Classic Boat — November 2017

(Barré) #1

Craftsmanship


CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2017 87

The Dory Shop celebrated 100 years of building dories this year,
with a lineage that stretches back, unbroken, to providing dories
for the great cod schooners in the dying days of sail. The yard is
picture postcard perfect, which is fi tting as the port of Lunenburg
is a UNESCO world heritage site. It still builds dories and variants
in the time-honoured fashion, from grown frames and tradtional
planking and fastenings, from 8ft (2.4m) upwards, for sail and
power as well as, of course, oars. It also runs two-week
workshops, where customers learn to build one of these iconic
little boats. The yard has, over the years, built quite a variety of
boats besides, including two cabin cruising schooners.

Artisan Boatworks recently launched its new tender for a super
yacht that is still in build. The superyacht owes much to a series of
sleek steam yachts, all named Corsair, that belonged to fi nancier
JP Morgan. They mostly had graceful period tenders from the
board of Nat G Herresho‘ , and the drawings for HMCo Hull 381
(one of four original Corsair tenders) were the starting point for
designer Matt Smith. The design spec called for low draught (for
storage on the mothership), classic looks, 24ft (7.3m) max
length, two cockpits, and a canopy for shelter.
The build of this new tender has a plywood bottom and
strip-planked sides. Equipment includes a bowthruster, bronze-
and-canvas awning and a vintage-style horizontal “steering
bar”. Artisan's Alec Brainerd describes her as having “the
elegance of a Newport yacht of the gilded age". She can take
two crewmen and 12 passengers at 20 knots-plus, with a
Yanmar 110hp diesel.

LUNENBURG, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA
A century of dory-building in a
World Heritage Site

MAINE, USA
JP Morgan-style tender

C/O THE DORY SHOP

C/O ARTISAN BOATWORKS

TONY PICKERING

A good number of sailing vessels took part in
Operation Dynamo in 1940, but not many of the size
and ilk of the 30ft (9.1m) Kentish smack yacht
Cachalot. Now she’s been re-launched, after an
owner-led, decade-long restoration on the banks of
the River Deben, at Tidemill Yacht Harbour. She was
built in Folkestone, Kent in 1898 and has, like so
many boats her age, a history of illustrious owners
and periods of neglect, including time spent cruising
in Scotland’s western isles and in the Mediterranean.
Current owner Steve Yates fell in love with the boat
(particularly her counter stern) in 2005. After a year
sailing on the East Coast and planning a programme of
winter maintenance, she almost sank at her berth in
January 2006. Rot was discovered in the arch board and
beamshelf. She had also su‘ ered from over-enthusiastic
re-fastening of the planks. It was clear, by May 2007,
that Cachalot was a serious project and in the end, she
needed a new ply deck, 90 per cent new planking (in
larch), new sternpost, stem, rudder, bowsprit, bulwarks
and replacement or sistering of most of her frames. The
Yanmar diesel has been reconditioned and some of the
old teak deck has been used to make new boards for
the sole and cockpit. Fitting her out internally is planned
for 2018. She also still needs a new suit of sails.
Living in Derbyshire, Steve Yates and wife Beverley
Daley-Yates, both OGA members, bought a camper van
and lived by their project every summer. Read more at
cachalot.org.uk.

WOODBRIDGE, SUFFOLK

Sailing Dunkirk little


ship re-launched


Classic motor launch on sea trial

CB353 Yard News.indd 87 26/09/2017 13:28
Free download pdf