With Twigs and an Animal Hide You Too Can Build a Boat

Forget the megayacht of yesterday.  I am sure I can afford a megayacht timeshare…unless you can rent by the minute and I start saving now.  Despite my lack of cash, I do have access to some willow rods.  If I could just find the a large animal hide, I’d be set.  I guess it’s time to get scudding.  With these supplies and some tar, I could presumably make an Irish coracle, a flat-bottomed-walnut-shell-shaped boat constructed of  interwoven rods, bound by twine, and covered in an animal skin, used on rivers, tidal flats, and other waterways.

The video above demonstrates how masters build the coracle, so nothing should stand in your way.  You can order a hide here or better yet McMaster-Carr has canvas.

5 Replies to “With Twigs and an Animal Hide You Too Can Build a Boat”

  1. With a couple fine coracles and crews of grant thirsty marine scientists armed with pipettes and CTD’s I’m sure we could strike fear into the hearts of the mega-yacht owners and convince them to “grant” us use of their ships for the 340 dys of the year they don’t use them.

  2. Fascinating piece of footage. But a sea-going coracle made of willow and 30 ox hides? Hmmm. What could possibly go wrong?

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