint is eager to share his knowledge and skills that he’s acquired over the years using Rhino3D, a modeling program popular with designers. The week will be busy but fun as you learn the many facets to drawing your own boat design on the computer. Everyone will be starting with an existing lines plan – perhaps one you’ve drawn in the ELEMENTS OF BOAT DESIGN course or on your own. You can also start with a refined lines sketch of the boat of your choice. The boat can be any hull type, but for learning computer design, a simpler hull form like a multichined or lapstrake hull is easiest for the beginner. Whatever plan you choose, it must come to class scanned into your laptop as a JPEG file. This is our starting point. As the week progresses, we will virtually build a 3D model of the hull and deck of your design. Students will learn to navigate in Rhino and become proficient with its tools and the list of commands that enable the lines to take shape on the screen. Demonstrations and discussions of the basic and more subtle aspects of computer lofting, 3D modeling, hydrostatic calculations, creation of layouts and CNC cutting files, and problem-solving will flow together through the week. You’ll print your work on a large-format printer on Friday, and we’ll visit a nearby shop and see how a boat kit can be cut on a large CNC router. Everyone in the class will be bringing a variety of experience and knowledge and a willingness to help each other so each student leaves with new friends and the fundamentals of computer design. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Requirements: You will need a MAC or PC laptop that is within 10 years of age; 4MB RAM; video graphics capability; and a free 90-day trial version of Rhino 5 loaded and ready to go. Minimally, a 15 ½" screen size is recommended as is a comfortable mouse with pad. Students should have solid experience with lofting or drafting table. WoodenBoat School’s LOFTING or ELEMENTS OF BOAT DESIGN course provide excellent prerequisite information for this COMPUTER DESIGN course. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 15 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING INTRODUCTION TO BOATBUILDING INTRODUCTION TO WOODWORKING A one-week primer on building small boats. Understanding wood and woodworking techniques with an emphasis on hand tool usage. John Karbott — June 5-11 Bill Thomas — September 4-10 There are many individuals out there who have decided that they would like to build their very own boat but don’t know how to get started. Many first-time builders have run into problems understanding the process of what to do first and, as a result, soon get intimidated and the idea loses momentum. Bill Thomas and John Karbott, noted boatbuilders and teachers, invite anyone interested in wooden boats and woodworking to join them in either of these two six-day courses focusing on the skills and techniques used in basic boatbuilding. No prior boatbuilding experience is required; simply a desire to learn. If you want to build a good-looking, simple sailing skiff, Bill or John can help you get started and guide you through the step-by-step procedures to taking on and completing such a project on your own. Bill has chosen a Karl Stambaugh design, the Bay Skiff 12, as the boat students will construct during his course. This multi-purpose skiff offers a great compromise between rowing and sailing qualities. We will be building a rowing version during the course. Using traditional boatbuilding methods, she is built of marine plywood over a strongback and moulds. John Karbott’s students will build two of his handsome 12 ½' semi-dory skiffs combining marine plywood, white oak, and Northern white cedar. Both classes will start with understanding boat plans and lofting and proceed through scarfing, framing, planking, and interior joinerwork. As with any one-week building schedule, there will be plenty for students to do as we finish the boats. As both skiffs take shape through each week, Bill and John will lead discussions in small-craft design, selecting a suitable design for the amateur builder, setting up a one-man shop, proper hand and power tool usage, and much more. Whether you have a hankering for traditional skiff construction like the Bay Skiff 12 or the 12 ½' Semi-dory skiff or are simply looking for a perfect introduction to wooden boat construction, you will thoroughly enjoy any of these weeks. Tuition: $800 Note: These are six-day courses ending Saturday afternoon. Bill Thomas — June 26-July 2 Over the years we’ve seen individuals arrive on our campus to participate in a boatbuilding class who have little or no woodworking experience. They often feel intimidated when picking up a tool to use for the first time, especially in a setting where there are accomplished woodworkers working alongside. We know for a fact that individuals who do possess previous hand tool experience have the potential to gain so much more from our boatbuilding classes. This introductory course offers a place for folks of all skill levels to learn from a seasoned craftsman, Bill Thomas. Bill has been a selfemployed woodworker and designer for more than 30 years. He’s delved into everything from house carpentry, cabinet, and furniture work to high-end boat joinery. And Bill has been teaching woodworking and boatbuilding for nearly 20 years. Each day, Bill will cover numerous lessons in tool selection and capabilities; hand tool usage and maintenance; tool sharpening; proper layout procedures; shop safety; power tools; and lots of woodworking techniques that will serve you well in future endeavors. Everyone will also learn a lot about wood itself, how it works, and what to look for in selecting a species for a particular purpose. Glues, epoxy, and fastenings will be covered as well. The focus of the entire week will be introducing students to the tools and techniques common to all types of woodworking and joinery, in addition to a look at boat-related projects. Each student will undertake the design and construction of their own toolbox during this week. Whether you have had some type of formal woodworking experience or have never had the opportunity to try your hand with woodworking tools, you will gain much from this course with Bill Thomas. This week will prove to be an excellent preparation for a basic boatbuilding course or for your own home projects. It’s also a great opportunity to work alongside a very talented craftsmen who has plenty to share. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $53 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 16 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S BOATBUILDER’S HAND TOOLS BUILDING A DORY Making, restoring, and using traditional tools of the trade. The elegance of traditional workboat construction. Graham McKay — August 28-September 3 Harry Bryan — June 19-25 In spite of the ever-increasing number of power tools in the woodworking/boatbuilding trades, the foundation of the boatbuilder’s skills is still largely dependent on the use of hand tools. Hand tools bring you in close contact with wood, enabling the user to get to know and work with its grain structure. Many of the pieces that make up a wooden boat are complex shapes employing compound angles and rolling bevels. Often it is more efficient to create these pieces with hand tools than trying to set up a machine that is not appropriate to the job at hand. This five-day course with well-known boatbuilder/designer Harry Bryan will focus on developing skills with hand saws, draw knives, chisels and slicks, auger bits and planes. You’ll acquire skills, such as, cutting the complex angle on the end of a deck beam and have it fit first time. You will have the confidence to cut a stem rabbet and make short work of a plank scarf using a slick and smoothing plane. Keeping these tools sharp is absolutely necessary for controlled, accurate work. Therefore, time will be spent presenting simple, straightforward methods for creating a razor-sharp edge. From setting and filing a handsaw, to renewing the edge of a drill bit for cutting steel, we will learn to restore tools rather them toss them aside when they are dull. You’re encouraged to bring along any old tools that you feel may be candidates for restoring. Harry will also discuss where to acquire good tools, how to avoid wasting your money on cheap ones, and how to recognize and restore that jewel covered with the rust of neglect. Making and modifying tools is a natural progression for the hand tool user. Students will learn about hardening and tempering tool steel, as well as sawing, filing, and drilling to create precise shapes. There will be practice in the use of silver solder and rivets for joining metals. Each student will be encouraged to make a tool of their own during the week, such as a carving gouge, chisel, boatbuilder’s bevel or pencil divider. Hand tools are not a nostalgic holdover from the past. After this fascinating week with Harry Bryan, you’ll feel the direct connection between the craftsman and his work. A century ago, dories were found everywhere along the New England coast— they would carry a good load under sail or oar, they could handle rough seas, and they were relatively easy to build. There are tales of small hardworking shops turning out 20 dories in 20 days! Lowell’s Boat Shop, founded in 1793, is the birthplace of the American Fishing Dory. Thousands of dories were manufactured at Lowell’s throughout the last two centuries. We invite you to join professional boatbuilder Graham McKay from Lowell’s Boat Shop in Amesbury, Massachusetts, in constructing a traditional 15' Banks Dory. As the head boatbuilder at Lowell’s, Graham has extensive experience and insight into traditional dory construction methods. Graham will use John Gardner’s The Dory Book as a construction guide through the course. The boat will be built from traditional materials with the bottom and topsides planked in northern white pine and the frames, stem, and other parts made of white oak. Laps will be secured with copper rivets, and the frames will be joined at the chines with riveted stainlesssteel clips. Using traditional Lowell’s building methods, lofting will be minimal, with the students using patterns lofted from plans and planking by eye. The dory will be built upright so that plank lines can be sighted and the rivets easily reached. By week’s end, the hull should be completely planked and frames and the inwales steamed into place and fastened. Graham will cover building from plans, copper-riveting, caulking, spiling, beveling and lap fitting, steam-bending, and other traditional skills. This will be a fast-moving, exciting class where everyone will be actively involved. And if you’re lucky in the class lottery on Saturday, you could be the winner of a brand-new fishing dory! Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 17 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING BUILDING THE OCEAN POINTER NEW Strip-plank construction of a 19’6”outboardpowered skiff. BUILDING THE NEW MAINE COAST PEAPOD In in-depth look at traditional wooden boat construction, tools, materials, and the right way to do the job. John Karbott and Bob Fuller — August 14-27 When visiting the coastal communities of New England, one immediately takes notice of the number of outboard-powered skiffs along any given waterfront. One of the prettiest is the Ocean Pointer – a 19'6" center-console skiff designed by David Stimson. Based on Alton Wallace’s 18' inshore lobster skiff, the Ocean Pointer is designed for strip-built wood construction. The hull has a flared bow and transitions to a tumblehome at the stern. The bottom is a soft chine with a small keel, which allows for good tracking and a comfortable ride. Ocean Pointer also features a spacious, self-bailing cockpit and center-console steering station. A transom-mounted outboard engine of approximately 50 hp seems to be the ideal choice for a motor. In this two-week course taught by professional boatbuilders John Karbott and Bob Fuller, students will build one of these beautiful skiffs. The strip construction technique utilizes epoxy adhesive and edge-nailing. You will learn how to laminate the stem, forefoot, and keel. Lofting, panel development, and patternmaking will also be key facets of this project. The self-bailing cockpit and framing are an integral part of the construction and allow the boat to be built without a complex set of molds. John and Bob will arrive with a partially built skiff that will be set up upside down with framing in place. Students will begin fitting planks, gluing and fastening them along the keel, stem, and transom, and continuing up to the sheer. The hull will then be faired and sanded, and flipped upright. You’ll then sheathe the cockpit with fiberglass and epoxy; construct the foredeck and side decks; make and install the coamings, gunwales, and rails in place; and build the center console and seat box. Students will also start the subassemblies for a second Ocean Pointer. You’ll lay out and build the transom, motorwell, cockpit, framing components, keel, and stem. This will be an exciting, rewarding experience, keeping everyone busy the entire two weeks! With John and Bob’s guidance, you will learn how to start a project and see it through to completion in an organized, efficient manner. Upon returning home, you may be inspired to begin building your own Ocean Pointer or similar stripplanked powerboat. Previous woodworking experience is highly recommended for this course. Sam Temple — September 18-October 1 Peapods have been a natural fit for Maine’s harbors for over a century. Long used as working boats in the lobster fishery and all kinds of waterfront work, these craft are seaworthy, stable, and comfortable. Models vary from small tenders to larger versions meant as a primary vessel. The class project during these two weeks will be the Maine Coast Peapod, a 14' traditionally planked double-ender designed by Joel White. This is a boat that is a joy to row, sail, or tow! The class will begin with Sam and his students reviewing Joel’s plans, followed by assembling and fairing the building jig. Once the jig is completed, you’ll build a white oak backbone with matching stems and cut rabbets. Oak frames will be milled and then steam-bent onto the vessel. She’ll be planked with northern white cedar and copper rivets. Joel designed the sheer plank to be lapstrake, and Sam will explain this procedure for students to tackle. After the rivets are headed over, you’ll install breasthooks, rubrails, inwales, and thwarts. Eventually, the peapod will be completed for sailing by students building a dagger board, tiller, and rudder. If there’s enough time, the lug rig and a pair of oars can be fashioned out of spruce. These two weeks with experienced boatbuilder Sam Temple will give a good foundation in lining out, spiling, and traditional carvel planking. It will certainly be a confidence builder for anyone looking to do accurate work using traditional methods. The emphasis will be on hand tools, trusting one’s eye, and looking for fair lines. Previous woodworking experience will be very helpful to those interested in this course. Tuition: $1,200 two-week course Tuition: $1,200 two-week course Note: See page 42 for a photo of the Ocean Pointer. ©Benjamin Mendlowitz 18 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S BUILDING THE PENOBSCOT 13 NEW Glued-lapstrake construction of a beautiful daysailer. BUILDING THE MCKENZIE RIVER DORY NEW A captivating week building boats with craftsman, historian, and author Brad Dimock. Arch Davis — August 21-September 3 Brad Dimock — July 10-16 Arch Davis and his lovely small-boat designs have been well known to the readers of WoodenBoat magazine for a number of years. We are very excited to welcome Arch back to our campus this season and invite you to spend two weeks with this innovative designer-builder constructing his latest design, the Penobscot 13. In this course, students will build two of these fine-looking lapstrake daysailers. The Penobscot 13 is the little sister to two of Arch’s most popular designs, the Penobscot 14 and 17. The 13 is smaller and lighter than the 14 but possesses comparable lines with similar characteristics under oar and sail. She features the same gluedlapstrake construction—with fore-and-aft stringers—that has proven so successful in the bigger Penobscots. The designer has introduced a number of modifications to simplify the building process so that students can aim to complete the two boats and prepare them for painting in the two-week time frame. On the first morning, Arch will review the plans with students and explain how the Penobscot designs were developed. Students will then get busy setting up the station molds, stem, and transom on a simple strongback. All the stages of construction will be covered: fitting the keel, sheer clamps, and stringers; beveling and fairing; planking (including scarfing plank stock to length), and cutting gains. Once the hulls have been completed and turned over, you’ll fit breasthooks, quarter knees, seats, and rails, and complete other finishing details. These two weeks will be a comprehensive introduction to Arch Davis’s unique method of glued-lapstrake construction, and will leave students well equipped to build a Penobscot 13 of their own, or one of the bigger Penobscot designs, or to tackle any other similar project. The course promises to be very rewarding to those participating and will bring plenty of satisfaction as these lovely craft come to life under their hands. And two very lucky students who win the raffle on the last day of class will each be taking home a very beautiful boat that will provide enjoyment for years to come. With the 2008 publication of Roger Fletcher’s Drift Boats & River Dories, these highly maneuverable shallow-draft boats have undergone a great surge in popularity. Originally designed as fishing boats on Oregon’s McKenzie and Rogue Rivers, river dories have found admirers on shallow fishing streams and whitewater rivers around the world. In the late 1940s Woodie Hindman created the archtypical McKenzie River dory: the 16 Double-ender with Transom. This elegant design has proved excellent for rowing in swift, shallow or whitewater streams, and handles well with a small outboard motor for flatwater and lakes. Students will be building this dory as a traditional plywood-on-frame boat, but assembling it in the more modern free-form method without forms or strongback. Brad Dimock has been building, rowing, repairing, restoring, and researching river dories in the Grand Canyon and the West for four decades. He’ll begin this course by having students loft the design and expand the frame patterns, then create the frames, transom, and stem. You’ll also scarf together sheets of marine plywood into full 16' side panels and floor. By mid-week, students will assemble the hull and begin installing chines and gunwales. By Friday, the class should be busy fitting seats, flydeck, and floorboards, and applying the last of the oil and paint. With luck, you’ll float her on Saturday! A lucky winner of the lottery will take her home for the cost of materials. During the week you will gain the knowledge and skills to build your own McKenzie River dory, her larger cousin the Grand Canyon Dory, or any number of other similar craft. You’ll learn lofting, scarfing, fabricating parts, free-form assembly, and outfitting, as well as many of the arcane arts you’ll use along the way. You’ll use a minimum of fancy tools, relying more on adaptation and improvisation. Brad will also cover maintenance, storage, and repair. Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Tuition: $1,200 two-week course C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 19 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING GLUED-LAPSTRAKE PLYWOOD CONSTRUCTION FINISHING OUT SMALL BOATS Build Merlin, a versatile, fixed-seat 14’ rowboat; and the Compass Harbor Pram, a wonderful 9’ sailing dinghy. John Brooks — September 18-24 Creating neat woodwork and joinerwork. John Brooks — September 11-17 This very popular course focuses on the construction method of modern, small boats that is commonly called for in many designers’ plans. During this week students will build two hulls for one of John’s well-known designs that features light weight, resilient strength, permanent watertightness, and graceful lines. The Merlin rowboat and the Compass Harbor Pram are great introductory projects for this one-week class, having narrow, flat bottoms and curved, lapstrake topsides. Both hulls will offer interesting, instructive challenges for the class and make useful boats for a wide variety of activities after class. During this captivating course, students will start by learning how to prepare and scarf the marine-grade mahogany plywood planking stock. You’ll then learn how to make and assemble the backbone parts: transoms, inner stem, keelson, and bottom. John will also show students the similarities and differences of the backbone parts for a round-bilged hull. He’ll explain how the building jigs are created, then show students how to attach the backbones over them and how to bevel the keelson and bottom in preparation for planking. With two hulls to work on, everyone will have plenty of opportunity to learn how to spile, make and attach planks, and how to bevel the laps. The goal of this course is to give everyone the skills they will need to take a set of plans with full-sized patterns and build a beautiful boat – especially the hardest first step, turning lines on raw paper and raw lumber into a solid, real hull. Plans for Merlin and the Compass Harbor Pram will be available from John at a discount to his students. Please keep in mind that woodworking experience is required for this busy and varied class. Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Here’s a week that promises to be a fulfilling and challenging one, with plenty of opportunity to learn--with brains and hands--how to build the intricate parts and finish out small open boats. The joinerwork of a small boat is particularly exacting because there is nowhere to hide slipshod work--no burying rough joints under decks or in cabinetry. John will teach you how to make elegant parts and gorgeous, tight-fitting joints for a boat you’ll be proud to varnish. The course is designed to be a follow-up to some of our plywood/epoxy hull building classes and very useful to anyone completing a small boat. Many of the skills and techniques you acquire can be transferred to big boats as well. Your instructor will start the week describing how to organize a project as complicated as a boat. Students will learn how to work from boat plans, drawings, or the lofting board. John will explain the versatility of various types of patterns and show you how to make them, as well as how to use them. You’ll learn about making curved parts such as a laminated outer stem and steam-bent floorboard frames. John will demonstrate methods for measuring and layout in the hull to accurately position interior parts and pieces. He’ll also explain how to accurately scribe and fit parts such as the breasthook, quarter knees, and bulkheads. And you’ll learn how to use epoxy and other glues and bedding compound; and to become familiar with woodworking in three dimensions with no right angles in sight. Working both at the bench and in the boat, you’ll refine your skills with a wide array of boatbuilding tools, from planes, spokeshaves, scrapers, and chisels to the tablesaw, bandsaw, and router. Throughout the week, John will be showing you many tricks, tips, and jigs that make each job easier and faster, as well as look better and help you make a boat beautiful and truly yours. Please keep in mind that woodworking experience is required for this busy and varied class. Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. 20 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S REBUILDING A HERRESHOFF 12 1/2 NEW Taking stock, building a new keel assembly, followed by the planking process. Eric Dow — July 17-30, August 14 -27 WOODEN BOAT RESTORATION METHODS The rebuilding process finalized. Walt Ansel — July 17-30 In the summer of 2013, the Herreshoff 12½ SEAL was brought to WoodenBoat School by a student to incorporate into our two-week Small Boat Repairs course. The boat, hull #1007, was built in 1926 at the Herreshoff Manufacturing Co. in Bristol, Rhode Island. She suffered serious damage in a 2009 storm in Connecticut and has been out of the water since. After a thorough survey conducted at WoodenBoat School, it was decided that a more practical strategy for the boat would be a complete rebuild instead of a complex series of repairs. This season we are excited to offer students the unique opportunity to join boatbuilder Eric Dow as we bring SEAL back to life. In the July session, we’ll use station molds from Eric’s shop, set up prior to the beginning of the course. There is a mold for every frame for all Herreshoff-built boats. After checking these for fairness, students will begin replacing all of the original oak frames by milling, steaming, and bending new frames of straight-grained white oak onto each mold. At the same time, other students will proceed in cutting out, building, and rabbeting a new keel/stem assembly, replacing floor timbers, and creating a new transom. This building system, in which many of the components are finished before the boat goes together, requires precise work and results in an efficient building evolution and a very exact rebuild. Throughout these two weeks, everyone will get an in-depth look at the many details and decisions involved in the rebuild of a traditional wooden boat. In our August session, students will be engaged in the entire planking process, from spiling to striking a waterline. Of all the different planking methods, carvel or “plank-on-frame” is the most common, and this is the manner in which SEAL was planked. Using northern white cedar, students will replank her in the same style that was used in 1926. There are 10 planks per side on the Herreshoff 12½, so you’ll get plenty of practice at hanging strakes. Eric will discuss and demonstrate resawing plank stock, hollowing and rounding, stealer planks, the various types of fastenings on today’s market, fitting butt blocks, stopwaters, and a proper caulking bevel. After SEAL is planked up, students will smooth and fair the entire hull. We’ll return to the boat in our 2017 season to continue the rebuild of SEAL by replacing bulkheads; installing new deck frames, fore and aft; building new decks, coamings, and cockpit sole; and reinstalling the fin/ballast assembly. Both of these two-week sessions will be challenging, but with Eric’s knowing supervision and years of experience, each student will learn a great deal about first-class boatbuilding and how to take on a rebuild or restoration on their own. The upcoming 2016 steam launch restoration class will conclude five years of tremendous effort by instructor Walt Ansel and numerous WoodenBoat School students. The 24' fan-tailed launch will retain only her original skin of cedar strip planking, part of her stem, and her overall sublime shape. Woven in and around this original fabric are a new backbone comprised of keel, stem knee, shaft log, floors, frames and sheer clamps. Additionally, she has a new fantail rim timber, deck beams, and, last but not least, beautiful new beaded Alaskan yellow cedar ceiling. Using a very fine launch at Bath Maritime Museum for inspiration, the class has brought some subtle changes to our original Michigan launch. Three mahogany floor grates and pre-made deck planks with rabbeted yellow cedar edge banding have been built. The interior side seats will be panel-faced lift-ups and students will replace the original heavily-nailed staved coaming with a new one of quarter sawn steam-bent oak. Additional projects for the 2016 session will include the completion of the cockpit sole installation, the design and construction of the side seats, completion of decking and covering boards, and coaming construction. The big project will be the construction of a classic launch canopy to fit the boat that will have sheer and bow ends much like a snowshoe frame. There will also be plenty of small and large hardware installation jobs that will be completed. Come join us for two weeks of challenges that will be sure to increase your skill levels. It’s a demanding project – almost like finishing out a piece of furniture – but our students, under the expertise of shipwright Walt Ansel, always pull together and help each other out to restore to the highest standard. It’s going to be an emotional goodbye to this fine old launch at the end of this final session. Many individuals have put their hearts and souls into the work they’ve contributed to her and if they’re lucky, they’ll get to ride in her someday on a quiet lake back in Michigan. Tuition: $1,200 two-week course Tuition: $1,200 two-week course Note: Previous woodworking and/or boatbuilding experience is required for this course. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 21 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING INTRODUCTION TO COLD-MOLDED CONSTRUCTION STITCH-AND-GLUE BOATBUILDING Everything from approaching the project to techniques and materials. Learn introductory and advanced modern plywood boatbuilding techniques suitable for simple or heavy-duty boats. Mike Moros — June 26-July 2 For years cold-molded wood construction has been used successfully in building small sailing dinghies, competitive rowing shells, cruising sailboats, rugged multihulls, and swift powerboats. The technique involves laminating together layers of wood veneers or very thin planks to create a hull that is watertight, extremely strong, and lightweight. Blend these noteworthy features together with a relative ease of boatbuilding, and you have a method of construction that is a very popular choice among professional and amateur builders alike. The object of this course will be to see and learn firsthand exactly how the professionals take on a cold-molded project and how smaller builders can incorporate professional systems into their own styles. Mike Moros, WoodenBoat School’s Shop Manager, will lead this course, one that has been requested time and time again by a large number of alumni and interested public. Mike brings plenty of experience to the class, including being a member of Brooklin Boat Yard’s building crew, where he worked on a number of their large cold-molded sailing vessels. We have chosen Bill Garden’s 12'6" catboat TOM CAT design as the main class project, which should provide students with a close look at much of what you need to know in building laminated wooden boats. Daily discussions will cover material choice, handling, tooling, costs and time, and application techniques. Topics that will receive individual attention include epoxy resins, health and safety, fastening systems, spiling, planking, vacuum-bagging, trimming, and fiberglassing. A small side project will look at repair methods. Mike promises that this will be an energetic week with plenty to do, so come prepared to roll up your sleeves and put in six full days. For anyone contemplating the cold-molded approach for their own boat or, perhaps, to add to their boatbuilding business services, this course will be invaluable. Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. John Harris — August 7-13 The “stitch-and-glue” construction method is the easiest way to build a boat, as tens of thousands of amateur boatbuilders will testify. The approach, which emphasizes the use of epoxy adhesives and strategic fiberglass reinforcement combined with marine plywood, is ideal for first-timers. But like so many things, it’s easy to do but hard to do well. This class is about how to do it well. The stitch-and-glue techniques date back to the advent of modern adhesives in the 1960s. The basic process involves prefabricated plywood parts, which are stitched together with loops of wire, then glued with epoxy to create rigid and seaworthy hulls. The process dispenses with lofting, elaborate molds, and much of the complex joinery of traditional wooden boat building. While the method is beloved of amateurs, in recent decades professionals have seized on this type of construction as a way to create beautiful free-form hull shapes with amazing strength and light weight. While still benefiting from the speed and ease of stitch-andglue boatbuilding, pros deploy sophisticated techniques that result in optimized structures and glittering finishes. As the owner of Chesapeake Light Craft, John Harris has shipped 26,000 stitch-and-glue kits and built hundreds of boats in classes and in his own shop. In this class, students will build an attractive, sophisticated camp-cruiser of Harris’s design called NANASHIP. Water-ballasted, yawl-rigged, self-righting, and unsinkable, this seaworthy 12'6" sailboat offers many opportunities to focus on the finer points of stitchand-glue, including perfectly hand-drawn fillets that look like they were molded in place; fast and clean fiberglass sheathing and reinforcement; the use of advanced materials like peel-ply, high-performance foil construction; and hollow wood-epoxy spars. Whether you’re building your first boat, or looking to learn the advanced tricks that the professionals use to get “showboat” finishes, this one-week class will advance your abilities to work with wood, epoxy, and fiberglass. And the boat we build together will be raffled off at the end of the week to one very lucky student! Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. 22 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S FINE STRIP-PLANKED BOAT CONSTRUCTION A guide to building small boats with wood strips and epoxy. Nick Schade — June 12-18, September 11-17 If you want to build a lightweight, rugged, and beautiful small boat, combining thin strips of wood with epoxy and fiberglass will make a cartoppable, low-maintenance, and gorgeous vessel. Nick Schade has been building strip-built boats for over 25 years. He has written two of the standard texts on the subject, Building Strip-Planked Boats and The Strip-Built Sea Kayak, and his efforts have guided thousands of people through building their own boats using the popular stripplanked method. In this six-day course, students will explore this method of construction while building two very different boat designs created by Nick. In the June course students will build the Mystic River tandem canoe and the microBootlegger recreational kayak. In the September course students will build the Nymph pack canoe and the Night Heron sea kayak. Nymph is a small, extremely lightweight, easy to handle double-paddle canoe. Night Heron is an elegant, high performance sea kayak design that has found a place in the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. The Mystic River 17' tandem canoe is a wonderful example of a classic woodstrip canoe with graceful lines and a beautiful recurved stem. The microBootlegger 17 is an open-cockpit tandem kayak with lines reminiscent of a 1920s mahogany runabout. All four of these boats will provide an excellent overview of the strip-planking process. Students will gain experience in a wide variety of techniques involved in this modern boatbuilding process. Strip-planking small boats uses thin cedar strips reinforced inside and out with fiberglass and epoxy. The finished boat is lightweight, strong, and beautiful. The fiberglass fabric is absolutely transparent and allows the beauty of the wood to shine through. Students will learn how to work with the wood strips and fiberglass fabric and epoxy. With the open canoes we will mount inwales and outwales, breasthooks, thwarts and seats. On the kayaks we will make the deck and hull, join the two together, and make the cockpit, coaming, and hatches. Day One will have students fairing up the forms, shaping the inner stems, fabricating the kayak coaming and canoe backrest, and getting a start on the planking. Tuesday will have us continuing with planking, installing stems, and working on hatches and gunwales. Before you know it, we will start sanding the hull and deck and applying fiberglass on Wednesday. On Thursday, the kayak and canoe will come off the forms. After fairing the insides of the hulls, carbon-Kevlar hybrid fabric will be laid-up on the interiors. Come Friday, students will start finishing up the canoe while the hull and deck of the kayak are joined together. The class wraps up midday on Saturday with final fiberglass work and completion of details on both boats. Throughout this course, Nick will take time to discuss the many variations on the stripbuilding process that students can use on their own boatbuilding projects. After a week of fine craftsmanship and fun, we’ll step back to admire two stunning boats that will raffled off to two lucky students. Mystic River Tandem microBootlegger Nymph Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Night Heron C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 23 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING TRADITIONAL WOOD-AND-CANVAS CANOE CONSTRUCTION The art of the canoe with a master builder. BUILDING A NORDIC PRAM The traditional approach to lapstrake construction. F. Jay Smith — July 24-30 Rollin Thurlow — July 10-16 Cedar-and-canvas canoes are coming back. Not only are they wonderful to look at and a pleasure to build, they also perform quite well. This construction method permits a clean, sharp entry and a subtle shape that is difficult to achieve with aluminum or fiberglass. The century-old technology of clenching thin planks to steamed frames and then covering the hull with a tight canvas skin yields an amazingly flexible and rugged craft. And the ingenious forms developed years ago by companies like Old Town and E.M. White make the building process relatively quick and easy. Rollin Thurlow has been building and using, writing and teaching about wood-and-canvas canoes for years. In this course, he will lead you through the complete construction of one traditional Maine Guide canoe, the 17' Atkinson Traveler, and one traditional Maine fishing canoe, the 15' square-sterned Kingfisher. You’ll start by steambending the clear cedar ribs onto the two forms. While they cure, you’ll make up ash thwarts and prebend the stems and gunwales. Then comes the fitting and fastening of the planking— a good chance to practice hand-tool skills in a very satisfying process. Working this thin cedar is a real pleasure. At week’s end, you will canvas the canoes in the traditional manner, using the “envelope” method, stretching the canvas drum-tight, tacking it in place, and filling the outside weave with a special compound. Between steps, there may be time to carve your own paddle—a fascinating project unto itself. Three students will leave this course with a new canoe nearly ready for paint and varnish; all will leave with knowledge and experience of what is probably the most indigenous of American boatbuilding techniques, a process directly evolved from birchbark canoes and still very much alive today. Tuition: $800 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. The Norwegian pram was the workhorse between ship and quay along the coast of Norway for centuries. Norwegian designs, in this case the pram, are also well ensconced on the rigorous proving grounds of the North Atlantic. The pram was a source of inspiration for many of this country’s most highly regarded designers, including L. Francis Herreshoff. In this course, students will build the classic “ferry” or pram in the traditional manner of “hand and eye” construction – that is, without a set of molds. No lofting or spiling is required. Building “by eye” has been the cornerstone of Nordic lapstrake construction since the Viking age. You’ll quickly see that the Norwegian tradition for building prams is so simple and elegant that this really makes the pram what it is. Classic construction of the pram is lapstrake using cedar planking, copper rivets, and treenails, and students will rely on a few basic hand tools. Jay will give considerable attention and time to proper choosing, tuning, sharpening, and use of traditional edge tools without a reliance on power tools. Economy and simplicity will be wedded with durability and function. From beginning to end, students will play a major role in the daily decisions with regards to the construction of the pram. If you’re imagining a week of nonstop, hands-on activity, you have the right idea. Come prepared to work, not watch! Jay Smith will provide the advice and inspiration; you’ll supply the energy, the newfound abilities, and the confidence. So come join us for a delightful week making shavings and building boats in the Norwegian tradition. Tuition: $850 Note: This is a special seven-day course that begins on Sunday morning and ends the following Saturday afternoon. 