This old book took me about two and a half years to finish. Granted, I did not sit and read the book straight through. I started the book sometime in late 2019 or so as a nightstand read; a dry book meant to usher me from not quite ready to sleep to unable to bear the weight of my eyelids. I figured a door stopper about boat maintenance would do the trick. As it happened, a worldwide pandemic interceded, yachting took a swan dive from the top of my priority list and escapism came to dominate my reading list. Starting a few months back I returned to yacht racing at the local club and picked this tome up again. Since I work well with a deadline, I resolved to close this book for good by the coming new year. With the better part of a month left, I overachieved!
Don Casey’s writing is approachable with dots of humor. His descriptions are reasonably clear and the illustrations do a great deal to clarify when needed. The book is structured so as to offer approachable projects early and then to graduate toward more elaborate projects as the reader’s skills and toolbox grows.
This Old Boat is too short to be exhaustive and too long to be cursory. It occupies that jack-of-all-trades, master-of-none space in the market. Coupled with the fact that the book is a bit dated already, no one should be deluded into seeing this is a one stop shop for all their boat maintenance knowledge. Instead, the book is better seen as a steppingstone, to start one’s journey into DIY boat repair with a general and thorough overview of what is involved so they are better armed to ask the right questions of more specialized sources.
The upshot is I like the book. It isn’t a page turner, but for what it is, it does its job well. One point I’m a bit stuck on is whether this book warrants being read cover-to-cover. On the one hand, the book is a reference resource and can and should be consulted as needed on discrete projects. But the book is a starting point, not the ultimate authority on any particular subject so if you are taking on some task, the book is unlikely to be the last resource you consult. On the other hand, as an approachable and broad treatment of boat care, the book as a whole helps a would be DIYer contextualize boat care in toto. By reading about all the possible types of projects a boat owner might need to consider, a DIYer would be better empowered not only to take on a project but also to prioritize a range of different projects over the ownership of their boat.