2 Months on a New Boat, Full Walkthrough - Episode 277 - Acorn to Arabella: Journey of a Wooden Boat
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 ก.ค. 2024
- 00:00:00 Intro, Newburyport update and American Yacht Club
00:01:12 A look at the hull, repainting the waterline
00:04:59 Standing rigging with Dyneema climbing slings
00:07:22 Victoria and her electric outboard motor from ePropulsion, the challenges of a homemade rubrail on the gunwale
00:11:32 What's coming up for the roller furler and jib?
00:13:12 Are the anchors secure?
00:14:24 Staysail pedestal and the off-sized hanks.
00:15:38 Do we like the manual windlass?
00:16:42 Got some belaying pins?
00:17:33 Why no sail covers or lazy jacks?
00:21:06 Where are the solar panels?
00:22:37 What's up with that wooden dodger?
00:26:32 Preparing for jib sheets and winches.
00:28:41 Tour down below-forepeak.
00:32:05 What's on the workbench ?
00:34:10 Saloon: How's that charging station and table?
00:37:39 Galley tour! Propane stove, food storage.
00:42:24 Navigation table.
00:43:24 Steve's ice cream.
00:45:42 The one disappointment.
00:50:57 Cruising plans for the next few months
00:55:05 True treasure: The Guestbook
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Acorn to Arabella is a wooden boat building project taking place in Granby, Massachusetts. Steve started as an amateur wooden boat builder building a 38' wooden sailboat in his backyard: designer William Atkin's Ingrid with a Stormy Petrel's gaff rig. These videos follow the journey from tree felling, to lumber milling, to lofting, to the lead keel pour and beyond-sharing details of the woodworking, carpentry, metal smithing, tool building, and tool maintenance that classic wooden boats command. This ultimate DIY boatbuilding project will continue well past launch, when he and the crew will travel and learn to cruise aboard the handmade wooden boat that they've built. Just kidding about all that, this channel is about a Siberian Laika named Akiva.
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Crazy to think years ago I stumbled upon this channel when you guys were pouring lead in the ground for a keel. Amazing progression and story.
Same here. I used to shoot a lot of cast lead bullets and came across these guys while looking info about lead casting.....and I'm so glad I did. This channel is great
That was my first video too
Also my first video
Also joined for the pour, stayed to watch this crazy guy.
I was like "he's pouring what into where for what?! I'm in!"
Possibly my personal favorite video with calm and seemingly relaxed Steve taking us on the best tour ever. Thanks to Ben as well and Anne! I’m a land lover, but have certainly enjoyed the seven year plus journey and can’t thank you all for taking us along on your life’s journey! Thanks!
I was thinking the same thing... loved this walkthrough!
It's been a long time since I've seen Steve so happy, relaxed and contented..... that's proof that it was all well worth it.🇻🇨
Yeah, his entire body language and eye contact seems like a different person.
Yes thinking exactly the same thing. The ocean and time doing its magic.
When my wife and I first started motorcycle touring, we carried everything we thought we would need. The bike was close to its GVWR and handled like a pig. When we got back, we made a list of everything we had taken. We noted which things we had used at least once and things we had never used. Next trip we didn't pack the things we never used and added things we wish we had packed. Over a couple of years, we came up with a list of exactly what we needed to tour between 15-20,000 miles a year (we were teachers so had the time). It meant a simpler, leaner life, but that's exactly what attracted us to motorcycle touring.
Arabella right now looks like our first tour. I never saw so many toys packed on one boat. At some point, you won't feel compelled to drag along everything from your landlubbing life and settle in on what you need to live a lean but comfortable life aboard a boat. You will rarely use even half of the things you packed into that beautiful boat. But only experience will prove that to you.
When did you start sailing?
About 5 years before that (~1971) first in SF BAY, then along the So Cal coast. Owned a Cal 20, Ranger 29 and partnership in a Challenger 40 over the years. Also had unlimited access to the company Grand Banks 42 (stink pot) kept at Marina del Rey. That's why I thought my bike touring experience was applicable. I've seen and made all the rookie mistakes myself. Thanks for asking.
@jcarleezy nice try at a little dig there. It backfired huh. lol
@@ericcsuf that was a backhanded dig at you. Saying motorcycling has zero compatibility with sailing without actually saying it. Therefore you don't know what you're talking about. Some folk just can't help themselves.