24 2015 WoodenBoat School 2016 C O U R S E S THE ART OF WOODCUTS WOODCARVING An intriguing woodworking project for the beginning or intermediate woodworker. Introductory techniques for first-time carvers. Reed Hayden — July 17-23 Gene Shaw — August 21-27 Woodcut printmaking is a relief-printing artistic technique in which an image is carved into the surface of a block of wood, with the printing parts remaining level with the surface while the non-printing parts are removed, typically with gouges, knives, and chisels. It was created in about 1400 in Europe and, throughout time, has gone through various levels of technical and artistic development among woodworkers around the world. Gene Shaw, artist and master woodworker, has designed this captivating course for individuals interested in learning how to create black-and-white woodcut prints. On Monday morning, Gene will introduce students to the proper use of carving tools, methods to sharpen them, and how to make a straight knife from a simple hacksaw blade. During the week, work will be done on both soft and hard woods, plywood, and linoleum blocks. There will also be an introduction to various papers, inks, and brayers. Printing will be by hand using a traditional Japanese barren (of several types) or a bamboo paddle, the instructors favorite. A trip to a nearby gallery that exhibits woodcuts and wood engravings by a number of local artists will be planned early in the week to expose students to a wide variety of styles. A visit to a handmade paper gallery will include a demonstration and a chance for each student to make a couple sheets of paper. After the paper dries, students will use it to print their own woodcuts. Anyone interested in woodcarving and woodworking will be fascinated by this week with Gene, a very talented craftsman and artist. By the end of the course, everyone will have achieved a solid foundation for designing and producing high-quality woodcut prints in a small space using quality tools and materials. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $45 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Professional boatbuilder and woodcarver Reed Hayden offers students new to carving a stimulating look at decorative woodcarving during this week. Whether you are a casual hobbyist or a devoted craftsman, this week promises each participant very satisfying results using basic carving tools and woodworking skills. Reed will introduce a variety of carving and woodworking techniques including design and drawing, incised lettering, low and high relief carving, overlays, three-dimensional projects, router work, and gold-leafing. All of these procedures will enable students to produce elaborate carvings as well as integrate them into marine and residential applications. One of the first projects will be a motif sign. Coupled with this exercise will be a decorative carved shell. Both of these projects will help the student develop a “good eye” toward visualizing various shapes and forms. As one’s carving skill and experience develop, so does that “good eye.” Having brought the motif sign to a point where it is ready for paint, students will be encouraged to explore other techniques. These may be incorporated into a project of their own design. Reed will provide plenty of examples of his own work and others for reference. If you’ve ever had the ambition to design and carve, this week might be just what you’ve been waiting for. Complete with design advice, tool and wood selection, carving instruction, and finishing techniques, Reed’s helpful course should provide immense satisfaction and inspiration. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $90 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. ADVANCED WOODCARVING NEW Ambitious projects designed to challenge experienced carvers. Reed Hayden — August 7-13 This week is designed for those individuals who have previously taken Reed’s introductory course or a similar woodcarving course and have gained considerable carving experience. The main class project will be a 2’ stylized dolphin of Reed’s design. Three-dimensional carving, profile relief carving, carving a logo, rope border, small figurehead, or stern eagle are some examples of the work that will be covered. Students are also encouraged to bring any of their own carving projects they may want to work on. Tuition: $750 | Materials: determined based on project Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 25 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING BUILDING HALF MODELS SCRATCH MODELMAKING The practice and pleasure of carving half models. Ship model building for beginners to advanced as taught by a master. Eric Dow — September 25-October 1 Steve Rogers — August 28-September 3 There are few products of woodworking as exciting to behold as a well-done half model. It reveals the character of the boat it represents at a scale that can be admired at a glance and appreciated for a lifetime. Half models are a wonderful way to remember a boat of the past or dream about one of the future. Half-hull modeling is both a practical way to enjoy woodworking with limited time and tools, and a tangible way to grasp the intricacies of boat plans. To carve for yourself and mount a half model is to forever capture a design in three dimensions. We have built models of ships throughout history for many reasons, but the simplest is that it brings great pleasure. It doesn’t matter if your interests lie in a Beetle Cat or the BONHOMME RICHARD, you can learn how these boats were constructed and build a model yourself. Whether your interest is ethnological, historical, technical, or just curiosity, modelmaking will prove to be fascinating and an excellent learning exercise. Steve’s course has been designed to appeal to the advanced builder, as well as the beginner. First-time modelmakers will be able to work on a purposefully chosen traditional small craft that not only teaches model building, but the techniques of full-sized traditional wooden boat construction. You will touch on all the basics of scratch modelmaking, along with advanced procedures and finishing techniques. Advanced students will be able to work on a model of their choice or choose from a large selection of master molds for traditional roundbottomed sailing and working craft. Each master mold builds a specific boat in a specific scale, using plank-on-frame construction. The necessary plans for each boat will be provided by the instructor. All of these boats are traditional, historic, interesting, and challenging. Since there is only one building master for each boat, they will be reserved on a first-come, first-serve basis after the student registers for the course and contacts Steve. A complete list of the molds is available from the instructor by e-mailing him at candletwo@comcast.net. In this week of hands-on participation, you’ll explore the tools, techniques, and materials for halfmodel making from lines plans; the woods; the glues; the tools; the paints and varnishes. Students will have access to the extensive model plans collection at the WoodenBoat Store. Eric also encourages folks to bring lines drawings of their own boat or favorite designs. Besides creating one or two models of your own, you will learn a lot about boat plans and gain a feeling for the long tradition of half-hull modeling—and go home with the ability to build more on your own. Some of the available building master molds include: RAINBOW, a Stonington dragger in ¾" scale Barnegat Bay sneakbox in 1" scale Stone Horse in ¾" scale Delaware Ducker in 1" scale GEORGE W. BEALE, a menhaden steamer in 3/8" or ¼" scale Beals Island lobsterboat in ¾" scale ADA C. LORE, Delaware Bay oyster schooner in ¼"scale Cape Cod catboat in ½" scale Herreshoff 12½ in 1" scale Wianno Senior in ½" scale EDNA LOCKWOOD, a bugeye in 3/8" scale VICTORY CHIMES (Edwin & Maude), a three-masted ram schooner in ¼" scale Tuition: $750 | Materials: $127 wood and one set of plans Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. At the end of the week, you will have an excellent foundation to build on and quite a bit of valuable information to take home. You will have some of the skill and knowledge necessary, but more important, all of the enthusiasm you can imagine to pursue the hobby of a lifetime! Tuition: $750 | Materials: $125 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 26 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S BUILD A FRIENDSHIP SLOOP MODEL VINTAGE POND YACHTS – PART II NEW Choose from several different designs including Mystic Seaport’s ESTELLA A, WoodenBoat School’s BELFORD GRAY, and others. Mark Wilkins — July 3-9 Join professional ship model maker Mark Wilkins for a captivating week learning how to create a 3/8" = 1" scale model of this celebrated and iconic sloop that has become synonymous with Maine’s maritime past. Further work toward completion of your previously started pond yacht. Thom Mclaughlin — July 24-30 This week is intended to provide the environment and guidance for you to return to Brooklin and resume work on the pond yacht you started here at WoodenBoat School. Students from Thom’s building courses from the past 15 years working on the 36" Acadia or Brooklin hulls, or any of the 50" Vintage Marblehead pond boats Naskeag, Peony, Rusticator, Iduna or Norumbega are invited to participate. Construction methods and tasks covered in this course will include epoxy sheathing of the hull, completion of the fin and rudder, fabrication of internal support beams, decking, electronics installation, sail control device, manufacture of mast and booms, mounting fittings, and final rigging. Perhaps not every class member will accomplish all of these steps, but at a minimum you will depart this week inspired with specific production knowledge and with the confidence to finish your model at home and get it out sailing. The course materials fee will cover the cost of the wooden materials for all of your boat’s deckbeams, mast, booms, deck, and electronic board. With Thom’s assistance and list of resources, students will be expected to bring along the electronics, appropriate fittings, and rigging items. As always with our pond yacht courses, students will have the opportunity to sail completed pond yachts on our waterfront or in local ponds throughout the week. Tuition: $800 | Materials: $160 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. This course is designed for those who are looking to build a full model, and it should appeal to the advanced builder as well as the intermediate. You’ll need to be familiar with lift-style construction (such as half models). Mark will touch on some of the basics of scratch modelmaking, along with advanced techniques and some finishing methods. He’ll cover assembly and shaping of the hull, decks and cockpit soles, cabins, sparmaking, and rigging. In addition, students will be exposed to different approaches to making their own fittings and deck structures. More-experienced students will have the opportunity to embellish their model by adding a hollowed-out cuddy cabin or even parts of the hull. At the end of this week, students will be very familiar with all aspects of the Friendship sloop, as well as having an excellent foundation for building future models. And you will have spent a week with a very gifted artist and modelmaker who is more than willing to share all that he has learned in the trade. Tuition: $800 | Materials: $125 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 27 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING NEW BUILD YOUR OWN WILLOW/QUICKBEAM SEA KAYAK BUILD YOUR OWN GREENLAND SKIN-ON-FRAME KAYAK Two easy-to-build, all-purpose stitch-and-glue sea kayaks. A busy week that results in a wonderfully simple and affordable boatbuilding project, ideal to do with a partner. Bill Thomas — September 18-24 NEW Mark Kaufman — June 19-25 Boatbuilder and designer Bill Thomas has spent the last 35 years working with wood; the last 20 years paddling and building boats. He’s been teaching boatbuilding classes since 1998. During this time he has tried out numerous kayaks, each of them someone’s idea of the perfect boat. Like many folks who spend considerable time on the water, Bill started dreaming, drawing, engineering, and constructing designs and models of his own and eventually arrived at the Willow sea kayak, a great boat to paddle. Students will have the choice of building the 17'7" Willow sea kayak or another of Bill’s designs - the 17'9" Quickbeam. Willow is suitable for paddlers and gear loads up to 300 lbs.; Quickbeam will accommodate taller paddlers and carry larger payloads. Feel free to contact Bill if you have any questions about the boats. Both are built by the stitch-and-glue method, using 4mm okoume plywood and epoxy. The kayaks feature cambered decks for strength, ease of construction, and beauty. Laminated deckbeams grace both interiors. The hulls are sheathed inside and out with 6-oz fiberglass cloth. Each boat has a keyhole cockpit sized to take a standard sprayskirt. Adjustable footbraces and proper seats come with the kits. There are bulkheads and deck hatches, with the option of a day hatch. The weight of the finished boats is approximately 45 lbs., much lighter than similar fiberglass or plastic kayaks. Bill has introduced enough rocker to allow control in big seas and surf, with a long waterline providing straight tracking. Hard chines assure easy, safe turns. A rudder will not be needed but can be added if the builder would like to have one. In touring kayaks such as these, Bill feels it is ease of control and stability that guarantee safe and enjoyable paddling. Boats with low wetted surfaces may have a high topend speed, but keeping them upright and tracking straight can make for a long day. You don’t necessarily need to be an accomplished woodworker to build a kayak. With a few basic carpentry skills, you’ll be up for the challenge. With a little patience, lots of enthusiasm, and expert guidance from your instructor, you can build a beautiful boat. Tuition: $800 (partner: $400) Materials: Willow Kit– $1,414 | Quickbeam Kits – $1,440 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. 28 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com During this rewarding seven-day course, students will have the opportunity to build an elegant replica of a traditional West Greenlandstyle skin-on-frame kayak based on museum surveys. Participants will have a choice of building one of two different Greenland kayaks. These kayaks have a flat, low aft deck with gracefully upsweeping ends, a pronounced V-bottom, and hard chines. Participants will have a choice of building a reproduction of the Fram Museum #176 kayak from 1888 which measures 17'10" in length by 20½" in width, or a replica of the Ken Taylor Illorsuit kayak from 1959 which is 16'6" long x 20¾" wide. Both of these kayaks can be fitted with the standard egg-shaped cockpit rim (16" x 23") or the longer egg-shaped cockpit (16" x 31"). Minor sizing adjustments will allow the builder to custom-fit both of these kayaks. Traditional construction techniques will be blended with modern materials to create a kayak that is fast and light. The finished kayaks, constructed from Western red cedar with steambent white ash ribs and a stitched-on nylon skin, will weigh between 25 and 28 lbs. Instructor Mark Kaufman will create a materials/kit package that includes pre-machined and mortised Western red cedar gunwales, stringers, deckbeams, stems, white ash rib stock, laminated white ash masik deckbeams, finished cockpit rim, seat slats, latigo leather deck lines, nylon skin, urethane coating, and a partially pre-shaped Western red cedar paddle blank. Skills Mark will teach include procedures for accurately replicating the original profile of the kayak from line drawings, layout procedures, mortise-and-tenon construction, steam-bending, hull shaping, sewing on a skin, and carving a Greenland paddle. Mark promises a fun, fast-paced, intensive week as each kayak takes shape. Students can expect some long, very productive days so that each day’s goals can be met, and by the end of the week each participant will have a stunning kayak that is ready for the water. Tuition: $850 (partner: $400) Materials: 16'6" West Greenland Kayak – $1,335 17'10" West Greenland Kayak – $1,387 Note: This is a special seven-day course that begins on Sunday morning and ends the following Saturday afternoon. | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S BUILD YOUR OWN STITCH-AND-GLUE KAYAK Versatile, durable, easy-to-build designs for both the recreational and serious kayaker. Eric Schade — July 3-9 Is there a perfect kayak? You can’t have all in one kayak. For speed, you want a hull that is long and narrow. For comfort, you want broad beam and a big cockpit. For maneuverability and ease of handling, a short kayak is desirable. Artful compromise is the mark of good design, and Eric Schade has a number of beautiful kayaks that may just fit your bill. Students who register for this very popular course will be able to choose among the following designs: the 14' 6" Shearwater Sport, the Shearwater 16 or 17, and the Wood Duck series. The Shearwater Sport is Eric’s most versatile traditional kayak. It offers the perfect compromise of light weight, sharp West Greenland handling, effortless cruising speed, and an extra-large cockpit for comfort. And it’s more than fast enough to accelerate onto waves for surfing. The Shearwater 16 and 17 are great-looking, performance oriented touring kayaks, perfectly suited to the experienced paddler. The Shearwater designs feature a cambered deck and a West Greenland-style hard-chined hull. The Wood Duck 10, 12, and 14 are all compact, easy-to-launch, recreational kayaks built for comfort and speed. With big cockpits and ample stability, they are ideal for exploring inland waterways, fishing, or just having fun with your kids. All of these designs are built from a Chesapeake Light Craft kit using the most advanced wood-composite techniques. Stitch-and-glue plywood construction of computer-cut panels makes the assembly very user-friendly. The structure is carefully and neatly reinforced with epoxy and fiberglass for use on rocky beaches. During construction, Eric will explain options for outfitting the boats with seats, backrests, foot braces, hatch covers, and deck rigging. At the end of the week each kayak will be ready for sanding and paint or varnish. On Saturday afternoon you’ll be taking home a beautiful, new boat along with plenty of new skills and shop tips you can use on many future wood-epoxy composite boatbuilding projects. Tuition: $800 (partner: $400) Materials: Shearwater: Sport – $1,318 16' – $1,318 17' – $1,318 Wood Duck: 10' – $1,213 12' – $1,213 14' – $1,265 Double – $1,318 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Wood Ducks Shearwater Sport Shearwater 17' C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 29 BOATBUILDING &WOODWORKING BUILD YOUR OWN ANNAPOLIS WHERRY BUILD YOUR OWN NORTHEASTER DORY Experience the ultimate in a recreational, open-water pulling boat. The elegance of a traditional workboat in stitch-and-glue construction. Geoff Kerr — June 12-18 George Krewson — September 4-10 In this six-day course, each student will build an Annapolis Wherry from a Chesapeake Light Craft kit. The Wherry is designed after the graceful 19th century livery boats used on the River Thames. She is, however, lighter and slimmer, combining breathtaking grace with thoroughbred performance under oars. Solid stability, sea-kindly lines, a buoyant bow, and ample flare make the Wherry a natural choice for rowing in choppy water. It is designed around a sliding seat and, in the hands of an experienced oarsman, cruising speeds easily reach 5 to 7 knots. The Annapolis Wherry (see Small Boats 2007) may be unsurpassed as a rowing trainer, exercise boat, long-distance cruiser, or open-water racer. The boat is made of 6mm okoume plywood with 9mm okoume plywood frames, thwarts and flotation tanks. Outwales, breasthook and quarter knees are solid mahogany. The Annapolis Wherry is built using the LapStitch™ construction technique. Traditional lapstrake boatbuilding employs molds over which planks are nailed or riveted together. By using precision-rabbeted, computer-cut plank shapes and frames which double as molds, a CLC Lapstitch™ kit boat is wired together just like a stitch-andglue kayak. When glued with small epoxy fillets, the planks create a stiff and strong hull that will last for fifty years. A dory is a lot of boat for the money, which explains the enduring popularity of the type over the last 150 years or more. Graceful roundsided lapstrake dories like this 17footer were once the primary recreational craft on the New England coast. In this six-day course, you’ll assemble a faithful reproduction in just a week, using marine plywood and epoxy. Capacity is three adults, and you can add a sailing rig if you choose. Enjoy fast rowing with one oarsman or two, or add a slidingseat unit. This very popular John C. Harris design uses Chesapeake Light Craft’s patented LapStitch™ process, which yields boats of 19th-century appearance but 21st-century weight and durability. More than 11 years after the first CLC LapStitch™ models, the Northeaster Dory enjoys numerous refinements for faster, easier, prettier, and stronger construction. Just as in the original dories, we begin with a sturdy flat bottom, erect frames, and then add planks in a single day. A handsome timber rail adds stiffness, and the structure is further reinforced with epoxy and fiberglass. Solid timber seats feature alternating Spanish cedar and cypress strips, which will look great under varnish. All plywood is marine-grade okoume. The impulse for this new design was the desire for a fast but safe and dry rowing craft, for exercise during Maryland winters on the creeks near John’s Kent Island home. Simple and sturdy, the dory can live in or out of the water, ready to go in any condition of wind and wave. Dories are great load-carriers, and the Northeaster Dory is no exception. The maximum payload is 800 lbs. By the end of this exciting week, hulls will be assembled, ready for sanding and painting at home. If there’s time during the class, those who elect to add the traditional dory sailing rig may get started on that option. Come join John, a leading designer in the wooden boat community, and experience the satisfaction of building your very own beautiful dory. The pre-cut hull planks are scarfed together, and then connected to the frames and each other with copper wire stitches, then fixed in place with epoxy fillets. Next come thwarts, knees, wales, and air tanks. Fiberglass cloth on the bottom, inside and out, provides abrasion resistance. The instructor will also discuss the proper way to sand and paint or varnish your boat, and will explain sliding seat installation. At the end of an absorbing week, students will have learned about stitch-and-glue basics, including epoxy work, fiberglassing, and laminating. Building a LapStitch™ boat is easy, but assembling an 18' boat in a week means a tight schedule, and you’ll be spending plenty of time in our shop. It will be an exciting week with an outstanding boatbuilder to guide you through your project! Tuition: $800 (partner: $400) | Materials: (single) – $1,582 (tandem) – $1,687 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. 