The Wooden Boat Challenge
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Boat Building 12PM – 4PM | Rowing Race at 5PM
What is the Wooden Boat Challenge?
It’s a boatbuilding competition with teams of two battling each other and the clock to build a 12-foot rowing skiff – the CAROLINA BATEAU – within a four-hour time limit. The teams are judged on building speed, workmanship, and rowing speed when they test their completed bateaux for seaworthiness in a rowing relay on the Sampit River. At the end of the day, cash prizes are awarded to first, second and third place winners.
The Challenge begins at noon with the command “Gentlemen, Start Your Skil Saws” which sets off a din of circular saws and swirling sawdust as the teams commence to build their bateaux fast and build them right. Quality counts for 1/3 of the points, speed of building for 1/3, and team rowing speed for the final 1/3.
Each team receives a set of plans for the CAROLINA BATEAU when they pay their $100 entry fee and are encouraged to practice-build a boat before the Challenge. On the big day they are issued the same building materials. They provide their own tools, sawhorses, work tables, hull molds and home-made oars. Each team builds within a 12 x 15 foot space beneath a huge tent with hundreds of spectators cheering them on. Some teams finish, amazingly, in just two plus hours.
The Challenge ends with a whistle at 4 PM. The boats are judged for quality and, then, the teams carry their newly built boats through the crowd to the floating docks and lower them into the Sampit River for the rowing race that begins at 5 PM.
The Wooden Boat Challenge is open to men and women, family teams, boatbuilders, cabinetmakers and basically anyone with a competitive spirit and a love for sawdust, power tools and wooden boats.
Register Your Team – Georgetown Wooden Boat Show
The Georgetown Wooden Boat Show is now accepting deposits for this year’s Wooden Boat Building Challenge!
In addition to earning the title at this premier boatbuilding competition, teams will have the opportunity to compete for the following prize money generously provided by the Harbor Historical Association:
🏆 First Place: $2,000
🥈 Second Place: $1,500
🥉 Third Place: $1,000
🎖 Youth Winner: $500 (Eligible participants must be currently attending high school or a recognized maritime program.)
Upon receipt of your deposit, plans for the Bateau or Teal will be emailed to your team. If you prefer to receive printed plans by mail, please email boats@woodenboatshow.com.
🔨 The Georgetown Wooden Boat Building Competition (GWBBC) will provide all materials and fasteners—teams are responsible for bringing their own tools of choice.
For additional information, please contact us at boats@woodenboatshow.com or call 843.520.0111.
Secure your spot today and join us for an unforgettable competition!
Rules and Regulations
- Each team will consist of two boat builders.
- Each team will be assigned a space approximately 12’X 15’. All tools, tables and necessary building materials will be confined to this space.
- Each team will provide their own tools, both hand and power. 20amp service will be supplied to each team. All tools must be in good repair with all guards and safeties in working order.
- Any power tool is allowed except for pneumatic tools.
- Each team must bring their own sawhorses and worktables(s). No jig, pattern or automatic assembly mechanism may be used.
- Only manual caulking guns may be used to dispense adhesive and caulking material. Teams must bring their own caulk guns.
- All plans and building materials will be supplied by the National Boatbuilding Challenge Committee.
- The oars must be MADE by the team (not purchased); however, they should be made ahead of time. One set of 2-inch diameter oar locks and oar sockets will be supplied and may be installed after the team has blown the whistle to signal completion of the boat.
- Transom blank will be provided at the competition.
- Two station molds are needed and should be built before the competition.
- Boat plans are available to teams as soon as their entry fee is received.
- A team is permitted to be coached verbally, but the coach cannot physically assist the team in any way.
- PFD’s (life jackets) need to be provided by the building teams.
- The fee to reserve a workspace for the competition and receive the boat plans is $100.00 payable to the HHA (the Harbor Historical Association).
Scoring
World Record Championship is based on the following:
50%- speed of building the boat
50%- Quality of workmanship
The Georgetown Challenge is based on the following:
1/3 – Speed of building the boat
1/3 – Quality of workmanship
1/3 – 2 man relay rowing race
Speed of building the boat:
Each team will have a 4 hour time limit to build the boat
Each team will be awarded points for their standing against other teams for simple elapsed time.
First place will receive 1 point, second place will receive 2 points, third place will receive 3 points, fourth place will receive 4 points, fifth place will receive 5 points, and so on.
Quality of workmanship:
Each team will be given a point score, based on the quality of the workmanship. These points will be compiled from the scores of each judge evaluating each boat, taking into account adherence to the plans. The lower the point score, the better the quality of construction and adherence to plan details. The point scores will then be converted to a ranking: ¾ points for the lowest point score, 2 points for second lowest point score, and so on.
Relay rowing race:
The race will be a relay on an even course with each team member rowing one leg each. The course will be short with simple straight lines and one turn. The points for this portion of the competition will also be awarded in the same manner as the speed portion of the Challenge.
We look forward to you becoming a boat building “Warrior” this October in Georgetown, SC!
History of the Challenge
The Wooden Boat Challenge was started in 1981 by John Hansen- current publisher of Boats and Harbors Magazine- and was held at the Newport, RI wooden boat show. The Sika adhesives company sponsored that first event, a quick and dirty boat building contest featuring six teams building any boat they cared to build and then racing them. Racing the boats has been a fundamental part of the contest ever since.
The first one-design boat building contest, featuring the TEAL, a double-ender design by Phil Bolger, was held four years later at the Oyster Festival in Norwalk, CT. The TEAL design remained in use until 2001 when Willie French of Georgetown, SC (by way of New Zealand) and his partner set an unbelievable record of ONE HOUR, ELEVEN MINUTES AND THIRTY-FOUR SECONDS.
The bar had to be raised. In 2002, “B” Coleman of Seaco Yacht Design in Lexington, KY, was asked to design a more challenging skiff. The result was the handsome GEORGETOWN BATEAU which remained the Challenge boat until 2007. Then, Phil Bolger’s version of the MONHEGAN SKIFF was introduced, but it was a bit too challenging – too many teams were unable to finish the boat in the four-hour time limit. A happy medium was reached in 2010 when “B” Coleman got busy again and came up with the CAROLINA BATEAU, which combines challenge with beauty.
In 2007, the National BoatBuilding Challenge was organized by WoodenBoat Magazine as a circuit of regional boat building contests. So far, regional contests have been held in Belfast, ME, Georgetown, SC and Beaufort, NC. WoodenBoat Magazine hopes to expand the National BoatBuilding circuit to include more sites.