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Blake
Boatworks

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P.O. Box 91
Gloucester, North Carolina
(252) 729-8021
blake@blakeboatworks.com
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Notes from the Field - "Cherokee" Huckins Restoration Project
April 26, 2004 As Down East bursts with pink, red, and white
azaleas, Cherokee enjoys her spring finishing touches. Below shows the Huckins in full regalia. Kerry, after
spraying the final clear coating, is unmasking the lettering installed by Sharon, Caroline, and Garrett.
Tom Parker is installing wingwall trim, and Bryan and
Steve are up top securing the canvas covering. Steve also installed antennas. The rest of the crew is
below detailing and doing punch-out trim carpentry. It won't be long now!
Shaping Up to Ship Out
Climb the stairs and take a look - below left shows the stair treads installed, and
to the right is the aluminum structure that the guys from Hancock and Grandsons built, with gray canvas
top, sewn by Coastal Canvas, attached.
Stairs with Treads, Fly Bridge Aluminum Framing and Canvas Top
Bryan has been assembling the many layers of sound insulation for the engine hatches
- first a layer of 3 inch
fiberglass batting, then a quarter inch of loaded mat, and finally another inch of quilted
fiberglass batting, all encased in a light weight perforated aluminum housing.
Below right Bryan is working on the "ram", or hydraulic hatch opener for the center hatch.
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Sound Insulation for Engine Hatches
Center Hatch Installed
Navigational Map - We are Here
Steve Gilpin got the computers on line, including the navigational
software. Above he's touching the touch screen, pointing out where we are (well, we're about an inch
to the right of his finger). Look how great the channel shows up! This mapping software ranges from
the above specificity to broad ranges - Atlantic waters from NC to FL, for example. Below are the wingwalls and doors - the
door is closed on the port side, blending in with the curve of the wall, and open on the starboard wall. Tom is
shown in the right-hand photo installing wingwall trim.
Wingwall Doors and Trimming
Cherokee received her final survey from clipboard-weilding Bill Gladding of Gladding
Marine Surveying in Florida. "This is by far the best Huckins restoration I've ever seen," Bill told
Bryan. Guess she passed with flying colors!
Surveyor Bill Gladding Checks it Out
Launching a boat is like having a baby - long preparation and labor and a split second
splash into the world. Remember crane-operator George Brown's steel trawler that we
featured two years ago? The Chelsey Girl finally hit the water - check out the pictures! | The 65 foot vessel was
put on wheels and pulled down the road with a tractor. Then the crew (friends, family,
and community members who voluteered their strong backs) had to turn the boat into a grassy
field toward the sound. Huge oak mats were laid out with George's crane, forming a makeshift
path and enabling the crew to nudge the trawler along without destroying the grass.
The third day was the toughest - the vessel was pulled alongside a boat basin, but
had to be pivoted on greased skids so that the stern pointed toward the
mud bank. Instead of launching her that evening the men decided to cut off the
Chelsey Girl's skeg and wheel with a torch to avoid expensive wheel or shaft damage
should the boat hit bottom - it's not hard to weld it back on later. By day four at noon, all systems were go - the trawler was blessed
by Reverend Ellis Bedsworth of the Marshallberg Methodist Church, christened by George's 12 year-old daughter Chelsea, and shoved down the bank for a big splash and
perfect launch. The four day project brought locals and newcomers together and
turned into quite a community event with plenty of food, music, and storytelling. Guess
it takes a village to launch a boat or, as one elderly resident said, "It takes a steel
trawler to get us all out!" Signing off for now, Barbara "Fish Doctor" Blake
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