30 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com Tuition: $800 (partner: $400) Materials: Row – $1,687 Sail (sloop) – $3,111 Sail (lug) – $2,952 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. | (207) 359-4651 RELATED CRAFTS TRADITIONAL AND MODERN OAR MAKING NEW Creating beautiful oars that turn minimum effort into maximum power. Clint Chase — August 14-20 There are few projects more thoroughly satisfying than oar making. Making your own oars engages all the senses—the sweet smell of spruce, the feel of the plane peeling off a perfect shaving, and the sound of hand tools at work. The “tricks of the trade” that make crafting an oar truly enjoyable are not easy to pick up on your own, but will be generously shared in this course. After a week in a pile of shavings, you will leave this course with a new knowledge about oars and rowing, along with your very own set of beautiful oars. Clint Chase brings years of experience as a boatbuilder and oar maker, and has designed this exciting course to guide students through the fundamental steps of making and finishing oars: milling the blanks, choosing a pattern, tapering, rounding the looms, shaping the blades, and tuning the oar. Clint will teach his techniques for counterbalancing each set of oars with cast-lead “slugs.” Each student will choose the spruce oars they want to create. Some will choose flat-blades or spoons. Others can choose laminated-plywood blades or carbon fiber. Whether you choose traditional or modern, you will learn the crucial methods and knowledge required to craft a lightweight, strong, and balanced oar, making rowing a great pleasure. On Saturday morning, Clint will teach you how to leather your oars and make the collars, and you will go home with a fancy leathering kit, finishing instructions, and resources for further learning. Most of all, you will head home with a beautiful, functional set of oars to prove it. THE ARTS OF THE SAILOR NEW Practical marlinespike and hand-sewn canvas projects for small boats. Eric Stockinger — August 7-13 Hervey Garrett Smith’s classic 1953 book, The Arts of the Sailor, is the inspiration for Eric Stockinger’s introductory course on traditional rope and canvas work. While many people have an interest in learning how to sew canvas with a sailmaker’s palm and needle, there is little practical instruction available, and even less information on where to find good, modern substitutes for tools and materials once used by sailors aboard tall ship. Here’s a great opportunity to gain some of those skills and plenty of information on knots and ropework, as well. The week will begin with the fundamentals of palm and needle sewing, discussions of tools and various materials, and basic marlinespike rope work. Students will work on several projects throughout the course. Everyone will make their own ditty bag with a fancy marlinespike handle and a canvas bucket made with wooden mast hoops, brass thimbles, and copper tacks. Most “fancy” knots have humble and practical origins aboard ships. Eric will show you how to create useful items that will look good and feel at home on a small wooden boat. Students will make a rope fender, a Monkey’s Fist heaving line, and other small undertakings such as lanyards, mats, Turk’s Heads, bracelets, etc. Eric will also discuss ropestropped blocks, as well as other options for rigging small boats. At the conclusion of the week, each student will come away with a good set of basic tools, the knowledge to use them, and, hopefully, the inspiration to take on other projects for their boat or around the house. Tuition: $750 Materials: $105 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Tuition: $800 Materials: $106 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 31 RELATED CRAFTS MARINE PAINTING AND VARNISHING BRONZE CASTING FOR BOATBUILDERS The art and science of finishing prep work to final coat. The process of patternmaking and casting custom hardware. Gary Lowell — August 21-27 Mike Saari — August 7-13 Painting a boat is not simply a matter of opening a can and dipping in a brush—especially if you want the job to look decent and last well. Marine finishing requires a lot of careful preparation, good technique, and an understanding of a bewildering array of products. Gary Lowell packs a great deal into this one-week course. He starts with the preparation of the surface—the key to a fine finish. Too many good coats of paint do little more than emphasize a rough hull, and too many fine hulls have been damaged by the misuse of power tools. You’ll work with a variety of grinders, sanders, and scrapers on a variety of wooden boat parts. You’ll develop the feel needed to make these tools work for you, not against you. You’ll examine the whole smorgasbord of currently available finishing products—strippers and primers, additives and thinners, enamels and epoxies, antifouling paints (both traditional and high-tech), varnishes and oils, etc. You’ll discuss how to pick the right product, and how to apply it. You’ll learn about different types of brushes and rollers, and the techniques of masking and cutting in, striking a boot top, and keeping a wet edge. And you’ll practice how to artfully coordinate the tools and techniques as you paint and varnish the boats on hand, or possibly your own. You’ll also learn how to protect yourself from the potentially harmful dusts and chemicals involved in this work. Gary will show you how to get a beautiful finish and stay healthy at the same time. This is a very worthwhile course for boat owners or anyone else who would like to make a good boat shine. If you are a professional or amateur boatbuilder, in a small or large operation, working on traditional or modern craft, power or sail, wood or even plastic, one thing you always have to consider is the matter of hardware. Boatbuilders are often in need of special bronze fittings that are either not available off the shelf or must be cast at great expense. This course with Mike Saari will introduce the basics of patternmaking, sand molding, and bronze casting. Students will learn how to build an inexpensive furnace and all the tools necessary to cast hot metal using sandcasting technology. Even if you don’t want to do your own casting, you will learn enough about design and patternmaking to minimize the cost of having a commercial foundry make your castings. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. In this hands-on, introductory course, each student will make a pattern of his or her design to cast original hardware from start to finish. Anyone who has ever lost an oarlock will appreciate learning how to make copies of original hardware. Students will learn foundry safety practices and resources for supplies. Last, but not least, students will learn how to finish off their castings. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $264 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 32 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S METALWORKING FOR THE BOATBUILDER AND WOODWORKER BLACKSMITHING FOR BOATBUILDERS A survey of tools and techniques. An introduction to traditionally forged ironwork for marine projects. Erica Moody — August 28-September 3 Doug Wilson — June 12-18 This highly useful course designed by professional metalworker Erica Moody will provide students the unique opportunity to review and practice various metalworking techniques geared toward assisting the professional or amateur woodworker and/or boatbuilder in fabricating or repairing metal parts for their projects. We will start by looking at the various types of metal used in the marine environment and their properties and uses, and review the tools and techniques to work them in simple ways without the need to set up an expensive, fancy metal shop at home. Focus all week will be on working mostly with different bronze alloys and copper. Techniques covered will include drilling and tapping, forming, silver brazing, soldering, and finishing methods, as well as heat treating for toolmaking. Suggested class projects will be to start and finish your own bronze and tool-steel scribe/marking tool to use in class, and a pair of custom bronze chart dividers, and/or a small bevel gauge. Students can also bring parts to repair or fabricate, or just practice skills. No previous experience is necessary. This week with a very talented metalworker will give each individual the opportunity to clarify metalworking questions and start building the skills and confidence that brings satisfaction from being able to repair, replace, or customize your own deck and hull fittings, cabin hardware, tools, or beautiful accessories and gizmos. It will be a great way to get started! The time-honored craft of blacksmithing is alive and well. This captivating, five-day course, taught by master craftsman Doug Wilson, will expose students to the principles of the craft, focusing on hot-forging steel. Students will learn fundamental handforging processes and then have the opportunity to create useful items. No power tools will interfere with your understanding of the forging process. Do you need a special tool or would you like to restore an old one? Can it be fixed, or will you need to replace the original? How about steel hardware? The lessons learned here will apply to both ornamental forge work and tool making with high-carbon steels. The mysteries of hardening and tempering will be addressed, and students will learn to properly heat high-carbon tools of their own making. As students become more confident in basic blacksmithing skills during this course, they’ll move on to designing and making individual pieces to take home. The promise of success in this course will be limited only by the talent and enterprise of the beginner, and not by the lack of expensive or elaborate equipment and materials. And as students find themselves becoming more confident in their blacksmithing skills over time, they will discover, with pleasure and satisfaction, that they have become their own teacher. Tuition: $800 | Materials: $215 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. This course will be held at Doug Wilson’s shop located in Little Deer Isle, a short drive from WoodenBoat School. Tuition: $750 | Materials: $132 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 33 RELATED CRAFTS MAKING FRIENDS WITH YOUR MARINE DIESEL ENGINE INTRODUCTION TO CANVASWORK An introduction to evaluating small marine diesels. Project design, tools of the trade, industrial machine stitching, materials, and lots more. Jon Bardo — June 5-11, September 25-October 1 Realizing that the diesel engine powers the world, we are offering this course to provide you an indepth view of the small marine diesel engine. Despite their apparent complexity, diesels are quite simple machines that can be given an almost indefinite lifespan by painless preventive maintenance techniques and proper operation. Jon Bardo has had over 30 years of experience troubleshooting and rebuilding diesel engines from 16 hp to 2,400 hp, and has tailored a course that will meet the immediate needs of each student and his/her own engine. During the week, students will be presented with a wide array of hands-on demonstrations and lectures designed to cover the care and repair of the small marine engine. Fuel systems, cooling systems, lubricating systems, electrical systems, exhaust and intake systems, and more will all be explored and thoroughly explained in layman’s terms. Mechanical problems are almost always the result of some human weakness or deficiency, and Jon will create a “survival guide” for owners of diesel-powered watercraft to properly maintain their own power plants and extend the lives of the engines. You’ll get plenty of grease under your fingernails in this course as your instructor details correct operation of your engine from start-up to shutdown. Students will have a great chance to find out what to look for in troubleshooting common problems, and which repairs you can do yourself and which should be done by a professional mechanic. And if you should need repairs, Jon will teach you how to find and deal with a mechanic, and how to tell if you’re being taken care of or being taken for a ride. If you are one of the many boat owners who are interested in improving your understanding and ability and gaining confidence in dealing with your motor, then come join Jon Bardo for a fascinating look at the marine diesel. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. A copy of Peter Compton’s book Troubleshooting Marine Diesels will be provided to each student at the start of the course. 34 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com Ann Brayton — September 11-17 Ann has been running her very successful canvaswork business out of the family barn in Brooklin, Maine, for close to 20 years. Her reputation as an exceptional canvasworker (specializing in custom interior and exterior boat cushions) leads many of the area boatyards and boat owners to her doorstep each year with orders in hand. We are fortunate to be able to offer students the chance to work alongside Ann learning the basics of this valuable skill. Canvaswork is one of those traditional crafts that have been part of the boat owner’s world for centuries. Sails, protective covers, seabags, even clothes were once made out of canvas by a ship’s bosun. These days, the availability of new synthetic fibers has drastically changed the landscape for those producing marine canvaswork, though many techniques remain the same. Students in this course will learn the ins and outs of working with a wide range of these materials that are on the market today. Students will begin the week learning to use the industrial sewing machines we’ll have on hand for this course, followed by an introduction to all the various fabrics and foams available to the canvasworker. We’ll then look at the other tools of the trade, and learn how to install grommets, zippers, and other fastenings. The course will cover how to make various styles of boat cushions ranging from simple cockpit cushions to beveled V-berth cushions, and as time permits, students will learn to make other useful canvas projects, such as bags, tool rolls, etc. Everyone will discover the step-by-step procedures in designing a project, choosing materials, and proper cutting and assembling to produce quality work that you will take pride in. Most canvaswork projects involve simple sewing techniques that are easy to master with plenty of practice, even if you’ve never done any sewing before. Students are welcome to bring their own projects to work on during class but must discuss their ideas with Ann prior to this week. There is much satisfaction to be achieved from producing your own canvaswork, not to mention the financial savings involved. After this week in the loft with Ann, you’ll head home with confidence, a new awareness in working with fabrics, a completed project or two, and a seabag full of new skills. Tuition: $800 | Materials: $50 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. This course takes place at the Center Harbor Sail Loft in Brooklin. | (207) 359-4651 2016 C O U R S E S PAINTING THE DOWNEAST COAST IN OILS SEASCAPE/LANDSCAPE IN WATERCOLOR A comprehensive approach to understanding how to see and paint the Maine coast. Capturing nature’s inspiration in watercolors. Jerry Rose — July 24-30 You are invited to join local artist Jerry Rose for a fascinating week painting in oil. Each day will find students working both in group settings and out on their own. Jerry will cover a variety of topics, including seeing and composing a sketch, tools and techniques to achieve wet-on-wet oil painting, mixing paint and brush techniques, capturing morning light, the elements of composing and arranging the visual elements to form a better design, experimenting with design and technique, and lots more. Morning and afternoon demonstrations and discussions by the instructor will cover a different facet of landscape painting/sketching and help students understand the process of painting in oils. Following Jerry’s presentations, students will work on their daily assignments followed by a class critique. The week promises to be challenging, fun, and inspiring. Previous painting experience is recommended. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. Paul Trowbridge — July 10-16 The inspiration for this course with artist Paul Trowbridge will be nearby landscapes, tidal zones, the ocean, boats, and people. This class will be flexible enough to accommodate all levels of watercolor experience, allowing for group instruction, demonstrations, critiques, lots of individual instruction and feedback. There is nothing like setting aside the time to paint at WoodenBoat School’s campus on Eggemoggin Reach to expand your skills and generate excitement about your work. With the support of fellow classmates and instructor, you should experience greater confidence in your work, learning to recognize your own strengths and make the most of them. The schedule will allow students to put in the hours needed to make progress, and to address the question, “How can we make paintings that capture our subject in a fresh, direct, and inspirational way?” You will become familiar with (or review) negative- and positiveshape painting; painting in puddles; using the white of the paper as a design element; as well as other general concepts of drawing and painting, including composition and color theory. This class is for people who love the visual excitement of nature and want to capture some of that thrill in watercolor painting. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. MAINE COAST: WATERCOLOR TRAVEL SKETCHBOOK NEW Maritime details near and far. Amy Hosa — September 4-10 Fill a sketchbook with colorful memories while learning how to draw quick studies that capture the essence of coastal Maine. Each day we travel to new locations – boatyards, harbors, lobster wharves, quaint towns, islands, fields of wildflowers, and the rocky shore. Drawing from life not only gives you time to discover details, but also creates a sensory record of that place and time. The goal of this course is for you to master the art of “quick-study color sketches.” Instruction includes pen and pencil techniques; how to draw architecture and trees, the shoreline, piers, boats and people; composition; perspective; and watercolor. Amy offers multiple step-by-step demonstrations each day that address a range of skills from basic drawing, composition, and color for the novice to more challenging techniques for the advanced. Daily group and individual critiques will nurture the novice and challenge the experienced artist. All levels of experience ae welcome. