I started this blog when I was restoring a 1917 Kennebec canoe. Now I have added to my boat building adventures, and built a kayak. I also have pages about birds and astronomy.
Friday, November 27, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Launch day
We took the canoe to the WCHA NW Chapter spring meeting at Lost Lake. Ours was among about 30 wood and canvas canoes. It was so exciting to finally get the canoe in the water after 67 years in a barn, garage or basement.
Saturday, May 2, 2015
Ready to launch
Well, here it is. Lots of scraping, sanding, steaming and bending, nailing, painting and varnishing. Made a whole lot of shavings, sawdust, sweat and a bit of blood too. The first launch in 67 years will be this weekend at the WCHA Northwest Chapter spring meet.
Keel and nameplate installed
Here are the last bits that were added. The original keel is long gone, but I do have a metal strip that was probably used as a stem band. It was pretty crude, and not original, so I replaced it with the standard brass half round strips. The keel is oak with a cove cut into the mating surface, filled with bedding compound to seal the screw penetrations every other rib.
The nameplate was originally black except for the raised lettering, border and embellishments. I tried to restore it to that state, but the raised features are not very prominent, making that task very difficult. I put a black patina on the whole surface and tried to polish just the raised areas, but ended up with this.
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Finish coat of paint
Almost ready for the water |
I brushed on Epifanes yacht enamel #16 red. This is the greatest paint. With a quality brush, it really flows out nicely. We debated for a long time what color to paint the canoe. I'm pretty sure the original color was green, but there was red paint on the trim. In places there were layers of red and green. Looking at other canoes, the green ones faded into the landscape and brighter colors stood out more. I've always liked red cars, red bikes and now I really love this red canoe.
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Primer on the hull
Sunday, April 5, 2015
Aft Seat Caning
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Caning the first seat
The first three layers are really quick because there's no weaving involved. Two vertical layers and one horizontal |
After 4 layers it starting to go a bit slower. |
All finished, except for the edge trim. |
Detail of the weave and edge trim |
The final product. I'm planning on a thin coat of varnish on the top side only, although this is a subject of much discussion on the wood canoe forums. |
Saturday, February 21, 2015
More varnish
This is likely the last coat of varnish for now. A final touch up coat on the gunwales and decks is likely.
Saturday, January 24, 2015
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