Soundings

BOAT SMARTS

Situated about 40 miles north-northwest of Seattle, Washington, and sandwiched between Port Townsend and Discovery bays, is the Quimper Peninsula, an area that’s home to one of the most diverse traditional boatbuilding communities in the Pacific Northwest.

Scattered around an area that’s surrounded by mountains and forests are a handful of marine businesses that keep the boatbuilding gears well-greased. There are outfits such as timber supplier Edensaw Woods, the marine metal casting specialists at Port Townsend Foundry and various boat shops and boatyards, including Port Townsend Shipwrights Co-op, Haven Boatworks LLC and Cape George Marine Works, to name only a few.

Also nearby, in Port Hadlock, is one of the most respected boatbuilding and marine systems schools in the United States: the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding (NWSWB). Located on a sprawling seven-acre campus on the shores of South Port Townsend Bay, the accredited career and vocational school has been teaching

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Soundings

Soundings4 min read
Tidewater 3100 Carolina Bay
LOA: 31’1” Beam: 10’2” Draft: 1’7” Weight: 7,200 lbs. Fuel: 220 gals. Water: 19 gals. Power: (2) 400-hp Mercury or 350-hp Yamaha outboards Tidewater Boats says that its 3100 Carolina Bay is the world’s largest bay boat. Having stepped aboard at Febru
Soundings2 min read
Thief of Tradition
In the painting The Lobster Trap by Ed Parker, a Maine lobsterman lowers crates into the water while, unbeknownst to him, a large sea monster intertwines itself with the line. The calm water and blue skies suggest a peaceful and idyllic day, juxtapos
Soundings7 min read
Driving A Classic
Chris-Craft, one of America’s oldest and best-known boat builders, celebrates its 150th anniversary this year. Stephen F. Heese has served as the company’s president for more than 23 years. We asked Heese to share his insights on the company’s trajec

Related Books & Audiobooks