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  1. memaquay

    What do you use to rustproof your wood stove in the off season?

    I've got two tent stoves now, a kni-co and a G-stove. The G stove is stainless, and has not rusted. The kni-co is rusty, I haven't treated it in 15 years, but it is fine. Our Outers club had Great West stoves that were 50 years old and had never been rust treated. They were rusty but still...
  2. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    Maybe, but did your app track your progress for an entire day, or a short distance? Based on my limited experience (I have one chum who has gone to the double blade dark side) we both arrive at camp at the end of the day at the same time, but I look better with my classy single stick.
  3. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    That's interesting Steve, I never thought of using a double blade for a pole, does it hold up in the long run?
  4. memaquay

    Is this route doable for a novice solo paddler?

    14 k a day will lea e you lots of time for fishing and bird watching. Totally doable.
  5. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    Alan, if you stop calling your canoe naughty names, it will treat you nicer. And you gotta have a set of arms, not twigs hanging out of your shirt sleeves, to push that paddle around.
  6. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    I'm Canadian, and I am very reluctant to play the switchy thing, so Al, I guess you are right. I played around this weekend in my Raven, unloaded, so lots of freeboard. Winds were gusting to almost 50 k per hour, or 30 mph for the metricallly challenged. I paddled for about 3 k into the wind...
  7. memaquay

    Hood loop tie downs

    I have very rarely used bow and stern lines for transport. Actually, I don't think I have ever used them. I have always assumed they were safety lines, in case there was a catastrophic rack failure, as my canoes have always been solidly held on the racks by ropes or cam straps. On the new...
  8. memaquay

    FRENCH RIVER 2022: Lake Nipissing to Georgian Bay

    Wow, I wonder how I missed this report. Excellent job. I did some whitewater training on the French, somewhere around Hartley Bay. I saw more people on the river over the course of five days than actually live in the little town I'm from. Are you planning any trips this summer?
  9. memaquay

    Bears and Meals

    Not to be nosey, but do your September trips still involve coming up to Ontario? My memory is not the best now, but I seem to recall you had been speculating about a trip in Wabakimi maybe? If that is the case, don't worry about the bear vault, just put your food bag outside your tent, if you...
  10. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    I find myself using both measurement systems too, but to be honest, metric is a lot easier if one if fractionally challenged. Most of my students measure their projects in centimetres, although I spend a fair amount of time instructing them in imperial as well.
  11. memaquay

    Thoughts on double bladed paddles from a somewhat experienced double blader.

    Except for woodworking, I haven't found many project plans in Canada using metric.
  12. memaquay

    A Raven from Scratch

    Fifty pounds is great for that canoe. People who haven't seen a Raven before are often surprised by how big it is. I've never found it tender, pretty much the opposite. It was designed by J.Winters as a down river tripper, it does well in river travel. Because of the asymmetrical hull and your...
  13. memaquay

    Poll: Wood Strip Material Choice

    I've worked with quite a few different woods, but hands down prefer our local white cedar. I am going to get some poplar or aspen this fall though and try that as the main wood.
  14. memaquay

    Poll: Would you rather do group meals or cook your own?

    There's always surprises in groups, for instance, surprise Bannock, layered with the surprise mexican jalapeño peppers, the ones the won the hottest peppers in Mexico contest, and the ones that subsequently turned my rosebud into a surprise ring of burning fire, the likes of which had never...
  15. memaquay

    Poll: Would you rather do group meals or cook your own?

    Having organized group meals for extended trips for over 30 years, I don't care to ever do it again. I'm quite happy sharing a fire or using one of my little stoves to make my five minute meal.
  16. memaquay

    Back in the Coho..... Finally.

    Glad to hear you are getting back into the pole of things. I'm hoping to do a real trip this summer too, first in a few years.
  17. memaquay

    Paddling in an Apocalypse

    That's a good plan, but you have forgotten the most important Apocalypse belief......Zombies can't survive the extreme cold, even mild temperatures will slow them down enough double tap them with ease. South America will be knee deep in Zombies.
  18. memaquay

    Paddling in an Apocalypse

    I grew up on Canadian air force bases, my Dad was a radar technician. Nuclear war was a daily reality for us. Because we were the base for the Argus, and then the Aurora, both submarine hunting planes, we were told that we would be included in the first strike of nuclear bombs. The air...
  19. memaquay

    Getting Kids into Canoeing

    I spent 30 years taking high school kids on extended wilderness trips. Our focus was a little different from much of what is being discussed. This might sound somewhat pretentious, my apologies. We were all about trying to get the group to gel into one cohesive unit, where everyone came together...
  20. memaquay

    Help to identify canoe?

    Some of those old fiberglass chopper 3 keeled canoes are tough as heck. I have seen them still going strong with well over 50 years of use.
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