T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1087.1 | piece of cake | MOSAIC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Tue Apr 11 1989 16:46 | 10 |
| I built a rack that allowed me to toss the canoe up by myself -
without demolishing the top of the car. Most canoe/boat racks have
just two rails, I made one with 4 rails. That way I could lie the
canoe perpendicular to the car, toss up one end of the canoe onto the
side of the rack, then lift the other end of the canoe, push it up onto
the rack (still perpendicular) and then rotate the canoe parallel with
the car. I also made it so the canoe fit snuggly between the two side
rails, this helped keep it real secure.
Don Mac (who now just slides it up on the truck cap)
|
1087.2 | Lifting scenario | CURIE::GOODENOW | | Tue Apr 11 1989 16:48 | 22 |
| What does it weigh? How long is it? How big are you?
I have a moderate-sized canoe [16'] and I elevate it by lifting
it from the rear, putting all its weight on the bow. As I tip it
I bend over and walk under it until I am at the center bar, which
I rest on the back of my neck and shoulders. Putting my hands on
the sides, one about two feet further down the canoe than the other,
I balance the canoe and then stand up and walk it over to the top
of the car. I use foam blocks, which have been firmly attached to
the boat. Using them, it is easy to slide the boat onto the car and then
secure it. Once you master this technique you'll be surprised how
much weight you can get up over your head --and how easy it is
to do it in reverse.
But be careful when practicing this. Don't do it after a beer!
It does take practice and some strength.
I don't know whether this bit of info will help. Sometime, when
the canoe is on the car, stop by a place that sells them and
get advice.
Ron
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1087.3 | Look in a canoeing book for methods | CSSE32::DORSEY | | Wed Apr 12 1989 10:04 | 15 |
| Methods for single person canoe lifts are described/illustrated in
most canoeing books. My Royalex Mad River Explorer weighs about
95 lbs when rigged for white water. My technique differs from
the previous reply in the way I get the canoe to my shoulders.
I position myself at the center of the canoe with the bottom against
my lower legs. Next I place one hand on the part of the center thwart
closest to me and the other hand grips the far gunnel. Then I lift/roll
the canoe with my knee and arms to my shoulders. I'd recommend that
you look at illustrations in a canoing book or have someone show you
how to do it. The method I've described is very fast and does not
take a lot of strength (I'm a 40+ years old 140 lb wimp) but does
take a fair amount of agility and confidence.
|
1087.4 | Just lift it,and put it on....a 66lb canoe makes it easy.... | STOWMA::LANGE | Toxic Waste Pinata | Wed Apr 12 1989 11:23 | 5 |
| I've got a 17' Grumman...all I do is put on the styrofoam rubber car
top carrier "blocks" on the canoe,with it laying next to my car.
At the center of the canoe,I just pick it up to my hip,get a better
grip,and then press it over my head,and put it on the top on the car.
It's simple,,and it takes 2 seconds...
|
1087.5 | thanks for suggestions, I will try all of them. | CADSE::JACKSON | | Wed Apr 12 1989 13:38 | 17 |
| Hi,
to answer note .2 I believe I too own a 17ft Grumman. I weigh 165 lbs
and I am 35 years old. The weight of the canoe (approximately 65-70
lbs) doesn't bother me, it is how bulky the canoe is and the idea of
reaching over a car and trying to set it down. I do have the
styro-foam pads and maybe they will slide on the roof of the car which
will make it easier. I like the idea of the roof rack that has the
4 cross braces - My wife's old station wagon has a roof rack
with 4 cross braces built onto the car, and perhaps I can push the canoe
onto the car perpindicularly and then twist the canoe so that it aligns
up with the car...
I will also check into a canoe store and see what gadgets and methods
they have.
thanks,
-Larry
they have any special gadgets or methods for this.
|
1087.6 | Well you just *flip* it up there! | CASV05::PRESTON | Better AI than none at all | Wed Apr 12 1989 14:05 | 18 |
| I have a 17' Coleman (70lb), and I "discovered" the same method(s)
mentioned earlier: standing alongside the canoe and lifting it to
your shoulder, then overhead. I have a Thule rack for the car, so
I just drop the far gunnel of the canoe just inside the supports
of the rack, and slide the canoe across until it is in place. I
often use pieces of carpeting to facilitate this, it keeps the racks
from getting scratched up too much. Be careful crossing the road
with an upside-down canoe over your head!
I find lifting the canoe is a breeze. I am 6'6", 245lb, and coach
the Olympic weightlifting squad in my spare time!!! And I tried
to tell Ben Johnson not to use those steroids, but he wanted
to have muscles like me without having to work so hard...
