Bolger Boats for sale

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1996 Owner-built Bolger 16-foot Pirogue

1996 Owner-built Bolger 16-foot Pirogue

$80

Redding, California

Negotiable

Year 1996

Make Owner-built Bolger

Model 16-foot Pirogue

Category Antique And Classic Boats

Length 16

Posted Over 1 Month

Bolger pirogue, all 6mm Okume soaked in epoxy, built around 1996. Set up with spritsail from Hogen Sails in Alameda, CA, modern sail hardware. Double-thick bottom glass, sides and deck need need sanding and refinish. I got the flotation fore and aft from a guy who lived in my duplex and was contracted to rebuild the dock at the maritime academy in Vallejo, and he said it was the best. Comes with 1960's Sea King trailer with new bearings. Bolger design eight-foot mast and my ten-foot mast for better passenger head clearance (these are 2x2 fir per Bolger.) All lines and fittings included plus random extras like an REI guide paddle, fishboat anchor with line, and whatever else I can find in the garage. I have the blue-line plans I built it with, if wanted. This boat was finished bright and was never taken out without receiving compliments or expressions of awe from random yokels. I'm too old to get in and out of it, want to get it out of my declining-years driveway and have to either find someone who wants it or dump it. The price is set to pay for this announcement plus eighty dollars gravy, but a few thousand extra dollars would be appreciated. Ready to haul away on the trailer, tires might need air.

1996 Bolger Windsprint

1996 Bolger Windsprint

$2,500

Wilmington, Delaware

Year 1996

Make Bolger

Model Windsprint

Category -

Length 16'

Posted Over 1 Month

1996 Bolger Windsprint, 16 Double Ender (Sharpie), Great Condition, Mostly Garage Kept, ~25 yrs old,I'm the second owner,Epoxied Douglas Fir construction,Bolger's builder plans included, Offset Dagger board,Kick up Rudder High Quality Custom Dacron Sail,2011 Sea Lion Trailer,Location: Wilmington, Delaware, US,See more at: https://sway.com/iHXpj60aI4ESfDrH $2500.00

2006 Bolger Glouchester Gull

2006 Bolger Glouchester Gull

$2,000

Skaneateles, New York

Year 2006

Make Bolger

Model Glouchester Gull

Category Small Boats

Length 15'

Posted Over 1 Month

2006 Bolger Glouchester Gull, Classic Phil Bolger Glouchester Gull dory. Full restored at Cutts and Case. Includes new Karavan trailer. Include new Shaw and Tenney oars and new oar locks. Rigged with two trolling stations. $2000, 7727081982

29' 2009 Bolger Whalewatcher

29' 2009 Bolger Whalewatcher

$19,500

Bladensburg, Ohio

Year -

Make -

Model -

Category -

Length -

Posted Over 1 Month

Please contact boat owner Patrick at 614-208-9308. Bolger whalewatcher, professionally built, FG in epoxy over marine ply, VG grain old growth fir structural members. Lug yawl rig, fast, comfortable, sleeps four. Always stored inside, includes custom tandem axle trailer.

Bolger Light Schooner (scooner)

Bolger Light Schooner (scooner)