@@macman6107It could have been perceived that way, but it was an honest question because he was comparing two very different things with no mention of the task at hand, and I'm happy to see that he does have that experience. So, no, it was not a backhanded dig & I will speak for myself.
I also think Steve has been very upfront about his lack of sailing experience & will continually refine things as he goes. To expect him to know every single thing he's going to want/need/not need on the boat from day 1 is a bit presumptuous.
I must say, earlier today I was kind of dreading this video given how Steve’s been looking lately. But I have to admit this brought a tear to my eye seeing how content and happy you seem to be now that things have settled down. All the best from Norway
The 12V LED strips expect no more than 12V and everything above heats them up and shortens their lifespan. If the boats 12V system is based on the battery's state of charge 11-14.6V - this might be the problem with them burning. You can check it with multimeter. One easy way to decrease the voltage is to put power diode(s) in series with the LED strip. Diodes have a forward voltage drop of 0.7V. So might need a couple stacked together.
Heat is the enemy of solid state electronics. I was going to suggest a 12v buck boost power supply is cheap. It will take 8 to 28 volts DC, and give a steady clean 12.0 vdc. Also make sure heat can escape the light fixture/housing.
Too low voltage will also cause excess heat, as the amperage will rise.
Do they have a good heat sink onto which they are mounted? If cooling is less than adequate, they perish very quickly. Using an infrared camera to monitor heat build up over time might give you some answers.
would having a pwm led controller help? maybe reducing the duty cycle would help, running at 80% wouldn't diminish the light that much
The way you both light up when looking at each other is fantastic!
This walk through is a testament to your planning over the years of building Arabella. As you say, there are small things still to be done. And you also recognise that living on and owning a boat is a constant stream on maintenance and fix it jobs. Arabella is your masterpiece which demonstrates your qualification as a master ship builder. It must be satisfying to know you built it and a little pride is justified. Fair winds.
This was a refreshing episode to watch. The routine of pressure has become the routine of a quite interesting life.
Great video, easy pace and relaxed feel to it, well done Ben. Steve looks 10 years younger and smiling and joking again so well done for persevering with the deadline excellent job and and amazing support from Robin.
Steve check around the maritime antique shops in those towns you visit up and down the east coast for the belaying pins and any other things that catch your eye there.
So good to see you two settling in to liveaboard life, especially you Steve.
The reduction in your stress level is palpable, you had aged before our eyes about ten years during the last eighteen months of the build.
Now, you’ve nearly lost most of those additional years again and got the life back in your eyes and your grin again, welcome back to the sun and to your better life.
Arabella is going to be a work in progress for ever, that’s wooden boat life. It’s not for everyone but for those who appreciate the beauty and environment of a wooden home it’s ideal. You’re obviously one of those people and having not only built your wooden home but also built one that can carry you around the world, it is obvious that you are thoroughly at peace with the deal.
If you happen to be dropping by the SW UK on your way to to Europe I can thoroughly recommend a stopover and a bit of recovery time in the Fal estuary, Cornwall.
If you do decide to stay a short while here, there’s a decent farm meal, chilled company, beautiful scenery and all of the facilities that you might need readily to hand locally.
You’d both be very welcome.
All the best, R.
😎👍🍻
Maine’s a cool place for a sailing adventure. Lots of fun rocky islands with forts to explore. I think you’ll enjoy it.
Hello Steve, I am 71 years old. I have traveled and had many vacation adventures. In September, I’ll be visiting the state of Montana and Wyoming. These are the last two completing my quest to have set foot in all 50 states plus our bordering countries of Mexico and Canada. I think what you have done is simply a monumental achievement, now enjoy the fruits of your labor! May God bless you and watch over all who sail on the Arabella.
Congrats on completing your 50 states, friend!
It’s great to see Steve with that old familiar glint in his eyes, he had started to acquire that thousand yard stare from the shell shock of the rush to launch, the launch and the stresses of beginning life on the boat. Hope you two have a great time on your well deserved vacation.
