Description
S.C.A.M.P. (Small Craft Advisor Magazine Project) For Plans Instant Download, click HERE
Original Designer: John Welsford
Additional Development: Kees Prins
Kit Adaptations: Turn Point Design
Our own youthful dreams often featured small boats in starring roles. Aboard these simple, stalwart little vessels we'd venture across nebulous bodies of water in search of distant wild shorelines or uncharted islands. We'd land, hike into the interior, and make camp. But always our boats offered refuge from any threat, including summer storms, which we'd wait out beneath our boom tents. At night we'd read sea stories by oil lantern and sleep under a blanket of stars.
Curiously, never once did these visions include negative images of wrestling with a heavy mast and complex rigging, fussing with a smelly, recalcitrant outboard, or being held off shore by our boat's draft. And even when we pictured the afternoon breeze kicking up whitecaps, never once did the vision include a chilly capsize.
It was the dream of returning to those simple pleasures that inspired thoughts of SCAMP. That and a persistent desire to go over "there" - that place we often see but are unable to reach. It seems to happen on every cruise. Never mind that we're usually sailing the smallest boat around for miles, we always come upon some ultra-shallow lagoon or serpentine tidal stream that disappears into the reeds, trees and rushes. To get in there - to really commune with nature - a boat needs to be light, shallow and easily propelled - and preferably flat-bottomed in case we decide to stay right though the ebb.
SCAMP features an offset centerboard, massive flotation from sealed seats and stowage cabin, a water ballast tank holding 173 pounds of water, an after cabin "veranda" that functions like a hard dodger, and a flat bottom and skegs for beaching.
PLANS: Complete plans now available on 7 24 x 36" sheets. A complete "Building guide" with suggested steps Is available in printed or digital format. Additionally, there are several boats beginning construction and documenting progress at the Small Craft Advisor message board and elsewhere online.
LOA - 11 ft 11 in
Beam - 5 ft 4 in
Draft (board up) - 7 in
Water Balast - 173 lbs.
Weight (including rig) - 420 lbs.
Additional Information
Measurements: |
Metric |
Designer Name: |
John Welsford |
Sail area (Imperial / Metric): |
100 sf / 9.3 sm |
Rig Type: |
Lug, Cat |
Ballast Type: |
Water |
Ballast Weight: |
173 lbs / 78.5 kg |
Keel Type: |
Centerboard |
Rudder: |
Kick-up |
Length (range): |
8' - 15'11"' / 2.44m - 4.85m |
LOA: |
11' 11" / 3.63m |
Length at Waterline: |
11' 5" / 3.48m |
Beam: |
5' 4" / 1.6m |
Hull Weight: |
200 - 999 lbs / 90.72 - 453.14kg |
Estimated Hull Weight: |
420 lbs / 190.5 kg |
Draft: |
6" - 11" / 15.24 - 30.27cm |
Unloaded Draft: |
7" / 0.178m |
Weight Capacity: |
600 lbs / 272 kg |
Primary Material: |
Marine Plywood |
Method of Construction: |
Stitch and Glue |
Hull: |
Monohull |
Hull Type: |
Displacement |
Hull Shape: |
multichine |
Cabin: |
Cuddy |
Power Source: |
Human, Wind |
Built-in Floatation: |
Yes |
Trailerable: |
Yes |
Cartop: |
No |
Unit of Measure: |
Metric |
Instruction Manual: |
Step-by-Step Instructions |
Lofting Required: |
No |
Recommended Experience Level: |
Beginner |
Designer's Thoughts on Experience Level: |
Chuck Leinweber's suggestion |
Boat Type: |
Sailboat |