I want to thank all the contributors to this forum for all the useful information, instructions, suggestions, and techniques you provided that helped Steve and I repair the Arthur Templeton canoe built by Doc Blanchard around 1970. We had no idea what we were getting into when we decided to repair this canoe. Had we known that most of our effort would be in finishing and sanding, we might have decided for full restoration. Lesson learned. Regardless, she's back on the water, is watertight, and we are both real pleased with the results.
You'll be albe to tell from the lack of foliage in the pictures that the repair has been done for some time. The pictures were taken with Steve's camera and he could never email them to me. I finally went over his house yesterday with a memory-stick and took copies, which I will try to post here, if I can remember how to do it.
Last winter, I posted a question about seats. I was planning on putting in webbed seats, but I visited canoeist Mike McCrae up in Middleton, Md, and he pulled some old slat seats out of the shop's rafters that we thought looked good. We put them on 5 gal buckets and sat on them over a beer. They seemed comfortable. I built new seats using the ones we got from Mike as a model, and they turned out well. Time will tell how they hold up.
Well, thank you. Fixing up the canoe really opened my eyes to the craft of wood canoes, an aspect of canoeing that had previously escaped my notice. It was wonderful to have the forum here for advice. Plus, I feel like I joined a fraternity of sorts, I enjoyed reading about everybody's projects. In short. THANK YOU!
You'll be albe to tell from the lack of foliage in the pictures that the repair has been done for some time. The pictures were taken with Steve's camera and he could never email them to me. I finally went over his house yesterday with a memory-stick and took copies, which I will try to post here, if I can remember how to do it.
Last winter, I posted a question about seats. I was planning on putting in webbed seats, but I visited canoeist Mike McCrae up in Middleton, Md, and he pulled some old slat seats out of the shop's rafters that we thought looked good. We put them on 5 gal buckets and sat on them over a beer. They seemed comfortable. I built new seats using the ones we got from Mike as a model, and they turned out well. Time will tell how they hold up.
Well, thank you. Fixing up the canoe really opened my eyes to the craft of wood canoes, an aspect of canoeing that had previously escaped my notice. It was wonderful to have the forum here for advice. Plus, I feel like I joined a fraternity of sorts, I enjoyed reading about everybody's projects. In short. THANK YOU!