If you are like I am right now, staying home with lots of time for working on canoes, you’ve found that you can only sand white cedar for so many hours and then you have to do something else, - one of those other things being the reading of a book. Recently I bought Canoe Trails and Shop Tales by Hugh Stewart. Hugh was the owner/operator of a canoeing camp in Ontario named Headwaters, doing canoe tripping in the summer, and in the winter building wood/canvas Headwaters canoes. One of his forms is an original 17’ Chestnut Prospector. You can search on Headwaters canoes in these forums and find several posts. Other worthwhile places to look are:
and https://www.explore-mag.com/A-Classic-Canadian-Canoe-Maker-Passes-the-Torch.
Only recently has Hugh eased himself out of the canoe building business, which continues to operate, and has written this book, which is a kind of reminiscence. There is no plot, but rather a series of chapters on various topics which interest Hugh. As someone who paddled in the north most every summer for years, obviously there has to be some tripping stories, but in addition he talks about some memorable people he has met along the way, the lumberyard from which he obtains white cedar, and his philosophy of forestry and portaging. He talks a lot about the wilderness tripping ethic, and how a wooden canoe is the perfect vessel for that. He shows his interest in researching and re-tracing the canoe routes taken by explorers of the north, particularly AP Low, JB Tyrrell and others in the Geologic Survey of Canada who made lengthy surveying trips in wooden canoes. A number of maps and B&W photos are included.
This book is published by McGahern Stewart Publishing, Ottawa, which has brought back into print several northern classics, like Sleeping Island by PG Downes, but strangely I did not find this book listed on Amazon. You may have to order it from your local bookseller: ISBN 978-0-9868600-7-2.
Well written and enjoyable, I fear this book will not find a wide audience, but if you self-identify with the small cadre of wooden canoe devotees, and find yourself with sanding fatigue, chances are you will like it. Tom McCloud
and https://www.explore-mag.com/A-Classic-Canadian-Canoe-Maker-Passes-the-Torch.
Only recently has Hugh eased himself out of the canoe building business, which continues to operate, and has written this book, which is a kind of reminiscence. There is no plot, but rather a series of chapters on various topics which interest Hugh. As someone who paddled in the north most every summer for years, obviously there has to be some tripping stories, but in addition he talks about some memorable people he has met along the way, the lumberyard from which he obtains white cedar, and his philosophy of forestry and portaging. He talks a lot about the wilderness tripping ethic, and how a wooden canoe is the perfect vessel for that. He shows his interest in researching and re-tracing the canoe routes taken by explorers of the north, particularly AP Low, JB Tyrrell and others in the Geologic Survey of Canada who made lengthy surveying trips in wooden canoes. A number of maps and B&W photos are included.
This book is published by McGahern Stewart Publishing, Ottawa, which has brought back into print several northern classics, like Sleeping Island by PG Downes, but strangely I did not find this book listed on Amazon. You may have to order it from your local bookseller: ISBN 978-0-9868600-7-2.
Well written and enjoyable, I fear this book will not find a wide audience, but if you self-identify with the small cadre of wooden canoe devotees, and find yourself with sanding fatigue, chances are you will like it. Tom McCloud