She's a beaut !!!
Come on Mike , some more images ....please!!
JD
She's a beaut !!!
Come on Mike , some more images ....please!!
JD
Senior Ole Salt # 650
She looks saucy.
More pics!
I was surprised , especially with the paint. I thought it wuz gonna be yaller.
Verrry nice boat.
Wakan Tanka Kici Un
..a bad day sailing is a heckuva lot better than the best day at work.....
Fighting Illegal immigration since 1492....
Live your life so that whenever you lose, you're ahead."
"If you live life right, death is a joke as far as fear is concerned."
We want on-the-water shots!
Steven
Nice!
Will
OK Mike your turn. How about a view from the quarter ?
JD
Senior Ole Salt # 650
Mike is certainly a talented man... No plans, built by eye. Nice job!
I searched in vain for more pics, but alas came up dry. Please post an update.
"Wherever there is a channel for water, there is a road for the canoe. " - Thoreau
That is very nice. Good job Mike!
Envious.
She really is a looker:
Steven
Awesome!
I think it's time for a canoe, next!![]()
"The bottom of a canoe should only touch two things - one is air and the other is water."
-The Silver Fox
Geez, that's handsome. And handy-looking, too.
Nicely done, Mike.
Another masterpiece from the Scratchnsaw Boatworks... lovely job Mike.
Finastkind.
As always, beautiful build!
Allan of the Grove - S/V Laura Ellen, 1937 Gaff Schooner
http://aylard.ca http://bluenosejr.com
"never send a ferret to do a weasel's job.."
A very cool boat, (as usual)... been following the build.
Nice job, man. Immaculate brightwork, and tastefully laid out. When does it get wet?
She'll never float. You built it wrong. She'll fall apart. Heck, somebody had to say it.
:-) :-) :-)
This is why I built it for shallow water would never take the boat in the ocean under any circumstances.The boat is ready to run even though I do have some cosmetics left to do which includes windows.
There is no boat ramp avaliable close by and the weather has not been friendly enough to make a passage to float it and run it for in water shots. Chuck the yeller turned into Ivory Toplac since it was on sale for five bucks a quart with a fair amount of dust from being unsold on the shelves. But if you would like it yeller, then you can be that new owner that I am seeking in which I will change the color for you at no further charge.
The cookie jar is empty with nothing to look foward to in the future. So for now, this is the statis of the boat awaiting a "green" light to proceed to the end of the tunnel. I will not be doing anything else for now, as I am giving the house a freshen up for this horrible market too.
Fitz, the photobucket album bit the dust with the changeover about two months ago, which seperated into multiple albums when I attempted to update the e=mail and password on the older one and lost the buiild shots even after attempting to contact them. So the threads were rendered useless.
Thanks guys.
It is truely an honor to witness a master practicing his trade. Thank you for sharing.
Scotty
Bravo!
Nice work, Erster. You have a good eye for proportion. To put that much house on that small a boat without it looking boxy or top-heavy is no small feat. I hope you find a home for it soon so that you can move on to your next project.
Hope for the best, but plan for the worst.
Gorgeous.
sweeet!
Beautiful job erster.
Sooo, this is your last build, is it? I have my doubts!
Thanks, for the size of boat and for what I felt was needed at the time, the inside is more than adequate, leaving the cockpit also with additional seating outside in comfort. The walkaround is super with the trunk doubling as a foward seat if anyone wants to ride or just sit foward without the legs doubled up in your chest.
I also got an additional full sized berth across the port side which actually folds within itself for storage which is not shown in the shot that I took before splitting it up. The galley of course folds down for a small kids bunk or a double seating. So six people can sit in this boat using the options. Storage is all around the exterior and under the dinette and inside helm seat.
Dave yep unless I find a sponsor, this is it with the economic enviroments. Our region has almost double the unemployment numbers in the trades even if I attempted to go back building anything, and the healthcare industry will also be taking a serious hit with initial steps already taken.
Nice boat, Mike. Well done and a lot of good ideas. Would work great on both coasts, and very salty looking. You did yourself proud.
Tell everybody where to get the plans, Mike.![]()
Excellent work Mike... Its amazing how a completed work can rise to such a level of aesthetic beauty when no detail is left to chance.
I wish I was closer to photo document such a sweet boat.
RodB
Nice-looking boat! I followed your build thread. Great to see her done.
This new ship here is fitted according to the reported increase of knowledge among mankind. Namely, she is cumbered end to end with bells and trumpets and clocks and wires. It has been told to me she can call voices out of the air or the waters to con the ship while her crew sleep. But sleep though lightly. It has not yet been told to me that the sea has ceased to be the sea.--Rudyard Kipling
Any transom shots?
What size engine is it designed for?
If she's for sale, where will it be listed?
Awesome build Mike. Been watching this closely and am anxiously awaiting the launch. What size motor you reckon is going on the back?
Jeff
"You only live once--but if you work it right, once is enough."
Very nice!
" He who works with his hands is a laborer.
He who works with his hands and his head is a craftsman. He who works with his hands and his head and his heart is an artist".
St. Francis of Assis (1181-1226)
Lovely as usual, Erster. You're a real artist.
Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
Another fine job.It looks good and it seems that you have found a way to use every bit of available space without it getting cluttered.
It sure is top notch. I guess you are finally getting the hang of this boat building thing and just in time to quit it altogether.![]()
I put a 40 hp four stroke from my fishing skiff. But it can take up to a 90, not because it wouldn't carry more, but there is no need for a large motor. I replied by mail, Brian to keep this as a straight boat thread. Pipefitter, the more you do something, the more you find that you do not know, except in one area and that you should have been doing something different .
It would be a shame to put that in the water. Prolly melt anyway, looking as sweet as it does.
Congratulations, Mike.
LOL, Thanks, one thing has always been in play with anything that I have built and used, I have no mercy when it comes to abuse. The great thing about any of these projects, you can always have a new boat next year or even the year after with a few strokes of sandpaper and a bucket of paint if you trash them.
With solid wood veneers, this too can be redone if "kids" ding it. The best a boat will ever be is as they slip down a ramp. When you accept this then you can and will truely enjoy them. Unlike what a lot of folks subscribe to, I build no Trailer Queens , only sow's ears with lipstick.![]()
Thanks for the PM's Mike!
Very nice craft, Sir.
Indeed!Naval architects and designers are a waste of money!
Very Nicely Done Mike!
Just caught up to this! WOW! Very well done indeed Mike. I can't tell how much I envy your abilties with wood and boats!
Thanks for keeping the bar set nice-n-high for us fools to aim for!!
Cheers!
Peter,a aiming high fool in training
Do it,do it,do it,do it,do it,do it,do it,now!
J.Lennon
This boat was built with ten thumbs.No fingers were harmed in anyway.