I know, right? I don't know why I needed to hear about Tally Ho and Acorn to Arabella. I've watched A2A for six years, starting around EP 12. I think I started with EP 1 of Tally Ho because of some quirk of the algorithm. I want to thank everybody for the upvotes and comments that push the algorithm to suggest this channel to the fans of the similar boat channels.
Get rid of the fiberglass ! And start over. Good project and better timing! Talley Ho is just coming to the end of her construction journey and you’re just beginning yours. Timing couldn’t be better.
Peal off the fiberglass. strip it, sand it, grind to clean and prep the seams and replace calking. Prime and then start on the decks and interiors. The boat was meant to be a wooden boat. Keep topsides covered until you can close the topsides as fresh water (rain) is the greatest enemy.
Please call Leo ! He will, I am sure, tell you that you are certifiable - Stop right now !! You will, of course, then ignore him completely and carry on regardless. I shall then be watching every minute of it for the next four years !!!!
As soon as I saw the lines of this boat, I fell in love. I'll be following your progress Janik. Tally Ho sets a high standard, and I hope you find other craftsmen who can help you build her into another work of art!
Good on you, Janik! best of luck to you as you undertake this restoration. I'll follow and comment if I find something to contribute. Like others, I am a follower of Tally Ho and an admirer of all who shoulder the challenge of restoring a wooden boat! Cheers.
Percy Mitchell was one of the finest boatbuiders of his era. He and his craftsmen built a phenomenal number of craft including The alfred milne designed Morva and Windstar in which her late majesty the queen sailed on. His son Gary Mitchell also a boat builder and designer is still with us. Percy Mitchell wrote a book called A boar builders story added to by his son Gary. Try and get a copy. Best of good fortune with the project.
I will watch your progress from Australia as I have done with the Tally Ho restoration from day one in the U.S northwest. Fair winds and following seas to you in the future.👍
Percy Mitchell was a very famous boatbuilder, and a deeply religious man too. His autobiography “ A boatbuilders story”:makes interesting reading. Any Mitchell vessel will create great interest in the UK.
I started watching Steve’s Acorn to Arabella, then Leo’s Tally Ho, and I am so looking forward following Jannik with his Akela. Good luck. Greetings from Hannover, Germany.
Hi Janik my wife's great uncle was Percy Mitchell we both grew up in Cornwall we now live in New Zealand always great hear about restorations. He wrote a lovely little book called The Life of a Boat Builder if my memory serves I think I have a copy which I can send you. I would be very interested to come to see the work in progress I'm back in the UK in September therefor a short trip to get to you. All the best. I agree with Johnny get her back to the original if possible.
Hi, of course I already own the book myself. Owning a boat like that, it was a must have. I'm planning a trip to Cornwall too, this September, to do some research. Hopefully i can find some information about the interior, at the moment I have zero Information about how it originally looked. thanks and best regards
I worked at Camper and Nicholsons in Southampton in the sixties where these yachts were built get rid of the fibre glass and bring her back to her former beauty.
I will follow your restoration with great interest. During the 1970's I sailed and helped maintain a 24 foot gaff cutter the 'Ark Royal' designed and built (1932) by Percy Mitchell in Portmellon. We visited the old yard and met Mitchell's son. I have a copy of 'A Boatbuilder's Story' by Percy Mitchell, published in 1968. He certainly built boats of great quality, all the best for your restoration.
One reason the glass didn't bond to the wood is that the old paint was left on the hull. The planking and keel needed to be clean and dry to get adhesion. Epoxy is better than than fiberglass resin for this purpose.
I would like to see it with all the fibreglass removed and the hull timber restored I looks a very nice classic boat But as a non boat person all I see is a giant wallet emptier Good luck with it from the other side of the planet 👍👍🇦🇺
I've watch with great interest the restoration rebuild process of Tally Ho. This looks like a good project to follow - boat has a lovely name and the wood looks reasonably sound, but until the fibreglass shell has been removed then the full picture of the extent of restoration will be revealed. Hopefully the wooden planking is in good shape throughout. Best of luck with the project.
