II. THE CANOE.
History.
- "Across the broad breast of the river at rest
gayly I glide.
- For my paddle dips deep, in its long, steady
sweep
- Through the sleeping tide;
- And the new-risen sun gilds the drops as t they
run,
- Like pearls from the blades with a tinkling
song,
- And the ripples dance bright, and they laugh
outright
- All my wake along; when I launch my canoe in
the sweet, clear morn,
- We're the merriest pair by the waters
borne."
must
have been very early in the history of mankind when
boats of some sort or other came into use. No great
distances, anywhere but on the desert, can be traveled
without crossing streams and other bodies of water. In
fact the raft is older than man, for animals have been
known to use it -- if not actually its builders.
Following the law of evolution, the next step in
development is to hollow out the log. This improvement
is suggested by nature herself in many ways --
floating bark, dry leaves, nut shells, and even some
sea shells. These forms were no doubt imitated in
wooded countries by hollowing out logs to some extent
with rude tools and fire, and elsewhere by stretching
skins over rough frames. A very little further up in
the scale -- when the logs' ends are sharpened -- the
canoe comes in. The canoe is the first real boat built
by a people. Think of a savage, anywhere, and does not
the thought go paired with that of a canoe? The South
Sea Islander, the cannibal, the African, Esquimau,
Indian -- all picture themselves in the mind at once
as canoeists; yes, professional canoeists. The canoe
is older than civilization, and will no doubt outlast
it. Go where you will, the canoe will be there before
you. It is on the equator, and again within the Arctic
circle. It was in America long before Columbus
discovered it.
What a Canoe is.
THE canoe has two characteristics which always mark
it. Both ends, bow and stern, are sharp, brought to an
edge, pointed if viewed from above. It is propelled by
a paddle. With the raft a pole was probably first used
and advantage taken of currents when possible. As soon
as the navigator left shore on his raft far enough to
fail in reaching bottom with his pole, he had to
invent something to take its place, and the paddle
suggested itself to him. The oar and rowing are
civilized. The paddle is barbarian. It is complete in
itself, and whether single-bladed, as used by the
savages, or double, Esquimau fashion, it is used
independently of the canoe -- having no fixed fulcrum
-- directly with the arms. No savage would ever think
of turning his back in the direction in which he was
rowing.
16 17
The Rob Roy Canoe.
It took the security of civilization
to give man the courage to travel thus (rowing)
practically with his eyes shut. The canoeist always
faces the way he is going when paddling. Rowing is a
reverse, acquired mode of propulsion -- paddling, a
direct, natural method. The canoe being older than
history, its comparatively modern forms and evolutions
alone can be treated by history.
The word canoe means to most people one of either
of three kinds of boats: the Indian birch bark (the
bark sewed over a wooden frame); the dugout, a
hollowed log; and the kayak of the Esquimau (made of
skins sewed together and stretched over a frame of
bones). The birch and dugout are open canoes. The
kayak has a deck and is entirely closed in except the
man hole. It is pictured in many of the geographies
with an iceberg for a background. The civilized canoe
is different from any of these, but borrows its
original idea from them; and it approaches one or the
other type in its various forms according to the uses
to which it is to be put. The tame canoe is very
recent; this generation, in fact, can claim it. In
earlier times the wild canoe was used by the pale face
and appropriated to his needs. Nearly every good thing
that the uncivilized man ever had has at one time or
another been thus appropriated by the white man,
according to the natural law that might is right.
Mr. J. MacGregor, a Scotchman, deserves the credit
of originating canoeing as a pastime and
showing the canoe's cruising capabilities. Canoes
were known and used in England to a limited degree
before he built his Rob Roy and took a thousand-mile
cruise in her in 1865. His canoe was so far superior
to any then in use for traveling purposes, and so many
have been built like it since, that canoeing, as we
now understand it, may be said to date from 1865, and
MacGregor's Rob Roy and the accounts he published of
her performances.
The Rob Roy is essentially the kayak, propelled
like it with a double-bladed paddle, but built of wood
instead of skins and bones. To the dry skin and bones
MacGregor added flesh, and the spark of life --
popularity -- thus creating the being all who know
intimately learn to love. In many ways he made the
canoe more convenient and commodious for use in a
warmer climate than that of the polar regions.
