I am still looking for help with an identification on this canoe,( see earlier post ). Further work has perhaps revealed some additional clues:
The canoe appears to have had sponsons connected at every fourth rib. (Photo DSCN072)
The stems are oak and bear no numbers, but they are 3/4 inch, and show screw holes that do not line up with the existing stem band. could it have had an external stem? ( Photo DSCN1082 )
I am not familiar with long deck canoes, so is framing with the two end ribs free floating typical? ( DSCN1069, DSCN1077 )
Would the direction of the planking possibly be a clue to its identity? ( PhotoDSCN1079 )
The seats and thwarts appear to be original, and all of the trim is mahogany. ( DSCN1088 )
Any help would be appreciated.
Larry Boeye
The canoe appears to have had sponsons connected at every fourth rib. (Photo DSCN072)
The stems are oak and bear no numbers, but they are 3/4 inch, and show screw holes that do not line up with the existing stem band. could it have had an external stem? ( Photo DSCN1082 )
I am not familiar with long deck canoes, so is framing with the two end ribs free floating typical? ( DSCN1069, DSCN1077 )
Would the direction of the planking possibly be a clue to its identity? ( PhotoDSCN1079 )
The seats and thwarts appear to be original, and all of the trim is mahogany. ( DSCN1088 )
Any help would be appreciated.
Larry Boeye