I have a boat!

The completed boat ready to roll

A few weeks ago I got working on the boat exterior and that took a bit of time even though I was at it daily.   Multiple layers of epoxy with 24 hour dry times then priming, drying, two coats of enamel with 24 hours in between, etc…  Finally on the 19th I had a painted and dry boat so got it off the platform and onto the ground to install the seat, hatch cover, oar locks and handles.   I got all that installed on the 20th and loaded the boat up for a test float on our local lake with Lira in tow.  Luckily Catherine got home from work just in time to join me and take some photos and video of the maiden voyage.

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Seams taped, rails on and misc work ongoing

I gave the jump-stitching plenty of time to dry since I had to go to Iowa for 10 days.  When I returned home I got busy on the boat first removing the bolts and cutting the wires to be sure it all stayed together.  Next I did the fillets for a day and let that dry for two days before light sanding and the taping of the inside seams which I then also let that dry a few more days.   Today I finally got the rails on the boat and opted for a simplified rail system of just inner and outer rail with no spacers.   I’ve also cut out the motor mount re-inforcements and some brackets for a bench seat should I decide to go that direction.   All in all a very busy week of boat building.

I’ll finish up the rails tomorrow, start sanding the corners of them and get the inside corners and the few small gaps filled with EZ-Fillet material.  Then I need to build some corners, do a good sanding job on the interior and rails, add another coat of epoxy on the interior seams and finally finish up the seat whichever route I decide to go.   With any luck I’ll have the interior wrapped up next week and can flip the boat over to start finishing up the exterior seams and put the bottom fiberglass on.  Time to order the last of my hardware and paint soon.   Trout season is only three weeks away but I’ll be turkey hunting the first weekend of it.  With any luck I’ll have a boat ready in early May to launch and start fishing from.

Ready to start assembly

Panels beveled, marked and drilled for assembly

It has been a busy four days since I picked up my wood last Friday.  Over the weekend I managed to get the plans lofted and luckily caught and fixed my lofting mistake.  Yesterday I cut out the sides and bottom panels with my new pullsaw and went to pickup epoxy supplies at SystemThree.   Today I have beveled the edges of the panels, marked them up for drilling and fiberglass tape and got holes drilled on the bottom panel for wires.   This afternoon I am going to a friend’s house to use their table saw and cut rails.   So, I’m ready to roll on assembly tomorrow which is video #5 in the series of 30-odd videos on building this boat.    Hoping to get the sides wired onto the bottom tomorrow so I can loft out and cut the transom and bow pieces and then get those prepped and wired in on Thursday.   Within a week I’ll have gone from a stack of wood to something resembling a boat hull.   Hopefully by then it will have warmed up enough that I can start with epoxy work.

Measure twice (no three or four times) before you cut

Oops, a few mistakes but I caught it early and fiberglass will cover these extra holes anyway

I’ve spent the weekend lofting my plans onto the panels for the bottom and sides of the boat and finally have everything marked off and ready to cut.   This process involved making 1′ station lines across the boards then plotting points on offsets either from the bottom of the panel for the sides or the center line for the bottom.   The corners were a bit tricky on the sides since they involved offsets from the bottom as well as the side (transom) or the last 7′ line (bow).  I went through and re-measured all the offsets on the station lines  on both panels to make sure they were golden.  After I got the lines drawn in for the sides I started on the bottom.    With the bottom lines in and looking good I measured the arc length of the bottom, 89 3/4″ on both sides, perfect.   Then I measured the arc length on the side panel which should have been 90″.  Nope, it was 87 5/8″, what the heck?

So, I spent a half hour going back over all the measurements and found I had not double checked the bow and transom points on the side, my transom was fine but the bow was off – I had measured the horizontal offset wrong and had to move things to the correct spot, re-measured the arc length and had to move it just a smidge more to get it right.  Whew, glad I didn’t start cutting before triple checking all these measurements and making sure to check arc lengths.

Now onto cutting these panels and then starting to stitch them together before lofting and cutting out the transom and bow panels.  At this rate I should have something resembling a hull later in the week.

