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Simple recreational
rowing

I am very keen on recreational
rowing boats, my Wife Jan prefers to see where She is going
in Her sea kayak but I like the feel of the bigger boat
and the way the rowing motion uses all of the bodies muscles
as well as assisting the breathing as the torso rocks back
and forth.
To row a nice moving boat
such as “Silver Gull” or the three other designs
later in the book is easier than walking, and is surprisingly
fast. To carry a load such as camping gear or a friend or
two makes little difference to the effort needed to move
along at an easy pace and it is a wonderfully peaceful way
to explore an estuary or coastline. For those who, like
Jan, wish to see where they are going, a motorcycle wing
mirror fitted to the gunwale makes a dandy “front
view mirror”! For those who wish to use an outboard
motor why not, Seagull has a transom braced for a small
motor and will get more performance out of 2 horsepower
than anything else I’ve seen.

Recreational or sports rowing
boats are often pretty easily upset, the narrow waterline
beam making them very tender. In this boat though the bottom
is wide enough to allow one to stand up within the boat
(carefully), stability which although it does knock a little
off her performance, makes her a much more versatile craft
and only about three minutes in the hour slower than her
more sophisticated sister Joansa featured later in the catalogue.

Seagull builds in the same
way as “Fish Hook” and her other sisters, and
in fact the long gentle curves of the proportionately slimmer
rowing boat makes her easier to build in spite of the larger
overall size. If you use Gaboon or Occume plywood and take
care in the building it should be possible to keep her weight
down to about 40kg.

Rowing a boat like this is nothing like
most boaties have ever experienced, they move incredibly
easily using very little energy, and once the technique
of wing the oars has been mastered can be rowed for hours
on end at a speed that would surprise many sailors. A good
recreational rowing boat, unlike the delicate “toothpick”
that the competitive rowers use, can cope with even quite
extreme weather conditions, and with an experienced rower
in charge will ride over seas that would put much larger
boats at risk.

Gently stroking Seagull along
on a quiet evening tide, up an estuary somewhere not far
from here, is my idea of heaven.
Mollyhawk:
A Bigger Seagull
I have over the years had
many enquiries for a simple open water sliding seat rowing
craft. I was persuaded to draw up an extra sheet of plans
for Seagull which incorporated a secure and sturdy sliding
seat as well as extra bouyancy and mountings for footrests.
The boat itself can be built
at the original length or if desired she can be stretched
out to 5.336m (17 1/5 ft) at which she can pull two pairs
of oars. The drawings include the seat and track detail,
the outriggers and rowlocks and suggestions as to oars based
on longer versions of the ones in Seagulls plans.

LOA - 4.640 m 15ft
3in
(MOLLYHAWK Version is 5.336m 17 1/5 feet)
BEAM - 1.226 m 4ft 1 in
WEIGHT - 42 kg 93 Ib approx
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