By the Ways
By
Victoria Colella
Ever watched steaming oak ribs inserted
into the spine of an old wooden boat? Or witnessed the
pouring of molten bronze into a sand mold? These are just a
few of the traditional processes that are employed by the
skilled shipwrights here on the Sausalito waterfront. But
there is more to it than I am telling. For these methods
have a rhythm and ceremony attached to them, and people who
know gather to lend a hand and toast a job well done under
the cold night stars. Young and old, men and women rise to
the occasion and there is a wondrous camaraderie and
connection to the ancient ways so lacking in our culture.
Beat your drums, howl at the moon, this will suffice for
now, but when the time comes to test your own mettle, count
on the sea to raise the bar. What better way to ensure your
survival than to build your own boat according to tried and
true plans tested over thousands of years.
It is said among most boat salesmen these
days that wood is out and fiberglass is the way to go. Low
maintenance, they claim, is the bottom line and outweighs
all else. Besides, it’s cheaper. If you attended the local
boat shows, you would see these salesmen standing beside
their oversized white bathtubs, painted with gaudy graphics.
I honestly did try to make some human connection with this
inert grouping of all-to-similar creations, for I will not
go so far as to consider them boats. For boats have a
romance about them, and these things have none of that. They
are hard and cold and lifeless and smell of some faraway
fiberglass factory. Moreover, these things have cut the
wooden boat culture off at the knees.
Still, the wooden boat culture survives
and will continue to survive as long as there are people who
understand the importance of keeping our human connection to
the world around us and who enjoy the satisfaction of
building something with their own hands and whose hearts are
lifted when they watch a new boat launched or an old one
restored to its former glory. Events such as John Muir’s
Chinese Shrimp Junk Project last year brought together an
entire community at China Camp for a boat launch as it
should be, complete with dancing dragons and firecrackers.
So all of you who wonder how you can
connect with this culture, how you can become part of it,
dream. Dream a dream of a little wooden boat, selecting the
plan and materials, building it together with family and
friends, launching it, sharing in its care, and enjoying the
use of it for years to come. That’s what it’s all about.