Teak vs not teak
I have never been a fan of teak. It's oily, susceptible to potato-crisp stains, uncooperative in construction and unreliable in dimensions till fully dried. I have also seen so much rotten teak in my life that I would not have had to get involved in restoring two 1977 Cherubini 44s just to see more.It seems to me that, for all its supposed olive-green/baby-poop color and beauty, most people who have and celebrate teak spend an inordinate amount of time taking care of it. And eventually it all goes silver, hard, and open-grained anyway.I am currently replacing all of the teak on my 1974 Hunter 25 with mahogany. I have three varieties, depending on where it's used-- African, Asian, and South American. The African is used for the heavy-duty structural stuff. The Asian is for the sole joists and handrails and hatch slides, and for a lot of stuff down below. The South American is for the pretty stuff like table trim and interior handrails. I also made the top plate for the compression post out of it.The South American (aka 'Honduras') mahogany is about the same strength as Asian (aka 'Philippine' --they are both really misnomers any more) but is prettier and rubs up really red, almost pink, when finished right. Look at Ferenc Mate's books on the Cherubini boats to see that incredibly rich-looking rosy red glow inside Amazing Grace. You do NOT get that glow from any other wood, especially teak. The African mahogany, usually know as ipe ('IPP-ay') is grayer, courser in the grain and does not polish up so well. It is sold in lumber places for decking and because it's much nicer than pressure-treated yellow pine for a number of reasons. Philippine, usually known as lauan, is the workhorse of the trade and is used for everything that has to take paint or finishes well and still be cheap. The veneer plywoods are far nicer for cabinetmaking than plain fir and probably lighter in weight.American woods had begun to become scarce, and Asian products affordable, by the time yachts were being mass-produced in America. And they don't always have good characteristics. Oak is strong but brittle, hard to work with, and vulnerable to rot. The Cherubinis used to steam red oak for the frames of Sea Scamp skiffs; nowadays we would use mahogany for them. You'll never get a bronze screw out of an oak plank again. Red oak is used for the Samson posts of C-44 ketches. With age these rot from the exposed endgrain; they have to be replaced every 27-30 years. All other wood on a C-44 is mahogany or teak. Cedar is good for visible areas because of its sweet color, and it resists rot very well, but it is not strong and is susceptible to splitting and crushing in compression. Use it for your deck in the back yard. Yellow pine works where fit and finish are not a problem, such as the planking of New Jersey speed skiffs and Maine lobster boats. It resists rot very well-- hence its being used for pressure-treated framing lumber-- and it flexes well, but it is not strong, splits, checks and warps, and is NOT suitable to fine woodworking at all. Spruce is more expensive than cedar, structurally resilient, and incredibly strong in compression, hence its use for yacht spars-- and for the compression post in my H25. But for cost reasons you rarely see a boat planked in it. White pine is so susceptible to rot as to make it completely out of the question for traditional boatbuilding; and yet I found a lot of UNTREATED white pine used in the cabinetry of my little first-generation Hunter. I have replaced all of it-- and the funny thing is, I used white pine over again. Seems that, when properly dried, its porous nature makes it EXCELLENT for epoxy saturation. Those cleats and drawer slides will never see water intrusion again!The only thing now teak in my boat is bonded to the inside of the aft end of the cabin, mainly because the piece of plywood was available and left raw it looks good against varnished mahogany. But you can bet the back of it is laminated mahogany and saturated silly.For nonstructural things like trim and interior shelving, make your own choice. I just found all the teak on my older boat to be in very poor condition-- primarily due to the nature of the wood selected for those parts-- and chose to change it over to something I could stand looking at and would consider it a pleasure to take care of.JC 2