(Of course if you believe that, I have some land in Florida next
to Disney World... in fact, Walt Disney was my, ah, uncle. Yeah,
that's it, he was my uncle..!")
Ed (subtract 6" and 60lb, and add some programmer flab...)
|
1087.7 | more advice... | ANT::MLOEWE | Low in sugar; Low in salt; Lowenbrau | Wed Apr 12 1989 14:08 | 9 |
| I used to load my 15', 65 pound canoe by myself also with the spongy pads.
I would grab it by the thwart, lift to my shoulder (the one on the side
of the car you're going to load it from) and hoist it on the top of the car,
and slide it very gently till it's on center.
Just one word of advice...watch out on windy days. :^)
But seriously, I spun a 180 one day lifting the canoe when it was windy.
But then again, who takes a canoe on on windy days...well maybe one or two. :^)
Mike_L
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1087.8 | how about on a Truck? | STAR::ROBIE | What is this dern deal | Thu Apr 13 1989 13:27 | 14 |
|
Instead of starting a new note I will ask the same basic
question but only I have a truck? Last year I bought a small
4 wheel drive truck to get into those out of the way places.
But it has no cap and I am not planing to purchase one. I
would assume I need to build some kind of braket in the back
of the bed. Any I ideas? Also this truck does not have the 2x4
cut-out is the bed walls so it would have to set or bolt to the
floor.
thanks
Michael
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1087.9 | easiest of all | MOSAIC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Thu Apr 13 1989 13:38 | 9 |
| I use a single roof rack (2"x3") on the cab and set one end up on the
rack and one end on the tail gate (when the caps not on). I have a
bedliner and tailgate protector so the tailgate top does not get ruined.
This obviously catches alot of wind but works fine. I strap
(with motorcycle tie-downs) from each side of the thwart to the hooks
on the cab end of the bed.
donmac
|
1087.10 | Bass Pro Has something | IDAHO::HOLT | Adam Holt | Thu Apr 13 1989 21:40 | 9 |
|
In the latest Bass Pro catalog, they had a thing that looked
liked one of the old car jacks. You put it on the canoe, put the
other end on to the back bumper, and swing the canoe around the
side. You can even drive with it on that way it's easy to take
off!
Anglin' Ad
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1087.11 | Reopening an old topic | MSDOA::CUZZONE | Clear the ropes! | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:56 | 14 |
|
RE:.10 I'm looking for such a device but don't have a current BPS
catalog. Can someone look up the part # and price for me? If it's not
there, anyone know where I might get one? I tried the local canoe shop
and they looked at me like I was from another planet.
The weight of the canoe is not what's at issue - it's the awkwardness
(the coleman has a metal pole running down the keel that makes it very
topheavy when it's upside down). Any helpful suggestions would be
appreciated but I think I'd like to try the back bumper jack-like
thing.
Many thanks,
-SSS-
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1087.12 | how I carried the Scanoe | GNPIKE::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Thu Jul 25 1991 17:00 | 19 |
| SSS, what do you have for a vehicle to carry the canoe ?
I have a 16' Coleman scanoe, and it is heavy to carry overhead,
but I've been able to load/unload it alone on my Sentra no problem
using Thule racks on the car (the basic black racks that people
use with attachments for skis and bikes).
I'd basically drag the canoe right side up to the car and line it
up about 1/2 way along the side of the car. Then I'd lift the front
of the canoe and place it onto the rear rack on the car while the
other end of the canoe was still on the ground. From there it was
just a matter of sliding the canoe towards the front of the car and
onto the front rack, no problem.
I once saw a guy with the same canoe with wheels (looked like old
lawn mower wheels) on the back of it, so when the canoe was turned
over, he just had to pull from the front and the back wheeled along.
Ken
|
1087.13 | Minivans are a stretch | MSDOA::CUZZONE | Clear the ropes! | Thu Jul 25 1991 17:37 | 20 |
|
I'm trying to load a 17 footer on:
1) A Plymouth Grand Voyager
2) A Buick Century
3) A Digital Taurus
It's the Voyager that's giving me trouble. It has a roof rack but the
rack is too low and too short and as a result, I am scratching
the rear and front of the roof. I haven't tried the Buick yet but
expect it to be easier. The Taurus is my lease car and naturally I
treat it better than if I owned it so I wouldn't even consider an act
that might put the tiniest scratch on its roof ;-) It's shaped a lot
like the Buick.
