 Now I need tapered ribs. Skinny at this end, fat at this end. Sometimes the simplest silly little things are the biggest pain to actually make. All right, got a PVC pipe. I just need to taper it with a nice perfect cut. Do I just eyeball it or draw a line? I think I need to draw a line. All right, I'll try to get as good a line as I can on there. It just has to go across the curve. All right, that wasn't so bad. Man, I hope I can get them all to look that good. See what I was hoping for. I wasn't sure if I was going to need more reinforcement at that end. It looks like it's good. Oh man, did I ever kick butt on that one? That one came out the best yet. I got it all done in one shot. Now I have three gallons of resin left. Now, before I did that one, I had five and a half. Oh, so I've only used two and a half on these two. Excellent. I should be able to get the whole thing done with half a gallon of spare because I'll probably have some, I don't know, whatever the next thing I'm doing is. Gonna attach these somehow. All right, let's not get ahead of myself, though. I still have two more of these to make. All right, last one. Got my pieces ready. I still have enough sun. Oh yeah, let's get to it. Oh man, that's it, right? One, two, three, four, five, six. Yes. Oh, so nice. It's a little bit of resin to spare. Doing fiberglass like this is kind of like mentally and physically exhausting because you have to, you have to be so precise with all your movements so you don't make a mistake because this is how it goes when you make a mistake. A mistake. Say you're rolling with this hand and putting fiberglass strips on with this hand and then this hand gets resin on it. Well, the next piece of stuff you pick up, you go to put it down. It doesn't get down because it's stuck to you and you got to be like, and then you have all this fuzz stuck to your hand. And then you go to pick up the next piece and you get more fuzz stuck to your hand. And everything just starts sticking together. It's like being tart and feathered. So it's best to be hyper-vigilant and just be super careful, pay attention like as much as possible. So it's very mentally draining. And then you got to race against the resin because the resin's hardening as you're using it. So you got to get it all on there before it solidifies. Although today it was pretty good. It solidifies a lot faster in the sun and today it was a little cloudy. Plus I moved my thing here under a big tree. So I had lots of shade so I had extra time to work, which is good on these pieces where I have to do the flap over and do that all before the thing hardens. Plus I didn't have enough PVC pipe to get a full strip on this one. So this one is like in chunks. So it took a little bit longer. Anyway, it all came out good. I'm exhausted. I'm going to have to do some good stretching tonight. All right, let's get the fuzz out of here. I can clean up edges, do all the trimmings, and stand off little bits tomorrow. And I'm hoping I don't have to do any more fiberglass. I'm kind of thinking maybe I can use some aluminium aluminum to make the attachurizers and rivet everything together. We'll see. Right now I'm pretty tired of fiberglass, so we'll see how I feel about it when I'm putting it all together. Speaking of being vigilant, every day when I'm done with the boat, I take this piece of crusty canvas and just wipe off the bottom. It takes like five minutes, ten minutes, and I make sure nothing starts growing on the bottom.