Everyone is overlooking the fact that the fiberglass was most likely done out of necessity. Nobody incurs that type of project or expense "just because they feel like it"....most likely heavily damaged
Recording a planked boat is no easy task. Greulling, backbreaking, shoulder killing work. So absolutely no surprise one of her owners decided to fiberglass the hull. Pretty shocking disrespect😊
She's a classic beauty with sweet lines, it's easy to see why you fell in love with her. Looking forward to following along as you bring her back to life.
For many years I have been observing a classic yacht covered with fiberglass. BUT it is coated with epoxy resin, so it has no problems for ten years. Polyester resin does not stick to wood and peels off. And here it is polyester... And the author again glues it on...  For many years I have been observing a classic yacht covered with fiberglass. BUT it is coated with epoxy resin, so it has no problems for ten years. Polyester resin does not stick to wood and peels off. And here it is polyester... And the author again glues it on...
This is a project that deserves attention, definitively. The boat has nice lines and a pedigree. Jannik is a competent enthusiastic young boat builder. Let's subscribe! I want to see how the story goes on... Ciao da Milano!
Keep the videos coming. Looks like a great project and worth saving. Couldn't you have just drilled a few holes in the fiberglass to let the water drain and patch the cracks until you made it across to the other side and then tear it all off and either recover it or leave the fiberglass off ??
I too will watch your progress on this restoration I have also been following Leo and the tally ho since day one I live in Washington state about an hour from Port Townsend where tally ho is being restored and refitted very exciting!!
@02:58 Applying fiberglass to the hull was a trend several decades ago. However, for many wooden boats it became a shroud. This was often done with polyester. Over time, the adhesion to the wood proved to be insufficient. Moisture provided an excellent environment for wood rot. To properly "pack" the hull, the wood must be dry (
Akela (also called The Lone Wolf) is a fictional character in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book. He is the leader of the Seeonee pack of Indian wolves. Akela becomes one of Mowgli's mentors. Akelā means "single or solitary" in Hindi.
A lovely boat, well worth restoring. I am hoping that the pitch pine planks will have passed the test of time in spite of being fibre glassed over! Good luck and can't wait to see the next episode :)
I’m very happy for you, because this is exactly what I would love to do. You must be having some really good emotions ! Looking forward to seeing your story unfold, thanks for taking the time to document it .
Hi Looks like you have a fantstice project on your hands. I hope we we will get to see more of you. In the mean time good luck with the changes in your life and with your project on Akela, I'll be keeping an eye out for your next video.
I’m so happy to have found your channel, especially at the beginning when you’re taking her home & I don’t have to “catch up “. I may even turn on the notification bell for the first time ever, since you said it would be a bit…….🍀
Certainly better off stripping the fiberglass off the hull. Those Carvel planked boats expand & contract normally...those two methods aren't meant to be used together.
Looking forward to seeing the restoration of your yacht, you have a great deal of work in front of you and a very interesting story to unfold. I wish you well on your journey, Gary from the UK 👍👍
My father restored a 1938 international Dragon, which admittedly had been left out in the open for many years. All the planks below the waterline had to be replaced plus all new decking etc. He chose to have the hull west system sheathed to get a fair finish. Good luck to you. My father’s Dragon took 5 years. Critically it still had a racing certificate so it races to this day.
Tally Ho just splashed, and a new renovation project pops up on the Internet. This old lady has beautiful lines ... Good she gets off the unhealthy glasfibre coat. Never can be a friend of wood (saying so living on a 63 yer old wooden gaff rigged 2-master of 37 ft) - Good luck !! :-)
Ein wirklich wunderschöner Klassiker, wünsche alles Glück der Welt für die Restaurierung. Ich liebe diese alten Yachten. Habe den Kanal abonniert um zu schauen wie es weitergeht. Zur Beschichtung mit GFK hörte ich mal, es sei das Totenhemd für ein Holzschiff. Denke die Entfernung ist der richtige Weg. Alles erdenklich Gute und LG.
