Helpful tip, thanks kona! Especially in reference to another Bell royalex, which I assume has the same style/shape of gunnels.
Oh also, I heard back from someone at Millbrook, presumably Kaz tho they didn't say, that the molds for the Souhegan and Coho went to Hayden's daughter after he passed. So presumably those boats are truly no longer being made, unless someone has new molds made off existing boats. I wonder how many of each exist.....
Yes....I guess you and I have a weakness for uni-dino-corn-a-saur poling boats, eh? I'm continually on the lookout for a boat that poles well, will stand up to rocks, isn't a pig (Heron) or a whirlygig (Souhegan) to paddle solo on the flats, and is light enough for easy cartopping and portaging down to the creek. The white gold Morningstar seems to fit all those except I can't bring myself to scrap up a hull in good shape on rocks. As you said, the Rx version solves the rock issue. It's a bit beastly to carry without a yoke, but I'm hopeful adding a yoke and losing seats might make it fit the bill. We'll see how it paddles solo on flats and lightens up with less seats and a proper yoke.
What are your four dino-corns?
I'm not familiar with the Chesapeake. The others I've heard of but never seen in person, let alone paddled. I see Mohawks for sale around here periodically, but not solos.
Chesapeake is a 12' what most people call recreational kayak. It's a shallow arch hull with soft chines. Extremely Swede form. Very large cockpit (hence, my argument for "decked canoe"). Weighs something under 40 lbs (I forget what, exactly). I read somewhere that it was Wilderness Systems's first kayak, on which the plastic Pungo was based - but it really doesn't resemble that boat much. Think - Poke Boat, but much more refined.
(For Glenn)When I was recovering from an injury, it was the first boat I got into - and I paddled it with a single blade.
I'm heading out for the day, but when I get a chance, I'll post a photo.
Yep.Nice! You could fit a large dog in that cockpit with you.
I've been thinking more about trying a pedestal style seat. Did you make this one yourself? Are there many 'factory'-made on the market?When I want to paddle it, I use this.
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I've been thinking more about trying a pedestal style seat. Did you make this one yourself? Are there many 'factory'-made on the market?
Well, I finally got out the scales and weighed some boats. The RX Morningstar comes in around 60.5 lbs, and that's with only a center seat. I still don't have a yoke and the shape of the gunnels doesn't work that well with the clamp-on yoke I have. The Rx Heron is only 55 lbs with two seats. The WhiteGold Morningstar (center seat only) and Souhegan come in around 44lbs. (And then there's the Penobscot 16 at 68 lbs).I think I like the idea of the royalex Morningstar as a dedicated poling canoe for up to technical class 2+. 55 lbs in standard dress, from what I read. Pulling those seats and dropping that by 3-4 lbs makes an attractive hull, IMO. That one's on my BOLO list.
Well, I finally got out the scales and weighed some boats. The RX Morningstar comes in around 60.5 lbs, and that's with only a center seat. I still don't have a yoke and the shape of the gunnels doesn't work that well with the clamp-on yoke I have. The Rx Heron is only 55 lbs with two seats. The WhiteGold Morningstar (center seat only) and Souhegan come in around 44lbs. (And then there's the Penobscot 16 at 68 lbs).
I do like poling the Rx Morningstar well enough, but it's a bit of a fight car-topping it and getting down the creek bank vs the others. Plus, it's more of a round-bottomed boat, and as I hear more about wanting flat bottom and chines to carve turns, I'm leaning back towards the Heron and Souhegan for the bony creek. (I do like the WG Morningstar for swamp poling, where I'm often paddling the deep stretches as well). I think I need a fixed yoke for the Rx Bell, though I'm tempted to say that's the one to get sold. But, it could be a nice lighter alternative to the Old Town on a rocky river solo camping trip with some minimal portages ....
I did finally see a Coho in person - Chip Cochrane had one at the ACA New England Poling event. Races were cancelled due to flooding, but we still got on the bankfull river for a bit - the guys absolutely schooled me on handling the pushy water - I was struggling to stay upright at times. Chip said the Coho is Swedeform, but he found it's faster poled facing the wider end, so the wide end tends to ride up in front and the narrow end sinks and provides a bit of tracking. I can't remember if he said he pulled in one of the thwarts to get that effect though. I wonder how many Cohos are out there.... I have my eye out for a kevlar MR Explorer or Malecite too....