Certainly as early as MacGregor's time, if not long
before it, the Indian birch was used in Canada for
journeys other than those of strict business or the
chase. The canoe itself did not, however, show the
marks of a civilized hand (at least in literature)
till MacGregor wrote of his voyage on the Rhine. The
Canadian canoe is still very closely allied to the
birch. The modifications and improvements from the
original have been so gradual in the evolution of this
canoe to its present perfect form for the uses to
which it is put, that the successive steps are next to
impossible to trace, and it is especially difficult to
separate and date them. Suffice it, then, to say that
during the last twenty years this canoe has hardly
changed at all in its general form; but, having had a
great amount of thought spent on its construction, the
wonderful improvements made all lie in this
direction.
18 19
Open Canadian Canoe.
The model was perfect before and
could not be improved upon. It is a stronger canoe
than any other, is very light to portage easily, will
carry a greater load for its size, always adapted for
a crew of two or more persons, draws very little water
(about two inches), has practically no keel, propelled
almost entirely with the single-blade paddle, and it
is capable of being paddled faster than any other
model, and can hardly be improved upon for running
rapids and performing the services required of it. The
hunters and trappers of the North use it as their sole
transport over lakes and rivers for general traveling.
It takes the sportsman to his happy hunting or fishing
grounds, and with him all his belongings, including
the dogs. It brings him and his "catch" home again to
his very doorstep, maybe. Lastly, this same canoe will
afford him many an hour's enjoyment near home, perhaps
of a summer's evening when she consents to accompany
him, sitting forward, most comfortably posed within
easy billing and cooing distance of his place aft,
where the paddle is plied.
It is said of John MacGregor, Adjutant of the
Scottish Eight, that in May, 1865, he was roughly
handled in a railway accident, and was thus prevented
from shooting at Wimbledon. "Walking moodily by the
Thames, he decided to go afloat again, and that night
devised the Rob Roy canoe, which was launched in July
following on her cruise of a thousand miles."
20 21
MacGregor on Canoeing.
The following is what Mr. MacGregor
says of his canoe:
"The [first] Rob Roy canoe was
built of oak, with a deck of cedar. She was fifteen
feet in length, twenty-eight inches broad, nine
inches deep, and weighed eighty pounds. A paddle
seven feet long, with a blade at each end, and a
lug sail and jib were the means of propulsion, and
a pretty Union Jack was the only ornament. My
baggage for three months was in a black bag, one
foot square and six inches deep."
In his first chapter of the "Thousand Mile Cruise"
he notes down many points of interest to all
canoeists; his exact words are therefore here
quoted:
"It was a pleasant book that 'Log of the
Water Lily,' telling how she was rowed on the Rhine
and the Danube; and after her went the Waterwitch
to labor up French rivers and a hundred tedious
locks on the German canal. But all such cruising in
rowboats was of course very limited, for in the
wildest parts of the best rivers the channel is too
narrow for oars, or if Wide enough, it is often too
shallow; and the tortuous passages, the rocks and
banks, the weeds and snags, the milldams, barriers,
fallen trees, rapids, whirlpools and waterfalls
that constantly occur on a river winding among
hills, make those very parts where the scenery is
wildest and best to be quite unapproachable in such
a boat, for it would be swamped by the sharp waves,
or upset over the sunken rocks, which cannot be
seen by a steersman,
"Now these very things which bother the 'pair
oar,' become cheery excitements to the voyager in a
canoe. For now, as he sits in his little bark, he
looks forward, and not backward. He sees all his
course, and the scenery besides. With one sweep of
his paddle he can turn when a foot from
destruction. He can steer within an inch in a
narrow place, and can easily pass through reeds and
weeds, or branches and grass; can work his sail
without changing his seat; can shove with his
paddle when aground, and can jump out in good time
to prevent a bad smash. He can wade and haul his
craft over shallows, or drag it on dry ground,
through fields and hedges, over dykes, barriers and
walls; can carry it by hand up ladders and stairs,
and can transport his canoe over high mountains and
broad plains in a cart drawn by a man, a horse, or
a cow.
"Besides all this, the covered canoe is far
stronger than an open [row] boat, and may
be fearlessly dropped into a deep pool, a lock, or
a millrace, and when the breakers are high, in the
open sea or in river rapids, they can only wash
over the deck, while it is always dry within.
