T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1111.1 | Find a different canoe | SALEM::NORCROSS_W | | Mon Sep 13 1993 14:36 | 9 |
| Personally, I would try a different canoe. If you only want it for
fishing and not white water work, there are canoes out there that will
do what you need. I had a 15' Lincoln Assabett canoe that four adults
could stand up in in relatively rough water and it still wouldn't tip
over. It weighed 125 pounds and was hard to paddle but it was great
for fishing. I also owned a Grunman aluminum that would capsize
practically on it's own but was real fast. I'm sure you could rig up
some type of outrigger but then you've lost the ability to go where
canoes are meant to go.
|
1111.2 | Go Hawaiian... | RIPPLE::CORBETTKE | | Mon Sep 13 1993 15:42 | 3 |
| You could look into building yourself an outrigger.
Ken
|
1111.3 | Outriggers are out there | ESBLAB::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Tue Sep 14 1993 00:17 | 37 |
| re: .0
There are outriggers available and even if you didn't buy a commercial
product at least you could get some ideas on how to fabricate one
yourself.
Grumman makes a pontoon/outrigger stabilizer that's pretty popular with
duck hunters - a bud' that I used to duck-hunt with in the Pacific NW
had a set for his 17' double-ender. They made a heck of a difference
when we were shooting our 10 gauges together (which otherwise would
damn near chuck us out of the canoe without the pontoons).
As I recall the rig has a pair of ~5' pontoons (made of closed-cell
foam) connected with crossbars that clamp to the gunwales. Went on in
a snap, and the pontoons were narrow enough that it didn't impede
gliding much at all.
I don't recognize the node name, but if you're in the general vicinity
of MA. you can call the South Bridge Boat House in Concord to find out
cost and availability.
FWIW: Canoes vary all over the place as far as stability vs. weight vs.
ease of forward motion. I have a Grumman that is one of the slickest,
lightest boats in the water, but with its mere 34" beam it can be a bear
to fish from - especially if lightly loaded. I also have an Old Town
Katahdin which is a beautiful canoe and is excellent to fish from (46"
beam and flat bottom) but is a bit of a sled when making headway.
At the extreme of stability is the SportsPal, which has a 52" beam, foam
stabilizers applied alongside the hull, and weighs a ton, but can't get
out of its own way to save its (or your) life. These are great for
shooting platforms but I wouldn't want one for fishing - at least
without an outboard on it!
Good luck!
/dave
|
1111.4 | stabilizers? | SALEM::LAYTON | | Tue Sep 14 1993 14:37 | 3 |
| How good are those foam stabilizers that attach just under the gunwales?
Carl
|
1111.6 | Don't Hole The Hull | ESBLAB::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Wed Sep 15 1993 00:29 | 16 |
| re: .4
I've only seen those mounted on the SportsPal - which hardly seems to
need it given the 52" beam. I would hate to think of holing a hull
to bolt on those foam bumpers, in any case. I don't think a glass hull
would take the stress at the bolts - though maybe ABS or Royalex might
handle them, certainly the aluminum hulls should.
Not knowing the specifics of the basenote, it's hard to figure what
might help the situation. Perhaps some strategically placed ballast can
help stabilize the canoe: when my kids were just wee sprites I'd place
one of those 5 gallon collapsible water "jugs" up in the bow of my
17'er to level her out (as the kids weren't contributing much in the
ballast department at that age ;^).
/dave
|
1111.7 | or glue em. | SALEM::LAYTON | | Wed Sep 15 1993 13:11 | 2 |
| I suppose you could glue or epoxy them on, rather than hole the hull.
Of course, it's still not a reversible mod.
|
1111.8 | Thanks for the suggestions! | MRKTNG::DESHARNAIS | Knowledge is Power | Thu Sep 16 1993 11:05 | 18 |
| Thanks for the inputs. I called around and found out about the
Grunman pontoon setup. It goes for about $120. It was designed
specifically for the Grunman canoe (an excellent canoe, by the way)
but could probably be modified to fit my canoe.
By the way, I have a Coleman. It has served us well but it handles
like a oil tanker. :-)
After thinking it over, we'll probably be getting a 14 ft. Game Fisher
aluminum V-hull with a small motor. The canoe's been fun, but time to
move on to something a little more practical for bass fishing. We're
going to check out Sears this weekend to see if they have any left on
clearance.
Now if we could just find those big lunker bass...
Regards,
Denis
|
1111.9 | smart move | RANGER::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Tue Sep 21 1993 13:19 | 14 |
| re: alum v hull
Good idea. Much more practical, and comfortable.
You might want to check out Greene's Marine in Hooksett. They're one
of the nations top Sea Nymph dealers (Sea Nymph manufactures Sears
Gamefishers). They might be able to beat the price, epsecially this
time of year when they may have some overstock, or maybe even some
blems.
They might also be able to put you into a little Merc as opposed
to the Eska.
have fun, -donmac
|
1111.10 | Just saw one | VICKI::DODIER | Cars suck, then they die | Mon Oct 18 1993 17:33 | 3 |
| I just saw a used 9.9hp Merc in the clasifieds for $900.
Ray
|