My neighbor has a row of sumac trees that are about forty feet tall and fairly straight. I don't know how good they are structurally, but they'd be a sustainable supply for sure. Invasive buggers.
Sumac
Holy thread drift Batman!
The Sumacs we're interested in are the Buckhorn, Smooth & Fragrant Sumacs all of which produce seed heads of red, fuzzy berries that can be brewed into a tea & chilled to make a very pleasant pink lemonade facsimile.
Poison Sumac is more shrub-like and produces white berries. They're very easy to tell apart once you know what you're looking at. Incidentally, I know a local Forester who has a variety of woods including a sample of Poison Ivy. (I'm not nearly crazy enough to attempt a boat from that)
A "massive Sumac" is almost certainly Tree of Heaven, aka Chinese Sumac. They're very invasive and not particularly interesting as wood but I may use one to build a canoe someday just to rid the world of one and see if I can render it's existence worthwhile.
Anyway... I have a Goldenglass Sawyer Summersong, a Bear Mountain Freedom Solo stripper (16' 3" version) built from Aspen & Cherry, A John Winters designed Raven stripper in Eastern Larch (aka Tamarac) & Sassafras and a Northwest Canoe Merlin stripper in White Pine & Cherry that I'm hoping to actually finish before the snow flies.
I was waiting to post in this thread until I'd paddled each enough to relate my impressions of them but I screwed up and derailed the whole stinkin' thread a bit (oops... As you were...)
And now, back to our regularly scheduled programming...Holy thread drift Batman!
Updated: As of 11/30/2025#1: Hemlock Eaglet in lite-tech layup 38#
#2: Northstar Northwind Solo in starlite layup wood trim 29#
#3: Placid Boatworks Shadow in ultralight 23#
#4: Hornbeck New Tricks 14 23#
#5: Swift Dragonfly with metal flake exterior paint, expedition kevlar 38#
I love them all!
The image of me on Jabe was the same day I picked up my Hornbeck. Plan was to camp overnight BUT all the sites were taken. So I hit a brewery in Bolton Landing instead before heading home. Sadly I have not been back to Jabe@adkjoe I've been to Jabe and Little Jabe, both great short hikes from Silver Bay. Spent many summer weeks there as a kid, and unfortunately few as an adult.
@Punkinhead I have a Northstar Polaris with 3 seats. It it works nicely as a big solo, or with me and 2 kids, or as a tandem.
I have the same problem with my Phoenix and 65lb pooch. It's passable when he sits between my knees (I kneel), especially with a tripping load behind the seat. But as he's getting older he wants to lie down a lot, and to do that he has to hop the front thwart and then his weight is really way up there and the trim is terrible - it's almost worth going backwards in a tailwind. I thought about moving the thwart but sadly we're getting out together in the canoe less and less due to his arthritis.My main solo is a Northstar Phoenix in IXP. It's perfect for the shallow rocky rivers I prefer. The only downside is it's badly out of trim when my 60lb dog comes along. She doesn't come very often because rapids stress her out, but when she does the bow plows and it takes on a lot of water in wave trains. If she came along regularly I'd remount the seat farther back
to do that he has to hop the front thwart and then his weight is really way up there and the trim is terrible - it's almost worth going backwards in a tailwind.
I have a 10L waterbag I stick as far back as possible in the stern. It helps, but not enough. I could certainly add more but it's a balance of inconveniences.What about adding weight in the stern to counterbalance him? A dry bag partially filled with water always worked for me.
Alan
Yes, I was planning on it, but decided that his diminishing rate of outings probably doesn't justify drilling more holes in the gunnels.Tsuga8
Can you move the thwart so he can lay down close to you?