| Building Tennessee
 by Charles Leinweber chuck.leinweber@gmail.com
 
  
    |  | Sometime in 1995, my son Bonham and I
    decided that we would build a boat. I wanted to build a cruising sailboat, but he wanted a
    fishing boat. Tennessee was our compromise. I could cruise and he could fish. In the
    ensuing years, Bonham has discovered that he hates cruising, but my wife, Sandra, has
    discovered that she likes it. That is fine with me, she is a much better cook anyway. |  
  
    | I had built a couple of 8 ft. prams,
    and a self-designed catamaran which was a disaster. I was ready to use someone else's
    design, at least until I had a little more experience. Phil Bolger's designs have always apealed to me. He seems to get a
    nice balance between what makes a boat work well, what makes it look good, and what makes
    it easy to build. As you can see from the line drawing Tennessee is
    29' long on a 6' beam and 4' high with about 4" draft, really just a big
    flat-bottomed canoe. She's much more than a canoe of course. She is a great little camp
    cruiser for two with lots of room for gear. She is not fast, but she handles a chop very
    well, and will float in very little water. At eleven or twelve hundred pounds, any old car
    will tow her.  |  |  
  
    | Since this was going to be a simple boat, I didn't
    want to go all out on materials, but I didn't want the very cheapest either. I used
    Douglas fir plywood and western red cedar. In a few places where strength seemed important
    I used southern yellow pine.  Everything was attached with System Three epoxy and stainless steel screws. All
    surfaces were primed with epoxy before being painted, or glued. |  
  
    |  | I got the plans from Bernie Wolfard at
    Common Sense Boats. My sixty bucks got me
    one sheet of instructions. I guess I was expecting more, but everything I needed to know
    was there on 16 by 20 inches. The building concept is inspirational. All frames, which
    happen to be bulkheads, are internal. All longitudinal stringers such as chine logs and
    cabin beams are external. Therefore, absolutely no notching is necessary. |  
  
    | Here is how the building went: first the bulkheads
    and the transom were constructed. Then four sheets of plywood were joined for the sides
    and the profile was cut out. A 1x2 was attached to center of each bulkhead in order to
    line everything up. |  
  
    | Next, the chine logs were attached to
    the sides and the bottom placed across the chine logs and the bulkheads. We used two
    layers of three eighths ply with the joints staggered. Next the keel was attached, and the
    bottom was completely finished. |  |  
  
    |  | When the boat was turned over, the
    rest of the longitudinal stringers, which serve as rub rails, were attached. There are
    four of these stringers in all. One is at the cabin top, one at the foredeck and cockpit
    coaming level, one full length at the lazarette level, and finally, the chine logs. We later added a canvas sunshade, wheel steering, a Garmin gps, a depth finder, vhf, and most important; a Honda 10hp 4stroke motor. It was expensive, but it
    is quiet and reliable. At full throttle it gets about 15mph, at half throttle, 15mpg.  |  
  
    | We named her Anomaly, because she
    is so different from other boats. Her maiden cruise was from Port Aransas to the beginning of the land
    cut south of the entrance of Baffin Bay on the Texas Gulf coast. The next year, she
    cruised from Corpus Christi to Port Isabel and back on the inside with a stop at the
    Mansfield jetties. Anomaly has also seen action on Lake Buchannon, Lake Ivey, and Lake
    Travis.  |  |  
   
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