Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Gear Forum :: Canoe Id. and advise please
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rdgbwca |
The question is what is this Canadienne made of? As far as I know, they were made of fiberglass or kevlar. I have a kevlar model and I don't like to take it on rocky rivers near my house and prefer a royalex for those rivers. I have taken mine on the lower Wisconsin which has a very sandy bottom with no worries. The Canadienne was also made in different lengths. That said, I take it you haven't paddled this Canadienne yet because you probably would have bought it already. Of the rentals I have paddled (OT Discoveries and Aluminum flat bottoms) and compared to the Penobscot 17, it just feels better and more responsive to paddle the Canadienne. |
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jwartman59 |
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bobspencer123 |
I emailed the owner and it is fiberglass. Can anyone comment on whether this would be significantly more tippy (that's a technical term :) ) than a OT discovery 169? The river I would be going on isn't extreme by any stretch but there are some class 1 and 2 rapids. |
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rdgbwca |
bobspencer123: " Can anyone comment on whether this would be significantly more tippy (that's a technical term :) ) than a OT discovery 169? The river I would be going on isn't extreme by any stretch but there are some class 1 and 2 rapids. " I have rented an OT Discovery 158 before for a lower WI river trip. The next year on the same river (different put in and take out) I had the 17ft kevlar Canadienne. I felt stable in both canoes. This will be my third year paddling, so take that for what it is worth. My wife and 10 year old son also did fine in the Canadienne on a creek with mild riffles last year. We all paddle while sitting. |
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bobspencer123 |
Canoe newbie here. My group of friends have been canoing Pine Creek in PA near Wellboro for about a decade. Every year we rent our canoes from the outfitters. The trip is overnight and about 28 miles or so. The outfitters rents Old Town Discovery 169's. I decided to look for a used canoe this year to take on the trip and hopefully use a little at home with my kids too (8 and 6 years old). I found this Old Town Canadienne and am wondering if it would be ok for the river canoeing where bottoming out does occur and the canoe's take a little bit of a beating. I would appreciate any advise. Thank you! |
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Bannock |
If it is royalex , I say jump on it. If it is composite material (Kevlar or fiberglass) you'll need to be a little more careful with it on Rocky streams. Regardless, if it is a good price, I'd get it. It's a great design. |
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DadnWaldo |
Have paddled with friends in Missouri rivers and liked their Camper better than my Penobscot for those riffle-pool streams with the occasional class1 easy rapid |
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rdgbwca |
DadnWaldo: "Look for an OT Camper made with royalex, good initial stability, durable canoe for rivers that don't need whitewater technical skills. I think Canadiens won't turn as cleanly on a river with winds and shallow runs. OT Penobscot might do, but I'd pick the Camper for what you describe, especially kids...and I still paddle a Penobscot... I haven't paddled an OT Camper but am on the look out for one (they don't last long on craigslist). It has the advantage of being royalex and shorter than a 17 ft Penobscot. I would expect it to do well on smaller rivers and creeks. |