$3,500

Long Beach, California

Year -

Make -

Model -

Category -

Length -

Posted Over 1 Month

NOTE WELL: it looks like I will be fixing the boat up myself over the next month or so to go sailing. Once she's sailing, the price will go up. If you want a deal, buy now. I will also consider a partial or full trade for a Bolger Jinni camping yawl or similar. E-mail me to discuss. The boat is currently lying in Southern California. Registration in California for both trailer and boat are up-to-date. I have not sailed her in many years, but she has been sitting quietly under a good cover, waiting for more fun. And fun this boat is. Let me just say, one of my favorite memories of the many I have sailing this boat, is of a Fall day in the early 1990s on Lake Erie, just off-shore from down-town Cleveland. We had five adults aboard, it was 55 degrees with sun and clouds and a 15-20 knot breeze. The four crew and skipper found the port-and-starboard hiking straps very handy that day. I can see us now, all hiked out over the windward side, flying westward along the shore, blasting along on a broad reach under a steady northerly. Had we flipped her it would have been a cold 15 minutes, but this crew was fairly expert and sitting back aft, tiller extension in hand, I could not help the exhilarating feeling that we were about to become airborne. I've had some inquiries about the minimum space required to store the boat, its minimum footprint, in other words. Conservatively, I'd say you need at least 26.5 feet long and 6.5 to 7 feet wide to store the boat and move around it comfortably.. I built this little bald-headed schooner to a high quality standard in 1988-1990. Phil Bolger designed the boat for protected and semi-protected waters as a daysailer and rough-and-ready overnighter. She is featured in Dynamite Payson's original book on Instant Boatbuilding. Although, I can tell you that this boat was hardly instant! Note well: the boat and trailer include everything you need to go sailing. Nothing is missing. She draws about 3 feet with the daggerboard down. About 9 inches with the daggerboard up. I should also note that this boat is not a toy. She was made to be driven hard. She was created by one of the most talented boat designers of the 20th century and she sails beautifully on all points, with light weather helm to windward, and a very balanced helm downwind. The boat is built of mahogany doorskin quarter-inch plywood for deck and hull-sides. Half-inch out-door plywood for the bottom. I carefully inspected all panels for voids and flaws. Structural members consist of various appropriate soft- and hard-woods. The bowsprit and mid-ship stiffener on deck are of solid apatong. Booms and gaffs of clear, vertical-grain sitka spruce, custom-ordered from M.L. Condon. Tiller of mahogany. Masts of SPF two-by-fours laminated and hand-planed and sanded to shape. Masts are solid and totally bullet-proof. They have some weight to them, but are, nonetheless, easily stepped without much effort. The boat was built using the original Chem-Tech T-88 structural epoxy glue and Chem-Tech's sealing and laminating resin. Marine bronze anchor-fast nails and bronze screws used where appropriate. The entire boat is sealed in epoxy. The outside of the hull is sheathed in polypropylene cloth set in laminating epoxy, and finished with an epoxy paint no longer made, which has lasted the years quite well. The masts are sealed in epoxy. The booms and gaffs in marine varnish. Deck hardware consists of bronze cleats bolted through the deck and reinforcing stiffeners with stainless bolts. Rigging is best-quality line from West Marine, still in excellent, soft, pliable condition. Sails custom-made by Sail-rite, consisting of mainsail, foresail, flying jib and staysail. Wood-shell blocks are really beautiful and one size larger than necessary for the service, and should last forever. The boat has a motor-well, but I never used it. the boat goes nicely under paddle-power, and comes with four paddles. A little electric or gas engine of 2-5hp would be more than sufficient to power her wherever you want to go. The motor-mount itself is made of laminated apitong and is very robust. I fabricated a simple cover for the motor well, so that water doesn't slop in if you're not using an engine. Note that like many of Bolger's sailboats, this schooner has NO standing rigging. Once I got the hang of it, I could go from arriving at the ramp to sailing in under 45 minutes. And setting up a boat like this is part of the zen-fun of the thing. The boat includes wood brackets to hold masts and rigging inboard for trailering. The retractable daggerboard can be lifted part-way for downwind work (to lessen the chance of a broach), or all the way to beach the boat. The board has about 20 lbs of lead-shot in the bottom, which gives her a bit more stability for windward work. She still needs her crew to keep her right-side up in a breeze of wind, but is perfectly docile in lighter airs with just two aboard. I even single-handed her a few times in light-airs, with the mainsail reefed, and with two people and reefed main she's good in a breeze up to 15 knots, with care. The trailer was custom-made for the boat by Trailex of Canfield of Ohio to a superb quality standard. The trailer is made of extruded aluminum sections bolted together, and any part of it can be easily replaced. The trailer shows some wear and light oxidation from weather and years but everything still works fine, EXCEPT for the lights, which should be completely re-wired, and probably replaced. The buy-it-now price is quite reasonable. The trailer, sails, and all other materials and hardware in a big pile in your driveway would cost much more than my price. If you had her built today to an appropriate level of finish and quality by a skilled builder who understands this kind of thing, you'd easily spend $15-20K. Or more. See "Condition" note above for more details. Please ask any and all questions before purchase. I have described the boat as accurately as possible. I don't want any surprises for the buyer. I would really like to sell the boat to someone who will cherish her, as I did for many years. She needs a bit of TLC right now, but not all that much to go sailing!