A brave man! A man I know rebuilt an original Bristol Channel Pilot cutter which was built in Pill, Somerset which was traditionally the home of the Bristol Pilots.. the work which has gone into this boat is unbelievable and the cost is on another level.. but I guess if it’s what you want then I wish you all the best with the rebuild! Somebody needs to be saving classic boats so I guess we are lucky to have people around who are willing to put the effort in. ⚓️🦈⚓️🦈
Interesting project. I would have just repaired the hole and crack doing more is a waste of money by pumping air between glass and timber might well be able to lift hull clean out of the glass shell then you got yourself a mold . Once tidied up this mold could knock out three maybe four hulls to help sponsor the project.
Fiberglassing over a carvel hull is a bad idea for the very reason you have found. I would remove it totally and then you will at least know what you have got to deal with.
The guy who built my wooden boat literally wrote the book on this ill-advised, blasphemous practice. Thankfully, nobody who owned her ever read that book... I've never understood it. If you want a fiberglass boat, get one. If you want a traditional wooden boat, get one. Or you can get a strip planked boat if you want a little of both, but don't put fiberglass on a carvel hull. I hope they didn't spline the seams on this boat, because if they did, he's gonna have to replank the entire hull or else be stuck with fiberglass sheathing.
@@meofnz2320 Mine was full of rainwater when I got her. I made a reefing hook and pulled the caulking out of the bottom garboard seams, the water drained right out and now she's high and dry
Nothing is forever! It seems there is a good layer of fiberglas around it. I would repair it as good as possible with epoxy and sail with it instead of working a half life on a boat that is too old to safe in the original condition.
Love the old style full keel boats, they inspire a feeling of safety as opposed to a bulb keel, hanging there with a few ton shaped like a missile dangling off a stick basically. Exposed with the chances of hitting something and ending up in serious life threatening danger fairly high. Whereas the full keel would either bounce off whatever it is, or knock it out of the way. full keel boats are also comfortable either anchored up somewhere or underway, they're always comfortable. They also sail well like a train on rails, they may not be quick but they're definitely safer than other keel styles for cruising yachties
Beautiful boat, I had a 48’ wooden boat a previous owner sheathed in grp and it also never hit the water. I stripped it all off, you should also, it will be a world of pain if you leave it or patch it up. Do it properly and she will be a great boat. Good luck. Andy UK😊😊
Nice lines! Good luck with it. If you could manage to remove the fiberglass in two pieces you could make a mold to use or sell to offset the cost of restoring the original hull.
Sehr cool, jetzt wo Tally Ho bald segelt startet ein neues Projekt auf CZcams! Wir haben ein etwas kleineres Boot, einen Holzjollenkreuzer auch aus dem Jahr 1938. Also eigentlich ein Schwesterschiff :) Hoffentlich sehen wir uns dann irgendwann mal auf dem Wasser. Viel Glück und immer eine Handbreit!
Gosh a man with a vision and an eye for beautiful yacht design. You must have a VERY deep wallet to support this vision. Sailing+owning a yacht = bankruptcy!😅😅😅😅
Some people I know would slowly disassemble that boat, keep the steering wheel, and rebuild it from that.... with a team of heroes and lots of patience... Let's se what you decide. Good luck..
There is Too much noise during swallowing of your own saliva to listen and watch. Wish you good luck in renovating her. She is definitely nice looking boat.
Just when some of my boat restoration channels are nearing their completion, a new hand touches the beacon. Excellent.
I agree. Having just watch Leo splash Tally Ho!, this channel has popped up at just the right time. Looking forward to folloing along.
I know, right? I don't know why I needed to hear about Tally Ho and Acorn to Arabella. I've watched A2A for six years, starting around EP 12. I think I started with EP 1 of Tally Ho because of some quirk of the algorithm.
I want to thank everybody for the upvotes and comments that push the algorithm to suggest this channel to the fans of the similar boat channels.
My thoughts exactly , Acorn, Tally Ho , Yaba and Brupeg all launched , and now for something a little different 😀
For me the same! But big footsteps to fill. No pressure 😊
Great minds think alike. Yaba and Tally Ho are now splashed. Who will fill my addiction? Yea Akela!!!!!!!
