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               Part 1: Design  Considerations               
              
              Our part of Maine is blessed with a chain of large and  beautiful lakes that make it, in the words of a billboard we pass regularly on  trips to town, a “sportsman’s paradise.”   And our house is situated just about in the middle of the chain, which  means that if we--my wife Theo and I--leave our dock and turn right, it’s a  little less than a ten-mile trip to Canada; if we turn left, there’s another  ten or so miles worth of boatable water, and that’s just if we go in a straight  line.  Following the shoreline, much of  it now under conservation easements, gives us what feels like an almost  unlimited amount of territory to explore.   You can get a sense of what it looks like in this photo, which also  includes a good shot of the back of Theo’s head:                 
              
                
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                  Following the shoreline, much of  it now under conservation easements, gives us what feels like an almost  unlimited amount of territory to explore.   | 
                 
               
              Up until recently we’ve done all our exploring in  kayaks, either in singles (Theo in the CLC Chesapeake 16 I built for her and I  in my Feathercraft Kahuna) or in our pride and joy: a` George Dyson double  baidarka, bought as a derelict and rebuilt with the kind and patient advice of  the designer.  That’s the baidarka in the  first photo; the shot below shows the whole boat about to float away from the  dock. because I forgot to tie it.                 
              
                
                  | Our pride and joy: a` George Dyson double  baidarka, bought as a derelict and rebuilt with the kind and patient advice of  the designer. | 
                   
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              But kayaks, when all is said and done, are for  paddling.  They’re not the best platforms  for fishing or photography, and even the baidarka, which is pretty doggone fast  for a kayak, suffers inevitably from the limited range of people-powered boats,  especially when the people in question are avid but aging.  Either the muscles or the bladders give out  too damned soon.                 
              Confining ourselves to day trips that push but don’t  pop the stamina envelope, we’ve been able to investigate only a small portion  of our local waters.  We decided we  needed a powerboat (or two, as it turns out) to expand our horizons.                 
              First we bought an Old Town Osprey canoe and outfitted  it with an electric trolling motor.  The  big box you can see in the middle is where the battery lives, surrounded by  floatation foam. Notice also that I remembered to tie this one to the dock.  It’s a nice little boat, better than a kayak for fishing and photography, but  it still doesn’t give us the range we’re looking for or room for a  porta-potty.                  
              
                
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                  We bought an Old Town Osprey canoe and outfitted  it with an electric trolling motor.  | 
                 
               
              So I decided it was time to finally do something about  the boat that’s been percolating away in my head for years, approaching and  then receding from the front burner depending on the state of my time  commitments and finances.  The parameters  I started with were these:                 
              
                1. The boat had to be big enough to offer a stable  platform for fishing, photography, and swimming.  There had to be a cabin of sufficient  dimensions to provide minimal shelter and space for a porta-potty.  Overnight cruising ability would be a plus,  but not necessary. We once had a 12-foot former daysailer that we used for  recreational crabbing.  That size would  be too small. We also had a 24-foot cabin cruiser that we used primarily for  running aground in the lower Chesapeake Bay.  That size would be too big.  I settled on 18 feet as a sort of arbitrary  middle ground.
                  
                    
                2. The boat had  to be capable of handling the occasional rough water outing.  We are really quite diligent about checking  the sky and the weather radio, but storms can come up fast in our neck of the  woods, as evidenced by the picture below, taken at the nearby camp we rented  the year before we bought our house.  Not  ten minutes before the photo was taken, the water was dead calm, the sky just  beginning to cloud up.  Depending on wind  direction, the fetch over these big lakes can produce waves a lot rougher than  the ones shown.  This requirement  suggests a bit of deadrise in the hull, but I was determined to avoid the  sledgehammer approach of a monster engine driving a deep-vee planing hull over  the waves.  Even the otherwise reasonable  aluminum fishing boats common to our lakes use this approach.  But we don’t need to go fast through the rough water, we just need to get home.  At the beginning stages of the design  process, I was thinking in terms of a displacement hull, mainly because of  requirement #3.  
               
              
                
                  | We are really quite diligent about checking  the sky and the weather radio, but storms can come up fast in our neck of the  woods, as evidenced by the picture below, taken at the nearby camp we rented  the year before we bought our house. | 
                   
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                3.  The boat  could not be a resource hog.  The design  goal here was to find the combination of hull and propulsion that would get the  job done with minimal impact on the environment and on our budget.   Since it’s almost certainly illegal to build  a teeny-tiny submarine and use it to blow them out of the water, we can’t do  much about floating codpiece substitutes going way too fast and making way too  much noise, but we surely don’t have to add to the mayhem.   I did a lot of research on electric power  for this boat as well as the canoe--I really, really  wanted to go electric  because the silent, clean power is so appealing--but came to the conclusion  that with current battery technology, a boat of the size we were contemplating  could be most practically powered by a smallish 4-cycle gas outboard.  10 or 15 hp would be ideal from an economy  standpoint.  20 hp would be OK, and also  give us more wiggle room in case of bad weather.  
                4.  There’s this  bridge. . .   Within sight of our dock is  a highway bridge that serves as home for countless pigeons, a diving platform  for the local teenage boys, and the Great Preventer of Tall Boats from our half  of the lake system trying to get to the other half.  At its highest point, there’s only four feet  of clearance from the bottom of the bridge to the water.  One local resident cut the railings off his  pontoon boat to make it through.  Others  remove their windshields and duck.   The  alternative, if  your boat won’t make it  under, is to trailer it three miles from the launching ramp on one side of the  bridge to the one on the other side, thus missing the water in front of our  house entirely.  I’m sure this  constriction saves us from even more idiot traffic than we already have, but we  need to get under the bridge to take advantage of the increased range our  motorized craft will give us.  So we’ve  got to be less than four feet from the waterline to the highest point.  
                5.  The boat had  to be pretty.  There’s just no sense that  I can see in going to all the trouble to build a boat if you need to hide it  under a tarp when you’re done, so as not to offend the neighbors with its  ugliness.  I confess that I like to look  at the baidarka almost as much as I like to paddle it.  I was aiming for the same effect here.  
                6.  The boat had  to be relatively easy and quick to build.   Although I enjoy boatbuilding immensely, I was looking for a useable  boat here, not another long-term project that never gets finished.  I once built a Chesapeake Bay crabbing skiff  the authentic way--all solid timber including the bow staving, herringbone  planked bottom, the works--only to lose my building space before I had a chance  to put the decks on and finish it up.   That boat had to be given away, sadly.   This time I own the garage, but I don’t want my kids to have to finish  construction.  
               
