|   A month or so ago I found myself 
                sitting under the roller-door of my main shed, cup of black coffee 
                in hand, watching the rain pour down onto our small country property. 
                The feeling was good, as I had only just completed a three metre-wide 
                lean-to across the shed doors, giving an extra twenty-seven square 
                metres of sheltered space, and I was enjoying the cave-like protection 
                from the welcome rain. 
              Compared with big industrial sheds, the little addition was modest 
                – but my wife and I had constructed it with our own hands, 
                and the resulting satisfaction and utility was out of all proportion 
                to the small size of the structure. As the summer rain tumbled 
                down, I was able to luxuriate in the knowledge that the collection 
                of boats and tools outside the shed doors were dry and, if I felt 
                that way inclined, work could continue. 
              
                 
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                  Pleasant working conditions... | 
                 
               
              In front of the shed stood a Phil Bolger-designed Micro which 
                I had built for a customer-turned-friend nine years earlier. She 
                was there for some minor modifications and I was able to observe 
                evidence of the standards I employed nearly a decade in the past. 
                It gave me pause for reflection… 
              Beside the Micro, a twelve foot lapstrake (clinker) sailing dinghy 
                rested up-side-down on saw horses waiting patiently for a couple 
                of dabs of paint on some scratches. This boat was built by one 
                of my sons when he was just a fourteen-year-old boy – he 
                will be twenty-three at his next birthday, but the boat is strong 
                and functional – testament to a young fellow who used his 
                brain and did the job properly the first time around. 
              Around the corner stood another Phil Bolger design called Bee. 
                This was another example of work from the distant past, having 
                been built twelve years earlier as an interesting toy for my three 
                sons. I built her in the evenings at a time when my life was very 
                different – a stressful job, a big mortgage, young family, 
                busy city life – but the boat was finished and used in countless 
                children’s adventures. Nephews, nieces, in-laws, friends, 
                and even me – we all gained pleasure from this tiny boat, 
                and here she stands against the shed waiting for her next operation 
                on a creek, lake, or ocean. Her simple hull shows evidence of 
                past action, but she ages gracefully, which is something difficult 
                to say about a ‘glass or alloy production boat. 
              
                 
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                  Bee providing fun and education | 
                 
               
              The rain continued to pour down, and by this time I had been 
                joined by my wife and as the light faded we traded the coffee 
                mugs for wine glasses and some pleasant red. Our recent workload 
                had been high, and the construction of the lean-to had been physically 
                demanding, so the opportunity to relax and listen to the drumming 
                of the rain on the metal roof was a pleasure difficult to properly 
                describe. 
              Behind us, the building shed was filled with the clutter and 
                dust of wooden boatbuilding - scattered tools, sheets of plans, 
                a boat under construction, and a couple of possums peeking out 
                from their daytime hiding place in the rafters. 
              All of what I have just described paints the current stage of 
                an odyssey I first set out on ten years ago, and I make mention 
                of it for those of you who may be feeling what I had been suffering 
                in the lead up to a fateful day in early July of the year 2000. 
              I’ve been obsessed with hand-built wooden boats since childhood, 
                but the realities of career and family-life meant that most of 
                my building activities were spread very thinly over the years. 
                However, I was always able to make time for reading, and my library 
                of boating books increased steadily over the years - it was obvious 
                that the obsession was not going to go away anytime soon. 
              It is difficult to say just when I made my final decision to 
                commit to boatbuilding in a serious way, but I do clearly remember 
                one afternoon when I was all dressed up for a shift in the operational 
                career I had been committed to for twenty-five years. I had five 
                minutes of spare time before setting out on my city commute, and 
                I used that time to cut out a plywood part on the bandsaw for 
                a boat I was building. I can clearly remember saying to myself 
                that this is what I really wanted to be doing, regardless of money. 
              To cut what could be a very long story short, I resigned my respectable 
                and well-paid job to follow my own star as a full-time boatbuilder. 
                Now, ten years down the track I can look back on an unbelievable 
                adventure, and I thank my luck stars that I decided to make the 
                jump. 
              
