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Fish Hook, A Simple
skiff

The idea of a minimum building
time general purpose skiff had been lurking in the dim recesses
of my mind for quite a while, mixed up with a whole lot
of other odd things and not going anywhere much when Sea
Spray editor Shane Kelly and I were talking about the best
way to set the world to rights and bewailing the cost and
complexity of the plastic or aluminum boats being offered
the unsuspecting who just needed something simple from which
to dangle a fishing line. My “idea” surfaced
and we decided that in order to cure this particular one
of the worlds ailments we would work up an alterative.
I was to produce a design
for a simple skiff that could be built in one weekend and
finished off during the evenings of the following week.
Shane would publish a complete set of plans and instructions
over a couple of issues of the magazine and we could sit
back and enjoy a world that was a little better than when
we began.
As so often happens the best
laid plans of men, mice and editors went awry, the company
that owned the mag decided on a complete revamp including
a change of name ( now New Zealand Boating World) and shortly
afterwards Shane was made an offer that he could not refuse
by a publisher in a completely different field. I was still
contributing to the magazine but the new editor had enough
on his plate for the time being and it took quite a while
for the project to surface again. However, it all went well
in the end, Ancris Associates came up with the glues, resins
and surfacing compound, Gordon at Plywood and Marine Supplies
donated the ply. Geoff (then the new editor) and I got on
very well and we were away again!
She’s not intended
to be graceful, but has an air of surefooted (sure finned?)
safety which her performance lives up to. She can carry
a considerable load in a good chop and will row better than
most things her size. Construction is very easy and in fact
the Fish Hook” building system was so successful that
similar techniques have been included in the sports rowing
boat “Seagull” and the ‘Golden Bay/ Setnet’
dinghy.
L O A 3.05M 10FT
BEAM 1.20M 4 FT
WEIGHT 43 KG 95 LBS (APPROX)
POWER OUTBOARD MOTOR TO 5 HP
CAPACITY 400KG (5 ADULTS) IN CALM WATER.
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