Joshua Slocum - Leadin' the Way Took this li'l fixer-upper round the world |
I
got an Old Fat Boat, she's slow but handsome --
Hard
in the chine, soft in the transom --
I
love her well!
She
must love me,
Though
sometimes I think its for my money!
--
from Gordon Bok's Old Fat Boat
Crank Boats and the Cranks Who Love Them
It
used to be, tucked away in cove and backwater or moored along the far
end of otherwise respectable harbors, one could find boats and
persons of interest. Crank boats and the cranks who love them.
Cranks
exuded personality.
Crank
boats were strange and wondrous of line, often fantastic of rig. They
had been built or converted or repaired or transformed, by steady and
patient labor, to match the visions of some dreamer. Their pedigrees
were dubious, mutted beyond all classification. Each a bold statement
of individuality. Each a leap away from the mundane. Ex-centric.
Invention
and experiment were casually strewn about, aloft and alow.
Solutions by those long of need and short of pocket. Improvisation,
makeshift and found-art the rule.
Form
may have fit function in obvious albeit unfamiliar harmony. Or
cross-purposes, inscrutable to the uninitiated, might jar the
beholder.
Previous
incarnations – as a ship's lifeboat, a painter's punt or fishboat –
glimmered through overlays of ingenuity, hinting of past lives.
Their
paint might have needed renewal, their rigging could stand tuning,
moss or even grass might have found a foothold. Plank and timber may
have relaxed, here and there, succumbing to entropy's lullaby.
Someone
invested themselves in these vessels. Someone loved them. Created them in their own image.
Like
their craft, those someones were a crank lot.
Often
gimpy or missing bits... teeth gone awry or just plain gone...
knurled by a life of hard knocks... piercing eye(s) squinting through
clouds of smoke... gruff and squally of temperament.
They
generally had nothing better to do than offer a drink and an
afternoon's worth of pleasant company. Stories to tell and lives to
recall. Big ideas and small. Horizons to cross once the Old Girl was
brought back into shape. Any day now.
Mostly
single men, but sometimes not. They formed a community who knew and looked
after one another. Welcomed and mentored new-comers, young and old.
*****
There
is challenge and pleasure to a crank boat, mostly lost to a
generation of sailors with standards. Who expect much of their
toys. Even the renaissance in traditional boat-building often demotes
tradition to dogma. Takes innovation for heresy.
A
crank boat is created by warm-blooded hands to convictions personally
felt and lived. Even second or third hand, it sings a siren song to
seduce a kindred spirit. But somewhere along its way, someone with a
soul cared enough to breath life into her.
Crank
boats have personality. You've got to learn their ways and humor
them. Maximize strengths and work around weaknesses. Most everyone
loves their boat. Crank boats are loved passionately.
Why?
What is it about imperfection that inspires true love where perfection
palls?
I
think the answer lies in intimacy, in the partnership which crank
boats demand.
They
are not turn-key. They won't settle for 'pride of ownership', that
smug and shallow glow from having the sense and means to make a fine
purchase. They didn't roll off some assembly-line perfected by
specialists.
With
a crank boat, you have to earn your pride. Overcome challenge and
obstacle. Apply will, wit and wisdom to deficit and obstacle. Work
the angles, break a sweat. Pick up a few scars.
Crank
boats teach us to think outside the box. We learn from them, their
lessons arriving without syllabus. They demand the best from us, and
we love them for it.
When
we buy a factory boat, we so often fit ourselves to them. Reduce
ourselves to the dull mean for whom they have been designed. Our
creativity is exhausted in the choice of colors, fabric or accessories drawn from a narrow list of 'options'. We convince ourselves that we are
now among the Beautiful People who inhabit glossy
advertisements. Worse, perhaps, is that it becomes true – that our
lives become a photo-thin imitation of happiness.
*****
Take
a walk, now, down the docks among the gleaming extrusions. If
anyone's aboard at all, how often are they polishing chrome to a
glister of glare? Or washing salt spray from their topsides, as if
their boat was allergic to the sea? How many have a morning or
afternoon to while away? How many have even a story to tell?
Hmm.
I'm being a bit hard and less than accurate, here. But you know what
I mean.
The
cranks are mostly gone, whether afloat or afoot. Pushed and priced
and fined and impounded and scuttled and land-filled from the public
harbors and corners of the sea. 'Cleaned up', as if we weren't
talking about a person. A home.
Who
gives a fig for vagabonds with their eye-sore fleet of derelicts?
I
miss 'em.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWelcome back! Missed you man. Give me a crank any day. Actually I don't think they have all good, quite. I know of a few people round here in Suffolk/Norfolk, who live on their rather cranky boats. I spoke to one of them the other day, and to my questions whether the "authorities" left him alone, he said they didn't like it but he was happy to be a pain in the arse to them! Quote like the guy. Anyway welcome back.
