Part One - Part Two - Part Three - Part Four 
            
            I got home this evening, and the glue was  set up.  More or less.  I really wanted to get the top levitated  across to where the boat is.  There is a whole caboodle of stuff to do to  this little piece of the overall puzzle.  Like, shaping the bottoms of the  beams, and paneling the underside.  And, making foundations for the  arch-topped windows that will grace the supports, and a bazillion other  things.  Can’t be burning daylight on this project. 
I couldn’t get any help just then.   So, I asked myself, how heavy can it really be? 
            
            
            The answer, which should have been  obvious:  REAL-DAMN-HEAVY.  And, it still must go up another 20  inches or so to get things fitted to hold it in place.  Tomorrow, I’ll rig  the engine hoist.  Like I should have done before balancing the huge thing  on my back and assembling the cobbledtogether rack it’s balanced on now.   But, we almost... 
I don’t suppose they built the pyramids  this way.  I read someplace that those guys had a union.  Better luck  tomorrow. 
            After  an overnight of head scratching, and personal misgivings; the biggest single  piece of a soon-to-be pilot house took about two hours to get hoisted into  position.  The supports will take some doing, and jostling.  But,  this next step shouldn’t take all that much time (FLW?).  It certainly  would have been easier to carve it out of foam and glass it over, surfboard  style.  I just didn’t think I could get a constant camber over that big a  surface, that way.  Oh well.  Maybe next time… 
            
            This is as far as I could get it single  handed.  Somehow this top had to climb another two feet in altitude.   And, then stay put while I create “walls” under it. 
            
            Horray!  The cavalry has  arrived…  It’s amazing what an extra pair of hands is worth, when there is  a big, heavy thing swinging over your head, and it needs to be convinced to sit  still within an eighth of an inch of “just right.”  An extra pair of hands  that is more than willing to pick stuff up and hold it in the air too.   This cavalry troop showed up at the buttcrack of dawn on a Sunday, no  less.  Thanks, Jim! 
            
            Yep.  That’s duct tape and a 4x6  timber making the engine hoist long enough to find the middle of the coach roof  panel when it’s 8 feet off the floor.  The bolts actually carried the  load.  DT is good.  But, not that good. 
            
            This contraption is beginning to resemble  concrete forms for a freeway overpass someplace.  Time to start with the  boat parts. 
            
            Both Bosun the attack poodle and I (both  wearing matching gray shirts) should be able to stand up under this gonna-be  lid.  Ok, break’s over.  Gotta’ go get some sawdust flying. 
All of my measurements seem to be in that  universal standard, the Err-So.  Especially, when it comes to time spent  on the current boat project.  I think it’s been about a week.  Err-So.  I’ve got to admit there are many better ways to do things.  Like, for  example, taking months to plan, and years to build.  Now, there’s an  interesting concept.  Anyhow. 
            I’ll admit to being a touch peckish about  this tiger that has me firmly by the tail.  It’s not like just about  everybody hasn’t tried to warn me.  Kim Apel the architectural genius, and  fellow naviculus morbiddus sufferer, told me straight out.  He said  “Beware the rule of squares.”  Sort of like that mournful voice  insistently attempting to warn Caesar.  “…beware the Ides of March…”   He told me that everything would be twice as big, heavy, expensive, awkward,  and just plain, HARDER.  Like, Julius before me, I should have paid more  attention to the seer.  Instead, I said, “Sure.”  And, thought,  “Yeahbutttt.  I’m only growing from a 14 foot hull to a 17 foot  hull.  And.   I’ve already done this about twice before.  Shouldn’t be such a big  deal.”  And, yes, Shenanigan the designed and built by eye ersatz  tug went together in a couple-three weeks.  And, heck.  This time,  all I was gonna’ do was pretty much the same stuff, only different. 
            You probably know somebody like that. 
            If I was still working for the government,  I’d be getting paid to put verbal spin on stuff like this.  But, since becoming  a full-fledged civilian, I’ve developed the odd habit of frankness.  And,  like Mark Twain said, it does save you a lot of memory work.  So, the  unvarnished truth is that Roughneck is going to take a lot longer than I  expected.  I brashly estimated it at six weeks from tear-out to  trailer.  Maybe more like six months.  But, I think that sort of  thing happens to Real Boatbuilders too.  Doesn’t it? 
            I’ve got a framed-in pilot house, an  almost-complete coach roof,  and trunk cabin pretty-much-in-place;  on  top of a replaced sole and engine mount/bilge pan.  I’ve mocked up the  exterior shell, and done some experimental “lines in space” to lay out where  deck edges and curves need to land.  I’ve even stood behind the wheel and  made imaginary motor sounds - when nobody was around.  This boat is gonna’  get built.  Sometime. 
            
            This is what things looked like about a  week ago. 
            
            And, this is where we are right now. 
            
            Earlier, this morning. 
            
            Vrrroooommmmmm…  And, just about  EVERYTHING yet to do.  Like, cut that dashboard out, and make a real helm  station, for example.  And, yes.  This girl will have curves where a  girl aughta’ have curves.  It’s just gonna’ take a little longer than I  expected.   That’s all.             
      
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