                 
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                  Early days in a self-made career | 
                 
               
              Things have certainly changed for me, and for my family. As expected, 
                I now have less money, but I have become an officially trade-qualified 
                boat-builder, and more than fifty new boats have come through 
                the doors of my various sheds, along with countless smaller repair 
                and construction jobs. All of this could not have been achieved 
                without the help and support of many, many people of high-quality 
                – family, friends, suppliers, designers, and customers - 
                but it has been done, and my blood runs cold to think that I could 
                have so easily missed out on the adventure if I had remained in 
                my previous job. 
              Please do not think I am encouraging everyone to chuck in their 
                existing job to become a penniless hippie. All I am saying is 
                that I was able make the change and have survived by the skin 
                of my teeth, and that for me it was, and continues to be, worthwhile. 
                People must make their own decisions in life, but if you are someone 
                who is currently questioning your path, and you have a real passion 
                for boats, it may be worth the jump… 
              
                 
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                  Work never stops | 
                 
               
              So, what has been the downside for me? Well, first and foremost, 
                it has been HARD WORK! There is a certain amount of romance in 
                being creative in the boatshop, but about 97% of it is just plain 
                dusty, noisy, monotonous and tiring labour. Other negatives are 
                that I’ve spent countless hours answering emails, letters, 
                ‘phone calls and personal visits – followed by doing 
                the inevitable paperwork associated with running a small business 
                which cannot afford administrative help. 
              But the upside? I’ve learnt more about my passion than 
                I could have learnt in several lifetimes of part-time study; my 
                life has been immeasurably improved because of the people who 
                have come into it as a direct result of the boat-building and 
                designing; I can go to my grave knowing that I gave it a go instead 
                of just wondering; I’ve had the rare privilege of having 
                made my hobby into my career. 
              These days I’m doing less building and in its place doing 
                more design work. This has been part of an on-going evolution, 
                and is very exciting. Where it will lead I do not know, but I’m 
                enjoying the ride. 
              My sort of building and designing still centres around small 
                boats – anywhere between eight feet and twenty-six feet 
                long – and I strongly favour boats which are very simple 
                in structure and rig. Strangely, simple boats are not necessarily 
                simple to design, and there is a huge difference between the best 
                and worst examples of simple design on the market. The very best 
                designs are often quite difficult to properly appreciate, and 
                may not appear to be that much different from the lower-quality 
                members of the crowd. 
              When it comes to simple-to-build designs, it pays to educate 
                yourself on the subtleties by studying the work of the acknowledged 
                masters - two of the best being the late Philip C. Bolger and 
                Jim Michalak. Phil Bolger in particular has been criticized about 
                his so-called “Bolger Boxes” by people who do not 
                understand the hydrodynamic and structural quality of his work. 
                Also, most of the detractors do not understand that his “Bolger 
                Boxes” represent significantly less than 10% of his massive 
                output. The remaining 90% or more of Phil Bolger’s conventional 
                designs rival those of any acknowledged master yacht designer. 
                Jim Michalak continues the tradition of Phil Bolger’s simple-to-build 
                designs, and I hold his work in the highest regard. There are 
                others…. 
              
                 
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                  Happy surroundings | 
                 
               
              So, back to the shed where we quietly drink wine from chunky 
                glasses, while watching the rain drip from the edges of the shed 
                lean-to roof. We sit and meditate on the difference between city 
                and country life, and think about what provides real wealth – 
                lots of money, or following a quiet, creative path. To each his 
                own, and I know very well that everybody is driven by the need 
                to achieve their own particular goals. But for me, the design 
                and construction of simple, well-engineered boats provides unending 
                satisfaction. 
              If you feel the need to produce a boat, choose the best design 
                you can, do not compromise on the quality of your work, and build 
                a simple, utilitarian boat - I don’t think you will regret 
                the move. If, in addition, you want to step out on an adventure 
                in life, think carefully, but be bold. 
              *********** 
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