ReplyDeleteMeant to say I quite liked the guy.
DeleteDamn blogger...changed my name to "welcome to my website" . Joel from Suffolk.
DeleteDamn blogger...changed my name to "welcome to my website" . Joel from Suffolk.
DeleteGood to know you are still banging around.. .been waiting to hear more of what is happening with the current build.
ReplyDeleteMy lovely wife and I bought an old 1973 Ranger 23. It was sitting in a very high end marina. The guy who owned it got a deal back when the marina was looking for people. Now it's full of huge boats . . . and this old Ranger.
ReplyDeleteIn this place, I'm suddenly the crank -and loving it. We have a few more projects to complete at the dock, then it's off to more remote parts.
The boat isn't pretty, but my lovely wife was swayed by new rigging.
Ripped out the porta potty and replaced it with a composting head. Just installed 100 watts of solar power. Getting ready for life on the hook.
The previous owner was well known for sailing without a motor. There's a nearly new, barely used little honda sitting in a locker. It's funny, the guy makes his living selling huge power boats, but he sails small boats for fun.
I'm delighted to have a boat with good sails, sitting head room, sink, and a place to put the little propane stove. Pure luxury. Better than the big boats at the dock who need a freezer, washer and dryer, microwave, and don't go anywhere.
Soon I'll be in some Florida's more funky anchorages and back with the cranks. I've been calling them sea hobos down there.
Been a few months now reading all Triloboat blog posts from the very beginning. Just finished today. Speechless. Enlightened. Expectant. All in all, one of the best things I ever spent time reading.
ReplyDeleteConsider me like-minded.
Yoda
Cranky sea gypsy wannabe
P.S. - Echo the request for current status of Wayward project. Inquiring minds ...
Thanks to all (and to those who've written directly) for the good wishes!
ReplyDeleteI apologize for skipping out without a word... my internet/computer access has crumbled to much lower levels, of late, and a winter long power loss at our winter caretaking digs is keeping us busy with chores.
I hope to be posting as I can, this winter and early summer.
Thank for hanging in here!
Dave Z
I've read all your blog post and really enjoy it. I happened to run across a type of barge that was a big deal back in the day. Mostly pre WWII and there abouts. It's called the Thames sailing barge. Apparently they were very fast. Only the best racing yachts could keep up with them which astounded me and follows along the idea you've had that barges aren't slow. I found them oddly enough looking a sail info on the spritsail rig . The big sailing barges used a spritsail rig and sailed huge boats with only two men. After looking around apparently they are the most efficient sailing rig. I found a comparison where they sailed several different rigs next to each other with the same boats and same size sail. Turns out to be much more efficient on average. Unfortunately they didn't include a Junk rig. I'm wondering if it might be even better than a junk. All the ease of handling with better performance. Here's some links on the sail.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spritsail
On this page has a link on it to the comparison.
http://www.christinedemerchant.com/sail_sprit_sail.html
The Thames Sailing Barge links.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/http://www.bargetrust.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Pudge-Jubilee-June-2012-Avenue-of-Sail.jpg
http://www.mmhistory.org.uk/cce/Elaine/Vandervord1/barges-links.htm
A book on living on a Thames barge for a home.
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/42091
Reading the wiki article on spritsail rigs I wonder if you could combine the spritsail with the lowering ability of a junk. Here's a picture of a spritsail with the sails lowered by pulling them up.
http://www.bargetrust.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Pudge-Jubilee-June-2012-Avenue-of-Sail.jpg
Odd. Looking at junks they're very similar. Maybe you could mix the two to get the best of each????
I must admit I don't care much for the idea of pulling in the sails by raising them.
Anyways I hadn't heard of these type barges and sails. When I did I immediately thought about you guys so just in case you haven't seen this type I thought I'd pass it on.
Hi Sam,
DeleteI'm a long-time admirer of the Thames Sailing Barges. Thanks for all the links! Check out the Vermont Sail Freight Project for a Trilo-like version.
Speaking without experience, my take is that Junk Rig is easier than Sprit Rig, at least in full size boats. Those two guys could pull off amazing maneuvers, but they were seamen, head to toe. As an amateur, I'd choose JR.
One big advantage of the sprit is as a cargo boom. On a yacht, that's a much smaller need... my guess is the advantages for the pro boats was overwhelming, even if JR is easier to handle?
A combo would be tough, as a tack-to-peak sprit would cut across parallel battens. Some JR headsails do faintly resemble one, however, but not too common.
If one really wanted a combo, maybe battened for the lower, light wind panels, then a sprits'l above. But solving the sliding foot of the sprit would likely complicate away any advantage you might gain.
Still, Puddle Duck Racers let you play with any rig you can conceive, cheaply and with a good time had by all!
Dave Z