"The canoe is safer also than a rowing boat,
because you sit so low in it, and never require to
shift your place or lose hold of the paddle: while
for comfort during long hours, for days and weeks
of hard work, it is evidently the best, because you
lean all the time against a swinging backboard, and
when the paddle rests on your lap you are at ease
as in an armchair; so that, while drifting along
with the current
22 23
The Nautilus Canoe.
or the wind, you can
gaze around, and eat or read, or sketch, or chat
with the starers on the bank, and yet, in a moment
of sudden alarm, the hands are at once on the
faithful paddle ready for action.
"Finally, you can lie at full length in the
canoe, with the sail as an awning for the sun, or a
shelter for rain, and you can sleep at night under
its cover, or inside it when made for that purpose,
with at least as much room for turning in your bed
as sufficed for the great Duke of Wellington; or,
if you are tired of the water for a time, you can
leave your boat at an inn, where it will not be
'eating its head off,' like a horse; or you can
send it home, or sell it, and take to the road
yourself, or sink back again into the dull old
cushions of the 'Premiere Classes,' and dream you
are seeing the world.
"With such advantages, then, and with good
weather and good health, the canoe voyage is truly
delightful.
"It may well be asked from one who thus praises
the paddle, 'Has he traveled in other ways, so as
to know their several pleasures? Has he climbed
glaciers and volcanoes, dived into caves and
catacombs, trotted in the Norway carriole, ambled
on an Arab, and galloped on the Russian steppes?
Does he know the charms of a Nile boat, or a
Trinity Eight, or a Yankee steamer, or a sail in
the Aegean, or a mule in Spain? Has he swung upon a
camel, or glided in a sleigh, or sailed a yacht, or
trundled in a Rantoone?'
"Yes, he has most thoroughly enjoyed these and
other modes of locomotion, fast and slow. And now,
having used the canoe in Europe, Asia, Africa and
America, he finds the pleasure of the paddle is the
best of them all."
He might also have added that pecuniarily it is the
most economical mode of journeying of any of those he
named, and perhaps the most healthful.
The main feature of the Rob Roy, distinguishing it
from other canoes in general use up to its time by the
Saxon race, is the deck. The canoe differs in
construction and sheer -- the rising of the sides of
the canoe when approaching the ends -- from the
Esquimau kayak, but gets its deck idea from the kayak.
The Rob Roy has a rather flat deck, slightly rounded
laterally. The kayak has a very decided sheer, thus
sharply curving the deck up toward the bow and
stern.
Mr. Baden-Powell took up canoeing shortly after
MacGregor published his book, and purchased a Rob Roy
canoe, which was named Nautilus. After using this
canoe for a time he became much interested in sailing
it, and the idea occurred to him that a better canoe
could be designed for this purpose, and yet retain
good paddling qualities. He planned and built Nautilus
No.2. In reality this was the first Nautilus canoe --
of a model different from the Rob Roy. Up to this time
the two types of canoes known, open Canadian and
decked Rob Roy, were built for paddling, and very
little account was taken of the sail. The Nautilus
canoe was the first one designed with the intention of
a frequent and effective use of the sail.
24 25
Canoe Types.
This canoe was decked, but had a
decided sheer, and was intended to draw more water
than the Rob Roy, thus making a better canoe for
carrying sail and beating to windward.
A second Nautilus was built the following winter
(being really Nautilus No. 3), having a number of
modifications and improvements over the No. 2 (or No.1
of the new type. This No. 3 Nautilus is the one
Americans usually mean when they speak of the Nautilus
model. Mr. Baden-Powell drew out the lines of a No. 4
Nautilus -- almost identical with those of No. 3 --
but never built from them. These No. 4 lines, however,
were the ones obtained by a member of the New York
Canoe Club from England, and are the ones from which
James Everson, of Williamsburgh, built in 1870 the
first canoes of this type known of in the United
States. Mr. Jarvis, a builder of rowing boats and
canoes on the Thames, came to this country about the
same time and settled in central New York. He soon
began building, and produced a number of very good
Nautilus canoes (of No. 3 model), the best known of
which is canoe Psyche, built at Ithaca in
1876.
Mr. Baden-Powell has built many canoes, all called
Nautilus, no two of which are alike; in fact, their
models grade all the way from the slightly modified
Rob Roy up to the sixteen-inch draught, heavy
centerboard sailing canoe. Nautilus model, therefore,
means nothing; or, rather it can mean almost anything.
In the United States Nautilus is usually
intended to mean either Nos. 3 or 4.
Three canoe TYPES then, it has been shown, are
pretty clearly marked and distinct, the one from the
other, of those used in civilization.
