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Festival countdown – Three weeks to go!

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New Year’s Update

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Save the Ajax Cafe, Grow the Boat School
 

Exciting news! The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding has an opportunity to expand our campus while also supporting the re-opening of our neighborhood Cafe.

As you may know, the Ajax Cafe and the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding have been cornerstones of our community for over 36 years. The future of the Ajax Cafe has been at risk, but by working together the two organizations have developed a mutually beneficial plan that resolves septic issues and provides a long-term lease option for the Ajax while connecting the upper and lower parts of the Boat School into one contiguous campus. The Boat School has an accepted offer on the Ajax property and is raising funds to cover the cost of the purchase. We have raised over $155,000 of the required $375,000 in tax-deductible donations and we need your help today to reach the finish line.
 

 
This is the community dreaming – and all of us grabbing an oar.

You can help “Save the Ajax Cafe, Grow the Boat School” by making a tax-deductible donation to the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding to support the purchase of the property.


(On the donation page, please choose ‘Ajax Campaign’
in the drop down menu to specify this particular fund.)



For more information about “Save the Ajax Cafe, Grow the Boat School“:

Learn more about the details and budget for this project

Learn about the vision of the Ajax Cafe owners

See who else is supporting the project

Learn about the economic and community benefits of this project

To talk in person, share your ideas or set up an information session with a group of your friends,contact Betsy Davis, Boat School Executive Director at 206-390-0381 or [email protected].

You can also let your friends know about this by forwarding this email or sending them to boatschoolstore.com/savetheajax

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Alumni Meet Up: San Diego Wooden Boat Festival

Raise a glass us and join us at the 27th Annual San Diego Wooden Boat Festival on June 17th! Meet up with fellow alums and friends of the Boat School for a beer of glass or wine. A great time to find out what is happening at the school, talk shop, boats and reconnect with classmates. Family welcome.

Hosted by: Steven Opsal, Class of 2016 & Richard Johanson, Class of 2015, NWSWB Admissions & Student Services Manager

Where? Southwestern Yacht Club, 2702 Qualtrough St. San Diego, CA 92106
When? June 17, 2017 5:15-7:15 PM
Questions? Contact Steven Opsal at (858) 254-8823 or [email protected]

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Join the Celebration at 3rd Annual Gala & Fundraiser

The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding delivers a quality education that is effective and unique — old-world craftmanship relevant to today’s workplace. We’re going strong after 36 years and it’s time to celebrate!

We invite you to attend the Boat School’s 3rd Annual Gala & Fundraiser ‘Building on Tradition’ April 22, 2017 at the Northwest Maritime Center. Join us for an evening of delicious food, games, entertaining stories of the school’s rich history and future, and a don’t-miss auction.

Your support in this event helps strengthen our programs and ensures that craftsmanship reaches the hands of a new generation of problem-solvers.

Want to attend? We’re getting close to being sold out so don’t wait to purchase your tickets at boatschoolstore.com/gala

Want to give back another way? Consider volunteering the night of. Visit boatschoolstore.com/galavolunteer to learn about available shifts.

Have an item or service that would be a great addition to our live or silent auction? Contact Christina Cogan at [email protected] or (360) 385-4948 ext. 307.

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Viking boat-building techniques taught on Peninsula

Check out the Pviking photoeninsula Daily News article that highlights the workshop at the Boat School From the Forest to the Sea: 11th Century Norse Boatbuilding taught by renowned boatbuilder Jay Smith hosted at the School. The workshop will introduced participants to 11th Century Boatbuilding including the technology of the period, methods of construction, and the many unique tools used in building “klinker” (lapstrake) boats before the advent of sawmills.

Read the article HERE
 
 
 

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Week 22: Halfway There…

Life is one of those finicky calendar problems. I am never quite sure where I’m at on the schedule. Is this the halfway point or just another birthday to be recorded in a writer’s diary? Fortunately, all schools come with clearly denoted start and stop points. It seems someone figured out students reach a point upon which the brain is full and it’s time to go home—to mow lawns, repair leaking plumbing, or do taxes. And maybe go sailing!

Our return pLeigh 1ost windstorm and a Friday instruction break found endless projects awaiting completion. The small craft types have mastered epoxy such that steering wheels, stems, and submarines seem old hand. I remain amazed at what a little imagination and a lot of glue can accomplish. That is not to say we have abandoned traditional boatbuilding skills—Zen Master Leigh O’Connor and his crew splashed a Herreshoff Pram on Friday that has a finish worthy of anyone’s living room. In fact, it would be quite at home in a Victorian era boathouse.

But I leap ahead.

Just because we specialize in sawdust does not mean we have forgotten Mr. Edison and the evils of electrical corrosion. Zen Master Sean Koomen spent all of our mornings explaining electrical principles, metals that don’t like each other, and the pitfalls of placing anything within a body of water. Yes, I knew about rot and rust, but have you seen what just a little electrical current will do to bronze, copper and steel? Hence the requirement for corrosion specialists and more than a few scientists in our marine environment.

Thinking of specialists. We finally arrived at that magic moment in a boatbuilder’s life—when the molds go on a strongback and one’s ship begins to take on a three-dimensional life. That happened this week in the Hammond Shop, when Zen Master Jody Boyle stepped a few of us large boat knuckle draggers through the fine art of setting up the keel and molds for our Folkboat. Planking now only awaits our return from Spring break.

IMG_1315

While I am on the subject of progress, you may recall my lament a few weeks earlier about two steps forward, one step back. Well, lament no more. On Friday we put the whiskey plank on the Sea Beast and finished planning a similar board for Felicity Ann. With any luck, third quarter will find Felicity Ann with a deck and much of her new interior. The Sea Beast should have a completed cabin and find many of my counterparts busily constructing a mast. Progress all around.

Which finds me wandering back down the hill. In the contemporary shop that Handy Billy now has a shiny white interior and deck beams. The Nutshell Pram is damn near complete and that submarine—well, let’s say it’s ready for a mating of the two halves. How they get two college students inside is beyond me. (Must be small kids or very close friends). And with Zen Master Olivier Huin we find the Philbrick taking form at a pace that will challenge their Sid Skiff shop mates.

In other words, despite the vicissitudes of wind and time, we continue to make remarkable progress on projects that defy modern ideals concerning software and carbon fiber materials. Not that I am complaining. We ended the quarter and reached a halfway point with spectacular weather and a chance to go blow about the bay on one of our predecessors’ success stories—a 24 foot gaff-rigged sloop. No requirement for the inboard, just trim sail and venture from Port Hadlock to Indian Island. Who needs a calendar or schedule when you have fair winds and following seas?
 
 

eri profile
 
 
Eric Anderson is a retired Air Force officer who can be found puttering
in his shop when not scribbling on the keyboard. A new resident of Port Townsend,
he is an avid sailor, struggling carpenter, and would-be writer.

 
 
 

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Splash!

The Herreshoff Pram from instructor Leigh O’Connor’s class splashed! Congrats!

“My students just finished up this Herreshoff pram last week. We launched it yesterday and had a nice day on the water. This is just one of four boats my class will be completing over a six month period.” – Leigh O’ Connor