I decided to use offcuts of 12mm ply for the drawer bases. A bit over the top, perhaps, but there were sufficient around of more or less the right size, most of it coated on one side and none of it much use for anything else. It seems a shame to waste it. So I cut out the bases and using my wee router, put a rebate on 3 sides.
I am now in the spectacularly happy position of having heaps of kauri (thank you Gordie!) and as it is about the correct thickness for the sides and front of the drawers, I decided to use it. Again I routed rebates along the edges.
I found the best way to do this was to clamp a big chunk of wood to a saw horse and then to line the edge of the kauri along it and clamp that. This worked nicely producing a clean result.
I then offered up my kauri planks, cutting the wood to length as necessary.
And finally ended up with a kit of parts for six drawers.
I laid them all out, coated the edges with epoxy and then coated the joints along the bases with thickened epoxy. The drawers were then fastened with pins through pre-drilled holes, which ensured that they lined up truly.
My original idea had been to then glue on the fronts, but these seemed impossible to position. I consulted a friend who told me that even professionals make a full box and then add the front, so this is what I did. I cut 6mm panels and glued them flush at the open end of the box.
He was quite right! The fronts were a lot easier to fit now. I fitted the drawers and then one at a time, fitted the fronts, screwing them into place through pre-drilled holes in the plywood.
Then I disassembled them and glued them back together. The screws were replaced in their screw holes with infinite care and gently tightened to ensure that new holes weren't created.
In spite of my best efforts, however, the alignment was far from perfect. While irritating, this was far from surprising. My skills may be better than they were, but I'm still a long way from having the necessary tricks of the trade to get these things right. However, judicious use of fine saw, plane, belt sander and the odd shim got them to look acceptable.
I drilled finger holes, coated the drawers and fitted them one last time. Good enough.
Meanwhile, I've been cutting, fitting and coating the locker which will be under the sink and hold my two 10 litre water containers. My eccentricity in not wishing to make a hole even for salt water, even using a glassed-in pipe has been commented on elsewhere. But actually, with a lot of the rivers and anchorages being quite silty around New Zealand, it will be nice to have clean seawater on tap all the time, even if it does mean hauling the odd bucket.
I need to proofread the magazine for the JRA, so I'm not sure if I'll be getting a lot more done today. But we are slowly getting there. Although I have to confess that when a visitor last week, kindly told me that I "still have heaps to do", he was very lucky that I didn't have a chisel in my hand!!