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In 1995 I helped my friend Sam Johnson build a cold-molded Kayak in his father’s cramped garage, driveway, and front yard. As a reference, Sam was using a book entitled “Building a Strip Canoe,” by Gil Gilpatrick. I asked if I could borrow the book. Inevitably, I built my first canoe on the budget of a bookstore clerk, and thus the seed of Woodenboats West was sown! (See article below). I made a great many mistakes, but kept at it, and next built a canoe shelf of my own design for a co-worker. Then, for my mother’s 46th birthday, I made a far superior canoe shelf (see pics). It is a modified Redbird design from Ted Moore’s book Canoecraft, utilizing “Mac” MacCarthy’s no-staple technique found in his book Featherweight boatbuilding.
In the winter of 2004 I decided that my family needed a boat to cruise the Grand River. I wanted a boat that was stable and could easily fit my family of 6 (including the dog). I chose a simple design by Jim Michalak, the Jonsboat, from his book, Boatbuilding for Beginners and Beyond; a 16-footer with a 5 foot beam fore to aft.
Out of a desire to expand my craft, I began an apprenticeship with expert lapstrake/clinker boatbuilder Mike Kiefer in South Haven, Michigan. Armed with my new knowledge and a vast collection of boatbuilding books, I decided to officially launch Woodenboats West in January of 2007. I have since finished a “Mac” McCarthy-designed Wee Lassie canoe, a 16' tandem Prospector canoe and have begun construction on The Mouse Pram , a 7’9” boat for row & sail by renowned Australian/Scottish designer Iain Oughtred. | October 1995  |
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