Rating: Summary: When You Forget You Are Doing It For Fun.... Review: Some hobbies can grow into overwhelmingly large projects. After a while, it could become drudgery and you start to wonder why you started doing something like this. Building or renovating a boat is one such project. Look in the classifieds of boating magazines and count the "partially renovated" boats. Or listen to the endless stories of failed attempts and dollars poured into large structures that never saw the water. If you are lucky, you have found this book before you have started building your boat. If you are not, this book will still give you some perspective on why you are working on that huge contraption in your garage every weekend. This book tells you what can be done, what costs can be cut and what you can shoot for when you do not need to impress well-heeled shoppers at a boat show or build a boat that will look good on the cover of "Yachting World" with a bikini-clad beauty at the helm. You cannot and should not shoot for the cover of "Yachting World" when you are building your own boat. This book will tell you what you should do. And how to do it. This book is best read alongside the catalogue of George Buehler's designs. His simple, yet practical boats are not the stuff for glossy magazines, but will no doubt offer just as much sailing pleasure - and safety - for less money. That, according to Buehler, is the advantage of building your own boat. You can cut the costs that go into making the boat "marketable" and concentrate your expenditures on the beef. Even when you are not building to one of Buehler's designs, you will learn what NOT to do when you boatbuilding project begins to seem like a daunting task. If you are not building to one of his designs, you should own other books on boatbuilding as well. This book is not comprehensive if you are planning on building boats that are not built by his method. Also, the rustic, rugged philosophy behind his designs is a refreshing departure from modern sailing magazines written for leveraged buyout kings. It will remind you why you are dealing with those heavy chunks of lumber in the first place. You are doing it to have fun.
Rating: Summary: Mad Mossy PoopDeck Review: Thank you George Buehler for turning a passing curiosity into an ever increasing obsession!
This book could be described as a myth-buster. Expect to begin, as I did, content that boatbuilding was a black art privvy only to wood working geniuses and 10th generation shipwrights. Within a few pages however, you will be bursting with enthusiasm as Mr Buehler opens your eyes to the practicalities and possibilities of mere mortals like ourselves building sturdy, safe, and exceptionally good looking craft for a reasonable price, using readily available materials and some of his expansive know-how.
Only somebody extremely gifted and experienced could produce such a wonderfully straightforward book
Thank you Mr. Buehler for this and also for the plans provided, unlike other authors who are too paranoid/penny-pinching to include proof of their suggested experience.
DO NOT BUILD A BOAT WITHOUT READING THIS BOOK!!!
Rating: Summary: Thanks for the kind comments Review: Thanks to whoever wrote the nice comments about my book. I had a lot of fun writing it and have been pleased that so many people apparently like it, with enough buying it to make it one of the best selling boatbuilding books. If you do read it and like the type of boats it describes, I sell a stock plans catalog for $10 that might interst you. At the moment it has about 60 designs in it, from 9' to 82', all for wood, plywood, or steel construction. Speaking of steel, as much as I love wood I really think steel is the coming thing. I'm doing a lot of steel designs now days and hope to do a companion thing about steel building to BBB eventually. If you've looked, you've seen there really isn't a straight talking how to do a steel boat book out there yet. Hope somebody out there does one because I'm running out of steam! ANYWAY, thanks to all of you who like my boat stuff; I appreciate it
Rating: Summary: Great boats, great advice, but MAN, he uses a lot of wood. Review: The hardest thing about this book is spelling the author's name. Buheler sets out a wonderful and simple method for building a boat--any boat. While he has some small scale plans and offsets in the book (and available from him in large scale), the strength of this book is the advice. He's "been there and done that". His boat designs and construction methods are RUGGED. I'm not a marine engineer or naval architect, but he seems to love massive wood structures, and uses them whereever he can, even if they may not really be nessasary. But, as he says, when things start to blow, I'm sure they're a comfort. Even if you aren't building with that in mind, read his book for the ideas. The tips on nails alone saved me lots of money. And trust me, you'll laugh, too.
Rating: Summary: Entertaining and informative Review: This is a very entertaining and informative book for the potential "Backyard Builder." Behuler is very opinionated and somewhat 'off center' in his techniques and advice, but that makes it interesting. His designs are very 'salty.' Definitely a 'must have' for anyone thinking of building a sailboat.
Rating: Summary: My favourite book on boat building Review: This is my favourite book on boat building. Be careful, because this book will make you dream day and night. Contains complete (small scale, but readable) plans for several boats (reeeeal boats: ocean going sailing and power boats). It makes you laugh and think, and you'll feel the smell of tar and sawdust, cigarette smoke and Bourbon.
Rating: Summary: Home Depot guide to boat building Review: What sets George Buehler apart from the rest of the pack is his complete lack of pretense. There is so much ego and posturing and snobbishness in sailing, even at its friendliest, that it can really turn the stomach of the uninitiated. Buehler cries BS to all that, and says, "Hey...if you want to build a good boat and sail it, I can show you how." That can be mighty welcome news to someone who maybe isn't the son of a son of a sailor, or an orthopedic surgeon (with the associated bank balance.) This book shows you how you can, yourself (honest!) build a sailboat that will take you around the Bay or around the Horn (for real!) and do it on a budget that will keep you from using your retirement funds or your kid's college money. We're talking pretty short money here, for a boat that is built like Fort Knox and looks pretty sweet to boot.
But there are other considerations. Firstly, you have to want the sort of boat George likes, which is one based on the great British workboats - massive construction, long keels, heavy displacement, solid timber masts, usually even gaff rig. Lost you yet? That's what George likes, and if you're looking for a racer/cruiser to take you on a Jimmy Cornell rally to compete with all the Jeanneau 42's, you can forget it. It ain't happenin'. But, come a blow, you can heave your heavy, long keeled gaffer to and sleep the night away while the rest of the fleet white-knuckles it all night. You have to make choices in life - you're at the fork in the road.
The second consideration is resale. Now, I know you're *never* going to sell your boat, you're going to be buried at sea in it like a Viking. Right. At some point you're going to want to sell your boat, or at least be rid of it. The downside of George's boats is that they aren't "yacht quality", and you are going to have a hard time selling them. With their 2X4 lumber yard ribs and plywood interior and houses, they look very home made. If you are a talented craftsman, and want to spend a lot of money (and I thought we were trying to save money, right?) on teak and brass, you can make one look right shippy, but it's still going to be painfully obvious that this is a boat you built in your back yard. It doesn't matter that your boat is as tough as nails - things like steel and concrete ballast and iron fastenings in the hull just terrify people (not without some reason, let's be honest) and will dampen the market. Don't hold your breath waiting on the phone to ring come time to sell. It's something to think about.
For the flip side to this sort of boat building, check out Larry Pardey's masterwork on classic hull construction. His idea of a backyard boat is one that would make the cover of every magazine in print, and sell for $100,000 after years of cruising. But it takes years of work and LOTS of money and tools and equipment and skill to pull that off. Maybe you don't have all that. Maybe you don't WANT all that. Maybe you just want to take a year, build a tough little boat, and spend a few years in the Caribbean. In that case, let George Buehler take you there.
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