Mark Jensen
New member
Hey everyone.
First off, let me say that I read over this forum just about daily.
You fellas (& ladies) are a huge wealth of information and reading your posts on boats, hunting, dogs, etc. has made me a smarter man. Thank you.
This is a post about my boat rehab.
This is Eunlaidh (Gaelic for “to stealthily creep as a waterfowler”).
She’s a Glen-L design built by my father and me 14 seasons ago (Summer 1994).
Ply’ on plank construction, all mahogany members with a 6mm Okoume hull.
Here she is in the building phase many years ago.
I’ve experimented with a lot of camo ideas, and settled on a variation of Ed Askew’s attachment he’s used on his Karas.
The wooden slots allow me to move the doors around to fit the day's need and there are no holes drilled into the hull.
The doors also swing open easily (an add-on of mine).
It’s worked tremendously for the last 5 or so seasons.
First off, let me say that I read over this forum just about daily.
You fellas (& ladies) are a huge wealth of information and reading your posts on boats, hunting, dogs, etc. has made me a smarter man. Thank you.
This is a post about my boat rehab.
This is Eunlaidh (Gaelic for “to stealthily creep as a waterfowler”).
She’s a Glen-L design built by my father and me 14 seasons ago (Summer 1994).
Ply’ on plank construction, all mahogany members with a 6mm Okoume hull.
Here she is in the building phase many years ago.
I’ve experimented with a lot of camo ideas, and settled on a variation of Ed Askew’s attachment he’s used on his Karas.
The wooden slots allow me to move the doors around to fit the day's need and there are no holes drilled into the hull.
The doors also swing open easily (an add-on of mine).
It’s worked tremendously for the last 5 or so seasons.