Hi Guys:
Sorry haven't replied, have been reading with interest though. Answering some points:
GreenLake wrote: you may need to figure out a strategy when you .... take water overboard
Yes, the answer is manual bilge pump. Works very well when you shell out $50 and buy a good one. Works adequately when you go cheap and buy a $30 one with lousy seals. Guess which I did? Well, I'll put up with it for a bit, see if I can put in a better seal (throw good money after bad). But after two weeks in Maine sailing wooden boats every day (aka beautifully built seagoing sieves), I've come to a newfound appreciation for the humble manual pump. All the boats I sailed had strategically placed access holes in the floorboards (near the CB), so I may do that if/when I build floorboards. Also, for bailing purposes, I have a big ol' carwashing sponge for those last bits of mopping up, and a 5 gallon multipurpose bucket for the desperate "bailing out a swamped boat" routine... hopefully never have to use it, but it's there under my cuddy, usually holding my anchor line.
Whatever I do for floorboards will be in 4 pieces, two aft, two forward under the cuddy. What a great idea to raise the forward bits to the level of the keelson. You're not losing that much headroom and you have a much more useable dry space + underneath for the anchor. I'll do some measuring. In the meantime, I have a salvaged set of forward floorboards, and nothing for the rear. I usually sail with only the portside forward floorboard, good for things I want to keep semidry and/or for the dog to nap on, and the rest goes to starboard.
GreenLake wrote: One of the adult managed to nap on that platform (sideways, in the sense of athwartships).
Yes! Big as I am, I've hidden out down there while beached during a rainstorm, laying kinda diagonally, somehow avoiding the mast and happily reading a book for a few hours. Dead athwartships with my knees up also works. It's a pain to get in and out, but once you're there it's pretty snug. Impossible for overnight sleeping though!
GreenLake wrote:For sleeping, I would use the suggestion from John Alesch (@jeadstx) who described a board that he could place next to one of the seats to make it into a bunk.
I've been dreaming and scheming about sleepaboard for ages. My idea is a raised platform FORWARD of the thwart, from there to the forward bulkhead. Seems a shame to waste a nice dry roof (aka cuddy)! I'm 6' tall, from thwart to bulkhead is 5'8" on my boat. Add the 6" of thwart width and you have a reasonable single bed on one side, I'd sleep with my body in the nice dry cuddy and my head and shoulders out. But what about mosquitos and rain? Well that's where my bivy sack comes in. It's essentially a the 1 peson tent approach that you mentioned. But the bivy sack is even simpler, its built like a very light but waterproof sleeping bag with a hoop at you shoulders to keep the fabric off your face. You can either close it completely (for rain) or just just the mosquito netting (for bugs). Put a sleeping mat in there and you're set! So, essentially, I'd camping ON the boat, under the cuddy. With the option of not using it at all for dry nights, or camping ashore, or whatever. Whole thing rolls up and gets stowed away in the morning. I'd still need a boom tent of some sort for using the rest of the cockpit while it's raining, but now it's much simpler, an old tent fly will do. Which is what I use now, a tent fly from an 8person tent, thrown over the boom and held to the gunwales with cheap spring clamps. Works fine, but will probably get refined as this whole sleepaboard idea evolves.
GreenLake wrote: You should be able to build a shelf for under the transom that is much lighter than the one that came with the original DS.
That's the plan! I'm stuffing some nonmoveable flotation in there first, though.
GreenLake wrote: I'm not sure whether I would put the floorboards back in if I wanted to go on an extended cruise.
Floorboards are for daysailing only, there will be enough weight as it is for an extended cruise. My raised bed platform, though gives the advantages of your raised forward thwart, with even more stuff that can be stored underneath. One important point for my raised be platform, it doesn't have to be built with rot resistant, meaning heavy, wood. Pine is fine. Most of the time, it'll live in my garage, so plenty of time to dry out between adventures. Besides, once I have template built, its easy enough to build a new one. Keeping it light means that I can build it as an outer frame with 2 or 3 sections (going fore to aft) that can be lifted up to access storage underneath. Pretty much same as underberth storage in a "big" boat.
Anyway, those are my cruising ideas. Add a galley box, small cooler, plenty of freeze dried meals, a few 5gallon water jugs, and a portapotty and you're off adventuring. (PortaLoo goes as far aft as possible!). Overall, I think the right approach to cruising the DS is like backpacking in the boat. Or at least carcamping....