"chips and snacks... more snacks..." I felt that :D
Please please please put a Tether on your electric outboard to the stern cleat. I have seen so many drop off the back of boats. Great idea for marking the water line of the boat, I did that with my Boston Whaler for sealing and anti-fouling. It gives a perfect line. Cambro containers are so useful, my last 9 years in catering used them heavily and they are available in all sizes small to huge. Robyn is so cute in that last clip about Mexico. The visitor book is a lovely keepsake, lots of beautiful words in there, I am in it twice. I noticed the beard changed lengths, that is really clever! That was a really interesting episode, well done Steve and Robin for hosting it and Ben for the great filming and editing. You will get all those little jobs finished, after all, you built a boat!
I’m so stoked to head up and sew up those sail packs!!
Enjoying summer, slowing down, making plans.
Good call not getting in the water, and using the scumline for an accurate waterline measurement! I love the engine update and opinion! Putting around in the dinghy is also one of the great things about boat ownership! DD
What I like most about your project is the dingui. I love it
Hope you saw the videos of it being built on The Art of Boatbuilding!
Steve, Robin and crew. It is so good to see how comfortable you are on board after not sailing before. It looks like you were born aboard a ship the way you move around and handle duties. Congratulations on your journey so far and good luck in future adventures. All the best from landlocked Boulder, CO.
You seem super chilled now buddy ! Good to have you back , the rest did you good ! Cannot wait to see all your journeys !!!
Hey Steve & Robin, Not sure where/when you are planning your haul out, but if you are thinking in the Portsmouth/Kittery/Eliot area, we could offer some ground support. Workshop barn with all the woodworking toys, a bunch of marine supply shops nearby, and a car or pickup you can use to run all the errands... and a HOT shower if that gets to be a priority. Give a shout if we can support from this neck of the woods.
Safe travels. -Rob
This was extremely interesting!!
The LED strips burn out because it is built into its design. LEDs are supposed to last for decades. The issue is that the manufacture uses resistors that are WAY too small and the LEDs get hot and burn out. The solution if you have the time and patience is to replace the resistors with larger ones.
Easier to put one power resister on the input or use a buck reg to drop down to 10-11V in my experience. Amazing patience to rework all those SMTs!
Simply marvelous - the entire video. I feel like poor Steve has been MIA for a couple of months, I assume with the frenetic stressful and necessary activity around Arabella's finish and launch - but he's back!! I very much enjoyed the little ride in Victoria with his relaxed and comfortable dialogue. I hope you do that again. Very nice to see Robin ensconced and more visible than in the past. I admire you both enormously and I'm keenly looking forward to your future adventures.
17:55 I was wondering about when you'd give-in to lazy jacks / sail bags. I'm glad it didn't take you long
Hello from the Hudson Valley, NY. Love the Rock and Snow T!!
Thanks for the tour. Watched every episode since melting lead and pourin' the keel. Kinda missed seein' the engine room again tho.
You’ve learned an incredible new vocabulary!
Thanks again for the dinghy retrieval in Bristol. We love our EPropulsion motor too, especially with the frequent dog-to-shore excursions. We see more and more of them on dinghy docs, catching on quickly. We are in Maine for another week or so. Haven't lost the dinghy again.
Oh boy, it's a long one! Happy Friday! 🎉
Haaaaappy Friday!
I love this episode. Obviously my land yacht has nothing in common with your boat, but every problem, fix, solution, and regret you have had on the interior is remarkably similar to everything I had to deal with. I know that my rig looks rough on the outside but the interior is a complete rebuild. The birth, I had to rebuild to install my 16kwh battery bank and create more storage. The head was rebuilt to accommodate a composting toilet. The galley and dinette and cabinets are all refinished. Throughout the entire cabin we have walnut laminate flooring and blue beetle kill pine walls from floor to ceiling. The saloon is an epoxy penny table on an oak cabinet with 24" deep drawers. It's beautiful on the inside. On the outside the only thing that I have done is install the 6 panels 1500 watts. Basically I just sincerely commiserate with the trials and tribulations that you are going through and the happiness and elation of your success. My 6 year journey was congruent with yours for the six years my project took. I've been watching you from the lead keel pour up. Your videos helped keep me going. I'm so happy for you all! Now the real journey begins!
There is plenty in common between boats and RVs! Glad you’re finding this useful, thanks so much for sharing! -Anne
Some suggestions for you, Steve. Get a length schedule 40 PVC pipe to make a sheath for the anchor so the anchor stock doesn't wear a hole in the roller when stowed. Use water bottles or even gallon jugs to keep your freezer and fridge full... More thermal mass equals less cold air to escape when you open them. The bottles and jugs are great for cooler ice when you go on dinghy trips. If you have a problem with some items in the freezer not staying cold enough install a little fan to circulate the air.