Get rid of the fiberglass ! And start over. Good project and better timing! Talley Ho is just coming to the end of her construction journey and you’re just beginning yours. Timing couldn’t be better.
Tally Ho, Yaba, Arabella ... Lets hope Akela prospers soon.
Peal off the fiberglass. strip it, sand it, grind to clean and prep the seams and replace calking. Prime and then start on the decks and interiors. The boat was meant to be a wooden boat. Keep topsides covered until you can close the topsides as fresh water (rain) is the greatest enemy.
Please call Leo ! He will, I am sure, tell you that you are certifiable - Stop right now !! You will, of course, then ignore him completely and carry on regardless. I shall then be watching every minute of it for the next four years !!!!
As soon as I saw the lines of this boat, I fell in love. I'll be following your progress Janik. Tally Ho sets a high standard, and I hope you find other craftsmen who can help you build her into another work of art!
Good on you, Janik! best of luck to you as you undertake this restoration. I'll follow and comment if I find something to contribute. Like others, I am a follower of Tally Ho and an admirer of all who shoulder the challenge of restoring a wooden boat! Cheers.
Judging by his catboat build, he's a fabulous craftsman in his own right.
You are lucky the sheathing has not stuck to the hull. It will be much easier to throw it all in the bin!
Beauty lines, I see why you wanted to rescue her 🙏
Everyone so negative. This is this mans journey so sit back and relax and watch the show. 😊
I've been watching two other guys build/restore yachts. You build it, I'll watch. Good luck!
Me too
Percy Mitchell was one of the finest boatbuiders of his era. He and his craftsmen built a phenomenal number of craft including The alfred milne designed Morva and Windstar in which her late majesty the queen sailed on. His son Gary Mitchell also a boat builder and designer is still with us. Percy Mitchell wrote a book called A boar builders story added to by his son Gary. Try and get a copy. Best of good fortune with the project.
I will watch your progress from Australia as I have done with the Tally Ho restoration from day one in the U.S northwest. Fair winds and following seas to you in the future.👍
You've gotta watch Sailing Magic Carpet, great restoration.
One positive about the fiberglass is that it helped hold the shape.
Hope enough salt was stored within the wood to make a brine.
Definitely strip the fibreglass off it’s a dreadfully bad thing for the boat. All the best for your restoration, I will follow your videos. 👍🏻
Thank you for saving this boat, Jannik. Really looking forward to watching your progress. From UK.
I am not into sailing but I just love the style and lines of traditional wooden boats.
Percy Mitchell was a very famous boatbuilder, and a deeply religious man too. His autobiography “ A boatbuilders story”:makes interesting reading. Any Mitchell vessel will create great interest in the UK.
The previous comment is right. Be ruthless. Remove all the fibreglass and never put it back!!
I started watching Steve’s Acorn to Arabella, then Leo’s Tally Ho, and I am so looking forward following Jannik with his Akela. Good luck. Greetings from Hannover, Germany.
Looking forward to seeing the restoration of this lovely boat.
we also have a Percy Mitchell yacht, fantastic boat builder . totally agree ripoff all the fiber glass. the boat will be a nightmare if you don't
Hi Janik my wife's great uncle was Percy Mitchell we both grew up in Cornwall we now live in New Zealand always great hear about restorations. He wrote a lovely little book called The Life of a Boat Builder if my memory serves I think I have a copy which I can send you. I would be very interested to come to see the work in progress I'm back in the UK in September therefor a short trip to get to you. All the best. I agree with Johnny get her back to the original if possible.
Hi, of course I already own the book myself. Owning a boat like that, it was a must have. I'm planning a trip to Cornwall too, this September, to do some research. Hopefully i can find some information about the interior, at the moment I have zero Information about how it originally looked. thanks and best regards
I worked at Camper and Nicholsons in Southampton in the sixties where these yachts were built get rid of the fibre glass and bring her back to her former beauty.
I would have left the fiberglass on the bow and glassed over the existing glass just for towing purposes
I agree...