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 35 RELATED CRAFTS MARINE PHOTOGRAPHY I & II NEW Alumni WorkWeeks Techniques and tips for getting that perfect digital shot on and around the water. Jon Strout and Jane Peterson — September 4-10 (Marine Photography I) September 11-17 (Marine Photography II) Photographing on, in, or around the ocean is very challenging. The coast of Maine is certainly no exception. Lighting conditions are constantly changing, offering unique opportunities for the most experienced photographer. How to make the most of these opportunities is the test every photographer faces. As we’ve seen, digital cameras have changed the world of photography overnight. Well-known photographer Jon Strout and his able assistant Jane Peterson come to our campus to offer two unique photography courses. MARINE PHOTOGRAPHY I will be an introduction to camera technique, the chemistry of light, and capturing firstclass images. During the week, Jon will conduct daily sessions in shooting with available light. By using proper exposures and correct shutter speeds, you will learn the techniques needed to capture a multitude of conditions. MARINE PHOTOGRAPHY II is for the photographer who has already taken an introductory course, or is equivalently prepared and looking for the challenge of improving his or her style and technique, and moving on to the next level. Individual and group assignments will be given, and are designed to further develop one’s ability to see and create an image of what you experience and feel. Jon and Jane will offer advanced work on exposure and metering, lens selection and use, the three-dimensional photograph, the element of time, and, of course, composition. Students will use their own digital cameras, whether point-and-shoot models or SLR. With the convenience of digital photography, the instructors will critique students’ work daily. Each morning each class will meet in our Boathouse to review the previous day’s work and prepare to cover new ground. But the real essence of both courses will be taking pictures with your instructors and on your own. The WoodenBoat School waterfront and boatbuilding shops, the many harbors and local boatyards, the town of Brooklin, and nearby Acadia National Park will provide a wealth of photogenic material. The challenge and pleasure of both of these weeks will be to capture it all on film! MAY 22–28 / MAY 29–JUNE 4 Each year we traditionally mark the opening of our summer season with two weeks in the spring in which a number of our alumni come to Brooklin to help us open our doors. Alumni give us a week or two of their time and talent, and we return the favor with a week’s room and board, plenty of appreciation, and a few surprises thrown in to boot. There’s plenty to do on our waterfront, in our shops, and at our dorms. It is also a wonderful week of camaraderie with folks getting back together in this beautiful setting to relax, talk boats, and share stories. Call after January 3rd if you’d like to be added to the lottery list. We’ll pull names in March for these two popular weeks. Tuition: $750 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. 36 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 OFF-SITE COURSES Can’t make it to Brooklin, Maine? We’re very pleased to be working with John Harris and the good folks at CHESAPEAKE LIGHT CRAFT in Annapolis, Maryland, and, once again, to be able to offer courses at their excellent facility. www.clcboats.com ANNAPOLIS WHERRY Tuition for each of these courses is $800 (partner $400) Check our website for our entire 2016 program www.woodenboat.com Gift certificates available for all WoodenBoat courses. CHESAPEAKE LIGHT CRAFT SHOP Annapolis, Maryland MARCH 21-26 BUILD YOUR OWN ANNAPOLIS WHERRY With Geoff Kerr Materials: Single – $1,429 Tandem – $1,529 APRIL 4-9 BUILD YOUR OWN STITCH-AND-GLUE KAYAK With Eric Schade Materials: Shearwater Sport Materials: Wood Duck sport – $1,179 10' – $1,079 16' – $1,179 12' – $1,079 17' – $1,179 14' – $1,129 Double – $1,179 APRIL 11-16 BUILD YOUR OWN NORTHEASTER DORY With George Krewson Materials: Row – $1,529 Sail (sloop) – $2,879 Sail (lug) – $2,728 MAY 2-7 BUILD YOUR OWN LAPSTRAKE DINGHY With Bill Cave Materials: Eastport Pram Materials: Passagemaker Row – $1,029 Row – $1,379 Sail (lug) – $1,958 Sail (sloop) – $2,678 Sail (lug) – $2,578 NORTHEASTER DORY LAPSTRAKE DINGHY STITCH-AND-GLUE KAYAK SEPTEMBER 5-10 BUILD YOUR OWN SASSAFRAS With Bill Cave Materials: 12' – $1,029 16' – $1,205 SEPTEMBER 26-OCTOBER 1 BUILD YOUR OWN NORTHEASTER DORY With Bill Cave Materials: Row – $1,529 Sail (sloop) – $2,879 Sail (lug) – $2,728 OCTOBER 24-29 BUILD YOUR OWN ANNAPOLIS WHERRY With Geoff Kerr Materials: Single – $1,429 Tandem – $1,529 OCTOBER 31-NOVEMBER 5 BUILD YOUR OWN STITCH-AND-GLUE KAYAK With Eric Schade Materials: Shearwater Sport Materials: Wood Duck sport – $1,179 10' – $1,079 16' – $1,179 12' – $1,079 17' – $1,179 14' – $1,129 Double – $1,179 SKERRY DAYSAILER SASSAFRAS CANOE 37 FAMILY WEEK J O I N U S AT WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L F O R FA M I LY W E E K ! More and more families these days want to add a learning component to their vacations. We are excited to offer this special opportunity for you to share a unique experience with your children and/or grandchildren. All the courses are fun, educational, and great family projects. And your family will have memories for a lifetime. Contact us for details. Classes run from July 31 to August 6. CHOOSE AMONG THE FOLLOWING: BUILD YOUR OWN BEVIN SKIFF BUILD YOUR OWN WOOD DUCK KAYAK Christian Smith Designed by Joe Youcha, the 11' 8" Bevin Skiff has been built by hundreds of families at various Family Boatbuilding events around the world. This simple, good-looking marine plywood skiff comes in a kit and can be built for oar or sail. Ideal for first-time builders! Tuition: $600 (partner: $300) Materials: Row: $1,107 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. Eric Schade Bring your tools and work clothes, and build your very own 10' or 12' Wood Duck recreational kayak, a very cool boat suitable for novice paddlers and fun for those with more experience. Starting with computer-cut marine plywood parts, your kayak will be glued together using epoxy, and sheathed with fiberglass for strength. Bring your enthusiasm and your desire to try something new and exciting! Tuition: $600 (partner: $300) Materials: 10' – $1,213 12' – $1,213 14' – $1,265 Double – $1,318 Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. “Thank you for a wonderful week and being open to me bringing my teenage daughter and son. This will be a week we will never forget!” M.C., WORCESTER, VERMONT 38 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 JULY 31-AUGUST 6 LEARN TO SAIL BUILD YOUR OWN ECHO BAY DORY SKIFF With Jane Ahlfeld and Gretchen Snyder Introduce your family to a sport they can enjoy for the rest of their lives! Under the calm and knowing guidance of Jane and Gretchen, students will quickly learn that sailing is safe, fun, and builds selfreliance, encourages respect for the environment, and offers numerous rewards that come from being challenged out on the water. Your classroom for the week will be our safe and exciting fleet of Nutshell prams, Shellback dinghies, and Haven 12½s. This will be an awesome five days on the water! Clint Chase Tuition: $550 Note: This is a five-day course ending Friday evening. The Echo Bay Dory Skiff is a beautiful and stable 12' rowing or sailing skiff that is a delight to enjoy out on the water. Designed by boatbuilder/instructor Clint Chase, the skiff is easily built from a kit consisting of marine plywood and solid wood parts, a construction manual, and a full set of plans. A great family boatbuilding project! Tuition: $600 (partner: $300) Materials: Row - $1,477; Sailing components can be purchased from the instructor Note: This is a six-day course ending Saturday afternoon. FA M I LY W E E K C O U R S E S FAMILY WEEK courses are designed for families with school-aged children between 9 and 15. Adults and children must participate in the same course. NOTE: Room & Board is half price for children this week. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 39 FACULTY “It was a blast! You have the perfect setting for a sailing class. The Boathouse, pier, boats, staff, and sailing instructors are absolutely great. We’re already thinking about next year!” S.B., SIDNEY, TEXAS The sailing bug caught JANE AHLFELD while vacationing on one of the Maine windjammer schooners. She decided to take a leave from elementary school teaching…and has yet to return. She shipped out on the MARY HARRIGAN, a 50' schooner, as mate to teach Cruising Boat Seamanship for WoodenBoat School in the Caribbean and Maine. In ’93 and ’94 she taught a course in Small Boat Sailing on the local boats of Bequia. Since 1989 she has returned to Brooklin each summer to teach and work on our waterfront. When not on boats, Jane is a computer consultant. She has a masters in Education and holds a U.S. Coast Guard License. Students often comment on Jane’s patience, knowledge, sense of humor, and attention to both the group and individual needs. She teaches the skills and gives all the support needed to gain confidence on the water. WALTER ANSEL is a long-time native of Mystic, Connecticut. He grew up running 40 2016 WoodenBoat School | wild at Mystic Seaport Museum Shipyard and is still there after 35 years. Walt began sweeping out the Shipyard shop when he was 14; while he still does pick up a broom, he has graduated on to doing other jobs as well. One of his very favorite projects was building a Beetle whaleboat with his retired boatbuilder father, Willits Ansel, in 2002. Walt supervised the restoration of the Eastern rigged dragger ROANN and was able to go to sea on her for the Museum. Walt also worked on the whale ship CHARLES W. MORGAN on both her 1980’s and 2013 restorations and got the opportunity to sail with the whales on Stellwagan Bank on the MORGAN’s 38th voyage. Walt is married to Carol, a school librarian who is passionate about photographing birds and the seacoast. Together they enjoy birding, cruising in boats, and English country dancing as done in the time of Jane Austen. They are proud parents of Douglas, a filmmaker, and Evelyn, an author and ship caulker. Walt has built and restored boats at WoodenBoat School for 16 years. www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 After graduating from the Marine Science Department at Southern Maine Vocational Technical Institute in 1972, JON BARDO was employed on the schooner yacht AMERICA as an engineer. Having survived 14 months of bluewater cruising, Jon came ashore and spent the next seven years repairing diesel engines in everything from commercial fishing vessels to logging equipment. Eventually drawn back to the sea, Jon worked on commercial tugboats for four years and then started his own business working on diesel engines, which he enjoys to this day. WARREN BARKER built his first boat, a Culler skiff, in 1976 after earning his B.A. at Williams College. He then studied at Hoosuck Design and Woodworking School before joining Murray Peterson Associates in Maine, where he helped to build a number of prams and spars, as well as the 42' ketch NIA. For the next four years he worked as a project foreman at Eric Goetz Custom Sailboat Company, mostly building hightech, one-off, cold-molded racing boats. Along the way, Warren has built or rebuilt a variety of small craft on his own. A twoand-a-half-year stint restoring the yawl COTTON BLOSSOM ended with his first commission in his new shop, a Haven 12½'. A Bridges Point 24 kept the doors open, followed by CURLEW, a reproduction of the Herreshoff Alerion. Immersed in the 2016 Herreshoff technique, he used their methods to produce a 26' gig for Portsmouth Abbey School and a Columbia dinghy. Having completed the 30'6" William Garden–designed “Camilla” and the Herreshoff 12½' “Crow Dancer” in his Westport, Massachusetts, shop, he took the position of senior instructor at IYRS mentoring the construction of Herreshoff designs from 12' to 35' and a smattering of other designers’ work. Trying to stay ahead of the students, he is learning the ins and outs of GarWood and Chris-Craft boats. DANIEL BENNETT built his first boat out of recycled materials when he was 10 years old and first taught sailing at 13. At 15, he took LOFTING and FUNDAMENTALS OF BOATBUILDING courses at WoodenBoat School. Next came work in boatyards and then a life at sea, sailing 48,000 nautical miles aboard square-riggers and schooners in the Atlantic and Pacific. At 19, Daniel purchased PLUMBELLY, a 26’ Bequia-built engineless double-ended gaff cutter, and while serving as Assistant Shop Manager at WoodenBoat School, he readied for a singlehanded voyage to Bermuda that fall. After a rough trip and the necessary repairs, he became a highly motivated student of the weather and sailed on to the Caribbean and beyond, using both traditional and modern navigational means. Daniel logged 47,000 nautical miles over the next six years during several Caribbean winters, New England summers, and transatlantics to the U.K. and back, including a 4,000-nautical-mile nonstop voyage westbound. Sailing mostly singlehanded, he found work as a shipwright/carpenter/rigger to support his boat and simple lifestyle. For the past 20 years, Daniel has been sailing the coast of Maine as owner/captain of Bufflehead Sailing Charters in which he shares the beauty and challenge of sailing Maine’s island dappled waters. He recently logged 2,200 nautical miles a year within 50 miles of Rockland. local lodge. At a young age she realized the rewards of making useful things with her own hands, and after several years working in a local sail loft over 20 years ago, she began her own canvas business in her barn, allowing her to work more easily around her family’s schedule. Initially, Ann focused mostly on yacht interiors (cushions and curtains) for boats being built or rebuilt by local boatyards or individual boat owners, but has since expanded into doing a wide range of exterior canvas projects as well. At 15, JOHN BROOKS joined his grandparents and other family members on a two-year sailing trip from the Pacific Northwest to South Africa. In college he studied engineering and journalism, then he went to work building boats, took a boat design course, and built a Chesapeake Bay skipjack for himself. In the 1980s, John moved to Maine with boat in tow, and worked for a number of Mount Desert Island boatyards plus a keyboard maker, a cabinetmaker, and a custom furniture builder; he also designed and built his first glued-lapstrake boat, a 15’ fast pulling boat. In 1992 he and his wife, Ruth Ann Hill, started their own business designing and building glued-lapstrake boats, and together they wrote How to Build Glued-Lapstrake Wooden Boats, published by WoodenBoat Books in 2004. After moving to Brooklin in 2003, John continued designing boats and developing plans while also taking advantage of an opportunity to work at Doug Hylan’s shop and Brooklin Boat Yard as a master carpenter. Since 2009, he and Ruth have worked together as Brooks Boats Designs full-time, developing plans and kits for boats they built on MDI and for new designs. They live in Brooklin with their “John Brooks is a very professional boatbuilder and teacher. He brought passion, energy, skill, and a sense of humor. A superb course!” A.B., TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN ANN BRAYTON has lived here in Brooklin for years raising kids, animals, and vegetable gardens, as well as guiding kayak trips for a C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 41 FACULTY four children, a flock of chickens, and assorted boats. John has taught classes at WoodenBoat School for over 20 years. HARRY BRYAN built his first boat at age 10, his first boat that floated at age 12, and his first boat with almost no leaks at age 15. After successfully resisting attempts to be formally educated at the University of Vermont, he worked on fishing boats at Fairhaven Marine in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, and on yachts at Concordia Company in South Dartmouth, Massachusetts, before moving to New Brunswick, Canada, in 1972. Since that time he has repaired commercial craft and built dories, skiffs, and sailboats form 7' to 36'. His shop, which relies on a small diesel engine and solar panels for its power, emphasizes a growing commitment to pedal power and hand tools (see WoodenBoat No. 132). BILL CAVE spent 28 years as a firefighter in Washington, D.C. An avid sailor and small boat enthusiast, he’s also worked as a mate on a schooner. Bill built his first boat in a WoodenBoat School class. The Chesapeake Light Craft staff recognized his talent and hired him, along with his son, Matt, for good measure. As Chesapeake Light Craft’s primary staff boatbuilder, Bill has built dozens of boats of all sizes and taught many boatbuilding classes on his own. He lives in Bryantown, Maryland and when not building boats for a living, he builds them as a hobby. THAD DANIELSON felt a strong attraction to the ocean and boats at the age of nine on a liner voyage to East Africa with his family in 1954, reinforced over the next four years by having the Dar es Salaam waterfront as his playground. After high school in Rhode Island followed by college and grad- “Harry Bryan is a master….watching his hands working is more than learning technique, it’s like listening to really beautiful music. BOATBUILDER’S HAND TOOLS far exceeded all my expectations. I would take any course Harry taught!” F.C., BEACH HAVEN, NEW JERSEY uate school, Thad got into sailing. Some years later, a chance look at one of the first sets of plans sold by WoodenBoat turned his interest from general woodworking and house building to wooden boats. He moved to Marblehead, Massachusetts, set up Redd’s Pond Boatworks, and was soon busy building and restoring a wide variety of traditional wooden boats. He recently retired from the shop but is still building boats. Thad is the North American Secretary of the Albert Strange Association. BRAD DIMOCK combines a family proclivity for carpentry with his discovery of Grand Canyon boating when he was 18 years old. He has spent nearly every summer and a few winters since then running the Colorado and other rivers in a wide variety of vessels, from historic lapstrake replicas to modern river dories; from kayaks to paddle rafts to large motorized pontoons; and a few things that weren’t really boats at all. Brad rowed wooden boats for dory pioneer Martin Litton for 10 years, and has run dories extensively on whitewater rivers throughout the West. He has also written award-winning biographies of several lesserknown but mythic boaters of the Colorado River. Brad has built dories from Maine to New Zealand, but does most of his boatbuilding at his shop in Flagstaff, high in the Arizona desert. He combines techniques from traditional and modern methods, and occasionally invents new approaches as the need arises. Many of his boatbuilding techniques were born of necessity for lack of tools or time in wilderness settings. ERIC DOW was brought up a Maine fisherman, but pursued boatbuilding “as a means of being able to sleep later in the morning.” He graduated from the marine department at Washington County Vocational Technical Institute, and for over 38 years he has been building boats in Brooklin, Maine. He built many of the WoodenBoat half models for display, has been intimately involved with the development of the Nutshell Pram kits, and, these days specializes in the construction of the Haven 12½. OCEAN POINTER 42 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 QUEENE HOOPER FOSTER taught herself how to sail by reading books and studying the photographs of Morris and Stanley Rosenfeld. Right out of college she purchased a boat and learned to sail the hard way. She continued her education by sailing annually to Maine from the Chesapeake Bay, participating in the early classic yacht events in Newport, Rhode Island and in Maine. She has sailed in numerous Newport to