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  1. Steve in Idaho

    100-year-old Barren Lands canoe expedition mystery solved

    Yeah, great story! Their emotions must have been something akin to what drives archeologists. Cool that they found the cache. And still there remains the mystery of the camera.
  2. Steve in Idaho

    Thoughts on Grasse River/GRB Newman Classic?

    That GRB classic definitely looks fast. Thanks for sharing your experience with the sweet new boat. I can only hope to get a chance at any of those mentioned in this thread. I have a question as an aside... Will you give some details about those loops?
  3. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    I would so love to try a Souhegan. I was having a very good day there. I've been blown out of that wave quickly many times, and I've gone from standing to swimming there more than once. Ideal CFS made me look good.
  4. Steve in Idaho

    Carbon Fiber Delamination

    "Satanic vessel"....huh. I'm glad it was Pete saying that. Mucho cred.
  5. Steve in Idaho

    Carbon Fiber Delamination

    Did Esquif ever make a carbon fiber canoe? That looks like Twintex, which I recall as being known as very difficult to repair. There were several notable posts in the early 2000's about delaminations with the Mistral's balsa wood core in Twintex. I don't know what Twintex actually is or was, but...
  6. Steve in Idaho

    What next? Need recommendations for a solo-able tandem canoe.

    If you're thinking about a Malecite (which I have and agree that it paddles well solo) also consider a Bell Northstar (of which if I understand correctly, the Northstar Polaris is a current iteration), and the Wenonah Escapade. Oh, and the Ranger Otter.
  7. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    Those Maine guides were into poling in that configuration too. This might be more thread drift, but now you're reminding me of this video you've probably seen in one or more of the poling threads. Stern carving... Under less extreme conditions I would be standing just behind the yoke to carve...
  8. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    That has certainly been my experience. It's interesting though that my preferred flatwater solos are as long as some of my tandems. Longer, even, than my first two. The first thing I noticed was easier lifting and carrying, even for the same given weight. Then it was easier reach to the water...
  9. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    So, looking back at my question about symmetrical vs swedeform - I guess I don't have an answer to that, since there are other differences in the hull shape between my two 15.5' solos. It's likely that the chine shape and width differences are just as much or more in play. The only thing I can...
  10. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    Yes. That's my ski jargon leaking in. :)
  11. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    Yeah, they're quite different. I used a curve copying device to show it clearly. Both measurements are taken where I sit. Notice in this photo, the guide is lined up close to the middle of the Solitude hull. In this one, the end of the guide is a just a little past the center on the Moccasin...
  12. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    Good question. As soon as the sun comes up and sheds light on the lean-to, I'll take a closer look at both of them. Off the top of my head, I'm going to say the chines are probably different, but I can't describe from memory.
  13. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    Thanks, Erik. I had forgotten about that discussion and the mention of the Yellowstone being swedeform. ...Or maybe it's just that you're on the right shoulder of that bell curve and your forward stroke doesn't suck. ;) I'm a welter weight, and while I don't have a Yellowstone to compare, I...
  14. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    I think we've narrowed all this down to "it depends". ;)
  15. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    That seems intuitive. And like I said, I'm going on memory - so that is suspect. I really need to get both boats on the lake on the same calm day. The "calm" thing has been rare around here lately.
  16. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    So, what about edging symmetrical (below the waterline) vs Swedeform? I still have to get the Moccasin and the Solitude out on the same day for comparison, but just going on memory it seems that the Solitude responds to edging for a turn a bit more than the Moccasin. Both 15.5' long. Both zero...
  17. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    True. If I ever see a Magic or NW Solo in my price range within a day's drive, I'm all over that.
  18. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    I thought that too, until I got one. In fact, I remember seeing specs listed somewhere that showed zero bow and 1" stern, and I thought at the time that must be a misprint. But then I observed it on my own two examples. Actually, I think it would be described more accurately as deadrise. All the...
  19. Steve in Idaho

    Impact of Heeling - Canoe Design

    The Malecite is an interesting sideline to this discussion, since what little rocker it has is in the stern. Unfortunately, it's been a very long time since I last paddled it solo. So I can't say much about that. Paddling it tandem with my wife, it doesn't get leaned much to turn, other than...
  20. Steve in Idaho

    1994 Old Town Penobscot 16 Added to Fleet

    Try again with the JB. I did a "temporary" repair on the cracked aluminum rail on my Penobscot that never came off. I think you just have to get the surface real clean and possibly sand off any oxidation before adding the JB. Come to think of it, I did a field repair years ago on an aluminum...
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