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The most fun you can have without
getting wet.

It took 36 hours to travel from home in
Rotorua to the tiny coastal town of Brooklin, Maine ( USA)
where WoodenBoat magazine has its amazing office. I don’t
sleep at all well on an aircraft and so was not in good
shape by the time Publisher Carl Cramer dropped me off at
my accommodation,
I was completely on my own there as the summer visitors
are rare that far north in January but was pleased for the
peaceful spacious lodge after the horrors of being trapped
in aircraft and transit lounges for that long. 3am though
I awoke and could not sleep, my “clock” was
telling me I should be up and about even though my body
still felt awful, so there I was roaming around looking
at the wonderful Spruce clad rocky shore and the sea gleaming
like molten metal in the perfectly still moonlit night.
So I went for a swim !
The word “cold” now has a new meaning for me.
I knew that it would be cool but the WoodenBoat crew now
view New Zealanders with a mixture of awe and fear, and
I,
having swum in the waters of Eggemoggin Reach have designed
a boat suitable for winter sailing in those waters.
“Truant”, designed for those who want to play hookey, is
a very capable daysailer, with enough performance to be
fun, small enough to go onto a garden trailer rather than
a custom boat trailer, big enough to take a couple of less
limber adults and their camping or picnic gear or a small
mob of teenagers away for a small adventure. She is so designed
that she will be comfortable to sail, dry in most weather,
capable beyond almost anything else of her size and almost
impossible to capsize. Her wide beam and smallish centreboard
cause her to slide off
sideways rather than tip out, her generous freeboard and
wide decks help keep the water outside where it belongs
and she has so much enclosed locker and air tank space inside
that should the unimaginable happen there is enough buoyancy
to float her crew completely clear of the water when fully
swamped.
Built from Plywood and Marine Supplies sheet plywood and
fastened with Sikaflex flexible adhesive/sealant (Thanks
Gordon) the prototype is going together well, we’ve
cut the transom down to take a small outboard so her owner
can take her fishing, have today poured the lead into the
centreboard and will be painting her outside tomorrow. Lake
Rotomahana has really neat little coves, so tiny that a
launch would not squeeze in, and Jan already has tried fitting
our pile of camping gear in the big space under the foredeck
so I’d better quit the computer and get on with the
job!

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