Boat looks great.. it's very lived-in now..
The roller is bronze, so we're not really worried about it. I also recommend a big ol' hunk of delrin. One time, on another boat I cruised on, we bought 4" or so cylindrical delrin (hard as hell) and had a machinist turn it for us into bow rollers. I bet they're still in service 12 years later. -Anne
@@AcornToArabella groovy I thought your roller was nylon or something.
The remnants of Victoria must be marvelling at all the high-tech conveniences that make life in Arabella so comfortable and safe. Even ten years ago, much of this would have been less available or convenient. We live in abundant times.
It's really nice to see your decompression and settling in to the routine of wooden boat life and seamanship. Wonderful tour and assessment. A good friend said to me that you never own a wooden boat - you're just taking care of it for the next sailor. Congratulations again & I hope to see you out there.
It's nice to see a little mirth in Steve coming back. Glad he's (seemingly) been able to get some (well deserved) rest.
Hi Steve, I have been following you since the beginning, never miss an episode, this is my first comment, I hope this can help you.
I used to work in an LED company, and the problem you are having is humidity reaching the sulfur coating.
All LED are violet by nature, a coat of sulfur is added over the led to adjust its color (Warm to Daylight). Humidity affect the sulfur and change its property (color),
in turn, that change the persived color of the LED. You need a led strip that is rated with a high IP factor, I think IP66 or more from a reputable manufacturer,
meaning having a very good seal again humidity, especialy on a boat.
Hope this help you in selecting the next one. Happy sailling. Gilbert
I just have to comment on the word "lucky" that's tossed around regarding both Steve's and Robin's circumstances (that may be more on Instagram). People saying "you're so lucky to be able to do this" or Robin being "lucky to be able to work onboard" - that's just *so* not the right phrasing. It took dedication, hard decision-making, a crapton of work and willpower to get here! Saying it's "lucky" just undermines the amount of work that went into getting both of these fine, fine people to where they are now.
As someone who's been trying to even get to regularly sail on their own boat (while holding down a 9 to 5), hats off to Steve and Robin for, well, basically everything they've accomplished. Luck ain't got nothing to to do with it. :)
So great to see this walk around. It's been some time since somebody poured lead in a hole in the ground.
Looking forward to keep follow the adventure!
Friday’s just can’t get any better. A2A video just makes my morning. A coffee doesn’t hurt as well.
Thanks Stephen and Ben.
Its a well known feature of boats that "jobs to do" increases geometrically with the time spent onboard, while the interior space decreases exponentially.
Friday AM coffee w/A2A can't be beat. Thanks, crew!
Happy Friday, Bill!
So the dust from the social onslaught settled, and out here in youtube land we waited for some visible future. This has just been a delightful glimpse, and you and Robin are great on screen.
Glad you made it up our way! Happy Friday, 'bella fam! ☕
Haaaaappy Friday!!
"...it cant go nowhere..." Oh yes it can...thoughts of an ole sailor. good sailing...
So happy to see dirt-bag style technology used on the rigging. I feel validated.
Love the guest book. Cheers
What an amazing boat! I am very impressed with how thoughtful Steve is regarding the tuning process and finishing things up. It really pays to live aboard and shake everything down. Of course, when the time comes to head out into the blue water, you will learn even more. Good to see Steve on camera with the energy & excitement we saw during the build. One question I am a little embarrassed to ask; what does the upcoming winter look like? Where will the boat be and where will Steve and family be? Do you live on the boat still or pull her out of the water for more work? Thanks for letting us share in your journey and for taking the time to explain everything to all of us. Godspeed!
It is so nice to see you more at ease, not having to be the host, not having to meet deadlines, and… being a boat owner! All of the list items will be seen to at some point. She suits you! (By which I mean Arabella. No one needs to tell you about Robyn.)
From the 2 stroke ringing chainsaw until now, I've enjoyed every moment. You've made history. Now its time for you to enjoy the fruits of the acorns. ENJOY!
I totally agree, ice cream absolutely can save you from selfoffism !