              The most obvious way to avoid the neverending project  blues, of course, is to just buy a boat and have done with it.  And we considered that option.  The quintessential craft of our Maine waters is the  Grand Laker canoe--20 feet or so long, square-sterned for outboard power.  legendary for its seaworthiness--and there were a few of those for sale.  But the good ones were expensive (rightly so  considering the workmanship) and the cheap ones would need total rebuilds.  I looked at a beautiful Scott freighter  canoe--less expensive than a Laker because of its fiberglass construction but  equally seaworthy in reputation--and came very close to getting out the  checkbook.  But in the end, we held out  for the cabin and porta-potty requirement and rejected the canoes.  
               Once I determined that I’d have to build to get what I  wanted, to say that I consulted a lot of books and looked at a lot of plans is  a horrible understatement.  Here’s a shot  of one corner of my basement office.   You’ll notice a few boat books on the shelves.                 
              
                
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                  To say that I consulted a lot of books and looked at a lot of plans is  a horrible understatement.  | 
                 
               
              I bought a couple of those “26,000 Boat Designs on a  CD” things on eBay, and enjoyed looking at the old Popular Mechanics articles they contained.  I got a book of designs from Arch Davis and  admired their ingenuity.  I went through  my Bolger library for about the thousandth time. I got some plans from  Clark-Craft and Duckworks.  You get the  picture: no stone unturned.  In the end  the design I actually liked the most--it’s almost pretty enough to ignore the  flat bottom--was Karl Stambaugh’s Redwing,  but an e-mail to Stambaugh confirmed what I thought I’d gathered from the  small-scale plans in his book Good Skiffs--Redwing was too tall to fit under our  bridge, so I was left with a few “finalists.”                 
              
                1. Jim Michalak’s Brucesboat.  This one was attractive because in conception  it’s like a poor man’s Grand Laker.  But  it had the same disadvantage as the latter boat--really too small for the cabin  we wanted even though Mr. Michalak didn’t think a very small cabin would hurt  it much.  
                2.  Michalak’s Electron.  As I mentioned before, the idea of electric  power was tempting, and I liked the way the cabin is integrated into the  overall shape of the boat.  I can’t even  remember why I rejected this one.   Probably just dumbness on my part.   As with Brucesboat I still  have the plans.  Maybe someday. . .  
                3.  The Hartley  Trailer-Sailers.  Displacement hulls and  the promise of low power requirements were attractive here, as was the fact  that they had actual cabins.  The  designer even suggested that they’d make good fishing boats for inboard or  outboard power.  Just get rid of the  centerboard and sail rig and off you’d go.   I’d had the plans for the 21 and 16-footers for a long time, and bought  an additional set for the 14-footer.  As  designed, these boats are kind of tubby, befitting their reputation as safe  family daysailers, and the flattish sheer isn’t the most beautiful out there,  but I did some drawings and made some models (see next installment) that  suggested that the 14 or 16-footer could be stretched to the desired 18 feet to  make fairly pretty (to my eye) boat that would still do what I wanted it to  do.                  
                The construction was a little fussy compared to  Michalak’s designs, but not impossible.   I had some questions about converting them to powerboats though, and  e-mailed the current purveyor of Hartley plans, assuming that I’d get the same  kind of helpful response I’d gotten from the other designers I’d  contacted.  Not so.  The guy even said he’d be putting me on his  spam list if I wrote to him again.   Puzzled at this response--I had even offered to buy yet another set of  plans in exchange for help--I posted a question on the Duckworks newsgroup and  heard back from John Welsford that nobody seemed to know much about the folks  who now sell the Hartley plans.  Oh,  well.  They’re still neat designs,  though.  Another project for someday,  maybe.
                  
                    
                4.  Another Chesapeake Bay crabbing skiff.  My most prized boatbuilding volume is a book  of plans from the Chesapeake Bay   Maritime Museum  called A Heritage in Wood.  Full-size plans are available from the museum  for most of the boats in the book, and I’d already used one of those plans for  the ill-fated project mentioned previously.   Why not build another one, a little bigger one this time?  I’d worked on one of these boats--called the Lemon because of its decrepit  condition--as a crewman, and it had, at least in the hands of my boss and  neighbor Captain Tom Holland, been seaworthy in some very rough conditions  despite multiple leaks.  It had a small  cuddy, and even though Tom didn’t have one you could have stuck a porta-potty in there.  The Lemon was a big old heavy thing, but a 40-horse Yamaha still pushed it along pretty  well.  A lighter version, IF I could  figure out how to build a lighter  version--might work with the smaller engine I had in  mind.   The Lark design on page 60  looked like a good starting point for such a boat.  I thought I had a winner.  
                           
            On to Part two - Modeling  |