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lynaes
8th November 2008, 05:52 PM
Should you like to see wooden boats from my part of the world.
http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder.htm
no English text.:U
Erik

Boatmik
8th November 2008, 06:26 PM
Just wanted to pull some of the pics out of Lynaes' links

http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder/segelbatar/images/gazell_001.jpg

http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder/segelbatar/images/windex1.jpg

http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder/segelbatar/images/neptun.jpg

lynaes
8th November 2008, 06:46 PM
There are other types too, so here is a lnk to my own. Those you have choosen are all " skærgårdskrydsere " a type for near coast or flatwatersailing.
http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder/snipor_motorseglare/snipor_072.htm

http://www.trabatsakuten.nu/batbilder/snipor_motorseglare/images/photo2.jpg

Erik

lynaes
11th November 2008, 10:11 PM
I don't know the boat shown in the post, it is not mine, and I don't know how it got there. And I don't seame to be able to edit it away. Can anybody else put a pic. on my post. Now a couple of hours later the righ pic. is on. ????????????????????????
Erik

RFNK
6th December 2008, 12:40 AM
Well, since the topic is Scandinavian boats ... this was built by a Scandinavian but built in Sydney. We finished restoring her a couple of years ago. So, here's a Scandinavian boat with melaleucas rather than pine trees in the background. Rick

http://i470.photobucket.com/albums/rr69/rfnk/Pip.jpg

lynaes
6th December 2008, 01:35 AM
You are right , The Nordisk Folkebåd has been buildt I think since 1946 and for some years in GRP... At first it was used as a family cruiser, but in these days it's far too small for that, but it is used for competition and daysailing. I put on a pic. of a row of them on a day the water has left the marina.

Darce
6th December 2008, 02:07 AM
What beautiful boats.

PAR
6th December 2008, 01:50 PM
Mmmmm . . . . . .

Rattrap
6th December 2008, 02:15 PM
boat lol.

RFNK
6th December 2008, 06:35 PM
Pipsqueak (certainly not the original name but original details are lost) was built in Sydney in 1962 from coachwood ply. I'm not sure when the aluminium, deck-stepped rig was added but the original key way for the original timber rig remained in the boat until a couple of years ago when I replaced the heavy, galvanized iron compression post with a lighter SS post. Rick

lynaes
9th December 2008, 05:54 AM
Folkboats can still be seen in large numbers when a regatta is going on.

lynaes
9th December 2008, 06:05 AM
As we speek this brand new folkboat is being built in DK

RFNK
9th December 2008, 12:23 PM
Thanks for the great photo of the Folkboat building Lynaes. I'd love to visit one of these yards where they're still building these boats in the traditional way. There are big fleets of Folkboats in San Francisco and in Germany too, I think, but so many are fibreglass now. Nothing wrong with that but not much fun watching the building! Rick