What I'm saying is that there are boats with bridges that I wouldn't consider ever. The bridges are clearly an afterthought and just stuck up there.
I agree with that assessment. The boat American Marine used as its inspiration for the Grand Banks line they launched in 1966 was
Spray.
Spray was not built by American Marine (for many years I thought she had been) but her hull design by Kenneth Smith was used for the first of the Grand Banks line, the GB36, and all the models that followed except the most recent ones.
Spray did not have a flying bridge but for obvious reasons American Marine elected to incorporate one in their new Grand Banks line. I don't care for the look of GB's flying bridge, placing it in the "just stuck up there" category described by BandB.
However I would not be surprised if the inspiration for the Grand Banks flying bridge came to a degree from the open flying bridges used on many northwest fishing boats that were in use in the 1960s.
These I actually like as the ones I've seen have all complemented the design of the boat. One of my favorite vessels of all time is illustrated below and has this type of flying bridge.
I've ridden on
Gikumi's flying bridge and it is indeed a nice feature of the boat.
Gikumi was constructed in (I believe) Vancouver, BC in the 1940s specifically to be the workboat for the Telegraph Cove Mill, replacing an earlier boat of somewhat similar design. Many years later after the mill closed and the boardwalk community was purchased by Gordie Graham for the creation of a fishing resort,
Gikumi became the first commercial whale watch boat on the west coast, operated by Stubbs Island Whale Watching out of the cove.
I will have to check my photo reference books but I'm not sure that
Gikumi was built with a flying bridge. It may have been added later, perhaps along with the other modifications that were made for whale watching. Regardless, whoever designed it did a great job of complimenting the rest of the boat.
While not a fishboat herself,
Gikumi's pilothouse and flying bridge are typical of those found on all manner of commercial trollers, seiners and gillnetters that worked the Washington and BC coasts.
The second photo is our PNW boat and the awkward clunkiness and bulk of it's "stuck on" flying bridge is very obviously different from the beautifully aesthetic (in my opinion) lines of the
Gikumi's