1989 Bolger Palo de Aqua

1989 Bolger Palo de Aqua

$9,900

Daytona Beach, Florida

Year -

Make -

Model -

Category -

Length -

Posted Over 1 Month

Private Seller (386) 679-1377 Photos Photo 1 Photo 2 Photo 3 Photo 4 Photo 5 Close Request Information * Name First Name * Email Telephone (optional) Best Time to Contact Anytime Morning Mid-day Evening Question/Comments (optional) Shop Safely: Protect Your Money. By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use. Contact Seller 1989 Bolger Palo de Aqua,Commisioned in 1989 to be built by Atlas Boat Works using the plans from Phil Bolger for Palo de Aqua by the first owner. This shallow draft center board boat has an easily driven frp hull with a gaff mail sail with a sprit boom. It has 4 1/2 foot headroom with a galley, head, three settees, two singles and one double. Nicely finished interior. The Yanmar 2gm20f's propeller is protected by the shallow keel. The jib is on a roller furler curently, prior it was rigged with a balanced club jib. It has a garmin 542 gps-sounder, raymarine tiller autopilot, solar panel, and two batteries. It reminds me of a sharpie, but this has a rounded hull with a flush deck. The mast is free standing. The rigging is traditional with no winches. Bolger writes the design was based on stretching a 26 foot cat boat design. Ideal for coastal and river cruising, a large bay, or island life. Draft with the board up is 2'3". Time for me to downsize to a daysailer, a Catalina Capri 22, and I need this boat sold. $9900, 3866791377 Be sure: Get a boat history report|Finance this boat|Get an insurance quote|

1996 Owner-built Bolger 16-foot Pirogue

1996 Owner-built Bolger 16-foot Pirogue

$80

Redding, California

Negotiable

Year 1996

Make Owner-built Bolger

Model 16-foot Pirogue

Category Antique And Classic Boats

Length 16

Posted Over 1 Month

Bolger pirogue, all 6mm Okume soaked in epoxy, built around 1996. Set up with spritsail from Hogen Sails in Alameda, CA, modern sail hardware. Double-thick bottom glass, sides and deck need need sanding and refinish. I got the flotation fore and aft from a guy who lived in my duplex and was contracted to rebuild the dock at the maritime academy in Vallejo, and he said it was the best. Comes with 1960's Sea King trailer with new bearings. Bolger design eight-foot mast and my ten-foot mast for better passenger head clearance (these are 2x2 fir per Bolger.) All lines and fittings included plus random extras like an REI guide paddle, fishboat anchor with line, and whatever else I can find in the garage. I have the blue-line plans I built it with, if wanted. This boat was finished bright and was never taken out without receiving compliments or expressions of awe from random yokels. I'm too old to get in and out of it, want to get it out of my declining-years driveway and have to either find someone who wants it or dump it. The price is set to pay for this announcement plus eighty dollars gravy, but a few thousand extra dollars would be appreciated. Ready to haul away on the trailer, tires might need air.