I've looked at Thule racks and the cost would be more than this bumper
mounted device especially since I already have a hitch on the Buick and
those foam blocks that most folks use.
-SSS-
|
1087.14 | What will we think of next? | BOXERS::ROSINSKI | | Fri Jul 26 1991 07:55 | 12 |
| Wow! I didn't know we made the Taurus. I thought it was a Ford,
but then, Ken is on the B.O.D of Ford.
No wonder this companies having tough times selling computers, we're
expending all of our resources building cars, watches, T.V.'s, stereos,
etc., etc.,...
I just couldn't resist. :')
Tight Lines...
Al
|
1087.15 | | GNPIKE::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Fri Jul 26 1991 10:25 | 15 |
| In my opinion, I wouldn't waste my time with the foam blocks
only because it seems like it's such a hassle of lining things
up, getting the pads right, and the problem of getting it on the car.
I'd rather spend the time on the water. I did consider the foam
block because it was an inexpensive option, but went right for
the racks...
Thule is expensive, ridiculous really, but they hold up. A cheaper
way to go, which a friend did with his jon-boat, is to make your
own racks with a 2x4s and the support/side brackets. Worked fine.
A guy here at work has the standard-came-with-the-car low lying
racks on his blazer and put Thule-type racks on it for his canoe.
Ken
|
1087.16 | racks | DONMAC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Fri Jul 26 1991 12:22 | 25 |
| How much do the colemans weigh? I've never tried carrying one solo, but
if you can get it up onto your shoulders, sliding it onto a rack would be
easy.
If you can carry it on your shoulders, I'd recommend a standard rack over the
car-top-carrier you mentioned - less hardware to deal with - plus the rack
can be used for other things.
The rack on my toy 4x4 is probably at least as high as a caravan's would be.
My 17' MRC weighs about 72lbs. I carry it solo all of the time. I find it
much easier to carry and load it by myself - rather than wrestling with the
canoe *and* another person.
The coleman's aluminum cross thwart will be a pain - literally - I have one
on my Sears glass canoe - the sculptured ash portage yoke on the explorer makes
portaging much more comfortable.
Carrying a canoe on your shoulders is pretty easy once you get the hang of
getting it up there and balancing it.
If you have 2 people those foam pads ok. If you put them on the canoe in the
right spots before you toss it on the vehicle, it's not too much of a pain,
you just lower the canoe onto the top - tough to do when solo. With a rack
you just lower the bow and slide it on.
|
1087.17 | SEARS also carries the one-man loader | CHET::BEAUCHESNE | | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:28 | 1 |
|
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1087.18 | Sears Roeboat Inc. | MSDOA::CUZZONE | Clear the ropes! | Fri Jul 26 1991 15:44 | 6 |
| RE:-.1
Is it in the Sears boating catalog? I could pick one up after work and
probably have the loader by the end of next week.
-SSS-
|
1087.19 | a pointer | DONMAC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Fri Jul 26 1991 17:31 | 2 |
| send mail to VINO::ALLEN, he had one of these jobs for sale awhile back
-don
|
1087.20 | In the SEARS BOATING catalog | NQOAIC::BEAUCHESNE | | Mon Jul 29 1991 12:38 | 7 |
| RE. .18
Last I saw it was in the BOATING speciality catalog. You may want
to call the nearest store to see if they stock them. If you need
a catalog number, I think I've got a catalog at home I could.
Moe
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1087.21 | Another source to check... | KAHALA::PRESTON | | Mon Jul 29 1991 13:05 | 5 |
| I'm not completely sure, but I *think* I saw that kind of item in one
of the L.L. Bean catalogs last year, too.
Ed
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1087.22 | Kids, don't try this at home... | KAHALA::PRESTON | | Mon Jul 29 1991 13:29 | 23 |
| When I had a 17' Coleman canoe, I thought it was a bit of work
getting it on top of a car by myself, but I managed to get fairly
good at it with practice.
Then I sold it and bought a Crawdad XT, which weighs 150lb. Yikes!
I've somehow managed to develop a method of getting this awkward craft
in and out of my basement (through a bulkhead with steps), around the
house, and finally on top of the car. Whew! I don't recommend anyone
else try to do it, it's just that I *had* to, out of desperation. It
was that or miss out on about half of my fishing. One windy day a gust
caught the boat just as I was about to position it on the rear rack,
blew it off balance, resulting in most of the weight of the boat
landing on my head! I nearly broke my neck!
It got a bit easier when I finally decided that it really wasn't
important to put it on top of the car upside down. If it rains, just
take out the drain plug...
Canoes are starting to look good again...
Ed
|