Harry Bryan, Wooden Boat Builder

Wooden Boat Builder, New Brunswick, Canada

Email this article
Print this article
Subscribe to TOOLS OF THE TRADE
Subscribe Subscribe to Newsletters

Read more articles related to:

More articles from the Home Theater section

Photo:Matt Murphy
Harry Bryan

Source: TOOLS OF THE TRADE Magazine
Publication date: May 18, 2005

By Bill Thomas

People think I don't use power tools," said my friend Harry Bryan, a wooden boat builder and designer I was visiting on the coast of New Brunswick, Canada. Maybe that's because his shop is unusual: It's off the grid.

That doesn't mean there's no electricity. A wind generator and solar panels run lights, but that's only part of it. To get the power this shop requires, Bryan has installed a neat little Volkswagen Jetta engine under the shop floor. This rebuilt diesel engine drives a 12-inch planer and 36-inch band saw. And, because he's not exactly living a suburban lifestyle where he can run down to the corner to get gasoline, this 4-cylinder burns bio-diesel, which Harry brews himself. There's one more power tool tucked into the woods above the shop: a sawmill powered by a 6-cylinder Chevy engine.

Working off the grid does foster reliance on sharp hand tools, so bringing up a tool's edge is essential. Solution: a pedal-driven grinding wheel. There's also a hand-cranked drill press. Bryan's 12-inch band saw is treadle-powered, like an old sewing machine.

Despite its frontier feel and modern ingenuity, Bryan's shop isn't a museum or hobby shop. It's a working boat shop where he's made his living for more than 30 years, turning out beautiful small craft and well-founded boats that approach 40 feet in length.

Outside the shop, which he built himself, I surveyed the sawmill–the long open building, the sawmill carriage, and the 6-cylinder engine powering the massive 4-foot blade–and I realized it was one huge machine. Harry just grinned. "And they say I don't use power tools."