Howie
Wooden Canoe Maniac
Has any one out there restored or own(ed) a ‘long-deck’ Morris or Veazie? If so, I could use some advice. And pictures.
My good buddy Mike (MGC) gifted me a 16’ Veazie ‘long-deck’ last year (I wrote about it in a Forum last April). I’ve started to dig into it and have found a sea of problems (everything from the rails on up is rotted and needs replacing), but what I’m writing about here is the understructure below the decking.
Here’s a pic of the long-deck as yet unmolested except that the rail caps have been removed. The deck is actually made of two pieces, and has screws holding the outer edges to the inner rails. And underneath the decorative wood trim tacked to the center of the two deck pieces are screws holding the deck pieces center edges to something below.
My problem is with this ‘something below’. You can see from the pics below that there is a “C” shaped thwart that supports the part of the deck that abuts the coaming strip. Then there it is a sort of arrowhead shaped chunk of wood that supports the center of the two deck pieces. Its pointy end was tacked on each side to the first two ribs, while the other end was nailed to the curved thwart thingie. You can see that this chunk of wood has cuts on its top & bottom which allowed it to be easily shaped to the canoes up-bend profile at the tips, and its sides are beveled at 45deg to match the cut in the inner rails. Of course none of these inner parts were ever varnished, and so the arrow-head part is toast.
At first I questioned whether this arrow-head part was original – it just seems like an amateur way of attaching the long-decks given that the canoe is a Morris/Veazie. I figured someone lopped off the ends of the inner rails and made this arrowhead part with cuts in to so he would have to steam-bend it to shape. Plus I haven’t even mentioned that the two (mahogany) long-deck parts were glued? or epoxied? to it - I had to chisel away the decks to free them.
But now I’m not so sure. I'm wondering if this is original. Mike tells me that this is the only Veazie long-deck known to exist. Might someone at Morris have hacked it together like this to fill a special order? Or maybe this is the way Morris always made long decks?
Anybody out there know? Or have an opinion?
My good buddy Mike (MGC) gifted me a 16’ Veazie ‘long-deck’ last year (I wrote about it in a Forum last April). I’ve started to dig into it and have found a sea of problems (everything from the rails on up is rotted and needs replacing), but what I’m writing about here is the understructure below the decking.
Here’s a pic of the long-deck as yet unmolested except that the rail caps have been removed. The deck is actually made of two pieces, and has screws holding the outer edges to the inner rails. And underneath the decorative wood trim tacked to the center of the two deck pieces are screws holding the deck pieces center edges to something below.
My problem is with this ‘something below’. You can see from the pics below that there is a “C” shaped thwart that supports the part of the deck that abuts the coaming strip. Then there it is a sort of arrowhead shaped chunk of wood that supports the center of the two deck pieces. Its pointy end was tacked on each side to the first two ribs, while the other end was nailed to the curved thwart thingie. You can see that this chunk of wood has cuts on its top & bottom which allowed it to be easily shaped to the canoes up-bend profile at the tips, and its sides are beveled at 45deg to match the cut in the inner rails. Of course none of these inner parts were ever varnished, and so the arrow-head part is toast.
At first I questioned whether this arrow-head part was original – it just seems like an amateur way of attaching the long-decks given that the canoe is a Morris/Veazie. I figured someone lopped off the ends of the inner rails and made this arrowhead part with cuts in to so he would have to steam-bend it to shape. Plus I haven’t even mentioned that the two (mahogany) long-deck parts were glued? or epoxied? to it - I had to chisel away the decks to free them.
But now I’m not so sure. I'm wondering if this is original. Mike tells me that this is the only Veazie long-deck known to exist. Might someone at Morris have hacked it together like this to fill a special order? Or maybe this is the way Morris always made long decks?
Anybody out there know? Or have an opinion?