Boating

WANGO BANGO SPECS

THIS IS A REAL PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND BOAT. IT’S DESIGNED TO BE RUGGED AND STABLE, WITH AN ENCLOSED HOUSE AND THE RAMP ON THE BOW.

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LOA: 27'2" BEAM: 9'4" DISPLACEME­NT: 5,000 lb. DRAFT: 1'4" FUEL CAPACITY: 200 gal. TRANSOM DEADRISE: 12 degrees POWER: Single Suzuki DF250 PROP: Suzuki 16" x 17" 3-blade stainless steel PERFORMANC­E TOP SPEED: 37 mph BEST CRUISE: 26.5 mph at 4,500 rpm/11 gph RANGE: 432 miles

fiancée, Molly Swartz. The first leg of these ski trips is made by snow machine from Turnagain Pass, but more backcountr­y could be accessible if an approach were made from the eastern Prince William Sound side of the range. This would require putting the snow machine on a boat—a boat with a ramp on the bow. If the boat could tote a snow machine, it could also put an ATV ashore during deer-hunting season, or a crew of friends ashore for a weekend camping trip. With the notion of turning Prince William Sound into his yearround playground, Werth started imaging the perfect multimissi­on boat for that water.

THE FABRICATOR

The man building just such a boat, Delbert Henry, is curiously far away from the ocean in Palmer, Alaska, northeast of Anchorage in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley. A Montana native, Henry founded Hylite Fabricatio­n in 2009 as a welding specialty

outfit; in 2011, he engaged in a joint venture to build Peregrine Falcon Alaska, a 90-by-24-foot aluminum landing-craft-style research boat. This high-profile project establishe­d Hylite’s fine reputation, and more boatbuildi­ng work came its way. Henry has built a number of 35-foot bow-pickers and also commercial boats with landingcra­ft bow ramps. New customers liked the look of these boats

and commission­ed pleasure versions. He’s finished 10 to date, ranging in length from about 34 to 42 feet.

During his time on the Alaskan waterfront, Werth studied a wide variety of boats, cataloging features he might incorporat­e into a craft of his own one day. A co-worker introduced him to Hylite in 2019. Henry wanted to build a smaller, more affordable

version of his landing-craft pleasure models—the last wellequipp­ed 34-foot example cost about $275,000—and proposed to Werth a 27-foot-lengthover­all build (24-foot hull length) that he could retail for about $160,000.

“This is a real Prince William Sound boat,” Henry says. “It’s designed to be rugged and stable, with an enclosed house and the ramp on the bow. The

water there can get choppy, but big waves or swells are unlikely, so we can build it with shallow deadrise for minimal draft. In many places, he can nose this boat right up to shore and drop the ramp on dry land.”

The boat has 12 degrees of transom deadrise and 6-inch reverse chines for enhanced stability. Fuel capacity is 200 gallons, and the boat’s weight distributi­on is shifted aft so that it will rest on the desired waterline with a heavy load in the open bow. A set of Zipwake 300S intercepto­r-type trim tabs can bring the bow down if the load is light. The forward deck is 11 feet, 6 inches long and 8 feet, 6 inches wide. The house is 7 feet, 6 inches long by 8 feet, 2 inches wide, with 6 feet, 2 inches of headroom. The helm is to starboard, with a counter and cabinets abaft. To port is a bench seat with a pivoting backrest and a dinette that converts to a berth. Bulky gear is stowed through a deck hatch to the bilge. The entire house is surrounded by windows, making it very bright. The West Coast windshield affords excellent forward visibility and quickly sheds water. The interior is finished with durable speckled Zolatone paint and powder-coated gray.

At the stern is a back porch about 5 feet, 6 inches deep covered by the extended house roof and fitted with a table with a folding top. With a portable stove on the table, this is the galley. A ladder to port provides access to the house roof, which is surrounded by a low rail, rod holders, tie-downs for an inflatable dinghy, and a low radar arch.

The ramp raises and lowers with cables connected to a hand-crank winch. An extended anchor roller is welded to the starboard gunwale. Decking throughout is aluminum diamond plate. Werth chose not to spec a head or a formal galley to save space and expenses, and keep the boat simple to maintain. When guests are along, everyone usually camps on shore.

Wango Bango is built like a workboat. The bottom is ¼-inch-thick-plate 5086 alloy. Hullsides are 3⁄16-inch stock, and the house is ⅛ inch. The transom

A LADDER TO PORT PROVIDES ACCESS TO THE HOUSE ROOF, WHICH IS SURROUNDED BY A LOW RAIL, ROD HOLDERS, TIE-DOWNS FOR AN INFLATABLE DINGHY, AND A LOW RADAR ARCH.

is solid ½-inch aluminum and can accommodat­e single or twin outboards. Cross members and stringers are aluminum extrusions. Henry normally builds this type of boat with a forward crash bulkhead and sealed forward compartmen­ts; if a sharp impact ruptures the hull, the boat will remain afloat. Werth had a hatch placed in the center of the forward deck, so it’s sealed well but not airtight. Turns out, he’s never used that compartmen­t for stowage and now would prefer a fish box in the deck. The foredeck drains overboard through side scuppers.

In the Hylite shop, this boat’s project name was 401K because Werth’s retirement fund paid for much of it. At 31, he has plenty of time to start over. But his budget was tight. To that end, the boat

is powered by a 2007 Suzuki DF250 outboard, which provides adequate power and was reliable during the boat’s first season in 2021. Werth stores the boat on a $6,500 custom Hi-Tech Marine trailer shipped up from Panama City, Florida.

A GLACIAL PLACE

A day on the water aboard Wango Bango was the highlight of our family trip to Alaska last summer. Werth and Swartz picked us up at the Whittier dock, and we motored out of the inlet and headed north into the open water of Port Wells. Our first stop was the marker for shrimp pots that Werth and Swartz had dropped the night before. Werth deployed a portable electric winch to the port gunwale to pull up

the pots, which were 600 feet down. The pots were filled with shrimp as big as my hand. Next, we navigated into Barry Arm, where we began to encounter the growlers, a raft of dozens of sea otters, and the sleeping seals. Werth approached to within a half-mile of Coxe Glacier and killed the engine.

“We’ll watch for a bit and see if anything happens,” he said.

We could hear the glacier occasional­ly crack and groan, and suddenly kaboom! The glacier calved right before our eyes, a huge piece falling into the water just like on NatGeo. We’d only waited for five minutes.

“Right on time,” Werth said. What a great guide. He put us ashore to explore around the rubble at the base of the receding glacier, and we could scramble right to the edge of the ice. A Coleman stove on the aft table boiled up the fresh shrimp for lunch, after which we picked our way back through the growlers, into Port Wells and the waypoint Werth had marked the day before when a pair of 85-pound halibut were hauled aboard Wango Bango. Our luck, unfortunat­ely, was not as good.

I was allowed to take the wheel on the run back to Whittier. The ride was stiff into a crisp afternoon chop, the compromise for shallow draft and stability. But the boat runs true on course and is plenty agile. Back at Whittier, our adventure was over. But it seems clear for Werth and Swartz, who will be married this summer, that the adventure is just beginning.

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