Every now and then, most folks look forward to something different.........
Friend Keith and I just started on another boat that's a bit different, it's not a pirogue,canoe or 'yak but it is propelled by oars and I thought some folks might be interested in following the build. We don't get asked for this style very often, so it's a treat for us to build.
We call it a Louisiana Rowing Skiff. The man who built this style was from Pierre Part and he called it a rowing skiff. Folks from around Grand Isle call it an oaring skiff. Whichever name you call it, the design has been around for at least 300 (believe it came over with the first Europeans) years and you row it standing up, facing forward.
Start off with two cypress boards that are 3/4" thick, 18" wide and 16' long and cut them out so they look like sides.
Friend Keith and I just started on another boat that's a bit different, it's not a pirogue,canoe or 'yak but it is propelled by oars and I thought some folks might be interested in following the build. We don't get asked for this style very often, so it's a treat for us to build.
We call it a Louisiana Rowing Skiff. The man who built this style was from Pierre Part and he called it a rowing skiff. Folks from around Grand Isle call it an oaring skiff. Whichever name you call it, the design has been around for at least 300 (believe it came over with the first Europeans) years and you row it standing up, facing forward.
Start off with two cypress boards that are 3/4" thick, 18" wide and 16' long and cut them out so they look like sides.