Salty John
Well-Known Member
Dylan,
Here is guidance from an article by Larry Pardey, who regularly skulled Seraffyn: If you can find a lifeboat oar they work well but if not you can make one. You should make a 14' sweep on which the blade area is 4' long, 5.5" wide. Shaft diameter should be 2", tapering over the last 6' to end in a 0.5" thickness of blade. Some sag over the length of the oar when the blade is horizontal is ok, but no more than two or three inches. It should have no sag when the blade is vertical.
Proportions above are for a 14' oar, but length will be determined to a large extent by freeboard - more freeboard, longer oar to get the angle of dangle right. His boat was 3.3' from LWL to oarlock and he used a 13'9" oar. His later boat is 4' from LWL to oarlaock and he uses a 15'9" oar.
The inboard end of the oar should be chest height whilst standing to one side of it, and you'll need two feet of athwartship movement space.
Larry claims a child can skull a 30' boat with the right technique.
Hope this helps!
Here is guidance from an article by Larry Pardey, who regularly skulled Seraffyn: If you can find a lifeboat oar they work well but if not you can make one. You should make a 14' sweep on which the blade area is 4' long, 5.5" wide. Shaft diameter should be 2", tapering over the last 6' to end in a 0.5" thickness of blade. Some sag over the length of the oar when the blade is horizontal is ok, but no more than two or three inches. It should have no sag when the blade is vertical.
Proportions above are for a 14' oar, but length will be determined to a large extent by freeboard - more freeboard, longer oar to get the angle of dangle right. His boat was 3.3' from LWL to oarlock and he used a 13'9" oar. His later boat is 4' from LWL to oarlaock and he uses a 15'9" oar.
The inboard end of the oar should be chest height whilst standing to one side of it, and you'll need two feet of athwartship movement space.
Larry claims a child can skull a 30' boat with the right technique.
Hope this helps!