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Tree Damage

Joined
Jan 30, 2024
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Location
Maine
When making my canoe storage area a few years back, I thought "It's not ideal, but a tree would have to fall in a very specific way to impact my boats." I'm old enough to know what happens when you tempt the universe like that, but apparently not smart enough to heed that knowledge. So, of course, a tree fell in a very specific way during a recent windstorm, and it of course hit my SRT, the boat I'm most partial to (2 comeuppances for the price of 1!).

The good news - I don't think it's that bad (though I could certainly be wrong, given how much I don't know). In any case, it unquestionably could have been far worse. The bad news - I have no experience working with fiberglass, gel coat, etc. I think that all of the impacted areas should probably be patched, both inside and out - just looking for some feedback from people who actually have experience. Should I repair this myself, or seek out a professional? I won't be attempting repair until spring (unless not repairing quickly is a bad idea), and I do have plenty of experience working with epoxy and epoxy-like materials so I'm confident that I can do an adequate job with some reading and experimenting. I'm less confident that I can do an aesthetically pleasing job, especially with gel coat repair, but aesthetics are pretty dang low on my priority list, as you can probably tell by how many non-tree related scratches I've put on this hull in less than a year.

In any case, here's the damage.
 

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comeuppance
I haven't heard that word used by anyone other than myself since I left the east coast. My grandfather was from new Brunswick, and that's where I first heard it, such a good word, especially when combined with "That Big Feelin So and So will get his comeuppance soon".

My apologies, on to the canoe. I'm not expert, and I have never been overly concerned with looks. I'm sure others will give you better advice. It doesn't look that bad to me. I would sand the outside where the creases are, fill in any gel cracks with thickened epoxy and then sand them fair, then lay a piece of six ounce cloth over the affected areas and epoxy it on. I would probably put a layer on the inner hull too. I hope you were able to use the tree for firewood or something, at least the tree would have gotten a comeuppance too.
 
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