G
Guest
Guest
No, I will not fling you beads from a Bourbon St. balcony. I am not allowed back on Bourbon St.
But it could be interesting to see how folks are storing their boats.
PC120075 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
That one started as four 4 x 4s concreted in the ground, with old 10 foot long 2x6 deck boards as crossbars. The crossbars are topped with 2.5 inch PVC pipe with a slot cut out so the canoe with flange washers slid on slippery easy. I would tie the boats down anyway, but absolutely with that slippery PVC pipe cap.
A four+ boat extension was eventually built off one side. In short Honey Do order, because SWMBO mentioned that the canoes on sawhorses in the yard looked trashy, and I that should just build an extension to the rack. The two additional 4x4s where concreted in the ground the same day.
Hmm, whoda thunk it? I see four boats in that photo that need reflective tape. I think I will wait until it is warmer out.
Inside space storage is limited to one shop wall. Those boats get dusty as hell, but a wood gunwale canoe, a couple clear coat glass and nylon boats and the Precious, My Precious MRC Monarch, all live indoors along that far wall.
Racked on beefy brackets with beefy 2 inch screws into the wall studs. Augmented with cam straps through eye screws in the ceiling joists for belt and suspenders, uh, suspension.
PC160119 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
And a couple feet of vacant shop floor space beside that indoor rack to store a clean, dry and warm boat candidate for the next shop work on short sawhorses.
If only I could. I need to bring the Live Aboard Miramichi back in soon. It is outside on horses, armor encased in a solid inch of ice and refrozen snow. I hit it with a rubber mallet to no avail and my son, watching out the window, burst out laughing. dang kids.
But it could be interesting to see how folks are storing their boats.

That one started as four 4 x 4s concreted in the ground, with old 10 foot long 2x6 deck boards as crossbars. The crossbars are topped with 2.5 inch PVC pipe with a slot cut out so the canoe with flange washers slid on slippery easy. I would tie the boats down anyway, but absolutely with that slippery PVC pipe cap.
A four+ boat extension was eventually built off one side. In short Honey Do order, because SWMBO mentioned that the canoes on sawhorses in the yard looked trashy, and I that should just build an extension to the rack. The two additional 4x4s where concreted in the ground the same day.
Hmm, whoda thunk it? I see four boats in that photo that need reflective tape. I think I will wait until it is warmer out.
Inside space storage is limited to one shop wall. Those boats get dusty as hell, but a wood gunwale canoe, a couple clear coat glass and nylon boats and the Precious, My Precious MRC Monarch, all live indoors along that far wall.
Racked on beefy brackets with beefy 2 inch screws into the wall studs. Augmented with cam straps through eye screws in the ceiling joists for belt and suspenders, uh, suspension.

And a couple feet of vacant shop floor space beside that indoor rack to store a clean, dry and warm boat candidate for the next shop work on short sawhorses.
If only I could. I need to bring the Live Aboard Miramichi back in soon. It is outside on horses, armor encased in a solid inch of ice and refrozen snow. I hit it with a rubber mallet to no avail and my son, watching out the window, burst out laughing. dang kids.