After having owned several Cruisers Incs that had been restored by others I felt the need to do a keel up restoration on one myself. I began to search around for a candidate. Having owned a 1962 370 Seacamper that I really enjoyed, I looked around for it's bigger brother a 20' 570 Seacamper. I asked around and posted an inquiry on my Yahoo group Classicoutboards. I received a response from a member in Kansas City who had bought a 570 on e-bay but did not have the time to finish it. We talked a bit and came to an agreed price and away to Kansas I went to get her.
Towing her back to Texas....

She had come from the Door country of Wisconsin several years earlier and had been barned ever since. She had all original chrome and fittings, there was a large Chrysler that had been on her but I declined to haul it back to Texas. My friend had jacked her up and reset her on 4x4s to get the hull off the rollers. With a little extra strapping and tie downs back to Texas she headed.




My initial survey found the interior ribs and laps to be in overall good solid shape there was a hole on the starboard side where she had rubbed a dock during a storm. The bottom shape was true to form excepting a couple small divots near the transom from rollers. All hardware was there including seats and brackets, the original wooden wheel was in cabin and all glass in good shape. I located a small hole in lower lap at starboard transom indicating the ends of the laps were in poor shape on the starboard side only. The plywood decks were in poor shape with several soft spots both forward and aft. The transom seemed to be very solid but showed some damage on the inside and cross brace. There was some de-lamination in cabin roof and a broken place on rubrail at hull damage.



Wow, what had I gotten into, be careful what you ask for. She seemed pretty solid but needed lots of areas attended to. But this 1965 570 was one of the last big wooden Seacampers ever built and this along with the great lines of this boat drew me to her.
The day I arrived home with her my wife looked her over and said " hey you have ants on your boat", and pealing back some bad deck I uncovered a host of carpenter ants/ termites that had been feeding on the deck plywood and oak cross brace on transom, they didn't seem to care for the mahogany, thank God. So my first project was to spray the entire hull down with insecticide, problem solved.
Next up closer inspection and disassembly......