Wow, a month since the last post.  Not sure where the time goes.  Summer (even the poor apology we have had this year) is to blame I reckon.  Too many distractions.  Just a note – if you pay attention to the pictures that follow you might notice sometimes a step I just described hasn’t been done in later pictures.  That’s because I tend to do a bit of one job and then a bit of another.  I have tried to be a bit more organised and sequential in this log.
Now to shape the cockpit openings.  I very quickly discovered that I needed to mask off the carefully finished cockpit internal sides to prevent scratching them.  

   So I did. 
 
 The instructions suggest a Dremel sanding drum to shape the curved corners, so being an obedient sort of chap, that’s what I did – 
 
 Although I found a small aerosol can was best for finishing them off. 
 
 Next I sanded the engine hatch to a comfortable fit – close enough to look good but loose enough to allow for some finish on the edges (I hope).  I did need a temporary handle to lift it in and out as I sanded, tested, sanded, etc. 
 
 The hatch was then planked, a straightforward job as everything was – well, straight! 
 
  
 I did a similar job on the rear trapdoor (as it is called in the instructions – the hatch over the rudder area).  The planking here carries on to the edge of the rear cockpit, so after each few planks I cut through at the join to keep the hatch separate. 
 
  
 This completed all the planking on the relatively flat areas of the deck. I did some initial scraping of the plastic strips now, just as a break from gluing on planks. 
 
 Then moved on to what I suspected was the trickiest part of the planking, which was the rolled deck edges.  The kit supplies 1/8” strips for this, and recommends bevelling the edges to get a close joint.  The instructions also suggest not attempting to fit a single strip but to do each strip in 2 or 3 pieces.  As the strips also need tapering at each end, that seemed an eminently sensible precaution, so I set off doing it that way. 
 
 I quickly discovered that the 1/8” strips had quite a lot of wild grain in them, leading to several annoying breaks as I worked on them, like this – 
 
 This fragility really started to annoy as I accumulated more and more broken bits.  Of course, mostly they never broke when I started working on them, only when I had shaped a piece and was creeping up on the final fit, then snap!  

   But persevere, you’ll get there!  Actually, if I was careful and the strip was ready to be fitted, I could reassemble the broken bits in place on the boat with no discernible break.  As the planks were added, the gap left became a long thin one like this – 
 
 This now became less of a skilled fitting exercise and more of a random selection of different sized splinters and slivers to see which best fitted the gap left.  The “2 or 3 Pieces” became “as many as it takes to fill the gap”.  On one side, the final gap was filled with a short piece – 
 
 Looked horrible, but wasn’t too bad once planed and sanded down – 
 
 As I mentioned above, each plank (at least those that qualified for the term, rather than the slivers!) needed a bevel on one edge to snug up to its neighbour.  It took me a while (and many snapped pieces) to work out the best way of getting this bevel on the edge of a fragile 1/8” by 1/16” strip.  In the end I developed a technique which is almost impossible to describe, but 
this link shows a video is worth a thousand words (although there was a minute of your life you will never see again.  Sorry).  I used a folded sanding disc to do the sanding as it had a lot of rigidity, and moved my supporting finger back and forth so that the area being sanded was always supported.  (And I am left handed, so all you dextrous folk need to watch that in a mirror.)
Finally, I had persuaded all the planks, strips, splinters, wedges and just a little bit of filler into place, and the very last gap of the planking looked like this – 
 
 And then it was done.  I can’t pretend that the fitting of the 1/8” strips was easy and ended up more like assembling a sort of free form jigsaw, but when it was all done, it didn’t look too bad.  I have started a vigorous sanding of everything now to get a fair surface and lose all those glue stains. 
 
 I still have to plank the transom, but that ought to be a doddle after the last bit of planking.  The next big job will be glassing the hull, which I will do outside so I can work all round the boat, so I need some calm, warm, dry weather – you know, summer weather.  Remember that? 
Happy building and sailing folks 
Greg