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Guest
Guest
I took my family and brother in law’s family on a gentle downstream day trip, all in solo boats. My solo boats and paddles. There was a bit of cat herding involved, but everyone seemed to do fine and had a good time.
I lent my sister in law a new, lightweight wood paddle, and wasn’t paying attention to her technique; she was keeping up and in relative control, so no worries. Even the offspring did well, it was a happy day.
Except that, once home, I discovered that she had taken every stroke by grinding the paddle shaft against the gunwale, wearing not just through the varnish, but well into the wood. On two sides. After some sanding and revarnishing I had an oddly indexed paddle with a peculiar ) ( area midway down the shaft. Never really trusted that stick again.
Lesson learned – Use the old Mohawks as novice loaner paddles.
The other episode was more inexplicable. I loaned a Timberline tent to a co-worker for a weekend car camping trip with her boy friend. When she returned the tent the bag seemed mysteriously light. I unpacked it and found the ground cloth, poles, connectors, stakes, rainfly and even the two vestibules.
No tent body. I asked her about this and she was clueless about where it had gotten off to. How do you come back with everything but the tent? Contacting Eureka with that WTF tale they sold me a replacement tent body at cost.
Lesson learned – Eureka is a good company.
Eh, two instances of loaning canoes to friends. One boat came back abused by sheer stupidity, one didn’t come back at all.
Lessons learned – I will only loan my canoes if I’m along on the trip.
I lent my sister in law a new, lightweight wood paddle, and wasn’t paying attention to her technique; she was keeping up and in relative control, so no worries. Even the offspring did well, it was a happy day.
Except that, once home, I discovered that she had taken every stroke by grinding the paddle shaft against the gunwale, wearing not just through the varnish, but well into the wood. On two sides. After some sanding and revarnishing I had an oddly indexed paddle with a peculiar ) ( area midway down the shaft. Never really trusted that stick again.
Lesson learned – Use the old Mohawks as novice loaner paddles.
The other episode was more inexplicable. I loaned a Timberline tent to a co-worker for a weekend car camping trip with her boy friend. When she returned the tent the bag seemed mysteriously light. I unpacked it and found the ground cloth, poles, connectors, stakes, rainfly and even the two vestibules.
No tent body. I asked her about this and she was clueless about where it had gotten off to. How do you come back with everything but the tent? Contacting Eureka with that WTF tale they sold me a replacement tent body at cost.
Lesson learned – Eureka is a good company.
Eh, two instances of loaning canoes to friends. One boat came back abused by sheer stupidity, one didn’t come back at all.
Lessons learned – I will only loan my canoes if I’m along on the trip.