Pilot gig builders facing rising costs

BBC A bearded man with ginger hair in a grey polo shirt is leaning over the side of a wooden boat he is building and drilling a nail into one of its sides in his workshop.BBC
Finding good material and the cost of it is proving difficult for wooden boat builders

Pilot gig boats rowing across the sea are a sight many love watching, but the vessels' builders said construction costs were making their job harder.

The Cornish Pilot Gig Association (CPGA) said the sport had grown from 10 clubs 30 years ago to more than 90 around the world.

But builders said making the boats, which have specific requirements for competitions, had become an expensive job.

Many have also said a lack of quality wood had become a big problem.

A bearded man with ginger hair in a grey polo shirt working on a wooden oar in his workshop with a slice of wood falling to the floor.
Harry Poulson said he had to do a lot of shopping around for decent material

Boats used by gig rowers have to be made from elm and oak, be 32ft (9.75m) in length and require about 3,500 copper nails.

Harry Poulson, a wooden boat builder based near Looe, said prices for wood and copper had risen.

"You have to do a lot more shopping around and going up to the middle of nowhere in places like Scotland to look at wood," the 28-year-old said.

An unshaven man with dark hair wearing a red hoodie smiles at camera in front of a pile of wood in a barn.
Will Semken said keeping gig rowing's heritage going was important

Roseland Gig Club member Will Semken has been helping restore one of its boats - the William Peters.

The 33-year-old civil servant said he wanted to spend more time building wooden boats, although the costs made it a one-man job.

Mr Semken said: "You spend so much time searching for faster boats, but we want to maintain our old heritage boats too."

Skills challenge

Retired gig builder Maurice Hunkin said he sometimes had to travel from Cornwall to Northampton to look at wood.

Mr Hunkin, now a CPGA standards officer, believed the problem starts from when trees are felled.

"The problem is, when a tree is felled in the forest, it tends to get sawed into firewood rather than what boats need," the 76-year-old said.

CPGA trustee Norma Edwards said there were also other problems to contend with.

This included finding people to build the gigs, with the number of people in the job falling in recent years.

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