Yeah, yeah, I haven’t posted anything for a while and I know you’re all wanting an update on the quest for my having a shanty boat.
Well, there are a couple of reasons I haven’t posted lately, the most compelling being, I just didn’t feel like it!
But I haven’t been idle. I’ve been deep in contemplation about how a boat should go together. For example, I think, for now, anyway, that I’d like it to have a bowed roof, sort of like a Vardo, or Gypsy wagon:
It’s attractive and fairly easy to do, and the little overhang on the edges would be good for rainwater collection of which I will write more about later on.
Another thing I’ve been contemplating is doors and windows. Should I build simple bi-fold doors that secure with a hatch like this? (Note how the lip of the sliding hatch basically lock the doors shut.)
Or should I go with something a bit more conventional, but still off-beat like in the two doors in this photo?
Windows are another story. Down here at a little over eight degrees north of the equator, and at sea level, it never gets cold, so windows with glass panes aren’t really necessary. A lot of houses in Panama are built like these:
There was a sliding window on a green boat, I’m sure, that I liked a lot. I must have downloaded it but I simply can’t find it now and have been searching online for the last hour before giving up. Sigh.
I’ll leave with a couple of inspirational paintings by Claude Monet of his studio shanty boat. 