1997 Home Built Phil Bolger design ketch

1997 Home Built Phil Bolger design ketch

$3,800

North Bend, Washington

Year 1997

Make Home Built

Model Phil Bolger Design Ketch

Category -

Length 15'

Posted Over 1 Month

1997 Home Built Phil Bolger design ketch, Cutest sailboat EVER! 15' Phil Bolger designed cat yawl completed in 1997 and lightly used. She has a fiberglass over wood hull, no leaks, and feels larger than 15'. Nice size berth with portable porta potty. Comes with easyloader trailer (lights not working). The boat has never been moored and always wintered in garage. The sails are in great condition and are a custom dacron in an aged canvas color to compliment it's classic look. They have been stored inside in bags and never in the weather. (The last picture of the boat under sail is similar but not this boat. The sails are a lighter color.) The included motor is an older Evinrude 3 h.p. and worked well 5 years ago. I have used a newer 6 h.p. (not included) and found the extra horsepower was appreciated against currents. All spars are carried on supports for easy trailering and an extended tongue makes launching a breeze. She's a delight to sail and ALWAYS turns heads. She is dry, stable, and unsinkable. LOA: 15'4" Beam: 6' Draft: 1'9" Displ: 1650 # Blst: 420# Sail area 153 sq/ft. $3800

Bolger Light Schooner (scooner)  PRICE REDUCED!!

Bolger Light Schooner (scooner) PRICE REDUCED!!

$1,995

Long Beach, California

Year 1990

Make Custom

Model Light Schooner

Category -

Length 23.0

Posted Over 1 Month

PRICE REDUCED! At this price, this boat is a steal. If you had this trailer made now, it alone would sell for over $2000. I know it's a buyer's market for boats, but this boat is very rare to find at all, let alone in overall good, complete condition of this one. She just needs a couple of weekends of TLC and you could take her sailing! The boat is currently lying in Southern California. Registration in California for both trailer and boat are up-to-date. I have not sailed her in many years, but she has been sitting quietly under a good cover, waiting for more fun. And fun this boat is. Let me just say, one of my favorite memories of the many I have sailing this boat, is of a Fall day in the early 1990s on Lake Erie, just off-shore from down-town Cleveland. We had five adults aboard, it was 55 degrees with sun and clouds and a 15-20 knot breeze. The four crew and skipper found the port-and-starboard hiking straps very handy that day. I can see us now, all hiked out over the windward side, flying westward along the shore, blasting along on a broad reach under a steady northerly. Had we flipped her it would have been a cold 15 minutes, but this crew was fairly expert and sitting back aft, tiller extension in hand, I could not help the exhilarating feeling that we were about to become airborne. I've had some inquiries about the minimum space required to store the boat, its minimum footprint, in other words. Conservatively, I'd say you need at least 26.5 feet long and 6.5 to 7 feet wide to store the boat and move around it comfortably.. I built this little bald-headed schooner to a high quality standard in 1988-1990. Phil Bolger designed the boat for protected and semi-protected waters as a daysailer and rough-and-ready overnighter. She is featured in Dynamite Payson's original book on Instant Boatbuilding. Although, I can tell you that this boat was hardly instant! Note well: the boat and trailer include everything you need to go sailing. Nothing is missing. She draws about 3 feet with the daggerboard down. About 9 inches with the daggerboard up. I should also note that this boat is not a toy. She was made to be driven hard. She was created by one of the most talented boat designers of the 20th century and she sails beautifully on all points, with light weather helm to windward, and a very balanced helm downwind. The boat is built of mahogany doorskin quarter-inch plywood for deck and hull-sides. Half-inch out-door plywood for the bottom. I carefully inspected all panels for voids and flaws. Structural members consist of various appropriate soft- and hard-woods. The bowsprit and mid-ship stiffener on deck are of solid apatong. Booms and gaffs of clear, vertical-grain sitka spruce, custom-ordered from M.L. Condon. Tiller of mahogany. Masts of SPF two-by-fours laminated and hand-planed and sanded to shape. Masts are solid and totally bullet-proof. They have some weight to them, but are, nonetheless, easily stepped without much effort. The boat was built using the original Chem-Tech T-88 structural epoxy glue and Chem-Tech's sealing and laminating resin. Marine bronze anchor-fast nails and bronze screws used where appropriate. The entire boat is sealed in epoxy. The outside of the hull is sheathed in polypropylene cloth set in laminating epoxy, and finished with an epoxy paint no longer made, which has lasted the years quite well. The masts are sealed in epoxy. The booms and gaffs in marine varnish. Deck hardware consists of bronze cleats bolted through the deck and reinforcing stiffeners with stainless bolts. Rigging is best-quality line from West Marine, still in excellent, soft, pliable condition. Sails custom-made by Sail-rite, consisting of mainsail, foresail, flying jib and staysail. Wood-shell blocks are really beautiful and one size larger than necessary for the service, and should last forever. The boat has a motor-well, but I never used it. the boat goes nicely under paddle-power, and comes with four paddles. A little electric or gas engine of 2-5hp would be more than sufficient to power her wherever you want to go. The motor-mount itself is made of laminated apitong and is very robust. I fabricated a simple cover for the motor well, so that water doesn't slop in if you're not using an engine. Note that like many of Bolger's sailboats, this schooner has NO standing rigging. Once I got the hang of it, I could go from arriving at the ramp to sailing in under 45 minutes. And setting up a boat like this is part of the zen-fun of the thing. The boat includes wood brackets to hold masts and rigging inboard for trailering. The retractable daggerboard can be lifted part-way for downwind work (to lessen the chance of a broach), or all the way to beach the boat. The board has about 20 lbs of lead-shot in the bottom, which gives her a bit more stability for windward work. She still needs her crew to keep her right-side up in a breeze of wind, but is perfectly docile in lighter airs with just two aboard. I even single-handed her a few times in light-airs, with the mainsail reefed, and with two people and reefed main she's good in a breeze up to 15 knots, with care. The trailer was custom-made for the boat by Trailex of Canfield of Ohio to a superb quality standard. The trailer is made of extruded aluminum sections bolted together, and any part of it can be easily replaced. The trailer shows some wear and light oxidation from weather and years but everything still works fine, EXCEPT for the lights, which should be completely re-wired, and probably replaced. The buy-it-now price is quite reasonable. The trailer, sails, and all other materials and hardware in a big pile in your driveway would cost much more than my price. If you had her built today to an appropriate level of finish and quality by a skilled builder who understands this kind of thing, you'd easily spend $15-20K. Or more. See "Condition" note above for more details. Please ask any and all questions before purchase. I have described the boat as accurately as possible. I don't want any surprises for the buyer. I would really like to sell the boat to someone who will cherish her, as I did for many years. She needs a bit of TLC right now, but not all that much to go sailing!