1. The Canadian open canoe, holding two or
more persons, for sporting, carrying heavy loads,
and for general lake, river and rapids navigation,
handled with the single blade paddle.
2. The Rob Roy canoe, holding one person,
decked, double-bladed paddle, adapted for
cruises.
3. The Nautilus [3 or 4], not quite as
good in either of the special fields covered by the
other two, but still quite capable of much that the
others are, and adding to this good sailing
qualities, which neither of the others possess.
Under one of these three types any of the canoes
now in use can be housed. The word canoe being here
somewhat limited in meaning to conform closely to the
definition given by the American and the Western Canoe
Associations of America, and the Royal Canoe Club of
England. The Rob Roy and Canadian open canoes have not
changed very much in model in the last twenty years,
though in construction they have both been very
greatly improved. The great changes and almost endless
varieties in model come under the head of Nautilus
type -- meaning the type of canoes constructed to
carry sail to advantage. The sail has brought this all
about. Few "points" enter into the problem of the
design of a paddling canoe, weight to be transported,
character of water to be used on, and speed desired
being the principal ones. For sailing it is different.
Every man has his own ideas, as in yacht designing,
where two are rarely built just alike.
26 27
Construction.
ENLARGEMENT.
Every man who builds changes this
existing feature, or modifies that to suit his
individual taste or whim so that extremes of all sorts
have been run into only to eventually improve and
perfect the happy medium canoe. There is no such thing
as a best canoe. Many good ones exist, and you will
have to select from them the best one adapted to your
special needs. Much has been said and written about
the "perfect canoe." The only perfect canoe is the one
you happen to own and want to sell. Canoeists are a
little like horse jockeys; their statements about
their own canoes and the wonderful feats accomplished
in them must The taken with a grain of allowance. So
beware of what I tell you and do not accept it as fact
till you have demonstrated it yourself. I shall state
it all as fact, but you are to understand it is merely
my opinion.
Construction.
THE materials used in building barbarian
canoes are skins and bark stretched over rude frames
of bones or wood and sewed together her, the seams
being rendered watertight with pitch, gums or oils and
grease; the trunks of trees hollowed out and sharpened
at the ends; and in some localities of matted grasses
or woven reeds. The tame canoe adds to the above list,
wooden planked canoes, metal (tinned iron, zinc,
copper and steel), canvas and paper. ~ he most common
are those made of thin planks of cedar or basswood and
varnished or painted. Some canoes are built of many
very narrow strips laid lengthways and tapered to form
the lines, nailed securely to each other and to the
keel, stem and stern posts, the whole covered with
canvas and painted.
28 29
Uses.
Some have the strips run from the
keel to gunwale, tongued and grooved into each other.
Others are veneers of two or three thicknesses
cemented or riveted firmly together. Many different
kinds of woods are used for the various parts having
special necessities. Oak keel and frame, white cedar
planking, Spanish cedar deck, walnut moldings, pine
bulkheads and carlins, hackmatack knees, stem and
stern posts, and spruce spars and paddle, are a few of
the woods used, and their special functions.*
The cedar planked canoes are the most common in use
in the United States. The lightness, toughness and
elasticity of this wood recommend it for such use.
These canoes are built principally in two ways -- the
lapstreak and the smooth skin. A streak is a single
plank of the hull running from stem to stern. When a
streak is made up of two pieces, each extending about
half the length of the canoe, the planks are said to
be butted. There are usually five or more streaks on
each side of the hull. In the lapstreak canoe the
seams are made tight by the lapping of each streak
over the edge of the one below it and beveled into it,
the rivets or nails being drawn through both planks
and burred or clinched on the inside. The streaks are
fastened to the ribs in the same way. In smooth skin
canoes the planks are laid edge to edge, and a batten
run over the seam on the inside and nailed to both
planks, the seam being afterward caulked.
*For full
particulars on building and material see "Canoe
and Boat Building for Amateurs," by W. P.
Stephens, Forest and Stream Publishing
company.
The lapstreak is said to be "clinker built." The
Canadian canoes are all smooth skin canoes built in
several ways without the use of the batten, the tongue
and groove method being quite popular. The streaks on
either side of the keel on the bottom of the canoe are
called the garboard streaks.
Uses.
