• Happy 54th Wedding Anniversary, Maggie!👰🏻‍♀️💒

What are your current solo canoes and how do you like them?

My neighbor has a row of sumac trees that are about forty feet tall and fairly straight. I don't know how good they are structurally, but they'd be a sustainable supply for sure. Invasive buggers.
 
Holy thread drift Batman!

The Sumacs we're interested in are the Buckhorn, Smooth & Fragrant Sumacs all of which produce seed heads of red, fuzzy berries that can be brewed into a tea & chilled to make a very pleasant pink lemonade facsimile.

Poison Sumac is more shrub-like and produces white berries. They're very easy to tell apart once you know what you're looking at. Incidentally, I know a local Forester who has a variety of woods including a sample of Poison Ivy. (I'm not nearly crazy enough to attempt a boat from that)

A "massive Sumac" is almost certainly Tree of Heaven, aka Chinese Sumac. They're very invasive and not particularly interesting as wood but I may use one to build a canoe someday just to rid the world of one and see if I can render it's existence worthwhile.

Anyway... I have a Goldenglass Sawyer Summersong, a Bear Mountain Freedom Solo stripper (16' 3" version) built from Aspen & Cherry, A John Winters designed Raven stripper in Eastern Larch (aka Tamarac) & Sassafras and a Northwest Canoe Merlin stripper in White Pine & Cherry that I'm hoping to actually finish before the snow flies.

I was waiting to post in this thread until I'd paddled each enough to relate my impressions of them but I screwed up and derailed the whole stinkin' thread a bit (oops... As you were...)
 

Sumac, a famously native tree of Iran, has been infesting Gamma's boat building brain for more than six years now:


Time to queue back some sumac and glue/tack.
 
Holy thread drift Batman!

The Sumacs we're interested in are the Buckhorn, Smooth & Fragrant Sumacs all of which produce seed heads of red, fuzzy berries that can be brewed into a tea & chilled to make a very pleasant pink lemonade facsimile.

Poison Sumac is more shrub-like and produces white berries. They're very easy to tell apart once you know what you're looking at. Incidentally, I know a local Forester who has a variety of woods including a sample of Poison Ivy. (I'm not nearly crazy enough to attempt a boat from that)

A "massive Sumac" is almost certainly Tree of Heaven, aka Chinese Sumac. They're very invasive and not particularly interesting as wood but I may use one to build a canoe someday just to rid the world of one and see if I can render it's existence worthwhile.

Anyway... I have a Goldenglass Sawyer Summersong, a Bear Mountain Freedom Solo stripper (16' 3" version) built from Aspen & Cherry, A John Winters designed Raven stripper in Eastern Larch (aka Tamarac) & Sassafras and a Northwest Canoe Merlin stripper in White Pine & Cherry that I'm hoping to actually finish before the snow flies.

I was waiting to post in this thread until I'd paddled each enough to relate my impressions of them but I screwed up and derailed the whole stinkin' thread a bit (oops... As you were...)

Had to look up tree of heaven. Yeah, that's what the neighbors have. Strange name for that evil Thing. But now I know how to manage them...


I can get some big logs of that for anyone who wants to mill them into strips. :)

I have staghorn sumac on my place. And yes, the flowers make a good tea, but my honeybees like them so much I leave them for the bees. Not getting any useable lumber from them.
 
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