18' Phil Bolger Skiff With Motor and Trailer

18' Phil Bolger Skiff With Motor and Trailer

$6,200

Bath, Maine

Year 2001

Make Boldger

Model Skiff

Category -

Length 18 Feet

Posted Over 1 Month

18' Phil Bolger Skiff With Motor and Trailer This classic skiff was built by a fine woodworker about 14 years ago, from the finest marine plywood and sheathed in glass/epoxy. The design, by Phil Bolger, was originally done for Dynamite Payson who wanted a large, stable skiff that could carry a big load. The resulting design has a plumb bow and vertical topsides with a flat bottom and some rocker. The 25 HP Yamaha four stroke will push her along at about 20 knots. There is a built-in fuel tank, with guage, in the port locker aft. The starboard locker contains the battery, battery switch and all electrical switches. There is storage space in each locker. She comes equipped with a through-hull fish-finder/depth sounder, compass, automatic bilge pump, running lights, 12 volt accessory plug, bronze drain plug, bronze cleats and mooring bit, flotation compartment forward, two fenders with fender hooks, tiller extension, canoe paddle, docking lines, Danforth anchor, chain and rode, two life jackets and a flare gun."Dog Days" has only been lightly used, by retirement age adults, as a picnic boat.The trailer is an EZ Loader single axle bunk style with winch, and guides.