Bermuda Races, always in classic wooden boats, and was the first woman to skipper her own boat in the that famous ocean race. Sailing for the New York Yacht Club in her Aage Nielsen Ketch SAPHAEDRA, Queene sailed across the Atlantic to Cowes, England and was the only woman skipper to race in the America’s Cup Jubilee. She and her international crew received a Third Place Trophy from Princess Anne for the week of competition. Her career has been in publishing in New York City, specializing in marine titles, including Chapman’s Guide to Boating Etiquette, a detailed guide to boating traditions. Queene is an experienced sailing instructor and these days enjoys being out under sail on her Concordia yawl MISTY. BOB FULLER, a third-generation boatbuilder and patternmaker with a commercial fishing background, grew up in Halifax, Massachusetts. He apprenticed with his father and grandfather, working in the family shop where he also learned the trade of designing and building traditional wooden ship’s steering wheels. Bob built his first in 1976 at age 15. On occasion, when fishing on the bays and inlets on the South Shore of Massachusetts and Cape Cod, he would see Simmons Sea Skiffs being used in the rough waters and took note as to how seaworthy and perfectly matched they were for the strong southerly winds and following seas that prevail on summer afternoons. Bob has built numerous Simmons Sea Skiffs for fishermen and duck hunters in his Halifax shop. MARTIN GARDNER, born on the Chesapeake Bay, and with two grandfathers who were professional seamen, should have had a life in boats. It started well enough, “There is an incredible culture here at WoodenBoat School where good people are allowed and encouraged to pursue and perfect their passions in the company of other like-minded individuals. Everyone seems to enjoy being here! Thanks to you and your entire staff for creating such a culture.” C.J., SEVERNA PARK, MARYLAND with numerous fishing trips out on the bay and various model boats. Then something went wrong, and for a few decades, Martin pursued a career that included more time in airports than in anchorages. In the 1980s he came to his senses and began sailing seriously, eventually leaving his day job to cruise for four years aboard a 28' Lyle Hess cutter. He has sailed over 25,000 miles on a variety of bluewater boats. He holds a U.S. Coast Guard Master’s license and an assortment of U.S. sailing and ASA instructor qualifications. He now teaches sailing year round and keeps a cruising catboat back on the Chesapeake Bay. JOHN C. HARRIS owns Chesapeake Light Craft, the Annapolis-based purveyor of wooden boat kits and plans. His long tenure at CLC was preceded by a passion for boatbuilding and small craft that stretches back to earliest childhood. His first successful design was launched at age 14. More paddling, rowing, and sailing craft followed quickly, though he paused to get a degree in music—his second passion. After college he was determined to make a career as a boatbuilder and designer in the esoteric world of wooden boats. Eighteen years later, he’s shipped 26,000 boat kits and seen his designs built in more than 70 countries. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 43 FACULTY His work as a designer and builder ranges from dinghies to large multihulls and from kayaks to powerboats. He lives on the shores of Chesapeake Bay near Annapolis with his wife, daughter, and an always-changing fleet of curious small boats. HAVILAH HAWKINS, a second-generation captain, was raised in the windjammer business on the schooners STEPHEN TABER, ALICE WENTWORTH, and MARY DAY, which was designed by his father, Capt. Havilah Hawkins, Sr. Havilah, also a fourthgeneration boatbuilder on his mother’s side, designed and built his 50’ gaff-headed sloop VELA, with help from the Wooden Boat Co. in Rockport, Maine. He has been running a day-sailing business out of Martha’s Vineyard for the past 11 years. He presently runs, in conjunction with Windward Passage, a program dedicated to giving kids a chance to experience the Maine coast under sail. Havilah has had a 100-ton auxiliary sail license for carrying passengers for 30 years. REED HAYDEN was introduced to boats at the age of 12 when he got his first summer job on the Hyannis, Massachusetts, waterfront. He earned a Bachelors of Fine Arts degree in Sculpture from the University of Massachusetts and settled in the seaside town of Sandwich where he was a leading woodcarver. In 2000 Reed started his own successful sign carving business while he was working part-time at Ballentine’s Boat Shop in Cataumet. It was at this boatyard where he became interested in boatbuilding. In 2003 he and his family headed up to Maine where he joined the crew at The Hinckley Company. These days Reed keeps busy working as a carpenter at Brooklin Boat Yard and doing custom commercial and residential signwork at his own shop in Surry. AMY HOSA hails from San Francisco. Her love of things maritime took hold in the early ’90s when she volunteered in the Small Boat Shop on San Francisco’s historic Hyde Street Pier to restore old boats and learned to sail. She began filling “travel sketchbooks” with quick studies of boats in action on the 44 2016 WoodenBoat School | Small Boat Shop’s annual small-craft sailing and rowing excursions across San Francisco Bay. Amy is currently selfemployed as an illustrator and graphic designer (www.amyhosa.com), and has also been the exhibit designer for the Maritime Museum at San Francisco Maritime National Historic Park for the past 14 years. Her fine art watercolors have been in numerous gallery shows, and she is a member of the California Watercolor Society. JOHN KARBOTT spent most of his childhood along the beaches and waterfront of Plymouth, Massachusetts, watching commercial lobsterboats and occasionally catching a ride on one. He dreamt that someday he would have his own. During high school he purchased an old wooden skiff and a few traps, and joined www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 the crowd. While in school, he lobstered and raked sea moss during the summer season and worked odd jobs throughout the winter. He graduated from Boston’s Wentworth Institute with an Associate Degree in Architectural Engineering, but boats and the water were his first loves. John spent the next 30 or so years, lobstering commercially in the Plymouth/Cape Cod area. After owning and maintaining wooden boats all his life, he decided to pursue that career full time and sold his successful lobstering business. John now keeps busy building boats and doing boat repairs in southeastern Massachusetts, mostly of the lobsterboat style/design. MARK KAUFMAN has been fascinated with boats and boatbuilding since his childhood days of growing up boating with his 2016 family on Pennsylvania’s Allegheny River. As a teenager, he built his first boats, a wood-and-canvas Trailcraft canoe and a Minimost hydroplane. Later, he acquired a passion for flying and home-built aircraft, and built a two-seat, high-performance composite aircraft. After college, Mark became interested in aircraft restoration and restored an award-winning “tube-andfabric” 1948 Piper Vagabond aircraft. He holds instrument, commercial, and flight instructor ratings. During the last 14 years he has become an avid bicyclist and kayaker, and builds his own custom fillet-brazed bicycle frames and skin-on-frame kayaks. Mark is a technology educator at Garden Spot High School in New Holland, Pennsylvania, teaching beginner and advanced woodworking, as well as computer-aided drafting and prototyping. Many of his advanced woodworking students have built skin-on-frame canoes, stitchand-glue kayaks, wood-strip canoes, and skin-on-frame Aleutian and Greenlandstyle kayaks in addition to their regular course work. He also teaches a number of adult education classes on skin-on-frame kayak construction. Mark always looks forward to the classes he teaches at WoodenBoat School. GEOFF KERR does business as Two Daughters Boatworks in Westford, Vermont, on New England’s “west coast.” A boater since taking a Hurricane Island Outward Bound School course at age16, and later a Coast Guard officer, Geoff learned the trade at the Alexandria Seaport Foundation with Joe Youcha. He served as shop foreman and instructor in that dynamic environment. In his oneman, full-service Vermont shop, Geoff does small-craft repairs and restorations, as well as new construction, specializing in Iain Oughtred’s Caledonia Yawl. He has been affiliated with Chesapeake Light Craft since the company’s infancy, and is a licensed builder of their many designs, as well as an authorized and experienced instructor. BARRY KING has been sailing all his life. Along with his wife Jennifer Martin and their children, this family has been sharing their schooner MARY DAY with guests since 1998. In addition, to being a USCG licensed master, Barry has an M.S. in Experiential education and is a Wilderness EMT. “I love seeing the strong teamwork and sense of self that can be gained by the endless variety of skills that make up the world of traditional sailing vessels.” Sailing Association, Susan instructs yearly seminars directed toward women. She is the author and illustrator of Sailing Safely and How to Get Home, a sailing book for beginners and intermediates. Holding a U.S. Coast Guard license, Susan enthusiastically shares her passion for sailing, teaching the skills needed for enjoyment and confidence on the water, and just messing around on boats with others. “Mark Kaufman is an excellent teacher. Highly organized and very well prepared. A great class!” ROBIN LINCOLN grew up sailing on Cape Cod. She says the greatest gift her family ever gave her was exposure to water and boats at an early age. Sailing has been a constant thread throughout her life. Racing as a young girl in wooden Mercurys, Beetle Cats, Lightnings, and Wianno Seniors, she won many championships. Robin also taught sailing seminars, organized races, and helped establish summer sailing programs for children and adults at yacht clubs and summer camps. She sailed to Europe W.A., CRANSTON, RHODE ISLAND GEORGE KREWSON is a rocket scientist based in Cocoa, Florida, where he has spent the past 30 years working on the Space Shuttle program. George grew up sailing and surfing and began building boats after visiting WoodenBoat School during a Maine vacation. After building a few kayaks on his own, he became a “beta” builder for Chesapeake Light Craft and has assembled the prototypes of many new designs over the years. As an instructor, he particularly enjoys sharing the sense of amazement he felt with his own first build when flat pieces of plywood came together into a beautifully curved hull. George began experimenting with exotic wood veneers with his second boat, and has become a “goto” guy in classes and on the CLC forum for technical tips on the subject. When he’s not on the water, you can find him in his shop working on the next project. A passionate sailor, SUSAN LaVOIE has extensive cruising experience in coastal as well as offshore waters, in addition to many years of dinghy and one-design racing. As past Commodore of the Blue Water Sailing Club in Boston, Massachusetts, she was responsible for organizing cruise activities, developing seminars based on safety, navigation, and electronics and racing techniques. A member of the National Women’s C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 45 FACULTY aboard the schooner WESTWARD and cruised the west coasts of the U.S., Mexico, and Central America aboard a 38-foot cutter. Over the years, Robin’s sailing experiences have taken her up and down both coasts of the U.S. from Canada to Florida, Mexico, and the Carribean. She was a partner in a sail loft in Costa Rica for four years, where she had the opportunity to examine sails and rigging while sailing on different boats from all over the world. For over 20 years she owned and operated Center Harbor Sails in Brooklin, Maine. Robin’s life both in the loft and on the water gives her an intimate and well-rounded knowl- edge of boats and sailing. She has enjoyed teaching at the WoodenBoat School for almost every year since its inception. She continues to spend every spare minute she can sailing the beautiful coast of Maine. GARY LOWELL was born and raised in a small town in Maine. After living in Wisconsin for six years, he moved with his first wooden boat to Greensboro, North Carolina. While studying broadcasting in college, Gary worked at the local TV station as a director and lighting director. While the job paid the bills, boatbuilding fed his soul. He began rescuing and repairing old, clas- “Graham McKay was enthusiastic, full of energy with a continuous presence yet totally empowering as far as allowing us to work, learn, make mistakes and correct our errors. As a woodworker with some small craft experience, it was my first experience with traditional dory construction and I had a fantastic time working on various projects/pieces that all came together as a beautiful finished dory.” J.W., JACKSON, WYOMING sic sailboats and sailing them along the North Carolina coast. A descendant of the well-known New England boatbuilding Lowell family, Gary couldn’t ignore his heritage any longer. In 1993, Gary left television to open his own boatbuilding shop. Starting in his backyard, the business has since grown to one of the largest wooden boatbuilding shops in the country. Lowell Boats Inc. is an award-winning boatshop specializing in classic runabout restoration. To supplement his painting and varnishing course at WoodenBoat School, Gary has produced a high-quality DVD on Finishing Techniques for Wooden Boats. Gary often takes summers off to travel back to Maine with his family and enjoys sailing the coastal waters. GRAHAM McKAY grew up in Amesbury, Massachusetts, on the banks of the Merrimack River. His early fascination with boats and maritime history drew him to sailing tall ships. After attending Harvard for economics and baseball, he sought to experience the maritime industry from all angles. Graham spent time as a commercial fisherman, professional sailor, fisheries scientist, and commercial diver. In 2006, he attended the University of Bristol, England, for a masters degree in Maritime History and Archaeology. Upon his return to the states, Graham split his time building boats at Lowell’s Boat Shop in Amesbury and as a captain for the Ocean Classroom Foundation. He is the emerging Executive Director of Lowell’s Boat Shop which, in addition to being a wooden boat shop, is also a fully functioning museum and education center. Graham lives in Newburyport, Massachusetts, with his lovely and patient girlfriend Abbie and their dog Niki. Landlocked in the Midwest, THOM McLAUGHLIN grew up working on farms and having the cycles of nature deeply rooted under his skin. After finishing a graduate degree in visual arts (sculpture), he found himself surrounded by water as an art professor at the University of South Florida. In 1993, while searching for an art form that could more directly inspire an awe 46 2016 WoodenBoat School | www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 2016 of nature, he stumbled onto pond yachts. Since then he has written articles on, investigated the history of, and made many vintage pond yachts. He is currently the Southeast regional vice-president of the Vintage Model Yacht Group. In the last seven Vintage Marblehead National Regattas boats of Thom’s design, and their construction initiated in courses at WoodenBoat School, had third or better placing in final standings. In the 2011 National Regatta he placed First Overall in class and also received the Craftsmanship Award. ERICA MOODY was born in landlocked upstate New York and schooled in western Massachusetts, but finally made it to the coast in 1991 for a summer working on Martha’s Vineyard. Since then she has not been far from the sea. Upon moving to Boston in 1992, she was fortunate to sail on a friend’s 1940s Alden sloop for a few years, getting to know the Massachusetts coast first from the sea rather than from the road. Her passion for sailing and the beautiful craftsmanship and design of the wooden sailboat has never left. She was inspired to find a career in the building trades, and found an apprenticeship with a custom metalworker in Boston. She has now been working professionally as a metal craftsman in and around Boston for 19 years, the last 14 running her business Magma Metalworks, Inc. Erica has taught classes and workshops at Wentworth Institute of Technology and Massachusetts College of Art & Design in Boston, Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, and WoodenBoat School. She and her husband Paul finally made the move from Boston to the wonderful coast of Maine in 2014, and are currently living and working in Waldoboro. A longtime interest in woodworking led MIKE MOROS to open his own successful cabinet shop not far from where he grew up in Pine Brook, New Jersey. Over time, he found himself attracted to wooden boats and this eventually brought Mike to WoodenBoat School as a student in 2001. After a few courses in successive years and joining in on Alumni Work Weeks, the boat bug bit hard and Mike signed on as the school’s Assistant Shop Manager in 2006. In ’08 Mike took over the reins as Shop Manager. During the off-season Mike has worked on the carpentry crew at Brooklin Boat Yard. In 2009 Mike opened his own business, Michael Moros Woodworking, providing wooden boat work, custom woodworking and general contracting. When not working, Mike enjoys being outdoors, especially boating and fishing. He recently completed a handsome Glen-L Marine 16' center console skiff for himself and is now restoring a 1952 Chris Craft. RICH NAPLE has been sailing since 1967. His first port of call was where the Severn River meets the Chesapeake Bay as a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy. Before leaving for his assignment as a bridge officer on the USS Kitty Hawk, he remained in Annapolis to teach the fundamentals of sailing to incoming freshman on Rainbow 24s. After lecturing Naval officers in vessel stability in San Francisco, where he also taught sailing on Rhodes 19s, Rich brought his talents back to upstate New York to teach high school physics. He also became a fan of multi-hulls, sailing and racing Hobie 16s on various Adirondack lakes. Re-careering in his 40s, Rich apprenticed with a Shaker furniture company in New Hampshire, after which he struck out on his own, making fine furniture inspired by his favorite quiet and elegant woodworking traditions. When not in his shop in Saratoga Springs, New York, Rich likes to windsurf on mountain lakes and ocean bays. With an easy-going nature, C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 47 FACULTY schooners MARY DAY and AMERICAN EAGLE. In 2006 and ’07 she was mate and educator for WoodenBoat School’s course on the MARY DAY. Annie currently holds a USCG 100-ton license. At the age of three, MIKE O’BRIEN first climbed aboard a skiff, and at seven he taught himself how to sail by reading instructions found in the family encyclopedia. As a college student he rowed in “eights” and went undefeated during three years of surfboat rowing competition along the New Jersey shore. After earning a degree in physics, Mike pursued graduate work in oceanography. Later, while serving as Chairman of Marine Sciences at a small college, he filled his vacations by designing and building boats in his one-man shop. Mike has been Associate Editor for Sailor and Technical Editor for Soundings. He was Senior Editor here at WoodenBoat for more than 20 years. Now in semi-retirement, he works as Boat Design Editor for the magazine. He also writes and publishes Boat Design Quarterly. Mike takes much of his waterborne pleasure aboard sea kayaks. He is a registered Maine Guide. encouraging teaching style, and love for the adventure of life, Rich brings a unique blend of experiences in sailing, teaching, and knowledge of woodworking to WoodenBoat School. ANNIE NIXON fell in love with the ocean and sailing right after college when she went to work for Thompson Island Outward Bound in Boston, Massachusetts. She learned to sail and teach aboard their traditional 30’ open rowing and sailing vessels. Annie then spent four years at the Chewonki Foundation in Wiscasset, Maine, leading 21-day sailing wilderness trips for high school and college-age students. On these expeditions Annie captained both a 26' Crotch Island Pinky and a 28' Mackinaw Lake design. She taught elements of seamanship, wilderness “leave no trace” ethics, and marine ecology