I will follow your restoration with great interest. During the 1970's I sailed and helped maintain a 24 foot gaff cutter the 'Ark Royal' designed and built (1932) by Percy Mitchell in Portmellon. We visited the old yard and met Mitchell's son. I have a copy of 'A Boatbuilder's Story' by Percy Mitchell, published in 1968. He certainly built boats of great quality, all the best for your restoration.
One reason the glass didn't bond to the wood is that the old paint was left on the hull. The planking and keel needed to be clean and dry to get adhesion. Epoxy is better than than fiberglass resin for this purpose.
I would like to see it with all the fibreglass removed and the hull timber restored
I looks a very nice classic boat
But as a non boat person all I see is a giant wallet emptier
Good luck with it from the other side of the planet 👍👍🇦🇺
I've watch with great interest the restoration rebuild process of Tally Ho. This looks like a good project to follow - boat has a lovely name and the wood looks reasonably sound, but until the fibreglass shell has been removed then the full picture of the extent of restoration will be revealed. Hopefully the wooden planking is in good shape throughout. Best of luck with the project.
Good luck with this restoration. You have a beautiful boat to work on. I look forward to following your progress.
Seeing her old classic lines she's definitely worth the effort
Everyone is overlooking the fact that the fiberglass was most likely done out of necessity. Nobody incurs that type of project or expense "just because they feel like it"....most likely heavily damaged
Relax dude
@@thenomadichillbilly908 he's chilled. Just a realist.
Recording a planked boat is no easy task. Greulling, backbreaking, shoulder killing work. So absolutely no surprise one of her owners decided to fiberglass the hull. Pretty shocking disrespect😊
She's a classic beauty with sweet lines, it's easy to see why you fell in love with her.
Looking forward to following along as you bring her back to life.
For many years I have been observing a classic yacht covered with fiberglass. BUT it is coated with epoxy resin, so it has no problems for ten years. Polyester resin does not stick to wood and peels off. And here it is polyester... And the author again glues it on...

For many years I have been observing a classic yacht covered with fiberglass. BUT it is coated with epoxy resin, so it has no problems for ten years. Polyester resin does not stick to wood and peels off. And here it is polyester... And the author again glues it on...
Kia ora from Aotearoa/ New Zealand... a wonderful project... a few years lie ahead... but Akela is a sleek and worthy... bon chance... alex
After 7 years of watching tally ho, now coming across this, I feel like I have salt in my veins and the ocean is calling. I have a problem!
This is a project that deserves attention, definitively. The boat has nice lines and a pedigree. Jannik is a competent enthusiastic young boat builder. Let's subscribe! I want to see how the story goes on... Ciao da Milano!
Keep the videos coming. Looks like a great project and worth saving. Couldn't you have just drilled a few holes in the fiberglass to let the water drain and patch the cracks until you made it across to the other side and then tear it all off and either recover it or leave the fiberglass off ??
What a lovely old girl.🙂
buying the boat was the cheapest part , from now on it will become expensive . Saving this beautiful ship is worth it . we will see
I too will watch your progress on this restoration I have also been following Leo and the tally ho since day one I live in Washington state about an hour from Port Townsend where tally ho is being restored and refitted very exciting!!
@02:58 Applying fiberglass to the hull was a trend several decades ago.
However, for many wooden boats it became a shroud.
This was often done with polyester. Over time, the adhesion to the wood proved to be insufficient. Moisture provided an excellent environment for wood rot.
To properly "pack" the hull, the wood must be dry (
Akela (also called The Lone Wolf) is a fictional character in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book. He is the leader of the Seeonee pack of Indian wolves. Akela becomes one of Mowgli's mentors. Akelā means "single or solitary" in Hindi.
She has a truly beautiful hull.
I look forward to her journey.
I found you this morning after watching Tally Ho getting ready for launch. Look forward to your restoration.
A lovely boat, well worth restoring. I am hoping that the pitch pine planks will have passed the test of time in spite of being fibre glassed over! Good luck and can't wait to see the next episode :)
Good luck for the restoration
Thats a really nice boat! Looking forward to seeing your restoration progress.
