Making oars: the race was on
with no water in sight by
Liam Hymus
Making oars is one of the tasks that every apprentice has to
do at some point and the time had come for me to start my second set. Jake had already taken five weeks on his set
and I reckon he was over half way. He was about to take a week off so Charlie bet him that I would be able to have two rounded looms before he got back. He
accepted and the race was on.
So that Monday I started machining the timber for the two
oars to try and get them rounded before he got back. After the first day I was
feeling confident. I had most of the timber machined up and I'd smashed out the
two loom cores gluing the blades on. By mid-week I hadn’t slowed down a bit. I
had hollowed out and glued on the outer looms and the other two oars had
their loom cores shaped and blades glued on
Finally it
was time to start rounding. This involves a lot of planing and took me about
three days to complete. Luckily Jake
took the Monday off as well which gave me just enough time to finish off
rounding the two oars that were required
for Charlie to win the bet. I believe the bet was that who ever lost had to buy
the other person's lunch that day.
As it hadn’t
taken me that long for me to round those two oars, there was a lot of talk
about me finishing completely before Jake. All of a sudden I found
myself in yet another oar race. This time we decided that whoever had their oars
in a state ready for varnishing would be the winner.
Another week went by and I was still behind so then I really
started to pick up the pace. I wouldn't let anyone upstairs. It had become my
domain. I had a good set up and I knew exactly where everything was. I had finally finished rounding the second
pair of oars and then I had to shape the blades. That's a another job which
seems to take forever.
Onto the third week and I'm not feeling anywhere near as
confident as I was when I first started.
I’m still behind and Jake seems to have found his fifth gear, which he
doesn’t use that often. So I decide to tell Jake that I’m miles behind and I
haven't got a chance to catch him u
p. I'm hoping that he'll take it a bit easier and slow down. To be honest I think might have worked for a
day or two but then he realised that I was a lot closer to finishing than what
I'd said.
Around comes Friday of the third week . Ash tips glued on
the ends of the blades, looms
rounded, handles... Oh yes,
the handles... I'd made a massive
balls-up on the handles by not leaving enough excess. I knew exactly what I'd done
but I decided to carry on regardless, hoping that no one would notice just so
that I might still get declared the winner.
But no. John walked
in and the first thing he noticed was how tidy the room was. The second thing
was, of course, the handles. And, as it
turned out, I had made two oars the same length. This would prove to be a problem as each oar
is made a different length depending on what rowing position it is made for.
I was really annoyed with myself - so annoyed in fact that I’m now making
another set. Soon I will have two
complete sets – twice as many oars as Jake.
So I definitely win when it comes to quantity.
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