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Hunter
Ficke, September 2007
The
excitement of seeing my own crafted wooden boat appear over a
few months period was made possible by Atlantic Challenge in Rockland,
Maine. After a thirty year career in research management and business
development with a large chemical company, I decided to leave
to pursue work in the non-profit sector. Before beginning my next
career, however, I planned to take some time off to catch-up on
long deferred projects around the house and enjoy some travel,
sailing and family vacations. In addition, I had always wanted
to build a small sail boat. I had noticed the sign for Atlantic
Challenge while driving through Rockland and dropped in to learn
more about their programs. The Apprentice Shop at Atlantic Challenge
offered a flexible internship experience which allowed me to build
a boat in about 9 weeks.
It
was cold and snowy when I arrived in mid-March, but my reception
was warm and welcoming from the staff and apprentices. The lead
instructor, Kevin Carney, had me working immediately carving the
stem for the boat's bow and making the transom for its stern.
Every day brought a new stage of the boat building process along
with its challenges. True to the spirit of the shop, the instructor
and apprentices were always available to give enough guidance
and help to enable moving forward, but left enough unsaid to exercise
my problem solving abilities and drive up my level of skill.
During
my internship, I participated in the shop's meetings and "walk
arounds" learning about the boats under construction by the
apprentices and watching as these beautiful creations emerged
as a result of the boat builders' skills, hard work and dedication.
While at Atlantic Challenge, I was able to see the completion
and launch of a rowing skiff, a Havilah Hawkins Peapod, a Matinicus
Island sailing Peapod, and a restored Friendship Sloop. In addition,
the final touches were being given to a beautiful Wianno Junior
sail boat that had been extensively restored. It was quite an
exciting period.
On
a warm and sunny day in mid-June, I put my boat on a trailer for
its trip to Friendship, Maine . I was able to complete all the
construction at the shop and will finish the remaining sanding,
painting and rigging at home in preparation for its launch. Atlantic
Challenge provided me with the opportunity to be part of a community
pursuing common interests through a disciplined, experiential
learning approach. It also resulted in a very tangible outcome,
the boat, which offers many years of enjoyment for me and for
our younger family members as they learn the joy of sailing.
  
Carrie
Falby, February, 2006
As my
time as an intern comes to a close, I have begun to reflect on
exactly what it is that I learned. Of course it's easy to say
'woodworking', that's a given, especially considering the elementary
skills I arrived with. It's also easy to say 'boat construction',
another given. More than anything else, I feel like I learned
patience. You can't just throw a boat together. Some of the smallest
parts of my boat seem to have taken the longest to make and to
fit. At times I was frustrated in trying to figure things out
on my own. I quickly learned that patience often reduced the number
of mistakes I made and gave me time to think things through. So
even if gratification wasn't instant, it was certainly fulfilling.
All in all, this internship offered me a peek into the world of
boatbuilding and gave me a taste of what it might be like to be
an apprentice.
I probably won't go on to build boats professionally, or to be
an apprentice, but this experience definitely enhanced my interest
in woodworking and helped me to develop a platform on which to
start projects of my own.
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