Hi all,
Apologies for what is seemingly yet another superfluous thread, but I've read every pertinent thread here and elsewhere, sometimes twice, and don't feel any closer to making a decision, so am finally throwing it out to the group to see what others think I should do.
My wife and I have been paddling on and off for ~20 years, mostly flatwater tripping in Algonquin and similar, and day tripping on lakes, rivers, and big lakes (Georgian Bay, etc). Although neither of us have ever owned a canoe, we have collectively used a LOT of outfitter boats along with whatever people had available at cottages and the like, and know enough to know that we don't want a flat bottomed "recreational" canoe.
We have three small-medium size kids that right now fit fine sitting in a 16' canoe on day trips, but obviously that won't remain the case forever. For trips it will either be me solo, my wife and I tandem, or some combination of adults and kids, but when it comes to tripping with the whole family I expect we will have to rent a second boat (or buy another... more on that later).
What am I looking for? I am, of course, looking for a unicorn canoe that is lightweight enough to portage solo until I am in my 70s or 80s, durable enough to bomb Class III rapids and bounce off rocks, tracks straight on big flatwater, is maneuverable in rapids and twisty rivers, is fast, can be solo'd or swallow a whole family and gear for long trips, is easily repairable, and is nice and cheap. If money and storage were no object, I would of course buy 2 or more canoes, (i.e. something like at Esquif Canyon in T-formex for rivers or to let the kids beat up, and something like an H2O Boundary or Swift Winisk in an ultralight layup for lake tripping) but at least for now I must pick a single canoe to buy, and am struggling with whether I want to get a "do everything" Prospector design, or get something that leans more towards lakes or rivers now, planning for the eventual "two canoe" garage. Right now I would prioritize "rough water lake paddling" and weight... 65 lbs is my upper limit, but something in the mid to low 50s would be preferable. I have never paddled white water, but would like to try it and eventually would like to do some down river trips (5-10 day) with running some rapids here and there.
I've been watching the used market for a while and have been quite frustrated to say the least... People have seemingly lost their minds with what they are willing to pay for 30+ year old canoes. I have spotted a few reasonable opportunities pop up in the last few months, but even being the first to message and willing to immediately drive cash in hand and purchase without a test paddle is not always enough! I have lost at least 3 good deals to the same Marketplace/Kijiji seller, who has re-posted the boats for $600-$800 more within a day or two, and they STILL sell within 24-48 hours at the marked up price.
My wife and I are almost ok with the low end of pricing of a new Swift, H2O, or similar composite boat (buy once, cry once!), but adding an option or two such as colours or layup upgrades quickly prices us out. If we are going to pony up for a new build, we need to be damn sure it will be the canoe of our dreams and we will be happy with it for years to come.
I know the first bit of advice is to "test paddle, test paddle, test paddle!", and I have been trying to do this, however it is not always easy to test paddle in conditions that reflect our real world usage. We test paddled a couple of H2O boats at Frontenac Outfitters, and liked the Prospector 16-6 considerably more than the Canadian 16. This was the only test run with both of us present, and the kids on board. Not much wind that day, but the Prospector tracked reasonably well and we both liked the sitting positions and feel in general.
I visited Jeff at H2O, went through my requirements, and he thinks the Prospector 16-6 would serve me well, but he also showed me something he is working on that doesn't have a name yet... it is based on an Old Town Appalachian, which is a little more river focused, which is intriguing and I will be test paddling one when he has it available.
I also visited Swift and paddled their Prospector 16, an old Winisk (17'6"), and a Dumoine, although I was paddling solo on a fairly windy day. I loved the way the Prospector and Winisk paddled, even solo in the wind (I had some sandbags in the bow to simulate a child). The Dumoine basically blew sideways at an alarming rate in the wind, but I realize these were not the ideal conditions for it, or any of them... Part of me really wants to buy the Winisk (Swift will still produce them), but I don't know if buying it as an "only canoe" is prudent. I really like the "click in, click out" seats Swift sells for the Prospector 16 Combi so you can easily switch between solo and tandem setups, and their construction looks really nice, however the Combi options add quite a bit to the cost.
Part of me thinks that the way to go would be buying an Esquif Prospecteur 16 (or used Royalex equivalent if one shows up at the right price/condition), which just barely slides in under my weight requirement, but is fairly bombproof and will last through whatever the kids throw at it for the next 15 years and then down the line I can add the ultralight tripping canoe of my dreams... but something like a Winisk or Boundary is also calling to me as a fast lake tripper that is perfect for conditions on Georgian Bay.Decisions, decisions...
Anyway, thanks to anyone who read my verbal diarrhea thought process, and thanks to anyone that has an opinion to share with me... either way, it was helpful to write it all out!
|