I’m gonna build me a boat with these two hands…

After last season at the lakes I decided that I wanted a boat so I could take Lira out fishing with me and keep from being so cold in my float tube.   I spent a lot of time looking at my options – a used jon boat, a small plastic boat or a wooden fly fishing pram.   I finally decided that a pram was the way to go and that instead of buying one I’d just try to build it on my own.  I haven’t built a boat before but have been in a homemade boat before and years ago read up on the whole process and now have the time to go for it.

The boat I’m building is called the Nymph 8 and was designed by Warren  Messer of Red Barn Boats.  I like the looks of this little pram, it appears it will fit in the back of the Tacoma no problem and there is an entire video series on YouTube where Warren builds the hull so I’ve got not only plans and instructions but videos to show me exactly what to do.

I downloaded the study plans and model, watched about half the videos then got the full plans and instructions last week and began planning out the project.  This week I picked up the materials to build the work platform and just ordered all the epoxy products from local SystemThree as well as the few tools I need still.  I will pick up the wood from Crosscut Hardwoods in Seattle in the next week and then can get building.   I’ll post regularly so you can follow along with the project.   Hopefully I can have the boat ready to launch around the time of the Western Lowland Lakes opener at the end of April.

2017 – A lot of firsts!

My seasons of 2017 – spring lake rainbows, spring turkey season, tenkara trout,  summer fly fishing, summer steelhead fishing, pheasant hunting, elk hunting, late deer season,  chukar hunting

I can hardly believe that 2017 is drawing to a close already, where did it go?   As I sit back and look over the year I realize that I have had one heck of a year with a lot of firsts.  For the first year in a while health was just not an issue, as you can tell from my lack of health related blog posts, so it freed me up to get back into fly fishing, to really get into hunting and to finally reach my goal of stocking my freezer by myself.   On top of spending almost one-third of my days in the field I was able to get out for daily hikes (and later runs) with Lira and still find time to work all year long.

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2016, year of the dog

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2016 turned out to be a much better your than even 2015 was for me and really was shaped by our new family member – an Australian Labradoodle puppy we named Lira (river in Aboriginal Australian).   Catherine and I had been talking about getting a dog again and I wanted one that could hunt since I got back into hunting as well as be a good family dog.  We also wanted a non-shedding dog if possible.  This narrowed our options down to basically two breeds – a Pudelpointer or a Labradoodle.   We were on waiting lists for Pudelpointers when I found a breeder that had hunting doodles as well as Pudelpointers and after talking to her decided that the doodle would be a better dog for us.

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The strangest spey casting lesson I’ve ever had

Louis Cahill Photography

How silly is this?   photo by Louis Cahill Photography

I learned to spey cast in the 90s, back in the days when spey rods were a relatively new tool in the steelheaders arsenal in the PNW.   Lines were long belly mid-spey lines back then and my initial instruction consisted of about 10 minutes of my friend showing me a single and double spey and off I went.   I watched videos on spey casting and the one I remember the most had this basic formula of Lift-Loop-Pause-Fire.   This is how I learned to cast and after some time was able to put out a lot of line and actually caught some steelhead.

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Deschutes/Yakima Trip 2016

Last year Jeff and I had a ton of fun on our September trip to the Deschutes and Yakima Rivers so we decided to do it again this year.   Once again the trip was hosted by Louis Cahill of Gink & Gasoline and guided by Jeff and Barrett of Fish the Swing.

img_2249We departed on Monday morning for the fairly long drive down to the Deschutes, leaving a bit later and deciding not to fish along the way this year.   We ran into The Dalles to get a license and arrived at Heritage Landing just in time for the 2 p.m. pick-up.   Of course, everyone else was late due to a flight delay so we got to sit around the landing a bit and chat with Jeff and Barrett.    Once the gang arrived we jetted about 4 miles upriver to our camp at Wagonblast, one of the better steelhead runs on the lower river.

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End of one season, getting ready for the next

IMG_0355It has been a grueling winter here in the PNW, the wettest on record and the rivers have been blown out not only locally but also on the Eastside where one can usually go fish by March and have great conditions.    I had my last pheasant hunting trip at the end of February with friends Mike & Carolina and their dog Penny and we managed to get a few birds but even the pheasants were in a weird mood.   I  pulled off a cast & blast that day hitting the river after the hunt and managed to catch a couple of trout to go with the two roosters I got, one of them a 17″ rainbow and a decent cutthroat.   This was the last day the Yak was in decent barely fishable condition.

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