Awesome boat. Looking forward to seeing the future episodes
I’m very happy for you, because this is exactly what I would love to do.
You must be having some really good emotions !
Looking forward to seeing your story unfold, thanks for taking the time to document it .
Good looking boat, I hope you can bring her back. Also, please give us some information about your area, it is a beautiful location.
She is a lovely shape! 😍 look forward to seeing this refit progress
I'm very excited to see how this series progresses.
Good luck💯
Hi Looks like you have a fantstice project on your hands. I hope we we will get to see more of you. In the mean time good luck with the changes in your life and with your project on Akela, I'll be keeping an eye out for your next video.
Is a beautiful vessel!. Good luck in the restoration
She is lovely and graceful - what sweet lines!
Liked and subscribed. Looking forward to the next episode. :-)
I’m so happy to have found your channel, especially at the beginning when you’re taking her home & I don’t have to “catch up “. I may even turn on the notification bell for the first time ever, since you said it would be a bit…….🍀
Beautiful boat ...Hopefully your vision and dream comes true ...lots of work ...happy thoughts
Certainly better off stripping the fiberglass off the hull. Those Carvel planked boats expand & contract normally...those two methods aren't meant to be used together.
Good luck Jannik.
Looking forward to seeing the restoration of your yacht, you have a great deal of work in front of you and a very interesting story to unfold. I wish you well on your journey, Gary from the UK 👍👍
Her classic lines look beautiful! I hope You can restore her to her former glory!
Like you say nice lines a worthy project, looking forward to your forthcoming vids.
My father restored a 1938 international Dragon, which admittedly had been left out in the open for many years. All the planks below the waterline had to be replaced plus all new decking etc. He chose to have the hull west system sheathed to get a fair finish.
Good luck to you. My father’s Dragon took 5 years. Critically it still had a racing certificate so it races to this day.
Tally Ho just splashed, and a new renovation project pops up on the Internet. This old lady has beautiful lines ... Good she gets off the unhealthy glasfibre coat. Never can be a friend of wood (saying so living on a 63 yer old wooden gaff rigged 2-master of 37 ft) - Good luck !! :-)
Ein wirklich wunderschöner Klassiker, wünsche alles Glück der Welt für die Restaurierung. Ich liebe diese alten Yachten. Habe den Kanal abonniert um zu schauen wie es weitergeht. Zur Beschichtung mit GFK hörte ich mal, es sei das Totenhemd für ein Holzschiff. Denke die Entfernung ist der richtige Weg. Alles erdenklich Gute und LG.
beautiful lines, I do hope that you decide to fully restore her to a wooden boat again
I also like the Hammond orgel and the other tunes of music in this cosy video..✊🏼👊👍
(= Hyggelig Video 🇩🇰)
A brave man! A man I know rebuilt an original Bristol Channel Pilot cutter which was built in Pill, Somerset which was traditionally the home of the Bristol Pilots.. the work which has gone into this boat is unbelievable and the cost is on another level.. but I guess if it’s what you want then I wish you all the best with the rebuild! Somebody needs to be saving classic boats so I guess we are lucky to have people around who are willing to put the effort in. ⚓️🦈⚓️🦈
You have the heart of a Lion to tackle this project!
You’ll probably have to put another 50euro’s into it!!!!!!
I feel your pain I am restoring a 1955 19' runabout that is fiberglass over wood and the whole bottom has de laminated.
Oh darn…another long term wooden boat rebuild you tuber……guess I’ll have to subscribe……LOL
Good luck with the project as well as the new channel.
She is beautiful ! I wish you all the best
Beautiful lines.... next episode soon please
Good luck
I hope you will restore her to the beautiful wooden boat she is
Very beautiful boat and very tough project. Good luck. It will require a lot of time and money
Interesting project. I would have just repaired the hole and crack doing more is a waste of money by pumping air between glass and timber might well be able to lift hull clean out of the glass shell then you got yourself a mold . Once tidied up this mold could knock out three maybe four hulls to help sponsor the project.
we had the same idea😅
Subscribed and watching from New Zealand 👍👍
Good luck - it is a beautiful boat.
