Captain HighTide Here's
Spring- Summer- Fall 2010
Front Bow Cabin Construction and New Exterior Stain finish
The Picture above shows what was completed in 2009
In 2010, I begin building the front bow
by adding 1/2" thick Mahogany wood Planking
I was able to find a person on Craigslist not too far out of Sacramento, who just so happened to buy rough sawn Mahogany and re-saw and plane it down to the ½” thickness that I needed. (I love Craigslist!) Perfect timing, just when I needed Mahogany wood for the front bow planks. Thanks Paul.
This was a whole new experience, learning how to shape straight pieces of board for new planking to the same contour of the existing original curved planks. The Bow Planks were a lot of tedious exhausting work in the heat of summer with a saber saw and a belt sander, I estimated that it took about 2-4 hours each depending on the length, to trace, measure and cut, then belt sand and then check the fit and then belt sand some more, and then belt sand a lot more and then do the final belt sanding finishing touches and then a few extra zaps from the belt sander here and there, and then wonder why it’s not fitting as good as it did the last time I test fitted the plank? Start the Belt sanding process all over again, there now onto the next plank! %$#@&! 10 rows of Planks took me about 1-month of scattered evenings and some long weekends.
With the Planks installed it was time
to start building the Bow Cabin, walk around Deck
and Front Mast mount
In the series of pictures below, shows the front cabin progress including the walk around deck and front mast mount.
I will be adding 3 windows for the front cabin later
Front Mast Mount
The middle/Main Deck has not been installed yet and thats why the door to the front cabin looks a little tall
In the series of pictures below you can see the new decks on the front bow and Captains Quarters, Including the Safe-T-deck paint finish. The Deck paint has small granules in the paint to prevent Slipping.
in this picture above I have added
1/4" Luan Planks and then painted the transition areas
with Elastic Barrier before I apply the Safe-"T" Deck paint.
This helps prevent leaks.
above picture shows the Safe "T" Deck paint finish
In the Pictures above and below you can see that I have re-sanded the exterior (30+ hours) and re-stained with a Fence-Deck stain that is very easy to apply and will be so much easier to maintain. The hardware store that mixed the color named it Pirate Ship brown.
The series of Pictures below show what was completed in 2010
and how the Pirate Ship looks now.
Lets Recap
October 2010:
Finished Captains Quarters roof/deck
Front Bow Planking and Cabin with Walk around deck
Front Mast Mount
Exterior Finish
Added extra mid-section support 2X6 redwood
Added exterior trim pieces
I’m almost there! The only problem is the 2010/2011 winter is coming and it’s that time of year where I start getting everything put away for the crazy Northern California winter weather. Good thing I have all the decks sealed and the exterior weatherproofed.
If only I had 2 or maybe 3 more months of good weather! Arrrgh! I guess I will just have to wait until next spring/summer of 2011.
4 years now of spring /summer months on this Project and each year I keep plugging away at it.
I know for sure that passion and dedication is what keeps me going and of course a good wife….. to make me lunch, dinner, and something cold to drink and bring out to the pirate ship when I forget to take time out for that kind of stuff.
Some nights I would sit inside the boat to rest for 20 - 30 minutes or so, before climbing out of it after working 8 hours straight.
I have a list of things that need to be completed to finish this Pirate Ship project and I can say that I’m way past the half way mark. I look at what I have accomplished, and I think to myself, am I really, REALLY, actually building a 36’ Pirate Ship Playhouse? Or is it my imagination?
Thanks for viewing me Ship Once again!
I will be posting some original stuff I have been saving up these past few months and possibly years?
Here is a sample of what I have to show you all:
I made some custom and very inexpensive portholes to install on the ship, but I don’t know if I’m going to use them or not yet.
I made some custom and very inexpensive portholes to install on the ship, but I don’t know if I’m going to use them or not yet.
Also since its Halloweeny Weekend coming up!
I bet your Jack'O'Lantern can't do....
THIS!
As I was looking for Pirate ships on the internet I came across your project and I must say that your project was very interesting.As a little boy in pureto rico my dad and uncle would tell me story about pirate in the caribbean.To this day I fly skull and cross bones.Anyway I real like you work.I have one question, you think you can build one that is sea worthy
ReplyDeleteIf the boat that I used was Sea worthy I still don't think I would have built it to go back in the water. the Chris craft hull was ready for the crusher and not sea worthy at all. The most important thing is Safety and having it meet regulations etc. Who ever owns a boat is responsible for all passengers safety and lives.
ReplyDeleteSo...on that note I don't think I would want to build one for the water. There are Pirate ships for tours and parties in Florida that are cool!
Thanks for your comments Dwightyellowhawk
Are you stil working on the ship ?
ReplyDeleteI have plans to build a shop with the exterior looking like a pirate ship