as part of these expeditions. For five summers Annie worked on two larger traditional vessels in Maine, the 48 2016 WoodenBoat School | ANDY OLDMAN has had a passion for boats since age five. By seventh grade, he had read nearly every seagoing book in the school library and was soon preoccupied with building a working gaffrigged model remarkably like PATIENCE. Three memorable summers ensued near Castine, Maine, where teenagers sailed on a 45' schooner as far as Monhegan Island in the days of hand lead and compass. Andy discovered PATIENCE on a coffee break at a midwinter boat show; the child’s model had come alive. Andy and his family recently completed a wondrous, year-and-a-half voyage on their ketch that took them across the North Atlantic to France, down to South America, over to the Galápagos Islands, and many points in between. Meanwhile, Andy is dedicated to sharing the knowledge of wooden boats and sailing that he is so fortunate to have acquired from a beloved cadre of old-time sailors, friends, and adventurers. www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 MADELEINE OTANI OLDMAN spent her early childhood summers along the coastal beaches of Kobe, Japan, learning to swim, row small wooden boats, and navigate strong currents. Island-hopping and exploration on launch excursions were always the highlight of those summers. Moving to New England renewed her love and respect for the ocean. Through her husband Andy’s passion for boating, she was introduced to the joys of sailing and coastal cruising, and an opportunity for a 14-month sea voyage. For the past several years, Madeleine has practiced yoga and Korean martial arts. More recently, she began teaching in outreach programs including chair yoga for senior citizens. She will receive her Master’s Certificate this year. Madeleine also works as the Education Coordinator at Families First, building partnerships with educational and transitional housing organizations, and supporting underserved families in their effort to build strong parent-child relationships. From an early age, JANE PETERSON has been interested in photography. After years of using 35mm film, she has gone digital SLR and has not looked back. Her interests are nature and macro photography, but she has been venturing into documentary work as well. Growing up in Maine, Jane has a strong affinity for the coast and a love of the soul of Maine and her people. Photography is a way of capturing moments of wonder for her. She has studied photography with Neal Parent, Rick Sammon, Jon Strout, and others. Her work has been exhibited locally as well as in WoodenBoat magazine. STEVE ROGERS has loved boats and water all his life. Not only does he paint boats, he builds them as well in ship model form. He is a nationally recognized ship model builder, has written five books on the subject, and won a certificate of commendation at the 2000 Modelbuilders Competition at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, Virginia. Steve is also a signature member of the American Society of Marine Artists. Although model building and fine art would seem unrelated, each 2016 supports and enhances the other. Understanding construction methods, thinking in three dimensions, and working from blueprints, reference books, and photographs allows Steve to visualize the boats and ships that become the subjects of his paintings. He works primarily in acrylics and paints traditional working craft. These are not pampered fiberglass yachts, but hardbitten and overworked oystermen, crabbers, and menhaden steamers. His paintings capture the toughness and durability of everyday working boats, and the sheer beauty and stark terror of the weather and waters they work in. Steve is the recipient of the 2005 Established Artist Fellowship from the Delaware Division of the Arts. He is represented by the Peninsula Gallery in Lewes, Delaware, and the Art of the Sea Gallery in South Thomaston, Maine. Although most of his models are in the hands of private collectors, several pieces are in local museums, including the St. Clements Island Potomac River Museum and the Havre de Grace Decoy Museum. JERRY ROSE believes that great paintings are a product of love and respect for the subject. Drawn to coastal communities where people make their living from the sea and land, Jerry divides his painting time between coastal Maine and the Bahamas. He paints on site, which strengthens his understanding of the landscapes and people in these locations. His paintings cover a variety of techniques, which are done in watercolor, oil, acrylic, and egg tempera. Jerry received his formal training in Fine Arts from Ohio University and Graphic Design from the University of Cincinnati, but his interest in realism came together 30 years ago when he felt it was important to paint a way of life that was quickly disappearing in the outlying islands of the Bahamas. That need created the search for methods of painting that would best describe the vanishing life before him and has helped him understand some of the old-world techniques to which he subscribes. Jerry is a member of the International Society of Marine Painters and a signature member of the Florida Watercolor Society. His work has been pub- lished in The Best of Watercolor by Rockport Publishers, Coast to Coast: The Contemporary Landscape in Florida, A Gallery of Maritime Art, Painting Light and Shadow, and numerous other art publications and magazines including Maritime Life and Traditions, published in Great Britain. He has received numerous awards and has had many oneman gallery, museum, and private exhibitions. His work is in public and private collections in the U.S., Europe, the Bahamas, and the Caribbean. Jerry maintains a studio and home in Sedgwick, Maine, with extended trips to the Bahamas on his sailboat. www. jerryrosepaintings.com. GREG RÖSSEL grew up cruising on the waters of New York Harbor and spending time in the boat yards on the south shore of Staten Island where economics (more than anything else) made wooden boats the craft of choice. He makes his home in Maine where he specializes in the construction and repair of small wooden boats. Since graduating at the top of his class in boatbuilding technology from Washington County Vocational Technical Institute, Greg has had a multifaceted career. For several years, he was an assistance restorer for a major private collection of antique runabouts and airplanes. Then he spent another couple of years as an instructor and assistant director at Maine Maritime Museum’s Apprenticeshop program. All the while, he was building his own shop at home in Troy, Maine, and tackling a wide variety of smallboat construction and restoration projects. For over 25 years, Greg has been able to work for himself full-time, aside from a few odd jobs like setting up a wooden Whitehall “Your LOFTING course was exactly what I needed. After the week with Greg, I now feel confident to loft on my own. He was able to break the process down and showed us lots of steps and tricks to make it simpler. I’d take any class Greg Rossel taught!” C.S., MARTINEZ, GEORGIA C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 49 FACULTY factory in Mexico, custom lines taking and documentation for museums and other customers, and writing over 200 articles for WoodenBoat, and other publications. He has also written and illustrated Building Small Boats, a book on carvel and traditional lapstrake boatbuilding, published by WoodenBoat Publications and The Boatbuilder’s Apprentice, which explores other styles of construction and techniques. Since 1987, Greg has been an instructor at WoodenBoat School in Brooklin, Maine, teaching lofting, skiff building and the “Fundamentals of Boatbuilding”. Also, for the past 21 years he has been producing a weekly two-hour radio program about world music (which mercifully) has nothing to do with boats. Captain JOEL ROWLAND has been sailing since 1994. First as a student on a Hurricane Island Outward Bound expedition aboard a 30' open Pulling Boat, and then as deckhand and mate to his uncle Mike Rowland, for two transatlantic voyages 50 2016 WoodenBoat School | aboard the 40' sloop TAMMY NORIE. Joel has since returned to Outward Bound to instruct courses in Maine, Florida, and Puerto Rico. He is now the owner of TAMMY NORIE, living aboard, sailing and chartering her from the island of North “Joel Rowland was an outstanding instructor! The week on TAMMY NORIE was great. Thanks!” C.H., PARIS, FRANCE Haven in Penobscot Bay. Having learned as an adult from the most patient instructors and having taught sailing to many people of all ages and backgrounds, Joel is very comfortable sharing his knowledge and sailing skills, and enjoys helping others to find the beauty and simplicity in what can be a complex learning process. www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 MICHAEL SAARI is a master metalsmith, having studied and taught in the U.S. and abroad for 40 years. His restoration and commission work can be seen in many major museums and public parks. Currently, Michael is part of the restoration team for the historic whaleship CHARLES MORGAN at Mystic Seaport, Connecticut, where he is replacing and restoring metal ship parts in wrought iron, steel, copper, and bronze, as well as making whalecraft. An experienced sailor, Michael has competed in the Star class and has restored his own 1957 wooden Firefly. His home and studio are in Woodstock, Connecticut. Michael is an adjunct professor of art at Nichols College in Dudley, Massachusetts. ERIC SCHADE was trained as a mechanical engineer, and has practiced that profession for 20 years. In 1983 he built his first boat, a small strip-built canoe. Since then he has built more than 50 small boats, including kayaks, canoes, rowing boats, and 2016 small sailboats. In 1996 he founded Shearwater Boats to offer custom strip-built canoes and kayaks. Gradually Shearwater has developed to the point where it offers an extensive line of stitch-and-glue watercraft - kayaks, canoes, rowing boats, and sailboats. In 2005 Eric started designing boats for Chesapeake Light Craft. These new boats include Shearwater, Wood Duck, and Shearwater Tandem, which have all proven quite popular. Eric has taught boatbuilding at a number of shops and has mentored the construction of nearly 200 boats. This experience, and the feedback he gets from supervising the construction of his designs, not only has improved his skills as a builder, but has honed his skills as a designer. Eric’s greatest area of expertise is the computergenerated engineering of complicated and precise plywood boat kits that, when cut by computer-controlled machinery, can be assembled by amateurs. NICK SCHADE grew up around canoes and kayaks. After beginning a career as an electrical engineer for the U.S. Navy specializing in low-frequency electro-magnetics, he realized he wanted to get back on the water himself. Not able to afford the kind of boat he wanted, Nick decided to design and build a “strip-built” kayak. While this type of construction was popular with canoes, it was not commonly adapted for kayaks. Nick worked together with his brother to develop the process, and over the years has branched out and developed innovative kayak designs using the plywood stitch-and-glue method. As his skill as a kayak paddler and boatbuilder evolved, Nick’s designs evolved to match his changing aims. The driving goal has been to maximize on-the-water performance while respecting the natural materials used to create the boat. Out of these efforts, Nick has created Guillemot Kayaks, centered on designing high-performance sea kayaks for other craftsmen interested in building their own boats. He wrote The Strip-Built Sea Kayak, an instruction book describing the stripbuilt method, which has helped foster a revival in the construction of wooden kayaks. Nick’s shop is currently located in Glastonbury, Connecticut, where he builds prototypes of new designs and makes a select number of custom-built kayaks. He has taught kayak construction at Mystic Seaport and the Connecticut Valley School of Woodworking. His work has been exhibited at the American Craft Museum, and one of his boats is in the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. GENE SHAW moved to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in 1972 after receiving a Fine Arts degree from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the Philadelphia College of Art. While at PAFA, he received numerous awards, prizes, and grants. In Lancaster, Gene combined his fine art/design training and his love of woodworking, a skill he learned from his father, to establish The Wooden Plane, a custom cabinetry and home restoration business. He and his wife Tanis built a new home in town, featured in Fine Homebuilding magazine in 2006. The Historic Preservation Trust of Lancaster County twice awarded him the C. Emlen Urban Award, for preservation leadership and new-home construction in an historic district. Since 2005 he has traveled to Brooklin, Maine, to attend boatbuilding courses at WoodenBoat School. While here, Gene has made numerous sketches that are the basis for the woodcuts he creates upon his return to Lancaster. He has exhibited his work at the following Pennsylvania galleries: the Benjamin Mangel Gallery in Bala Cynwyd, the Gallery Doshi in Harrisburg, the Chestnut Gallery in Lancaster, the Lancaster County Day School, and the Lancaster Art Walk. He is also represented by The Turtle Gallery in Deer Isle, Maine, as well as Lancaster Galleries, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. As a child, CHRISTIAN SMITH explored the coves and marshes of Buzzards Bay in his father’s 12’, home-built plywood skiff. In “Eric Schade was fantastic! What an opportunity to work with the man who designed the kayak and who has the ultimate knowledge in the kayak’s assembly.” J.K., KANSAS CITY, MISOURI C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 51 FACULTY “Wade Smith was top notch! He’s knowledgeable and kept the course well-paced. He shared lots of information! As a bonus, he also exposed his students to new ideas. Wade is very enthusiastic about wooden boats and the entire construction process.” R.T., POWELL, OHIO his twenties, he circumnavigated the globe on a 41’ ketch that he and his friends restored from a hurricane wreck. At the age of 30, he built his first small boat, all by eye. In his more than 20 years in the marine industry, Christian has repaired yachts large and small, and taught sailing, windsurfing, and boatbuilding to both children and adults. He is the most recent family member of a long line of boatbuilders, woodworkers, and woodcarvers. Christian currently makes his living along the shore of Buzzards Bay as a boatbuilder, chainsaw artist, purveyor of gourmet bacon, and writer. F. JAY SMITH apprenticed to master builders in Norway and the Faroe Islands 52 2016 WoodenBoat School | and has specialized in Nordic lapstrake construction for over 30 years (see WoodenBoat #234). Regular trips to Scandinavia over the years have enabled Jay to expand his research on Scandinavian-related boatbuilding techniques. At his Aspoya Boats yard in Anacortes, Washington, he keeps busy with new construction, repairs, and interior refits. His main focus, however, is on traditional Scandinavian designs including prams, faerings, Folkboats, and, currently, a 56’ replica of a Viking ship. As a way of passing on the knowledge that was passed on to him, Jay teaches boatbuilding in his own shop, and has lectured at The Center for Wooden Boats in Seattle and taught at the Northwest School of Wooden Boat Building in Port Hadlock, Washington. www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 Despite an education and otherwise promising start in electronics manufacturing in Vermont, WADE SMITH couldn’t ignore the subversive call of the wooden boat in the back of his mind, and so left everything behind to study boatbuilding at the Apprenticeshop in Nobleboro, Maine. Rather than returning to the safety of a 9to-5, Wade decided to follow his passion and continues to this day as a boatbuilder and boatbuilding instructor. Wade worked for Barry Thomas in the boatshop at Mystic Seaport, researching, documenting, and replicating historic watercraft from the museum’s collection, and learning every word of John Gardner’s famed Boatbuilding for Amateurs course. After Barry’s retirement, Wade continued on as the Director of the John Gardner Boat Shop for 11 years, during which time he helped to create, and subsequently oversaw, an exponential increase in boatbuilding related courses, and assisted in setting up new boatbuilding programs from Maine to Honduras. After 15 years of working primarily as a teacher, Wade wanted to get back to building boats and was invited to join the crew at Taylor and Snediker Boatbuilding in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, whom he considers to be the most insanely multi-talented group of boatbuilders working anywhere today. Since then, he has been teaching boatbuilding for four weeks per year at WoodenBoat School and engaged in highend commercial boatbuilding the rest of the year. The love of sailing has kept GRETCHEN SNYDER on or near the water for most of her life. For over 20 years Gretchen has delivered boats up and down the East Coast, across the Atlantic, in the Mediterranean, and throughout the Caribbean islands where she spent three years in the charter business. Her enthusiasm for sailing and boats is not only confined to the sea, but has also led to her own land-based business. Gretchen has owned and operated “The Loft” in Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts, a sail loft specializing in gaff-rigged working sails, as well as the canvas needs of the entire boat. She sold The Loft in July 2005 and decided to cruise new horizons, the sea of education. She is 2016 now a licensed elementary school teacher presently enjoying her Kindergarten /Firstgraders on Martha’s Vineyard. ERIC STOCKINGER grew up in suburban Detroit, Michigan, and spent summers at a family cottage on Lake Huron when he got bitten by the water bug. He went on to get a degree in freshwater fisheries management from Michigan State University. After college Eric got involved with woodworking as a hobby, building stuff on the side, including several kayaks. He had been aware of The Apprenticeshop in Rockland, Maine, since his freshman year at college, and after jobs in Detroit, San Diego, and Dallas, he packed his bags and headed to Rockland. After completing a two-year apprenticeship at The Apprenticeshop, Eric became the Shop Director. Several years later, he took over as Executive Director, and held that position for three-and-a-half years. In the winter of 2012, Eric and his wife moved to Blue Hill, Maine, and began working at Brooklin Boat Yard where he is currently employed. Eric is a member of the International Guild of Knot Tyers. JON STROUT grew up on the coast of Maine, specifically Casco Bay. He has always been impressed by the natural beauty of Maine, but the beauty of the coast is most special, as it is constantly changing. For Jon, photography is an avenue to try to capture what he feels and to reflect the beauty and emotions of this pristine environment. Whether it is the power of a coastal storm or the simple beauty of barnacles captured in the light of a sunset, there is always something to be seen. Preferring to work in black and white, Jon is able to reduce an image to its basics of patterns, shapes, lines, and textures. By using these basics and their interplay with light, he searches for the extraordinary in the ordinary scene. Jon enjoys this challenge; it’s a passion. He has studied with well-known photographers Neal Parent, John Sexton, Brenda Tharp, and George DeWolfe among others. His photography has been exhibited throughout Maine, including Bowdoin College. SAM TEMPLE has family connections to two of Maine’s premier wooden boat building businesses, Rockport Marine and Brooklin Boat Yard. He worked part-time at the Rockport facility from age 11 through college. Sam then spent four years as one of the full-time Brooklin Boat Yard construction crew. He then set out on his own and started Barnyard Boat Shop, building traditional small wooden craft for customers. In 2008, Sam returned to Rockport Marine and has enjoyed leading traditional rebuilds and the construction of new cold-molded yachts working alongside world-class craftsmen. Outside of work, Sam and family spend time on a growing fleet of small boats including, most recently, the Beals Island lobsterboat ROXANNE. BILL THOMAS grew up paddling the rivers