THE fact that the canoe has lived so long and is
now on the increase, as to numbers, rather than dying
out in use, shows conclusively that it has a place in
human affections -- is useful. For what? It is
specially adapted for journeys (of pleasure) on small
rivers and lakes in wild regions on account of its
lightness, for ease in carrying from one water way to
another, and the simplicity of its management. It is
so narrow that an inlet three feet wide can be
navigated, and if no outlet is found the canoeist
merely turns himself around and paddles the canoe
stern first out again. A rapid can be conquered (going
up) by poling the canoe along, if the water be not too
swift; paddling down a deep rapid is the finest and
most exciting sport yet invented. The canoe carries a
large amount of baggage besides the crew, and is
strong enough to stand many a hard knock and rough
usage. The above are some of the reasons why the
Indians used canoes and learned to build and handle
them with wonderful skill, hunting and fishing can be
done in them, usually using the single-blade paddle
and the open canoe.
30 31
Canoe Fever.
Paddling is capital exercise with
either the single or double blade. The wrist movement
in paddling is said by an authority to be an excellent
cure for writer's cramp, and the fresh air and
pleasant scenes sure to be got at in a canoe will tone
up the body and refresh the tired brain -- and
certainly provoke a good appetite. Wherever a small
boat is useful a canoe is useful, ornamental and
thoroughly enjoyable as well. How can a summer
afternoon be spent more pleasantly than in nosing
around in a canoe on a quiet creek, mountain lake or
stream, some lovely river reach, or calm bay of the
sound, or along the coast?
Racing is of secondary interest in canoeing. It can
be made most exciting and enjoyable if the other
objects for which the canoe exists are not lost sight
of. Many things prevent that these points should be
neglected to the racing interest; the little time that
can actually be devoted to racing, the strong
inducements to cruise, take short trips, in fact, get
on the water anyhow, and the inconveniences of a
racing canoe and strictly racing appliances for such
other functions as are sure to push themselves; and
last, but not least, the limits drawn by the Canoe
Association rules for races among its members.
Builders have to come within these rules or there is
no sale for their wares. The rules are specially drawn
to prevent the construction of racing machines, as you
will discover if you read them carefully in the book
published yearly by the ACA.
If you are tempted by any canoe bait here
presented, or urged upon you by canoeists of your
acquaintance, and decide to go into canoeing, remember
that the canoe is not a toy and canoeing child's play
-- but a manly sport and pastime. If you catch the
fever (canoesia) you are likely to have a serious
attack. You will either come out well cured the first
season, or become a confirmed enthusiast of paddle and
sail.
Believe in no rose-colored accounts of the sport,
but make up your mind to lots of tough work, hard
knocks, petty annoyances, some disappointments, many
trials, and always remember that nature is stern,
unrelenting and no respecter of persons. "Time and
tide wait for no man," woman or boy; neither will the
wind blow always the way you wish it to; in fact, as a
rule it never does. When most you need a breeze, a
calm will be your fortune, and when a calm would be a
blessing it will blow a gale. If you fear a wetting,
never get into a canoe. It has been aptly said that in
a canoe you come face to face with nature; look out
then that you don't become acquainted too early with
her stern expressions, as they are pretty sure to
strike terror to any one viewing them for the first
time. Take her when she smiles and let the frowns come
when you know her other moods well. The canoe is the
child of nature. Win the mother as you would the
daughter -- by patience and endurance rather than
force. Expect nothing from her, and she will give you
all she has -- a rich store, never exhausted.
If you start out in the canoe to go somewhere --
and it is well always to have an objective point -- go
there.
32 33
Kinds of Canoes.
Think it all over beforehand,
prepare yourself, and then "never say die." If you
weather the rough work at the beginning, you are all
right. You will find such friends among the clan as
you never dreamed of before, and delights kings and
the rich are strangers to. To acquire these you will
have to earn your own experience. Rest assured that in
getting it many surprises are in store for you -- some
pleasant ones, others the reverse. The real canoeist
is a good fellow and one whose acquaintance will do
you good. He is healthy, body and mind; and is the
result of (old Darwin's theory) the survival of the
fittest; and also remember that only the fittest do
survive, as canoeists.
On the highways the canoe can go safely where many
another boat double its size would not dare to
venture. By an apron and hatches, the well, or open
part of the canoe, can be closed around the body of
the skipper so water cannot conveniently get inside;
and if the canoe is provided with watertight
compartments, as it should be, it will not sink or
become unmanageable, even if some water does get into
the hold, though laden with weight of baggage and
crew, perhaps ballast. The canoe can live in a sea, by
good management, up to the limit of the weight of a
breaking wave actually crushing in the deck when
falling on it; or a wave so high that it will turn the
canoe over end for end, or roll it out of its course,
broadside on for the succeeding wave to roll it over.
