On Monday, June 17, 2013 2:10:28 AM UTC-7, Jonny wrote:
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> > I've done it a number of times. In the US there is a company that makes a business out of collecting and selling wood shells.
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> Rowable Classics is one such place. Might be the one Sully is thinking
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> of.
Yes, good guys there, but since it was a UK request I didn't
think specifics would be helpful, thought maybe someone
similar in the UK.
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> > One bit of advice, if you have good useful hardware, seats , footboards, riggers, etc, replace them with trashed stuff.
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> > Once on the ceiling or as a salad bar, nobody cares.
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> > the hardware can be used on another rowable boat.
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> +1. Some old gear is hard to find now and someone with a working boat
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> might want them.
Just what I was thinking. got a call a couple years ago
from the boatman at Cal. Needed some old Pocock riggers
for some project some Cal alums were doing.
(ok, let me check here under the eves of the garage underneath
the K-2s...) Voila! A full set! :^)
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> OR
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> You could turn it into something more fun?
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http://tinyurl.com/kmnhwjr - photo of a section of boat converted to
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> furniture.
That's beautiful work, I'm not near that good of a craftsman.
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> I'm in the process of making some coffee tables and a bookshelf.
Nice. I've got way too many half started, half finished projects.
Most of them go into "sleep" mode because I'll need something for
it but don't want to spend the money - prefer to wait until it
shows up for free. So then I start something else.
My Hobie Cat catamaran launch is in that state, waiting for a discarded
steering assembly.
I had a very stressful bad winter/spring - prime candidate for a heart
attack. I'm convinced that the reason I didn't keel over was
embarrassment at how many things are unfinished!
If I had my s*** together RSR would be eulogizing ol' sully.