Fiberglassing over a carvel hull is a bad idea for the very reason you have found. I would remove it totally and then you will at least know what you have got to deal with.
The guy who built my wooden boat literally wrote the book on this ill-advised, blasphemous practice. Thankfully, nobody who owned her ever read that book... I've never understood it. If you want a fiberglass boat, get one. If you want a traditional wooden boat, get one. Or you can get a strip planked boat if you want a little of both, but don't put fiberglass on a carvel hull.
I hope they didn't spline the seams on this boat, because if they did, he's gonna have to replank the entire hull or else be stuck with fiberglass sheathing.
And it’s often rainwater or condensation that gets trapped which causes rot.
@@meofnz2320 Mine was full of rainwater when I got her. I made a reefing hook and pulled the caulking out of the bottom garboard seams, the water drained right out and now she's high and dry
Fibreglassing any wooden boat is a quick way to wreck it. Seen too many fishing vessels in Suffolk that died because of this.
Nothing is forever! It seems there is a good layer of fiberglas around it. I would repair it as good as possible with epoxy and sail with it instead of working a half life on a boat that is too old to safe in the original condition.
Only boatbuilders leave their boatbuilding work for weeks in order to work on building leftover boats for weeks.☺
love the story
Sehr schön! Ich bin gespannt auf das was da kommt!
There is a good chance you might get to keep most of this boat. I’m here for the adventure. Good luck.
Good luck, I hope you have much success. It will be a long process.
Please restore her to the Wood!
Love the old style full keel boats, they inspire a feeling of safety as opposed to a bulb keel, hanging there with a few ton shaped like a missile dangling off a stick basically. Exposed with the chances of hitting something and ending up in serious life threatening danger fairly high. Whereas the full keel would either bounce off whatever it is, or knock it out of the way. full keel boats are also comfortable either anchored up somewhere or underway, they're always comfortable. They also sail well like a train on rails, they may not be quick but they're definitely safer than other keel styles for cruising yachties
Beautiful boat, I had a 48’ wooden boat a previous owner sheathed in grp and it also never hit the water. I stripped it all off, you should also, it will be a world of pain if you leave it or patch it up. Do it properly and she will be a great boat. Good luck. Andy UK😊😊
Nice lines! Good luck with it. If you could manage to remove the fiberglass in two pieces you could make a mold to use or sell to offset the cost of restoring the original hull.
This will be a welcome new iteration of Tally Ho's restoration!
Sehr cool, jetzt wo Tally Ho bald segelt startet ein neues Projekt auf CZcams!
Wir haben ein etwas kleineres Boot, einen Holzjollenkreuzer auch aus dem Jahr 1938. Also eigentlich ein Schwesterschiff :)
Hoffentlich sehen wir uns dann irgendwann mal auf dem Wasser. Viel Glück und immer eine Handbreit!
Viel Glück!
Gosh a man with a vision and an eye for beautiful yacht design. You must have a VERY deep wallet to support this vision. Sailing+owning a yacht = bankruptcy!😅😅😅😅
That fibreglass has to come off.. looks like a full time 2 year project. Gonna subscribe and follow your progress. Nice vid.. good luck
Some people I know would slowly disassemble that boat, keep the steering wheel, and rebuild it from that.... with a team of heroes and lots of patience... Let's se what you decide. Good luck..
Congratulations we work on yachts and first guess you will only need 1.5M and a year and a half…..with a skilled crew.
If Jannik can become the next Leo then CZcams will pay for it
Viel Glück, hoffentlich finden Sie genug Zeit für dieses Projekt.
_Fascinating!_
Steering 101, boats are best in the wet stuff not on the hard. Contact Furuno for a GPS.
Very interesting find! Looks like quite a long project that I will subscribe if you offer.
On second thought, keep the teak.
Try epoxy injections through the wood.
There is Too much noise during swallowing of your own saliva to listen and watch. Wish you good luck in renovating her. She is definitely nice looking boat.
He's speaking too close to the mic