This video was no less wonderful than any you have shared with us. Maybe more. I hope Steve and Robin don’t mind continuing sharing their lives sailing, climbing, skiing or whatever with us. I am delighted that Akiva has a flotation device on.
This was a wonderfully relaxed Steve wonderful to see
maintenance you always keep
a Dutch saying loud "buy a boat and work your to death"
but you have vision Steve and that helps you through all the jobs
There ought to be a fan group that's watched since the keel pour. I LOVE reading the comments from people who've watched since then. It was such an amazing TH-cam discovery to me!! I was so impressed by the intelligence and inspiration that was in every minute. Still am!
I think it was sold upon the fan group yourself! We’ve got a tight little community here in the commons. It takes every single person to keep it informative, fun, and somehow, oddly unifying. 😊-Anne
so nice to see Arabella and crew doing so fine!
and the smile and look of Robin in the end... just amazing. as always, thanks for sharing your journey
Hopefully some people can upvote this so it’s visible! LED strip issue is heat, mount the strip on some aluminium extrusion or any metal and they will last forever!
You look good brother, I can tell you are settling in to your new dream home that you built from SCRATCH! I have been there every step of the way and I can't believe your in 'Arabella' and she is in the water. Can't wait to see the trips you go on now. Be safe in the mountains but have a great time. You have a good group of people around you, that is a blessing in today's society. CB "The only way is through."
Love seeing you and Robin together. You guys look so happy. 🍻🍀
For your dingy keep the three strand and put the rub rail underneath it. maybe chamfer a 45 on the bottom to make a nice angle so it doesn't catch edges....super inspired...woot woot
Hi Steve. From our own experience it will vastly improve ventilation and vision if you have a zip on the window in the front of the dodger. It just rolls down under way.
A great tour of Arabella. Robin & Stephen are such a cute couple. Thanks for sharing.
ICE CREAM to prevent a mutiny... Brilliant!
It looks like boat life has been good for the soul! So happy to see how relaxed and happy you appear. Glad you and Robin are settling in. Enjoy!
Steve I really enjoy you sharing your progress with us. ?Are you or have you thought about writing a book about your journey from the very beginning.👍
This is a great walk through and review of Arabella. As you noted, there will always be something to modify, repair or replace, but the joy of being able to sail where you want when you want will make it all worth while. Thank you for bringing uw along on this marvelous adventure.
Thanks Steve for a really interesting tour of the boat, having followed the journey right from the keel pour it is fascinating to see lots of the items that you literally created from planks of timber all that time ago, It is also great to see the "lived in" look with all the food and kit etc, Nice to see Akiva looking very happy on board as well.
Happy sailing and mountain adventures, you and Robin deserve it. Cheers from the UK..
Doing small projects first and making sure you're comfortable first sounds like a sound plan. One thing about jib furlers - it *will* get stuck with the sail out at the worst possible moment when gale force winds come out from nowhere and you're single-handing. So have a plan for that occurrence :D
On the whole, those things are quite reliable though. That one summer when mine got stuck multiple times was completely my own fault, but of course I only diagnosed it correctly in late September... Oh well, has worked trouble free for many sailing seasons after that.
(The thing that happened was that the bottom screws that hold the foil in place in its bracket on the furler had worked their way loose and disappeared, and I'd just replaced the screws and tightened the foil to where it sat. And what I found out was that the foil shouldn't have been touching the bottom of the bracket but be riding 1 cm higher, there were holes in the foil for the screws to go through. Funny how much difference a 1 cm foil displacement can make. It wasn't hitting anything that would've gotten stuck, it was just the wrong height that made the furler sit a little bit differently and caused the furling rope to get stuck.)
Thanks for such an in depth and interesting video today. I always sit on the edge of my seat and i gobble up every word. 😂 Been watching all these years and i ALWAYS am excited when Friday mornings come.
I agree with erriccsuf. After owning and cruising 8 sailboats it’s as much about what you take off the boat as what what you load on the boat. Also another channel I follow “Salt and Tar” built their wood boat and have been in the water a year and are still finishing construction while cruising like you.
Watch Salt and Tar as they hop anchorage’s in Mexico. They haul the anchor to the Bob stay. Pull it tight and cruise to the next spot. I think its a good idea for short passages and would certainly ease the process of storing the anchor. Just a suggestion.
Nice to see her having that lived-in look now!
