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#11
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On Oct 15, 8:40 pm, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: riverman wrote: wrote: ... I'm looking at a 17 footer that is stable, light and capable of being a tandem OR a solo canoe. Have any of you had experience (or heard good or bad) about the Souris River Canoes? I'm looking at the "Quetico 17". ... ... For the intermediate caster/paddler, then you will need to compromise somewhere....something flat bottomed (so it won't tilt side to side), with little rocker (so it won't twist around), fairly long, in the 17 foot range (anything longer is a bear to paddle, anything shorter is skittish to stand in), and BEAMY (that means wide...makes it more stable). A flat-bottomed, rockerless, beamy 17 foot boat won't be a Maserati on the water, but it will satisfy your 'peaceful flycasting' requirement and still be paddleable. ... I agree with everything except the 17' length. A 17' tandem is more canoe than I care to paddle solo, I wouldn't buy a tandem canoe much over 16' for solo paddling/fishing. Souris River makes nice boats and if you have to have a foreign-made boat instead of a better quality boat made in Winona, Minnesota USA then I'd go with the Quetico 16 instead of the Quetico 17. -- Ken Fortenberry- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, I agree that there's some discussion on the 16' vs 17' length to be had. I find a 16' boat a tad on the crowded side for tandem tripping, but a 17' is certainly a bit long for a solo boat (although my first love was a Blue Hole 17A that I put a lot of solo miles on). I think the OP should put a lot of thought into how much solo vs tandem paddling he is truly planning to do, and with how much gear. --riverman |
#12
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Dave,
On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 14:02:31 -0000, mdk77 wrote: I think this canoe would be great for the places I fish around here in Central Illinois -- and be easy to take on trips out-of-state. Let me know if there is something else worth considering in a fly fishing canoe. Thanks. Here's the canoe I use: http://www.greatcanadian.com/canoes_classic.html I have the Voyageur model. Scroll about halfway down the page. Steve Thomas |
#13
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On Oct 15, 11:23 am, (Steve Thomas) wrote:
Dave, On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 14:02:31 -0000, mdk77 wrote: I think this canoe would be great for the places I fish around here in Central Illinois -- and be easy to take on trips out-of-state. Let me know if there is something else worth considering in a fly fishing canoe. Thanks. Here's the canoe I use: http://www.greatcanadian.com/canoes_classic.html I have the Voyageur model. Scroll about halfway down the page. Steve Thomas That is a beautiful canoe. |
#14
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![]() "Bob Weiske" wrote in message ... I've enjoyed one of these for years of lake fly fishing in the Sierra: http://www.pokeboat.com/ Bob Weiske, long time lurker Nice pokeboat, I just pulled up the site. 23 lbs is pretty light. -tom |
#15
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On Oct 15, 10:36 am, riverman wrote:
On Oct 15, 8:40 pm, Ken Fortenberry wrote: riverman wrote: wrote: ... I'm looking at a 17 footer that is stable, light and capable of being a tandem OR a solo canoe. Have any of you had experience (or heard good or bad) about the Souris River Canoes? I'm looking at the "Quetico 17". ... ... For the intermediate caster/paddler, then you will need to compromise somewhere....something flat bottomed (so it won't tilt side to side), with little rocker (so it won't twist around), fairly long, in the 17 foot range (anything longer is a bear to paddle, anything shorter is skittish to stand in), and BEAMY (that means wide...makes it more stable). A flat-bottomed, rockerless, beamy 17 foot boat won't be a Maserati on the water, but it will satisfy your 'peaceful flycasting' requirement and still be paddleable. ... I agree with everything except the 17' length. A 17' tandem is more canoe than I care to paddle solo, I wouldn't buy a tandem canoe much over 16' for solo paddling/fishing. Souris River makes nice boats and if you have to have a foreign-made boat instead of a better quality boat made in Winona, Minnesota USA then I'd go with the Quetico 16 instead of the Quetico 17. -- Ken Fortenberry- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, I agree that there's some discussion on the 16' vs 17' length to be had. I find a 16' boat a tad on the crowded side for tandem tripping, but a 17' is certainly a bit long for a solo boat (although my first love was a Blue Hole 17A that I put a lot of solo miles on). I think the OP should put a lot of thought into how much solo vs tandem paddling he is truly planning to do, and with how much gear. --riverman Probably 75% of the time I'd be tandem. I wouldn't be hauling much gear either. Most of the time (not all, but mostly) I'd be fishing small ponds, lakes and rivers around here. There is one larger lake that I would fish some (Ken it would be Lake Evergreen). Even on vacation I wouldn't be tripping, but just fishing during the day. I do want something light that I can easily carry in to the remote places that I fish around here. I "get it" that the canoe would need to be a very stable design, rather than one with a lot of rocker or one that is meant for speed -- and not for fishing. My brother-in-law has a Wenonah, so I will definitely consider going that route. - Dave K. |
#16
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On Oct 15, 8:40 am, Ken Fortenberry
I agree with everything except the 17' length. A 17' tandem is more canoe than I care to paddle solo, YMMV, but Ken's probably right on this one. Although I've never fished out of it (not sure why not), I have an Old Town Discovery 174 that's stable as all hell. It's a barge to paddle, though. It's a great "family" canoe, and if that's your primary usage or excuse, it's a fine boat for the money; but as a solo craft, sheesh. It's too beamy to paddle from amidships; but a bag 'o rocks in the front seat works great. Joe F. |
#17
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On Oct 15, 12:23 pm, (Steve Thomas) wrote:
Here's the canoe I use: http://www.greatcanadian.com/canoes_classic.html I have the Voyageur model. Scroll about halfway down the page. Wow. Never thought a wooden canoe would be that light- 57 pounds. That's actually lighter than my Wenonah. But here's another (qualified*) vote for Wenonah's Adirondak. I sure like mine. And it's eggplant color is nearly as nice as that natural cedar. :-) Bill *qualified because I've only owned it a few months and have paddled it but a half-dozen times. I've never stood to fish in a canoe, but rather remain kneeling or seated. |
#18
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![]() "rw" wrote in message m... I hate the idea of fishing in a canoe by myself, without another paddler to keep it in place and oriented in the wind to where I want to cast. I far prefer a pontoon boat that I can control with both oars AND fins. The oars get you to where you want to go and the fins keep you where you want to be and facing in the direction you want to face. I've fished in one-man kayaks in the Florida Keys and in Belize. Same problem. Hated it. Ditto, canoes and kayaks. Both are abominable platforms to fish from. Even with someone else along to paddle, a canoe is still fairly miserable. Don't know squat about pontoons. Belly boats are great. Wolfgang |
#19
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Steve Thomas wrote:
Here's the canoe I use: http://www.greatcanadian.com/canoes_classic.html I have the Voyageur model. Scroll about halfway down the page. Nice boat. Here's the tandem tripper I use for solo paddling and fishing. http://www.frappr.com/?a=viewphoto&i...73&pid=5896861 It's a Kedros Navigator 16. The Navigator 16 is very much like the Wenonah Adirondack in design except, of course, the layup is cedar strip instead of glas or royalex. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#20
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Ken,
On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 12:34:47 -0500, Ken Fortenberry Nice boat. Here's the tandem tripper I use for solo paddling and fishing. http://www.frappr.com/?a=viewphoto&i...73&pid=5896861 Nice boat :-) Steve Thomas |
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