When their old GRP yacht was devastated by a
Southern Ocean storm, Jill Schinas and her husband,
Nick, resolved to build something stronger. Gaily, - and
without having researched the matter to the least degree
- they threw themselves into the work of designing
and constructing the ultimate, ocean-proof,
eco-friendly, dream cruising yacht. On their side they
had a wealth of sailing experience, which provided a
perfect knowledge of what was required, but their only
other weapons were irrepressible enthusiasm and the
mindset which enables a man to build a radio from a
potato or a mast from a lamppost. Had this been a
business enterprise no bank would ever have lent the
capital, for ranged against the dreamers was a whole
battery of forces any one of which would have deterred
more realistic people. For a start, neither Jill or Nick
had any experience with a welder - and yet they were
proposing to build a steel boat. Secondly, they seemed
only to have enough money to buy a couple of masts and
the sails. Worst of all, they had two kids and a new
baby in tow - and no one with a young family ought to
attempt anything more ambitious than the washing up.
Regardless of these drawbacks, Nick and Jill went ahead.
"It'll only take a year and a half," said he,
confidently. Fifteen years down the line, Mollymawk is
afloat and the family have cruised all over the
Atlantic; but the boat is still not finished. This is
the tale of what went wrong and what went right. Packed
full of advice about such things as ocean-worthy design
and sail plans, it will also tell you how to operate a
cutting torch, how to avoid a leaky stern-gland, how to
pour your own rigging sockets, how to handle a ferocious
gander, how to sandblast, how to weld in mid-Atlantic,
how to amuse three young children in a cabin space the
size of a phone booth... and much, much more
besides.
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