mtnbiker208
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2017
- Location
- north idaho
if you are going to use it on moving water, life jackets are your friend.
I'd like to get a canoe. Float, camp and fish down smaller, somewhat quick rivers. Possibly some lake use but not likely or often. Some duck hunting but for that it'll mostly just be walked beside and used to keep the kid and decoys in.
What type or style am I looking for? Aluminum, plastic or fiberglass? Will be transported on top of SUV and loaded up there, mostly with little to no help.
Any advice is appreciated.
Agree about the Prospector. I have a Nova Craft 16' Prospector and it's a do all rig although it's no speed demon on flat water. Carries plenty of cargo and good for solo or double.You describe the use case for the Prospector style canoes. Nearly all major companies make a version. Arched bottom, some rocker, no keel. 16 or 17' is about ideal. I wouldn't pass up a Mad River Explorer either.
Flat bottom boats like the Coleman's and Old Town Campers are great for families and dogs due to high initial stability, but turn very slowly and are a lot of work in the small, quick rivers. That arched bottom and rocker on a down river canoe will feel tippy, but in fact allow you to dodge rocks and sweepers and recover from a sketchy situation with a strong stroke.
If there are rocks, then you want plastic types as it will slide off easier and make it less likely to breach. A plastic boat is also very unlikely to be permanently damaged in the water. I would not recommended the rotomolded type however, as the one's I've seen have been heavy dogs.
Aluminum makes great utility canoes, but is super sticky on rocks and prone to damage in white water. Also pretty cold and noisy to sit in. For a lot of people, they work very well. Wouldn't be my choice for "small, somewhat quick rivers"
Composites are the best (light and stiff) for loading / unloading and portaging, but also relatively fragile and not very slippery. The most expensive by far, but the top choice for building flatwater canoes.
Otherwise, like most things its more about the skill of the paddler than the canoe. Bill Mason's "Path of the Paddle" is historically the bible for mixed water paddling skills.
My main canoe is a 17' Hellman Prospector built with a flexible composite. It's great for mixed water trips, but slow'ish on the lakes compared to a true flatwater canoe and too long and sticky for rocky whitewater. Everything is a compromise, but it works well for my current uses.
This ^^^^I have a Coleman scanoe, I’ve never had anything nicer so I probably don’t know what I’m missing. However for duck hunting the swamps here in SC it’s great. Stable, cheap, bomb proof, and holds everything I can put in it. The previous owner drug it over concrete or pavement so what keel it had was worn thin and cracked. I welded it back and built it up to like new thickness with some plastic welding rods off Amazon. Not the nicest or lightest but it works for my needs.
Good considerations. I feel that a 16’ Mad River Explorer is a good all around choice. Having said that, some will have good reasons to go longer or shorter, or with some other style or brand. Still, if you’re starting out and are unsure what’s best for you, the 16’ Explorer is a solid place to begin.I currently own 6 canoes - extended wilderness tripping is part of my/our lives, and I was paddling yesterday.
First: Tandem or Solo?
Second: How big/strong are you? Loading a 75# canoe is wildly different than a 40# canoe for most mere mortals.
Third: When you say camp...overnighters? Week-long trips? How heavy do you anticipate packing?
Fourth: Estimated total weight of people/gear/dog for heaviest use-case?
Fifth: Budget?
Sixth: The rivers - are we talking bony water, where you are bumping and grinding, or ?
Seventh: Any portaging?
I currently own 6 canoes - extended wilderness tripping is part of my/our lives, and I was paddling yesterday.
First: Tandem or Solo? Mostly tandem, but sometimes the second person will be my kid, so not a ton of help there just yet.
Second: How big/strong are you? Loading a 75# canoe is wildly different than a 40# canoe for most mere mortals. I'm in decent shape, but also trying not to throw my back out loading this.
Third: When you say camp...overnighters? Week-long trips? How heavy do you anticipate packing? Overnighters plus fishing gear.
Fourth: Estimated total weight of people/gear/dog for heaviest use-case? 700 pounds or so
Fifth: Budget? Used under 500 to start, until I know what I want. If I enjoy it and have a use for something better then I will upgrade from there.
Sixth: The rivers - are we talking bony water, where you are bumping and grinding, or ? No, shallow and some gravel, mostly sand in a lot of places.
Seventh: Any portaging? Very little if I can help it.
Nice boats - guessing here, but Mad River on the right and Souris River on the left?Dang. Canoeing is a top wilderness activity. Kayaking sucks though. Hate to get in an out of those things, and portaging is a bear.
I pretty much agree with roosterdown. For sandy / gravel streams, your top choice is a composite, but it's going to be well out of that budget. A used royalex lite would be ideal, and royalex woudl also work great but in the $500 budget range you are probably looking at aluminum or heavy Old Town Discovery types on the used market. Both of those live forever, but are HEAVY.