How to Build a Small Boat Yourself
Small boats are not small undertakings, not if we are contemplating their creation in our own garages from piles of wood. If we’re amateur builders, particularly first-timers, the prospect is daunting, maybe even frightening. We don’t know how to do this. We don’t know if we can do it. We’re about to commit epic blocks of time, money, and emotional capital to a project with no guarantees, except that—trust this formula!—it will cost twice the estimated budget and four times the projected hours to complete it. But if we stick it out, we will have not only refined our problem solving and tool skills, but also burnished our character. And we will have a boat to be proud of. One way to gain an understanding of various methods of construction is to take a class. At WoodenBoat School in Brooklin, Maine, for example, students in a two-week Fundamentals of Boatbuilding class learn several styles of traditional hull construction. In the foreground, a students fits a floor timber to a carvel-built boat, while in the background students fit a lapstrake plank.Courtesy of WoodenBoat School
Excellent summation. A pleasure to read as an amateur boat builder conversant with stitch-and-glue and glued-lapstrake construction.
Skin-on-frame might be worth a mention.
I just launched my Arch Davis Penobscot 17, following Arch’s variation on Glued Lapstrake design using permanent 3/4” stringers to guide the placement of each strake. This provides rigidity and strength with easy to work 1/4” plywood. Great fun in the shop, but 2X the budget and 4X the estimated time commitment is not far off.