• Happy Elated Jubilant Ecstatic National Thesaurus Day! 🟰

What are the best river and inland lake canoes of all time?

Joined
Oct 13, 2025
Messages
15
Reaction score
73
Just a “for fun” topic, but I am curious as it’s helpful information for those of us new to canoeing who want to do some camping/river trips.

Thanks!
 
The Tripper would also be my list, but it's too bad they weren't made in a lighter sleeker composite. I don't think you can go wrong with a Prospector or Northstar Seliga either. I like a symmetrical large volume hull, deep enough and with enough flare to keep you dry. There are faster hulls that are less affected by wind, but IMO they are not as sea worthy when things get sketchy.
 
Schuyler Thomson, retired canoe restorer, builder, told me he considered the 17’ Chestnut Prospector to be the best all around canoe. He restored over 1500 canoes, built over 100 new, he supplied new and repaired canoes for Keewaydin (Vermont)
Of course his opinion is biased towards wood canvas canoes and a modern “Prospector” canoe has little in common with an original Chestnut Prospector.
 
That's a tricky question. First, one has to define "best". Best construction, or best finish? Best for lakes or best for mild rivers? Best for big whitewater? Best for durability or best for light weight? Of all of the above, best tandem or best solo?

I know I can't even answer the question, but it can be a long discussion. I'm not sure I've ever been in a "best" canoe of any category, but a few are high on my list. Others that I haven't been in may be better but not better enough to run out and buy one new. And the betterness for my size, my skill, and my use would be only speculation based on my understanding of what makes canoes do what they do.

I suspect that the best flat water solo canoe for me would be a Northstar Magic in Blacklight.
I suspect that the best solo river tripper for me would be the Swift Dragonfly 15 in Expedition Kevlar - but I might have to up my game a little.
I'm pretty sure the best all-around tandem for me would be the Northstar B16 in IXP.

But there are a lot of other canoes I'm sure I can be perfectly happy in. This could be a very long discussion if we don't reject the premise of "best" out of hand.
 
This seems to be a recurring winter question. The first link below has a similar discussion here from early February of 2024. Dan Miller was the curator at the Antique Boat Museum in Clayton, New York many years ago and assembled an assortment of canoes that had been described as the 'perfect canoe' at different times from well over a hundred years. It is interesting to see how that definition changed over time. The second link below has the example from that exhibit for the 1960s (which would probably not be anyone's choice today).

Benson





 
two other chums and all your camping gear plus 24 beers and go on a trip
Only 24? That's a quick trip isn't it?

I'll agree with the sentiment, however. I'll never be a connoisseur of canoes and I'm quite happy with whatever I can build, borrow or afford to buy.

The perfect canoe is the one that you'll use, whether that means it's light enough to portage, it's scratched up enough that you don't have to baby it or it's already stashed at the far end of a portage somewhere.

This time of the year, even paddling a cast iron bathtub sounds perfect to me.
 
Memaquay nailed it. I really enjoyed and used my 17’ Sears aluminum canoe, purchased new in the spring of 1970, on a number of BWCA trips and UP of Michigan trips. Even took my first basic whitewater class using that canoe. I replaced it in 1983 with a new OT Tripper which I really liked for 23 years until those 80#’s became too much.

It was a great canoe on the lakes and down river and it was bullet proof. My diminishing physical abilities dictated Kevlar, which worked well weight-wise for the past 20 years. Now I am eyeing my brother’s light weight kevlar boat (same hull as mine but 12 pounds lighter - very noticeable to me as I rapidly approach 80).
 
I think the important thing to know is that of the long established canoe makers (excluding those makers of all things plastic) that have managed to stay in business over the ups and downs of the last few decades - are there any canoes that might not be the best for somebody ?
I think the answer is no. I can't think of any model from these companies that won't be the best choice for some class of individuals' intended use. We may not be in the Golden Age of canoeing, but IMO, our available selection of canoes is truly golden.
 
Back
Top Bottom