Christy went out and found a new project the other night. Considering I did not go with her to look, I will leave it to her to detail the pursuit of this old canoe.
Having it in the shop now we know it is a Peterborough Champlain, Model 1492. Although we originally saw the ghost of the deck decal, with a bit of elbow grease and spit, Christy managed to bring the model number up on the stem where originally only one number was barely visible. It certainly helps to know where to look. The Champlain is 16 foot long, 34" wide and 12" deep. She has a quick upsweep at the ends and is reminiscent of Chestnuts in the decks and skinny and wide last cant rib. The Dragonfly site says this was available in 1956, so we will peg it at 60 years old this year.
It has 1 1/2" wide ribs spaced 1 1/2" apart. The slat seats are mostly original, the drops certainly are as is most of the hardware. It is hogged in the middle as there are 10 adjacent broken ribs there. It could be a tad of a chore to get the shape back in correctly but we will do our best. The inwales need some help, one side has several breaks in it, the other just one or two. Outwales are mostly intact. Not sure if we can save them until we start taking it apart. Someone had the clever idea to pound nails vertically into one inwale and one outwale, likely to fasten a cover, tarp perhaps, since the boat was stored outside the last decade or so.
Having it in the shop now we know it is a Peterborough Champlain, Model 1492. Although we originally saw the ghost of the deck decal, with a bit of elbow grease and spit, Christy managed to bring the model number up on the stem where originally only one number was barely visible. It certainly helps to know where to look. The Champlain is 16 foot long, 34" wide and 12" deep. She has a quick upsweep at the ends and is reminiscent of Chestnuts in the decks and skinny and wide last cant rib. The Dragonfly site says this was available in 1956, so we will peg it at 60 years old this year.
It has 1 1/2" wide ribs spaced 1 1/2" apart. The slat seats are mostly original, the drops certainly are as is most of the hardware. It is hogged in the middle as there are 10 adjacent broken ribs there. It could be a tad of a chore to get the shape back in correctly but we will do our best. The inwales need some help, one side has several breaks in it, the other just one or two. Outwales are mostly intact. Not sure if we can save them until we start taking it apart. Someone had the clever idea to pound nails vertically into one inwale and one outwale, likely to fasten a cover, tarp perhaps, since the boat was stored outside the last decade or so.
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