
From The Editor
In our September issue we invite you to settle in aboard a solar-power, strip-built launch for a quiet 240-mile cruise along Ontario’s Trent-Severn Waterway. We’ll take look at Campion’s Apple 16, a lug-rigged lapstrake plywood dayboat that can get up on a plane as well as Oughtred’s Auk, a lapstrake tender that can be stretched out to be an capable dinghy for oar and sail. Ben Fuller shows us pneumatic trailer-jack wheels that make it easy to move a boat trailer across your back yard and Kent Lewis adds a cyclone separator to his Shop-Vac to simplify dust collection in the shop. In Greenville, North Carolina, a high school found a way to keep a highly regarded English teacher from retiring: they built a shop for him and let him teach boatbuilding. Our editor tells about parting company with an important part of his past—a traditionally built Alaskan hunting kayak that has been with him for 40 years.
From The Editor
Boat Profile
Light, fast, and well mannered
Boat Profile
An adaptable tender
Adventures
The Trent-Severn Waterway under solar power
Technique
Product Reviews
Dual pneumatic jack-stand tires
Product Reviews
Oneida's Dust Deputy
Reader Built Boats
A class in boatbuilding