Wednesday, January 26, 2011

A "salty" kitty sighting.

Last Saturday afternoon I went to the downtown St. Petersburg, FL. waterfront to see what salty yachts had attended the 2nd annual Good Old Boat Regatta. I was late figuring the regatta had been cancelled due to the near gale that blew through in the morning. The regatta (more info at: http://www.goodoldboat.com/) went off after all. I did find this really cool little cat boat tied to the pier at the St. Petersburg Sailing Center and I thought that cat enthusiasts would want to see her. I am going to try to track down the owner to see if I can add her to my Yacht Collection.

By the way the 49th annual meeting of the Cat Boat Association is next month in Groton, CT. Check out the Events page on my main web site.


Her name is Nadine.



Sunday, January 16, 2011

Cortez Boat Shop

I went down to Cortez, FL. yesterday to see what was going on at the Florida Maritime Museum's boat shop. Cortez is a very old fishing village on the West Coast mainland just across from the south end of Anna Maria Island. The museum is housed in the original Cortez school house built in 1912. It was fully restored in 2006 and turned into the museum. In town on one of the shell path lanes there was a working wooden boat building and repair shop. This I found out has just recently been moved east of town just south of Cortez road on the edge of the F.I.S.H. (Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage) preserve. Some activity was going on there but the old shop in town was closed. I took a spin through the museum building which was quite interesting. The whole town is very "Salty" and charming. The locals are still recovering from the net ban law which basically shut off their primary means of livelihood. Fishing still goes on from Cortez but it is primarily offshore hook and line fishing. There are some neat fish restaurants in the village on the waterfront, working boat yards, and lots of vacation rentals. Golf carts are a preferred means of transportation. It's worth a visit to meet some of Florida's active wooden boat builders and enthusiasts. Every now and then the group has a "Mess About" where they get together some of the local craft and "Mess about in boats" for a day on the water.
Village views.

The "Old" boat shop in town.

 




Boat shop projects.














 Local "Art"

A restored 1988  wooden Beetle Cat for sale in front to the museum. Restored in 2009 with new sail.
$ 9500.00 or best offer (941) 545-7109. Very popular on Cape Cod around Osterville, Mass..


On the waterfront.



Monuments to a way of life.



A Culler designed harbor launch being refinished at the "new" museum boat shop.




Don Johansen Palmetto Boat Builder

Right after Christmas I took a ride down south to look around and while in Palmetto, Fl. came across two character motor cruisers sitting on trailers in a guys side yard. There was a tin work shop shed behind them and an elderly gent nearby. I stopped the car, got out, and asked him about the boats. He told me his name was Don Johansen and that he had built them both. After a brief discussion I had to leave but asked if I could come back by and photograph them at a later date. I told him about The "Salty" Yacht Project and he said come back anytime.
Two boats in Don's yard

So yesterday I went back by and Don was still out in the yard puttering around. Don built both boats out of marine plywood to his own designs. The one on the left, a double ender, is his own and he is repowering it. The one on the right with a Drake Tail stern he built for a friend and he is refinishing it. Don is originally from up in New England and moved to Florida years back. He at one time worked for Lydia Yachts on the East Coast building wooden "Head" boats for coastal fishing. He didn't enjoy building boats there as much as his own boats so he switched jobs to become the captain of the 109' wooden Trumpy yacht Regina that belonged to the owner of the Lydia yard. Regina was similar to the presidential yacht Sequoia. At some point Don moved to Palmetto. Don just loves designing and building "Salty" boats mostly for fun. His boats are all very shoal draft and very economical to build and run. He calls them "Lumberyard Boats" because he gets all of his materials from local lumber/hardware shops, nothing fancy.
Don's own double ender.
  •  28' LOA
  • 8'8" beam
  • 2' draft
  • 1/2" plywood epoxy encapsulated with 10 oz. cloth.
  • Repowering with a rebuilt 4 cylinder Gray Marine gas engine.

Repowering


Don has owned many boats including the first Huckins yacht ever powered with diesel engines which he restored. He has owned one fiberglass boat, a sailboat which he never liked because it wasn't wood.



The drake tail stern boat he built for a friend.
  • 33' LOA
  • 8'6" beam (they are 8'6" for trailering)
  • 2' draft
  • 54 Hp Yanmar diesel
  • 12.5 gallons diesel down to Ft. Myers and back.





Don has a work shop right in his side yard.

 
Don took me in the house and showed me the models he has built as well.


A sailboat he keeps up in New England.

A power boat.

I plan to come back down in a month or so to photograph both boats inside and out when the work is finished. Maybe I can even go on a sea trial. There is a lot more to learn from Capt. Johansen.


Monday, January 10, 2011

SnapDragon

I was down at Snead Island Boat Works (perhaps the "saltiest" boat yard in Florida) the other day and saw a very cool "salty" modern power yacht. Her name is SnapDragon. She is 40' LOA, 10.5' beam, built in 1995 by Shepard's Point Boat Co. which appears to be out of Morehead City, N.C..


Here she is.



Check out that narrow beam!



Birth of the Gougmarans Boats - West System

Here is the scoop about the Gougmaran: Birth of the Gougmarans Boats - West System

It's a pretty cool concept for pocket cruising and makes a great kayak support vessel.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Around Ozona

Ozona was a fishing village for many years. Some fishing still goes on but now it's mostly an eclectic little town where folks drive around in golf carts. There are alternative healing centers, artists, and funky restaurants that are destinations for weekend day tourists. Not all that "Salty" but definitely cool!

Town Hall?

Homes




BBQ Joint

Famous "Molly Good Head's"

Waterfront on St. Joseph Sound