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              To Part Two 
              To Part Three 
              To Part Four 
              To Part Five 
              Back several years ago when I started  building my own John Welsford Pathfinder, I had some restrictions on  the size of boat I could build, most notably was my shop space and  exit door. Even the spray rail had to be a certain size to ensure the  boat would make it through the opening, it was that close. But in the  end, the boat made out into the light, and had a busy summer cruising  the many bays and coves of Newfoundland. 
              
 The Exploits islands had ideal winds  and nice sheltered coves to spend a night or two in. 
 Random Island had a large shallow run  for fishing and sailing with pebbled beaches for riding the  Pathfinder upon. 
 There were many other notable places  that the Pathfinder have seen,  and most involved some trailering behind my car to get there. 
 Fast  set up, easy launch and loads of room for gear, it has been a gem to  sail. However my gaff rigged version has spent much of its time  travelling under a reefed sail in 20+ knot winds, and under a double  reef on a couple of occasions in 30 knot gusts, but that was heading for shelter with 2 hardy and adventurous  buddies aboard. 
 It’s easy to achieve over 7 knot speeds in that  kind of wind. That being said, Newfoundland also gets more than its  share of rain, drizzle and fog in the same day. I have often been  caught out in a rain squall, not due to my inattention to forecasting  but simply due to the fact that I have a limited time for sailing. 
 If I waited for a sunny windy day, I might not  get on the water at all. That leaves me heading for cover or a  sheltered cove. 
 A boom tent  does not serve well under sail, and setting up in the rain has its  own drawbacks and an unhappy crew. 
Since the launch I have thought of  adding a cabin to the Pathfinder but wanted to get a few seasons in  before I made up my mind. 
              
 Now after season two and enough sailings to know what my needs are, I  have decided to add a cabin. This conclusion has not come around  easily. Those of you considering adding a cabin to their boat know  all the reasons for and against so I won’t make it worse by listing  them. It really depends on the climate you live in and what weather  you expect to be normally sailing in. 
              I made a couple of sketches and showed  them to various friends and asked their honest opinion. The reactions  were positive and most just questioned if it could be done. They were  under the impression that once built you could not just hack away at  a boat in such a way, removing the spray rail, cutting into the deck,  and so on without making a total mess of it. I never heard of such a  rule so here I am; at a crossroads preparing to cut up a perfectly  functional sailboat add a cabin to my Pathfinder. What sealed  approval of my budget for this folly?  I told my loving wife of the  added privacy of going potty in a cabin.  
              John Welsford has cabin plans for the  Pathfinder and he sells them on the Duckworks site, but I am drawing  up my own plans based on pictures of other cabin pathfinders and  similar styled boats. 
              
Many pictures were taken and studied from wooden boat magazines in  places where nice cabin ideas were. All were morphed into the concept  drawing. Trying to achieve the necessary space inside without ruining  the look of the Pathfinders beautiful lines was probably the most  critical thing. If I couldn’t make it look right the whole plan  would be scrapped, but it looks like it could work. 
Something to point out about the  working conditions. 
 I have  no garage to store my boat in this winter and no place to work on the  Pathfinder until Spring thaw, A minor complication. Much of the cabin  will need to be completed before I cut any decking. And the only real  critical dimension I need is from the back side of Frame #2 to the  back side of Frame #4. This is the length of the cabin and where it  will be fixed in place. With unseasonably warm weather I managed to  remove the tarp from the rear of the boat and climb inside with my  scrap lumber jig to get my measurements. After clamping the pieces in  place I got my measurement of 57” [1448mm] from the front side of  the forward scrap wood to the forward side of the rear scrap jig. 
 For anyone interested in doing  something similar I will be making my drawings cutting and fitting  and changing the drawings as I see issues crop up. In the end I’ll  have a set of useable drawings that a Pathfinder owner can safely use  to modify their own sailboat. These will be in a pdf form along with  full size templates, probably posted when i’m in the painting  phase.  
Next on the list, I will use my initial  drawings to cut my plywood parts inside my workshop and start the  building jig for the cabin. 
Drawings (Click to Download) 
  
  
  
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