Such seas are rarely met with in any but open waters
-- the large lakes and old ocean itself.
For navigating safely rapids, narrow and winding
streams, shallows and varied waters, the canoe has no
equal among boats. It is a boat of averages, adapted
for many uses and varieties of water. It is rarely the
best boat for any particular one of them. In point of
speed it is inferior to the better class of rowboats.
Oars will propel a boat faster than the paddle, other
things being equal. Generally a sailboat of the
canoe's length will make better time than a canoe
sailing. The sailboat always has the advantage of
being wider, and thus carrying more sail. On a journey
of one or more days' duration, the canoe will make
better average progress than either the sail or
rowboat. The canoe can sail faster than a rowboat, and
can be paddled faster than a sailboat can be rowed.
Thus, where sailing cannot be done all the time, the
canoe can be moving under paddle while the sailboat is
at anchor. For a length of time paddling is easier and
quicker than rowing. The canoe furnishes many comforts
foreign to a rowboat. It is dryer, usually lighter, is
not as much affected by head winds, and is more
conveniently steered by a crew of one, as he sits
facing forward. The canoe is easier to get under way
and house than the sailboat.
Kinds of
Canoes.
CANOES are not all alike. The dimensions and models
for particular uses have departed from the original
birch and kayak, and have been modified and changed to
better adapt the canoe to the precise
34 35
Classification
uses to which it is to be put. Two
canoes are rarely built exactly alike; or, if so
built, are differently fitted and rigged. The canoe is
either paddled, sailed or carried (over portages,
etc.) by her crew. Towing and other means of
locomotion are omitted in the above statement, as they
are exceptional cases. A canoe which is equally
adapted to all three is not apt to be a very excellent
canoe for any one. In building canoes for certain
uses, primary importance is given to one of the above
three points and secondary importance to either of the
other two, very rarely to both equally. All the canoe
varieties can be grouped under five heads, in a sort
of general classification, recognizing only vital
differences brought about by special fields of
usefulness. [See table on opposite page.]
Canoes are propelled either by paddle or sail. Some
canoes never have a sail used in them. Others rarely
use the paddle. The proportion existing between the
use of the paddle and the sail in any canoe determines
its class. The classification given in the rules of
the American Canoe Association for racing is much more
limited than the above broad classification; but
within its limits it is very exact in drawing dividing
lines by actual measurements of hull.
The TYPES of canoes have been described. There are
three from which CLASSES, MODELS and VARIETIES have
been derived; namely, Rob Roy, Open Canadian
and Nautilus, or decked paddling (double
blade), open paddling (single blade), and decked
sailing canoes. Types have to do with the history of
canoeing; classes deal only with canoes now in
existence. Models are subdivisions of each class, and
varieties are slight modifications in model not of
sufficient importance to constitute a separate and
distinct model.
Before buying a canoe, make up your mind which
class will give you most pleasure or profit, and then
get advice from some one well informed which model in
that class is the best for your special needs. The
classes merge one into another with no very hard lines
of demarcation, which is quite natural.
|
CANOE CLASSIFICATION.
|
|
I
|
II
|
III
|
IV
|
V
|
|
PADDLING 6
|
PADDLING 4
SAILING 2
|
PADDLING 3
SAILING 3
|
SAILING 4
PADDLING 2
|
SAILING 6
|
|
MODELS.
|
|
Birch.
Kayak.
Rob Roy (long).
Nessmuk.
Kill van Kull.
Racers.
Peterboro.
Herald.
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Rob Roy.
American Travelling.
Nautilus 2.
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Shadow.
Stella Maris.
St Lawrence.
Ellard.
Nautilus 3.
Juniper.
Grayling.
Diamond.
Clyde.
Princess.
Ontario.
Jersey Blue.
Sandy Hook.
Mohican.
Springfield.
Everson.
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Nautilus '80.
Pearl.
Guenn.
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Nautilus '79.
Atlantis.
Mersey.
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Note: Many of Class III
canoes come in this class unless fitted with
sailing appliances such as keel, centerboard,
etc.
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Note: Some of Class III
canoes come under this class when fitted heavy
center-boards, and are more especially used for
sailing.
