The Crestwood Gig 
            an Open Water Racer 
six sweeps & Cox  
              
                
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                      LOA=34'0" - 10.36m 
                        LWL=32' 8" - 9.96m 
                        Beam=5'6" - 1.68m 
                        Weight (est)=500lbs. - 226.8kg. 
                        Displacement @ DWL=2100lbs. - 952.5kg. 
                    Plywood Taped Seam Construction 
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              Rowing for Everyone: 
              While the MARIETTA YAWL and the CRESTWOOD GIG are designed to appeal to secondary school students and disadvantaged youth, they should interest others. 
              Neither  sex nor age nor athletic prowess are limiting factors. Some of the  handicapped have become involved successfully in rowing. Any group  interested in healthful, non-stressful, moderate exercise and fresh air  may participate. It can be as relaxed or strenuous as desired. It is  non-polluting and non-disturbing. It is the best way to observe  waterfowl and other wildlife. Competition is possible, if wanted. With  only one boat different crews may race by comparing times over a known  distance. 
              Museums and other historically  oriented organizations, particularly those with riverine or marine  leanings, may find existing contacts receptive to this activity. Many  have facilities suitable for instruction and construction. 
              
                
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                  The picture at left is from an article about gigs from the website of the Friends of the North Carolina Maritime Museum which owns the gigs and administers the Beaufort Oars rowing program. | 
                 
               
              Organizations, such as yacht clubs, that have seen the demographics  of their membership change with the passage of time, from mostly young  hotshots to more settled family types, may find a non-stressful rowing  program attractive. Retirement communities would seem to be a good  field for this activity. Many have workshops where the boats might be  built. The materials are readily available and relatively inexpensive.  Boatbuilding skills are not required. The components are prefabricated  before setup. Unlike conventional boatbuilding, nothing is attached to  the floor and the assembly is a quick and easy procedure. The boats are  light and easily transported. Perhaps some who are finding golf too  frustrating, or tennis too hard on the knees, may find rowing a welcome  change, and it is done in a sitting position. Those wishing to do  something for society may foster youth involvement. Existing programs  for getting young people involved in rowing show that all it takes is a  little guidance plus the necessary watercraft 
 
              History: 
              While  the Crestwood Gig may have a superficial resemblance to other types,  such as ship’s boats and Cornish pilot gigs, it is not related to those  types. Its remote ancestor is the Swampscott Dory, developed by hand  fishermen working from the sandy beaches north of Boston. 
              
                
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                  The Crestwood Gig's  remote ancestor is the Swampscott Dory, developed by hand  fishermen working from the sandy beaches north of Boston. | 
                 
               
              The immediate predecessor is “Millennium Falcon”, a boat designed  for the annual open water rowing race from Santa Catalina Island to  Marina del Rey on the California mainland. At the suggestion of Gene Loveless of Crestwood, NY, Joe Dobler enlarged the design to 34’ for six sweeps and cox. 
              Sailing: 
              The  Crestwood Gig may be equipped to sail. The easily driven hull will go  well with a modest sail area. Light air performance is not required  since the oars will provide auxiliary power. The masts will be located  so as not to obstruct rowing, the sails may be furled in place. A  centerboard will limit leeway and also improve tracking under oars in  rough water and windy conditions.  
              Suggested sail rigs 
              
                
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                  Sail Rig A 
                     Sprits'l Main, 
                  Standing Lug Mizzen  | 
                 
               
              
                
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                  Sail Rig B 
                     Leg o' Mutton  
                  with sprit booms  | 
                 
               
              
                
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                  Sail Rig C 
                   "No Halyard" Rig  | 
                 
               
              Gig Rowing 
                One of Life's Most Romantic Experiences 
              by Noelle Kreiner 
              
                The following article is reprinted from Messing About In Boats Magazine. The "Mary Moody" which is mentioned in th article was built  by Bob Alban of the Galveston Wooden Boat School for the Houston Rowing  Club from Crestwood Gig plans by Joe Dobler. 
               
              There we were. Shivering an the wet dock huddled in the early dawn  like so many street corner insomniacs. A blue heron, startled by the  splash of the first gig, Mary Moody as she broke the quiet of the lake,  lifted slowly into flight, sweeping low across the boathouse. 
              Conversation  focused on other oarsmen, those in Atlanta, those sturdy competitors  from distant lands who held half the planet spellbound in their rakish  shells moving like arrows across the vast expanse of Lake Lanier. 
              But  much of the talk was of gigs, other gig-lovers and that lighthouse row  to Boston Light chronicled in Messing About In Boats by contributing  writer Michael-McEvoy. 
              The Houston Rowing  Club is the oldest and largest privately owned row training facility in  the southwestern United States. With its fleet of 30 rowing craft,  including three 34’, all-wooden six-oared pilot gigs, arguably the most  active club, especially for Texas’ great army of yesteryear oarsmen who  would today rather watch rowing competitions than be training for the  gold. 
              The third boat is now afloat. One by  one they pull away from the shore. Eighteen oars arc skyward, then let  fall on the still morning sea. Aboard are five nurses, three retired  government workers, an astronaut, two attorneys, a Lifeflight doctor,  three school teachers, an architect, an airline pilot and an engineer. 
              Destination:  breakfast and fellowship at a lakeside cafe known as Duke’s Place. The  trip happens every Saturday and Sunday morning, with the small fleet of  wooden gigs easing off into Jarboe Bayou with clocklike precision. The  point of all this is fun and fitness. 
              For an  hour the crews respond to oar commands, usually with good-spirited  epithets hurled at their coxwains. In the distance, the Johnson Space  Center looms out of the morning mist. Several small sloops chug, sails  furled, down the wide channel leading to Galveston Bay. 
              The  founder of the Houston Rowing Club is white-haired, 65-year-aid Gene  Horton, NASA’S first space flight information officer. Now retired,  Horton teaches rowing and sculling lessons on weekends and recruits new  oarsmen, He also serves as one of the gig coxwains for the breakfast  rows, 
              Two of the club gigs (Mary Moody and  Jolly Janet) were acquired by Horton from the Texas A&M University  Wooden Boat School on Galveston Island. A third (Lady Lonie) was built  in 1995 by wooden boat builder Jon Ethridge of Austin, Texas. 
              The  boats’ popularity has exceeded all expectations. They are used for team  building with corporations, professional networking, birding  expeditions and especially romance. A local club known as AHOY, MATE!  performs the service of matching companionable oarsmen and women and  placing them together at sea. Several marriages resulted from last  summer’s sunset gig rows! 
              Horton and his wife  Janet met through rowing and subsequently started the Houston Rowing  Club at Watergate Marina on Clear Lake. Today the club has over 200  members. 
              “Rowing is for us the perfect medium  for meeting and really getting to know and enjoy others,” says Janet  Horton, who doubles as the club’s bookkeeper and matchmaker. Workouts  are light and allow for a variety of guests rowers, including the  physically challenged. 
               
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              Plans for Nootka Sound, Marietta Yawl and Crestwood Gig are available from 
              Duckworks Boat Builder's Supply 
               
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