How the Menace Happened... 
                By Gavin Atkin 
               One Saturday last autumn, several circumstances 
                came together and gave me an idea. My daughter Ella was due to 
                attend a party. There were a couple of sheets of ply, some glue, 
                and some galvanised nails in the garage waiting for a good idea 
                to happen to them. I was curious about the performance of the 
                simplified flat-bottomed Mouse variant known as the Skinny Mini 
                first developed by David Colpitts. 
                
              The idea, naturally, was to get Ewan to build a Skinny Mini. 
                It would be his first boat building project but I thought that 
                his bright nine-year old mind would cope with marking out the 
                coordinates and could handle most of the rest of the building 
                process except for some of the gluing and painting. He's asthmatic, 
                as I am, and I'm concerned to avoid making his condition any worse 
                through exposing him to chemicals. 
                
                
                
                
              Anyway, as the pictures show, Ewan marked out his ply, cut it, 
                made up his frames and generally built his boat. Most of my help 
                consisted of directing operations, but I did drill holes for his 
                nails, and I later painted the boat wearing a respirator. 
                
                
                
                
              And yesterday, May 22nd, we finally launched the Menace at my 
                friend Jim's lake. It's not quite the boat that the standard Mouse 
                is, but it's a splashy, wet and fun little thing that is perfectly 
                good for a small lake as you will also see from photos of the 
                event, and pretty good for playing silly wet games with a football. 
                Speed-wise, the Menace when powered by a ten-year old with a double 
                paddle turned out in races to be pretty even matched with the 
                single-paddle 12ft open canoes we were also playing with that 
                day. 
                
                
                
                
              The last photo shows Ewan landing Menace as we have learned to 
                do: you point it at the beach, paddle as fast as you can, run 
                up the beach and step out over the bows without going near to 
                touching the water. 
                
              I think it might take six hours for the average adult to build 
                this little boat, and it only took a little more for Ewan. 
              Gavin  |