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NOTE: the figures in each class
after the words Paddling and Sailing show the
proportion existing in such class that the
use of the paddle bears to the use of the
sail, taken for an entire season's work.
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36 37
Various Parts of Hull.
Class I canoes carry no sail
and are entirely propelled by the paddle, either
single or double-blade.
Class II use a sail only now and then with a
free wind (that is a wind blowing in the direction the
canoe is going, or nearly so) and do not depend much
on the sail. These canoes have little or no keel and
are without center and leeboards. They draw very
little water and have no hold in it, so to speak.
Therefore, with sail up, if the course is changed from
before the wind so that the wind strikes the side of
the canoe, it will be found to drift sideways, or make
leeway as it is termed, and if the course of the wind
is departed from very much, this same leeway will be
greater than the headway made.
Class III paddling and sailing canoes are
getting to be by far the most common. The sail and
paddle are used about equally. The length and breadth
of these canoes are means between the extreme length
and beam for one use only. These canoes by means of
keels or centerboards, are enabled, under sail, to
make to windward, that is, to reach a point in the
direction from which the wind blows, from the starting
point. Beating to windward means sailing at a very
acute angle to the direction of the wind, first to
right (or left) for a distance, then coming about
(tacking) and sailing to the left (or right, and so on
till the desired point is reached. In sailing back to
the starting point the wind would be free. One man can
lift and carry a Class III canoe when relieved of its
load of ballast or cargo.
Class IV are used mostly for sailing. They
have fixed deep keels or heavy centerboards of iron,
and carry considerable ballast to enable them to stand
up under a large area of sail. These canoes are
adapted to open water sailing, and are built usually
with a view to racing -- under sail only. They are
nearly always built up to the limits indicated by the
Association or the Clubs, and though they do excellent
work under sail, are heavy and tiresome to paddle.
Class V can cover large sailing canoes
outside the rules, which are not paddled if it is
possible to avoid it, and more nearly come under the
head of sailboats. Except for their general canoe
lines and method of rig they would all be regular
sailboats.
The
Various Parts.
HULL. The body of the canoe. The sum of all its
parts with the exception of masts, sail, rig, etc. The
hull is made up of frame, planking and deck.
FRAME. The skeleton to which the planking and deck
are fastened. The body frame consists of keel,
keelson, stempost, sternpost, ribs and knees.
KEEL. The backbone of the canoe. A timber running
from end to end on the bottom of the hull and
terminating in the stem and sternposts, to which it is
securely fastened.
KEELSON. A timber or plank inside the canoe
fastened to the keel and resting on it above the
junction of the planking with the keel.
STEM. The curved (or straight) timber rising from
forward end of keel, to which the planking is
fastened, forming the bow of the canoe, and
terminating at the deck, or very slightly above
it.
STERNPOST. The timber rising from the keel at its
after end, to which the planking is fastened, forming
the stern of the canoe. Bow, forward end. Stern, aft,
or rear end.
RIBS. Timbers running from gunwale (the junction of
deck and sides) on one side, down to keel and up to
the gunwale on the other; or, from gunwale to keel.
The curve of the ribs governs the shape of the canoe,
and forms its lines, so called.
38 39
Parts of Hull.
A canoe's lines merely mean its
shape, the lines indicating its shape. The ribs are
fastened to the keel and to the timber at gunwale
(which timber extends on both sides from stem to stern
or the top streak, which in that case is heavier than
the others, as is the case in the illustration on this
page (Section). In building the planking is put over
the molds and fastened, the ribs being put in
afterward, in this respect differing from the method
employed in building larger vessels. The distance
between ribs varies in different methods of building
from 1-1/2 inches to 10 inches or more.
ENLARGEMENT.
40 41
Parts of Hull.
KNEES. Timbers taking the place of
ribs along the canoe the length of the well or
cockpit, and forming deck supports as well as assuming
the functions of ribs.
PLANKING. Boards forming the sides and bottom of
hull. They are sunk into the keel and securely
fastened to it, to the keelson, to each other on the
laps and to the ribs. A single plank is called a
streak. The garboard streak is the one (on each side)
next to and joining the keel. The streaks usually run
the entire length of the boat, terminating at the stem
and stern posts, to which they are fastened. If they
do not extend the entire length two pieces are butted,
as it is called.
