Hi Benson,
Thank you very much for the quick response, that sounds exactly like my canoe and aligns with where I purchased it as well. I do have some follow up questions if appropriate to post them here. My plan is to repair it so that I can use it and do it as correctly as I can, knowing this is my first attempt at this type of canoe repair. I also attached some photos of the canoe taken when I first got it home.
- I see the thwarts are mahogany and glad to know since one was rotted at the end and I have to make one. The canoe came with two thwarts, one at each end with one of the two un-attached due to the rot. However there are screws in the middle for a third. Do you know if this canoe had three thwarts originally, or did someone just add one over the years. Most of the pictures I see have only two thwarts, but I wasn't sure if that was only because they were shorter than 18 feet.
- I'm going to try to sand and salvage the inner and outer gunwales. In my other canoes that often have fiberglass and wood trim or kevlar and wood trim, I was under the impression that I should oil the gunwales rather than varnish for those canoes, and varnish the inside wood if there is some. But I notice from the sites that often people varnish the deck plates and gunwales. Should I be sanding and varnishing them rather than use oil? If I varnish, is the wood typically lightly stained first?
- You can see from the pictures that I am expecting some rot on the stems once I remove some of the rotted pieces. What type of wood should I typically use to replace the rotted end of the stems if I need to scarf a piece into the original?
- Lastly (sorry I often ask way too many questions), the inside was redone as I understand a few years ago and then left outside unfortunately. So the outside has some rot, but the inside actually held up fairly well. I was thinking of lightly sanding and then varnishing the inside. Any thoughts there on the best approach?
Thanks! Bill