and coast of North and South Carolina, playing in the mountains and trying find meaningful work while avoiding a real job. He has been a self-employed woodworker, cabinetmaker, furniture builder and boatbuilder for nearly 35 years. Being an avid sea kayaker and boater, Bill also designs sea kayaks, canoes, and other small boats. Bill teaches woodworking and boatbuilding in his own shop, at the WoodenBoat School and in other venues across the United States. Bill is a Registered Maine Guide, and holds a Wilderness First Responder certification. In addition to his shop classes Bill also leads on water kayaking and sailing classes. The variety of work Bill does: building, designing and teaching both in the shop and on the water, when coupled with his passion for the outdoors, helps to keep his skills rooted in real world experiences. And, it keeps him from getting bored. Bill lives, works, and plays in Maine. Patching Boy Scout canoes on Maine’s Allagash River in the mid-1960s was ROLLIN THURLOW’s first successful canoe-building experience--successful, but not very graceful! After graduating from Maine Maritime Academy and a tour in the Navy, Rollin attended the wooden boat building program at Maine’s Washington County Vocational Technical Institute. His interest lead him to collaborate with Jerry Stelmok to start their own wooden canoe building company. While wooden canoes have had a long history, Rollin and Jerry discovered that there was precious little written about the actual how-to construction of the canoes. The canoe company became a real reinventing- the-wheel type of project--long on desire but short on capital and business skills, leading to the demise of the original company. But it was not long before with renewed C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 53 FACULTY “Paul Trowbridge was very good at explaining techniques. He’s so patient and supportive to each student, from beginner to experienced. We had fun as a group, encouraging each other and learning from one another. A very enjoyable course!” J.W., BRAINTREE, MASSACHUSETTS interest and skills, Rollin started his own company, the Northwoods Canoe Company. Co-authoring with Jerry the book The Wood and Canvas Canoe ensured that the how-to and historic information they had collected would become available to the public at large. Since its publication in 1987, it has become the bible for wood-and-canvas canoe building. Rollin has taught canoe building and restoration at a variety of locations throughout the U.S. and at WoodenBoat School since the late 1980s. Building a variety of his own designs plus historic reproductions, Rollin’s shop in the small town of Atkinson, Maine, the Northwoods Canoe Company, has become known as one of the premier wooden canoe shops for both restoration and new wooden canoes. PAUL TROWBRIDGE has painted in watercolor since the early 1970s. He studied fine arts at Principia College, the Museum School of Boston, the University of Maine at Orono, and received a Masters of Fine Arts in Painting from the University of Memphis. He settled in Maine because of his exposure to the area growing up, its strong visual appeal, and his love of the outdoors and the Downeast way of life. Paul built his home in Sedgwick where he and his wife, Jennifer, maintain a dance and art studio, and from which he takes painting excursions. He worked in animation at the Neworld Studios in South Blue Hill, Maine, participates in a figure drawing group, is a member of the Deer Isle Artists Association, and has taken part in plein air events in Blue Hill and Castine. Paul teaches watercolor at the Deer Isle Art Association and in regular classes during the summer. He has been artist-in-residence at Camp Newfound in Harrison, Maine. 54 2016 WoodenBoat School | Descended from grandparents who logged over 100,000 nautical miles, HANS VIERTHALER has spent over 20 years sailing the coast of Maine. His love affair with boats started when he spent six years working for a sailboat rental company in Deer Isle, where he took care of a small fleet and taught sailing to vacationing summer residents. He then became interested in larger vessels and crewed on the schooners NATHANIEL BOWDITCH, AMERICAN EAGLE, BILL OF RIGHTS, and NEW WAY, as well as other, smaller boats. Ten years ago he joined the crew at Brooklin Boat Yard as a rigger and carpenter, and in 1992 he earned his 100-Ton U.S. Coast Guard Captain’s license. In 1994 Hans fulfilled a longheld dream and www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 purchased the John Alden ketch ABIGAIL, and he looks forward to sharing his love of sailing with all those who step aboard. MARK WILKINS has been a professional ship model maker for over 25 years. He and his wife Karen live on Cape Cod where they have a model studio that focuses on ship and aircraft models. Mark’s models are represented by the American Marine Model gallery in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Over his ship modeling career, Mark has built a range of vessels, utilizing various scales, but specializes now in the area of 18th-, 19th-, and early 20th-century New England small craft, classic yachts, or clipper ships. He built two models of the clipper SNOW SQUALL, and more recently, a model of the WYOMING for the Maine Maritime Museum’s permanent collection. Although most of his models belong to private collections, several have been exhibited or belong to permanent collections at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston; Mystic Seaport Museum; The Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, Virginia; Ships of the Sea Museum in Savannah, Georgia; and the Chesapeake Bat Maritime Museum. DOUGLAS E. WILSON has been a practicing metalsmith since 1973. He has commissioned work in forged steel from his shop on Little Deer Isle, Maine, since his move there in 1981. Doug’s work is included in numerous national exhibitions and publications including The Contemporary Blacksmith, Fireplace Accessories, Anvil’s Ring, and Metalsmith Magazine. He has demonstrated his craft at many national blacksmithing conferences and has taught over 100 workshops about design and forge practice for blacksmithing organizations, school, colleges, and universities throughout the United States. WOODENBOAT SCHOOL STAFF Our staff members generally hail from all over the country and from many walks of life. Many of them are seasoned veterans of the joys and travails of boats, boating, and boatbuilding, while others are warm, friendly faces doing their very best to make your stay with us a pleasant, comfortable one. From the School Director to our energetic kitchen, waterfront, shop, and office staff, each member possesses a strong commitment to a firstclass program and the creation of a positive, safe environment for students and visitors alike. Above all, they enjoy sharing this “little piece of paradise” with all who stop by. School Director in 1990 and has enjoyed bringing insight, energy, and full-time dedication to WoodenBoat School. When he is not involved with work at the School, he enjoys hanging out with family and friends, gardening, sailing, skiing, hosting a weekly music program on WERU-FM Community Radio, and cheering for the Philadelphia Phillies. KIM PATTEN continues as Business Manager for the 14th year. Prior to joining WoodenBoat School, Kim spent five years as part of the WoodenBoat Store “team.” Originally from New York, she has spent every summer of her life in Maine, before making the move permanently after college. While summering in Maine, she spent her days sailing on Penobscot Bay. Kim and her husband Marvin keep busy working on their home and raising their daughter Riley. She enjoys the outdoors, sailing, skiing, and spending time with family and friends. A D M I N I S T RAT I O N The folks who administer WoodenBoat School believe that each student’s experience is of the utmost importance. From your very first communication with the School office to the completion of your course(s), they will work hard at meeting your needs and expectations. RICH HILSINGER first arrived at WoodenBoat School as a student back in 1983, and he’s been in Brooklin ever since. Rich managed the School shop for seven years, working under former directors Peter Anderheggen and Ben Ellison. He also taught courses in kayak and pram construction, experiences that he cherishes to this day. Woodworking became a part of his life after attending college in Pennsylvania, and he’s dabbled in everything from house carpentry to restaurant and bar renovation, barn restoration, and cabinetry. The “boat bug” bit while Rich wintered in the Caribbean in the 1970s, and, obviously, he’s still hooked! After sailing for two years with the four-masted bark SEA CLOUD as ship’s carpenter, he assisted on yacht deliveries; did boat repair; worked at two of Maine’s premier boatyards, North End Shipyard in Rockland and Brooklin Boat Yard; and purchased his own Crocker pocket cruiser, MARTHA. Rich stepped into the position of A longtime interest in woodworking led MIKE MOROS to open his own successful cabinet shop not far from where he grew up in Pine Brook, New Jersey. Over time, he found himself attracted to wooden boats and this eventually brought Mike to WoodenBoat School as a student in 2001. After a few courses in successive years and joining in on Alumni Work Weeks, the boat bug bit hard and Mike signed on as the school’s Assistant Shop Manager in 2006. In ’08 Mike took over the reins as Shop Manager. During the off-season Mike has worked on the carpentry crew at Brooklin Boat Yard. In 2009 Mike opened his own business, Michael Moros Woodworking, providing wooden boat work, custom woodworking and general contracting. When not working, Mike enjoys being outdoors, especially boating and fishing. He recently completed a handsome Glen-L Marine 16' center console skiff for himself and is now restoring a 1952 Chris Craft. Born and raised in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, GREG BAUER came to boatbuilding as a third career later in life. Before the boatbuilding bug bit hard, he worked for six years as a design draftsman for a metal fabrication shop and for ten years as an accounting manager of an auto parts manufacturer. A couple of sailing experiences on the Maine windjammer ROSEWAY led Greg to the world of wooden boats, and he soon enrolled at The Landing School in Kennebunkport, Maine. After graduating from their boatbuilding program, Greg joined the school’s staff as a graduate teaching assistant. He then spent three years as a joiner with Bruckmann Yachts in Mississauga, Ontario. Greg moved to midcoast Maine in the spring of 2002 and spent nine years with the boatbuilding crew at French & Webb in Belfast, Maine. In the spring of 2011 he joined the staff at WoodenBoat School as Waterfront Manager. In the fall of 2011 he started his own business, NB Woodworking, specializing in yacht joinery, custom cabinetry and fine woodworking. C E L E B R AT I N G 3 6 Y E A R S O F WO O D E N B OAT S C H O O L 55 REGISTRATION | INFORMATION STUDENT QUALIFICATIONS The main requirement for participation in WoodenBoat School courses is the desire to learn. Our students range from novices to seasoned professionals. Our classes are small, and there is a lot of opportunity for one-on-one teaching, so that usually a wide range of students can enjoy and profit from the same class. However, there are a few courses for which we expect a certain minimum skill level, and that is stated in the individual course descriptions. Also, we encourage students, particularly novices, to do a little prep work for their courses. We will send tool lists and reading lists along with your course confirmation. The more familiar you are with the subject and the tools, and the more questions you have, the more you’ll get out of the course. If you have any questions about the suitability of a course for you, please call Rich Hilsinger. Finally, it is a real help to the instructor to know something about his/her students ahead of time. Please enclose with your application a description of your relevant experience and expectations. REGISTRATION Registration is complete upon receipt by WoodenBoat School of an application form and the necessary deposit(s), and our confirmation of same. If a course is already full, you will be put on a waiting list and immediately notified when there is an opening. You may wish to call WoodenBoat first to make sure that there is room in the course you want. Call 207–359–4651 Monday through Friday, 8:00 to 5:00; ask for Rich Hilsinger or Kim Patten. If we have an opening, we can reserve it for you while you get your application in. This is an especially good idea in late spring and summer. Note: WoodenBoat School is GI Bill® approved. TUITION, DEPOSITS, REFUNDS, WITHDRAWALS, and CANCELLATIONS We ask you to deposit one-half of your total costs along with your application. The balance due must be paid one month before class begins. Your deposit, less a $100 fee per course, will be refunded in the event that you must cancel and do so at least one month prior to the beginning of the course. Deposits will be refunded in full to students who cancel three business days after registering for a course. If your notice of cancellation is received between 15 and 30 days prior to the course, your tuition is not refundable, but can be credited toward future courses later in the season. If you must cancel less than 15 days before the course, we cannot refund or credit your money. In case of emergency or insufficient number of registrations, WoodenBoat School reserves the right to cancel a course and return all deposit money. Because of this policy, we strongly urge 56 2016 WoodenBoat School | you to buy refundable airline tickets or flight insurance. WoodenBoat School will not be responsible for any loss on nonrefundable airline tickets. There is a 10% discount on tuition for all alumni. HIGH SCHOOL/COLLEGE STUDENT DISCOUNT Current high school and college students are eligible for a discount of 50% off the listed course tuition for classes in Brooklin. SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM The school has a one-third tuition scholarship available for all courses in Brooklin. These are awarded to people who could not otherwise afford to participate in our courses, with preference given to people who are working in the marine trades and to students contemplating a career in the marine industry. Scholarship recipients will be assigned periodic tasks in the shop, in the kitchen, and on the waterfront. TRANSPORTATION WoodenBoat School is approximately 250 miles from Boston by car, and 150 miles down east by boat. Airline service is available to Bangor, and WoodenBoat can provide transportation from there for an additional fee. Please notify us two weeks in advance if you need to be picked up at the airport. Details of this will be sent to you with your course confirmation. runs from the Sunday on which the course commences until the Saturday morning following the last day of the course. Weekend meals are light and continental. Maine can be on the chilly side during late spring and early fall. We recommend that you pack warm clothing and throw an extra blanket or sleeping bag in the car. Bring a bike if you have one—it’s a great way to get around Brooklin. Double Room: $297/week (per person) Single Room: $405/week (limited availability) Board: $221/week Campsites: $108/week (limit 4 people) Mooring: $100/week Note: If you reserve a room with us and decide to cancel this reservation, you must notify us two weeks prior to the start of the course to receive a full refund. Lodging/meal prices include 8% tax where applicable. COURSE MATERIALS AND TOOLS Any materials that go home with a student will be charged at our cost. In the several classes where every student works on his/her own project, we have noted the usual material costs in the course description. Material prices include 5.5% tax where applicable. You will be sent a list of the hand tools you will need for your course as specified by the instructor, as well as suggested preparatory reading. Winners of boat raffles will be responsible for paying material costs before leaving Brooklin. ACCOMMODATIONS AND COSTS Staying at the WoodenBoat accommodations is recommended by us and by former students. Evening socializing and boating become, in effect, an extension of the courses, and add immeasurably to the School experience. We have a number of rooms in both the Farmhouse (next to the Shop) and in the Student House on Naskeag Road. The rooms are doubles, not fancy, but clean and airy. Bathrooms are shared by several rooms, and students bring their own sheets, soap, and towels. We also have a number of local cottages that we use on a regular basis. Family members are welcome as space permits, but pets are not. Guests may take room and board with us depending on space availability. We also have campsites available on the WoodenBoat property. Again, these are quite basic, with no electrical outlets or tent platforms, but in a pleasant location. Campers have their own toilets and shower facilities. Pets are not allowed in the campground. Our kitchen and dining hall are located in the Student House (originally the Mountain Ash Inn). The cuisine is American with some gourmet treats. Ingredients are fresh, portions are hearty, and service is buffet style. For students taking a single week course, room and board extends from Sunday dinner through the following Saturday’s breakfast. For students in longer courses, room and board www.woodenboat.com | (207) 359-4651 ARRIVAL TIME AT WOODENBOAT Your course begins with dinner at 6:00 p.m. on Sunday, followed by a general meeting and an introductory session with your instructor. The Sunday dinner is for all students, whether or not they are taking board with the School. You may arrive at the School anytime you wish on Sunday. You will find room assignments and other information posted in the entryway of the Student House. The School Director will be at the Student House at 5:00 p.m. to meet you. Most classes end on Friday evening. Students are asked to depart on Saturday morning. If your course ends on Saturday, you have your room/campsite for Saturday night. First day of registration is January 4, 2016 at 8 a.m. EST. Phone lines and faxes will be very busy—we ask for your patience. When calling, please be ready with info regarding course selection, accommodations, and a credit card for your deposit. We recommend that you think of alternative weeks/courses in the event your first choice is not available. WoodenBoat School P.O. Box 78, 41 WoodenBoat Ln., Brooklin, Maine 04616 USA For over 42 years WoodenBoat magazine has inspired its readers with boatbuilding projects, tips and techniques, technologies, history, product and book reviews, design commentary, and more. The magazine’s editorial and business offices are located on the same grounds as WoodenBoat School, allowing an easy exchange between the magazine’s editors, the school’s students and instructors. In fact, many instructors take time from their busy schedules to write for the magazine, and occasionally a school project is featured in WoodenBoat as a how-to-build article. A one year subscription (six issues) to WoodenBoat cost $32.00 in the U.S. TO ORDER, CALL 1-800-877-5284 or visit our website where you can subscribe online. WWW.WOODENBOAT.COM The WoodenBoat STORE While you’re taking classes here in Brooklin, stop in at The WoodenBoat Store right across from the Shop. Open Monday-Friday 7:30am to 6:00pm, and Saturdays 9:00am to 5:00pm. We carry books, boatbuilding plans, half-hull model plans, WoodenBoat caps, T-shirts, tools, and great gift-type items… should you want to bring home something for your significant other who was so nice about you playing with boats for a couple of weeks. AND, even though we are in the wilds of Maine, you can stay connected, as we are THE hot-spot, so bring your lap top with wireless access, and you can email pictures home of your class. It's HOT all night long so you can sit out on the Store porch after dinner, and surf to your heart’s content. MYSTIC SEAPORT in Mystic, Connecticut June 24-26, 2016 Be sure to join us again in Mystic Seaport, Mystic, Connecticut for our 25th Annual WoodenBoat Show. Step aboard beautiful wooden boats large and small, watch demonstrations by expert craftsmen, dream about your next boat. In the words of one show attendee: “The boats were so beautiful I almost walked off the end of the dock!” IT’S GOING TO BE OUR BEST BOAT SHOW YET! Presented and produced by WoodenBoat Magazine and hosted by Mystic Seapor