• Happy Golden Retriever Day! 🐕‍🦺👅💛

Pack canoeists, do you use portage thwarts or yokes?

Glenn MacGrady

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 24, 2012
Messages
6,622
Reaction score
12,681
Location
Connecticut
A portage thwart can't be permanently installed because it would interfere with the central seat. Many pack canoes have thin or no inwales, so there is nothing or nothing much for a clamp-on portage yoke to clamp onto.

So, how do you pack canoeists carry your canoes? With some sort of attachable portage yoke—what kind? Or do you just not bother because of the canoe's light weight?
 
i have posted the photo of me carying my Hornbeck with a Knupak many times and will not repeat tha here. But i do have a photo of the knupak breing mounted on a custom bent yoke temporarily held at the canoe's CG by with bolts and finger tight nuts through the wood gunwales. Time to transition from paddling to carry mode and vice-versa is less than 4 minutes.

The lack of an inwale on my Blackwaer is overcome by having Ben Diller at SR glue in short blocks at the CG to acept the clamp on yoke.
Bill Swift installed threaded recepticles into the gunwale of my Cruiser to accept nob mounted bolts that work with the same yoke that I use on the BW. Joe Moore did the same on my PB Shadow, while my Gen1 Rapidfire has wood gunwales with an inner inwale to accepthornbeck knupac mount.jpegBW yoke.jpegBW gunwale block.jpeg the clamp.
 
You might be able to use a fairly conventional yoke, especially if the boat is very light. PakCanoes have 3/4" or so aluminum tubing inside fabric as the gunwales, providing very little room for purchase. However their yoke works fine for carrying the 60 pound boat. The yoke is routed with a channel for the gunwale, and opposite is a wooden clamp that rotates under the rounded gunwale, tightened by a screwed knob. I'll provide a photo after a while a (still having my morning coffee).
 
For short distances I just throw it over a shoulder. The Trillium is 27 lbs so I can manage that. For longer distances it digs into the shoulder and gets uncomfortable. That’s when I use a detachable yoke, I got a wood one from Northstar. I initially got the yoke with foam on it; it was not comfortable at all so I picked up shoulder pads similiar to what ykn shows in his picture. I have aluminum gunwales on my canoe and have no trouble clamping the yoke to them.
 
Now in my mid 70’s we started using portage yokes. My Northstar Trillium is easy but my wife’s Placidboat Oseetah was a challenge until I came up with this solution.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0161.jpeg
    IMG_0161.jpeg
    212.4 KB · Views: 16
  • IMG_2089.jpeg
    IMG_2089.jpeg
    90.3 KB · Views: 16
So this only just occurred to me today after writing my response earlier. I got my Trillium converted from a pack seat to a standard canoe seat with 4" seated drops, so I'm not sure my current yoke setup is going to work. I guess I'll have to figure that out.
 
I use the Swift carbon fiber yoke on my Prospector 14 Pack. They didn't have it worked out the first year or so, and the clamp slipped. The add a piece of tape on the gunwale and it usually works. Tighten the clamp really good.

They have since incorporated a threaded insert in the gunwales. I haven't used it. Bill Swift said they would add it to mine for a reasonable price. Would like to plan an Algonquin PP trip and drop it off while I trip in my other solo.
 
Back
Top Bottom