Living your dream Steve with the person you love and your dog
Good on yer Steve. Enjoy it all now.
Personally - And I actively state I know NOTHING! other than what I've learnt from University of YT - I always thought the "waterline antifouling" looked a bit on the low side BUT (yes caps again because I cannot exclaim enough!!!) I'm so so so incredibly impressed by where the A2A team calculated where the waterline would be on a brand new boat, built waaaay better than spec / design - shall we say oak to pine ratio whilst also considering the quality and density of the materials you used inside, Cherry, Locust etc etc plus all the modern tech that wasn't accounted for in the original design.... It just means that Arabella is more so an incredible feat of engineering than I ever thought she would be!!! In that case - what's a few inches of anti-fouling between friends??? 🤣🤣🤣 I'm honestly blown away by what the team have achieved!
00:40:00 The framed launch photo. 1 )I Love that placement and 2) best of all, just for me- I can see my boat in the background (white center cockpit sloop with a large blue awning up for rain protection) What a great memory I'm so glad we could sail up for the launch!
Awesome as always 🎉👍🏻
The joy of yachting - work, work, work and them some more work. But it's all great fun!
We just lost our old dog but for the past year we had her on joint chews from PetLab which were a huge help. I noticed Akiva seemed a little stiff when she layed down so you might consider a supplement. We also gave her Fish Oil daily. I feel we extended her life by many months.
Sorry to hear about your dear family member. Sending thoughts of healing.
I feel like this has been the happiest (back to regular Steve) that we have seen since before Arabella left the boat house. Soo glad to see it
Steve, it was nice to have the opportunity to tour the entire boat and see you pointing out all of the little things that you've identified as needing a little bit of attention. You've been out on the water long enough now to have encountered most everything that is somehow unfinished.
Robin, I see that you are comfortable in your new corporate headquarters.
My LED's in my kitchen had the same problem. After several replacements, I realized heat was killing them. I installed an aluminum channel as a heat sink to move the heat away from the LED strip and I've had no problems since.
Most of those LED strip systems are designed to over drive the LEDs. This gives brighter lights and considerably reduces the life of each LED.
Looking forward to 4 months, 6 months, 1 year... reviews of the boat and hearing of your tweakings of Arabella. Fair winds
Great work…thank you for sharing
Carry on. Excellent segment.
such a cool inside look thank you so much !
Clever use of the Dyneema. Spectra has slightly different properties.
Happy trails
I wasn't expecting all the bronze hardware to blue so quickly. Looks great.
This is great. This is the episode I’ve been waiting for since long before Arabella was launched.
Well done you guys, so fun to watch the progression.
Icecream makes everything better 😁
With how stressed and rushed the project was around launch I was rely worried about the project. So seeing you settleing in and adjusting to boat life rather than workshop life is fantastic. Arabella is clearly moving in the right direction, with lots of interesting videos to come.
Punch list should of been completed before the launch though.
Boat. noun: "a hole in the water into which you pour money."
Buying a boat was one of the happiest days of my life.
I loved my time on the water. The second happiest day of my life was when I sold it. 😁
50:00 those LED panels are dying because they are overheating, those brown spots are burnt LEDs. You need to use beefier aluminum railing underneath the LED strip, preferably offset it from the wall to create air gap, so the LED strip is able to cool down. Installed like this in the corner, any strip will overheat very quickly.
agreed, and/or possibly they are over voltage
I assume voltage would be the first thing they checked. Its clearly lack of heat sink issue. @@andrewduhan
So many questions answered. Enjoyed seeing all the details. In time I'm sure all the work will get done. Great video.
Well spoken and packed full of information that shows well youins have planned Arabella and your life together. Congratulations !!!! Close to your best video.
Great vid. Thank you. Brought us right up to date.
Love the thoughtful walkthrough/update -- warts and all. Forward, A2A crew!
Strip weight as much as you can. What you add should be as light as possible. I built one of this design in 1976 and sailed it trans pacific to NZ. Mine floated on her lines when launched, needed a couple inches at the second haulout. She was low in the water always and super tender. Wet wet wet. Decks awash whenever going to weather. You have already overbuilt much of what is there. I’m talking pure function here. Safety, weatherliness, all of it. Strip it out and you will have a better sailing boat. Best you can expect with that design anyway. That aside, you did a great job with the craftsmanship level. And the home cut soul is there.