That's fabulous. Great materials and supurb workmanship have really restored a grand old lady.
You keep life interesting for us.

e . . .

cccamper wrote:Heikki you have some interesting friends!
That's fabulous. Great materials and supurb workmanship have really restored a grand old lady.
You keep life interesting for us.![]()
e . . .
Classic Finn wrote:cccamper wrote:Heikki you have some interesting friends!
That's fabulous. Great materials and supurb workmanship have really restored a grand old lady.
You keep life interesting for us.![]()
e . . .
I wish some of you could come and visit us here. I have some real interesting places to show or take you to.
Our neighbor who built this boat is really interesting and gifted in this type of work. Ive watched him how he uses his knives for carving as well.
For another hobby he goes to a woodworkers class where he builds gift boxes, plates and all kinds of nice pieces. Just for somthing to do since here where we live we dont have garages or such to be able to work in.
Classic Finn![]()
Also an intersting place to visit inf you go to Stockholm Sweden is the Vasa Museum. Where the original ol time ship Vasa rests. It was lifted from the bottom of Stockholms harbor. Where it sank was it 1600,s
Its interesting but also an eerie feeling when inside.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gissa/sets/1789655/
http://hem.bredband.net/johava/WASAe.htm
Mike B wrote:He did a very nice job on the restoration. I really enjoy seeing the results of this kind of project.
He should transport that thing to Lake Coeur d'Alene; the boat would fit right in. Here are some pictures I took a couple of weeks ago: http://teardrop.blogicalthoughts.com/td ... _2008.html
My favorite is slide 97. The engine was manufactured in 1916. It's one of those engines that fires one stroke and runs 5 or 10 seconds, then fires again. None of that 2-stroke/4-stroke stuff. 8-)
Mike
Hayden Lake, ID
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