I kind of miss my old Dandy… It was conceived as a FreeStyle boat but really was bad at that. The lack of rocker made the stems stick though with its flared hull it was just about impossible to turtle it.
Terrific crusing boat for the long armed and it went somewhere where someone installed sailing stuff on it…
Kona,
I have some Blackhawk labels that I had made; might be able to help you out. Will have to dig around & see what I have left. A local business here made replacement labels for some of my old school canoes , and did so quite cheaply. I’ll bet you have a similar business close to you.
Yes, I do have a few canoes that I will probably be putting up for sale in the near future. Would be best if you contacted me personally; using pnet email message, instead of this thread. Someone would probably frown on that & quite rightfully so.
Also a kayaker (and stand up paddle boarder) but those are some beautiful boats, thanks for sharing. Maybe as I get older and wiser, at some point my kayaking and suping will converge, and I’ll get a nice canoe or 7.
Well, YIPEE, our internet is fast enough to view a couple Kevin Callan videos and cruise P.com this morning. A lot of those pictures are familiar and were enjoyed, Bob.
You mentioned the MRC Courier that I “Flipped?” That’s one in a long list I wish I still owned. Actually, the royalex Courier I bought and rehabbed is also missed as well as the Sawyer Autumn Mist and the Bell Starfire. I miss the Dagger Reflection on those 20mph days on the river, but my Wenonah Prospector fits me better unless le vent kicks up. But the boat I will miss the most is my Cedarwood Pal. If I had a better place to store it, it would still be ours. We even thought of hanging it from the living room ceiling, but getting it in the house would have been a real PIA.
Let’s see if my internet speed is high enough to permit me to upload a couple old boat pics myself?
Sold the Autumn Mist to a “good old boy” down in southern Missouri;
don’t know what he did with it.
The Sojourn is still hanging from the ceiling in my garage; in between a Blackhawk Zephyr, and a Blackhawk Shadow SS Special.
Love all the pics! I don’t have very many “old school” boats. Bob already posted one of mine the Mad River Guide that was his and then Doug’s and now it’s final home (no Doug I am not selling it back to you). My whitewater boat is a Mad River Outrage.
You call them pretenders; I call them old school.
Likely a question of semantics, perception, opinion.
The vast majority of the boats pictured are certainly post wood/canvas, post aluminum. That’s old enough to qualify as “old school” to me.
If I wanted to get picky; I could say that your wood/canvas canoe is a “pretender”.
It isn’t made from a log, not made of birchbark, not made of reeds. It is not an Indian made, buffalo skin, bull boat. It is also not a 2 or 3 hundred year old Hawaiian outrigger, nor a Viking longship.
BOB
P.S. I own a Chestnut Pal from the 1960s. Is it a pretender? It only a little over 55 years old…
Had an identical Caper. Definitely one of the most unusual and beautiful boats built. Mike may have been a mixed bag of positive and negative but he built some of the prettiest boats ever. Elegantly simple lines of the Dandy made it a true work of art. To paraphrase: “great design is not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away”
@thebob.com said:
You call them pretenders; I call them old school.
Likely a question of semantics, perception, opinion.
The vast majority of the boats pictured are certainly post wood/canvas, post aluminum. That’s old enough to qualify as “old school” to me.
If I wanted to get picky; I could say that your wood/canvas canoe is a “pretender”.
It isn’t made from a log, not made of birchbark, not made of reeds. It is not an Indian made, buffalo skin, bull boat. It is also not a 2 or 3 hundred year old Hawaiian outrigger, nor a Viking longship.
BOB
P.S. I own a Chestnut Pal from the 1960s. Is it a pretender? It only a little over 55 years old…
How about a repurposed Saudi whatever turned into a flower pot?
There used to be a guy here (had a name something like RPG 38?) who got a brand-new wood-canvas canoe from some builder up in Canada that I also can’t remember the name of. I’ve yet to see a new production-model wood/canvas canoe myself (I’ve seen a few built by private individuals), but they exist.
I had the same thoughts about all these “old school” canoes. Some of them, nice as they may be, are hardly classic, though I guess that’s pretty subjective.