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Boater November 16th 08 12:35 PM

I can...canoe?
 

Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:

http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj


Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!


[email protected] November 16th 08 05:32 PM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 7:35*am, Boater wrote:
Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:

http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj

Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!


Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?

Frogwatch[_2_] November 16th 08 06:02 PM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:

Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:


http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj


Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!


Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?


I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.

Boater November 16th 08 06:10 PM

I can...canoe?
 
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:

Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!

Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?


I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.



The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.

I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.

Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.

Frogwatch[_2_] November 17th 08 01:13 AM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 1:10 pm, Boater wrote:
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:


Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!
Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?


I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.


The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.

I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.

Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.


Probably cuz it means we use our boats. Lemme see, 46 yr old Grumman
canoe, all sorts of nicks and dings and I know the origin of most of
em. The bent thwart is from when my mother decapitated a water
moccassin right next to me with the paddle when I was 6. Welded spot
is from where it was sunk under a log on the Alapaha River, all the
bottom scrapes are from "Look and Tremble" shoals on the Chipola
River, etc...

[email protected] November 17th 08 01:53 AM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 8:13*pm, Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 1:10 pm, Boater wrote:





Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:


Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!
Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?


I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. *If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. *I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.


The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.


I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.


Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.


Probably cuz it means we use our boats. *Lemme see, 46 yr old Grumman
canoe, all sorts of nicks and dings and I know the origin of most of
em. *The bent thwart is from when my mother decapitated a water
moccassin right next to me with the paddle when I was 6. *Welded spot
is from where it was sunk under a log on the Alapaha River, * all the
bottom scrapes are from "Look and Tremble" shoals on the Chipola
River, etc...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I build boats that not only look nice, but stand up and can take a
beating too.. The modern materials such as 4.5 oz tight weave glass
cloth are good for clearcoat covering without adding weight... Harry
just says what he can to try to get my goat, but he really doesn't
know anything about modern materials and ultralite boat building ...

Frogwatch[_2_] November 17th 08 01:58 AM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 8:53 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 8:13 pm, Frogwatch wrote:



On Nov 16, 1:10 pm, Boater wrote:


Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:


Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!
Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?


I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.


The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.


I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.


Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.


Probably cuz it means we use our boats. Lemme see, 46 yr old Grumman
canoe, all sorts of nicks and dings and I know the origin of most of
em. The bent thwart is from when my mother decapitated a water
moccassin right next to me with the paddle when I was 6. Welded spot
is from where it was sunk under a log on the Alapaha River, all the
bottom scrapes are from "Look and Tremble" shoals on the Chipola
River, etc...- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I build boats that not only look nice, but stand up and can take a
beating too.. The modern materials such as 4.5 oz tight weave glass
cloth are good for clearcoat covering without adding weight... Harry
just says what he can to try to get my goat, but he really doesn't
know anything about modern materials and ultralite boat building ...


I've been wanting to design a folding dinghy 9' long made of heavy
flexible PVC with a glassed ply base. A company called Geodesic
Aerolite boats makes a similar one but theirs does not collapse for
carrying. I think one could use the thwarts to get rigidity (also the
seat). It should come in at about 45 lbs. Have not worked out all
the details though, maybe never will.
Been considering building a 3mm ply kayak coated with 4 oz glass but
with so many other things to do......

Boater November 17th 08 02:22 AM

I can...canoe?
 
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 1:10 pm, Boater wrote:
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:
Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!
Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?
I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.

The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.

I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.

Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.


Probably cuz it means we use our boats. Lemme see, 46 yr old Grumman
canoe, all sorts of nicks and dings and I know the origin of most of
em. The bent thwart is from when my mother decapitated a water
moccassin right next to me with the paddle when I was 6. Welded spot
is from where it was sunk under a log on the Alapaha River, all the
bottom scrapes are from "Look and Tremble" shoals on the Chipola
River, etc...



Uh, no. It means one of us is careful about our gear and the other
isn't. My canoe is pretty scratched up on the bottom because of the
rocky rapids we shoot on the river. Otherwise, though, it looks ok.

SmallBoats.com[_2_] November 17th 08 02:28 AM

I can...canoe?
 
Frogwatch wrote:

I build boats that not only look nice, but stand up and can take a
beating too.. The modern materials such as 4.5 oz tight weave glass
cloth are good for clearcoat covering without adding weight... Harry
just says what he can to try to get my goat, but he really doesn't
know anything about modern materials and ultralite boat building ...


I've been wanting to design a folding dinghy 9' long made of heavy
flexible PVC with a glassed ply base. A company called Geodesic
Aerolite boats makes a similar one but theirs does not collapse for
carrying. I think one could use the thwarts to get rigidity (also the
seat). It should come in at about 45 lbs. Have not worked out all
the details though, maybe never will.
Been considering building a 3mm ply kayak coated with 4 oz glass but
with so many other things to do......


Yeah those Geodesic boats are pretty cool. Older fellow up north builds
em' iirc. You carry shipping tape with you in case you hole it on an
outing, a 16 foot wineglass tail Whitehall type hull weighs under 20
pounds.. The other route is pretty easy too. Look at the flexible
plastic sheets and check out the way the "Porta-Boat" is built. It could
be done easily by the home builder, probably in one weekend for a 10
footer...

Rowdy Mouse Racing, don't feed the posers...
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[email protected] November 17th 08 02:43 AM

I can...canoe?
 
On Nov 16, 9:22*pm, Boater wrote:
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 1:10 pm, Boater wrote:
Frogwatch wrote:
On Nov 16, 12:32 pm, wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:35 am, Boater wrote:
Orvis has a lovely cedar strip canoe in its latest catalogue:
http://tinyurl.com/5j9upj
Boats...the way they are supposed to be built!
Harry, because of modern technology, there are many methods and
materials for building things than ever before. Should we really stick
our heads in the sand and not learn anything newer and better than
what was available previously?
I see a lot of boats like this and I wonder how much they really get
used. *If you REALLY use a boat, it will get lots of dings and scrapes
and would ruin a boat like that. *I'd have to say this is a poor
choice for a real boat but a good choice for a virtual boater.
The cedar canoe was aesthetically pleasing. Also, if you are paddling
around in the right sorts of waters, with no rocks or rapids, a cedar
strip canoe is great fun.


I have a plastic canoe. It has zero aesthetic appeal, but it is tough
enough for the bumps and scrapes of the Shenandoah River, where we paddle.


Trashy looking boats that have been abused seem to have lots of appeal
for you and Loogy the Braindead. To each his own.


Probably cuz it means we use our boats. *Lemme see, 46 yr old Grumman
canoe, all sorts of nicks and dings and I know the origin of most of
em. *The bent thwart is from when my mother decapitated a water
moccassin right next to me with the paddle when I was 6. *Welded spot
is from where it was sunk under a log on the Alapaha River, * all the
bottom scrapes are from "Look and Tremble" shoals on the Chipola
River, etc...


Uh, no. It means one of us is careful about our gear and the other
isn't. My canoe is pretty scratched *up on the bottom because of the
rocky rapids we shoot on the river. Otherwise, though, it looks ok.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Pffttt. what river do you "shoot rapids"??? snerk Now he is
shooting the rapids, next he will be telling us about his latest
marathon adventure.. :)


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