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    Cheap single burner stove for a chuck box?

    A relatively small bottle-top propane stove is my usual stove for weekend trips. The possibility of tipping does concern me a bit but it hasn't been a big problem. The major problem for me is wind. If there is any breeze a lot of the heat gets blown away from the kettle and it seems to take...
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    Useless gear, equipment and garments

    Cheap solar shower. It wasn't a high quality product - one time the shower head fell off the hose in the middle of a shower, and it was a bit awkward to fill and hang the bag in a suitable place. Also, maybe the water would have heated up enough to be worth it if left in the sun all day, but...
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    Bell kneeling pad top fabric peeling off

    Thanks yellowcanoe, I will look for Gorilla fabric glue. My T-pad has been sitting around unused for a number of years since my initial repair attempt. I just now pulled it out from the bottom of a pile of pads and dry bags and see that it has developed some (permanent?) indentations from...
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    Electrical device you are most likely and least likely to eliminate

    Headlamp for me too is probably the last thing I'd give up. Also I'm so used to having a watch that I'd probably have a hard time giving that up and it's been decades since I've had a wind-up watch. Most easily left behind would probably be my cell phone or hearing aids. I've started using...
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    Bell kneeling pad top fabric peeling off

    It has been awhile since I tried to do anything with this pad, but I think my first try was just spreading a thin layer of contact cement on the rubber part and pressing the fabric down. The fabric didn't stay glued down when I used the pad again so the second time I tried to spread contact...
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    Bell kneeling pad top fabric peeling off

    The thin knit fabric top on my Bell T-pad kneeling pad is coming unglued. I've twice tried unsuccessfully to glue it back down on the pad with contact cement but it didn't stick and I just ended up peeling more of the fabric loose in the process. Anyone have success with getting the fabric to...
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    Paddling in a lightning storm

    The one time I remember being in a situation like that I went into a small cove with trees along the shore and hunkered down in the bottom of the royalex solo canoe waiting out the storm and wondering whether that was the appropriate choice. I was less than a mile from the landing I was heading...
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    Wood paddles - which style and maker do you like?

    A straight shaft Sawyer Cedar Voyager (now apparently just called Voyager) is currently my most frequently used paddle. To avoid wear on the Voyager in shallow gravel streams I'll sometimes use a Bending Branches Sunshadow. The Sunshadow, which isn't a current model listed on their website...
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    Canoe designs for a small person or child

    Maybe a Woodstrip Watercraft Teal model? http://woodstrip.wcha.org/index.html It says plans are available for the Teal and the description seems to fit the type of canoe you are talking about. I have no experience with these canoes but had bookmarked this when fantasizing about building a strip...
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    Sunglasses

    Costco has prescription glasses at a significantly lower price than other stores in town. Not a great selection of frames, but I found ones that work for me. Even though my prescription has been changing more lately (the Dr. says cataracts can do that) I splurged and got 4 pairs last month...
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    Sunglasses

    I've settled on prescription polarized bifocal sunglasses with a minimal reading area. Sometimes opticians don't quite believe me when I try to describe how low I want the dividing line between reading and distance for glasses I am getting specifically for outdoor activities such as hiking and...
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    Solo Canoe for Ohio and Mississippi River

    The Wenonah Voyager is great on big rivers like the Mississippi if you want to get going and paddle at a steady pace to cover distance, though it can be hard to handle in the wind, but it is not good for start and stop sorts of trips. Before paddling the Voyager I didn't really appreciate the...
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    Solo Canoe for Ohio and Mississippi River

    A spray cover such as those made by CCS can help in wind as well as deflecting splashes from waves so you could have some of the advantages of a decked canoe with any canoe. Don't know if you are looking for new or used, but if you can find a suitable used canoe to start with, even if it isn't...
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    Flotation

    A guy on Paddling.com posted about adding flotation to an Old Town Guide 147 canoe by strapping peanut shaped yoga balls into the ends: https://forums.paddling.com/t/flotation-safety-yoga-balls/106804 Maybe something similar to what he did would work for adding relatively inexpensive flotation...
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    Swift Cruisers Anyone

    I've only briefly test paddled Swift Cruisers, but my impression of the 14.8 was that it was small enough to be easy to accelerate and had great glide, taking less effort to cruise along. Three or four years ago I had gone to a Swift demo day - hadn't given any serious thought to the Cruisers...
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    Lost (misplaced) a tool

    I'm a hoarder and although I'm told it is easy to de-clutter - just give or throw things away - I haven't mastered that concept, so I'm frequently looking for things. Sometimes in the process of looking for something I run across something else I forgot I had. Recently when sorting through...
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    The first canoe you ever PADDLED and the circumstances

    My introduction to paddling was in old wood and canvas canoes at Rucker Lake Girl Scout Camp in the Sierras in 1966. Don't know if the camp canoes were Old Towns or something else. They were rather beat up and many leaked a bit, but I was happy to be out on the water.
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    ​Patching (and inspecting) dry bags

    The Watershed bags I have seem designed to roll 270 deg. at the top, though occasionally I stuff them too full to roll the last 180. They do get difficult to open and close if I don't periodically wipe the closing strips with 303.
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    RIP J-Stroke: ACA No Longer Teaches the J-Stroke (EDIT: Or Does It?)

    Perhaps the idea is to help emphasize ending the forward stroke at the hip and avoiding the tendency to lift water that occurs when a power stroke is carried too far back. I was taught a thumb-down J at Girl Scout camp more than 50 years ago so that is the style I'm used to, but keeping the...
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