DECKS. The covering of the hold or body of the
canoe which is formed by the bottom and sides. The
opening in the deck to admit the placing of stores and
cargo inside and to accommodate the crew is called the
well. The deck is made of a frame and deck planks. The
frame consists of carlins, side frame of well, ridge
piece, main beam, and mast beams.
CARLINS. Deck beams fastened to the planking at the
gunwale on which the deck planking is fastened.
Technically, they are pieces of timber fastened
between beams in a fore and aft direction.
SIDE FRAME. Timbers running fore and aft, fastened
to and supported by the knees and forming the well
hole.
RIDGE PIECE. Timbers extending from stem and
sternpost to well. The carlins, are fastened to it,
and it forms the ridge or crown of the deck.
MAIN BEAM. The largest beam generally placed in a
canoe, just in front of the well as a support for the
ridge piece and fore end of well frame.
MAST BEAMS. Wide beams supporting in part and
stiffening the deck frame, and through which the mast
tubes are run to the step on the keel.
STEP. A block fastened to the upper side of
keelson, with a hole sunk in it for the reception of
the mast to keep it in position.
MAST TUBE. Usually of brass or copper, running from
deck into the step and securely fastened at both ends,
and plugged at the bottom to prevent the water coming
on deck from getting into the hold. It also guides the
mast into the step when putting the mast up. It should
be made large enough to allow the mast to be easily
removed, even if somewhat swelled after having been
wet for a long period.
COAMING. A plank on edge fastened to side frame of
well and completely surrounding the well to prevent
deck wash from coming inboard.
HATCH. A lid or covering for any part of the well
or other opening in the deck, capable of easy removal,
and resting on the coaming if over the well.
BEADING. A narrow strip of wood in the angle the
coaming forms with the deck at point of junction, to
prevent water entering. Also a narrow strip of wood
run along the top streak at the gunwale, to protect
its edge from wear.
42 43
Parts of Hull.
BULKHEADS. Partitions dividing the
hold into compartments. They may be permanent, in
which case the planking of sides and deck are nailed
to them and an attempt is made to render them
watertight; or they may be movable, and simply used as
partitions.
APRON. A cloth covering for the well, to take the
place of hatches or supplement their use.
BOTTOM or FLOOR BOARD. A board, or boards fastened
together, laid on supports raised from keelson and
bottom planks on which the crew and stores rest. It is
a protection to the planking, and keeps crew and
stores above any small amount of water that may be in
the canoe's bottom.
SHOE. A metal band run along bottom of keel at
either end or its whole length to save it from wear in
putting the canoe up on land.
DEADRISE. The angle (if less than a right angle
made by the junction of planking with the keel. The
section given on page 38 shows no deadrise. This canoe
is said to have a flat floor -- i.e., flat bottom.
BILGE. The curved part of the canoe's side formed
in turning from the bottom to the straight side
line.
TUMBLEHOME. Where the sides of a canoe slope inward
from its widest part to the deck at gunwale. The
Nautilus canoe section on page 26 shows a very
decided tumblehome.
SHEER. The difference in height above the water
line between the bow or stern and the gunwale
amidship. In the sheer plan on page 26 the curve of
the gunwale line upward from amidships to stern and
stern posts shows the sheer.
CAMBER. The arch of the deck. Sheer is the curve of
the deck fore and aft; camber, the curve of the deck
athwartship.
BACKBOARD. A board usually hung from a hatch or
bulkhead directly behind the paddler, against which he
rests his back.
BRACE. A cross bar of wood placed in a rack (to
adjust to any length of leg) on the bottom board of a
canoe against which the feet rest or brace themselves
while their owner is paddling.
RIVETS. Usually of copper, used in fastening the
parts of a canoe one to another. The rivet has a head
on one end. The other end is run clear through a plank
or timber and a burr (a flat rim) is pushed over it
and the rivet end flattened, thus forming two heads to
the rivet -- one at each end -- and effectually
preventing its working out of its place. When nails
are used to fasten parts together, their ends are
clinched, turned over to prevent their getting out of
place.
BEARINGS. A plank weighted to float on edge in the
water has practically no bearings. The same plank
floated naturally is practically all bearings. A sharp
deadrise and slight curve to bilge give slight
bearings. A flat floor and quick bilge curve give good
bearings. Good bearings are needed to give stability
under sail. Slight bearings render paddling easy.
44
Canoe Handling.
DISPLACEMENT. The space occupied by
the body of a canoe afloat below the waterline.
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© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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