How to Buy a Canoe
Things You'll Need
- Canoe Gear Bags
- Canoe Kneeling Pads
- Canoe Paddles
- Canoe Racks
- Canoe Yokes
- Canoes
- Life Vests
Instructions
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1
Decide how you're going to be using your canoe. Are you taking family trips on a gentle lake, or riding white-water rapids? Are you racing your canoe, or fishing from it?
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2
Determine the best canoe type for your purposes. A family or camping canoe needs to be relatively large in order to hold all your gear and passengers, but it doesn't need to be as maneuverable and strong as a white-water canoe. A racing canoe must be light and narrow. A fishing canoe should be stable and big enough to carry all your gear.
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3
Consider the various materials and decide on a budget. Royalex is very durable, though it varies in price and quality. Kevlar is a consistently light and very strong material, but it's usually expensive and is difficult to repair. Polyethylene is a strong, versatile material that is fairly inexpensive. Wood canoes can be both light and sturdy (or they can be heavy as sin and sturdy) with a great traditional feel to them, but due to the difficulty of making them, they are very expensive. Avoid buying aluminum canoes, which are heavy and hard to navigate.
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4
Consider length. Longer canoes paddle faster and hold more gear and people. Longer canoes are also more difficult to transport and maintain, and also harder to steer. Short canoes are better for white water.
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5
Pick a canoe with a rounded or V-shaped hull. Flat-hull canoes are more stable when you are sitting still in them, but rounded and V-shaped hulls out-perform the flat hull in every other category. They turn better, paddle better, and are less likely to overturn.
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6
Examine the tumblehome (the inward curve of the upper edges) of your canoe. Tumblehome is added to canoes to strengthen the sometimes flimsy materials used to construct them. More tumblehome makes a canoe stronger and easier to paddle, but also easier to capsize. Avoid excessive tumblehome if you expect rough water.
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7
Don't put too much weight on the advertised load capacity of a canoe. Bring a tape measure along and figure it out yourself. Assume that most of your load is going in the center of the canoe. Wider canoes will have more room, but they will also be slower.
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8
Consider the number of seats in the canoe. Will you be paddling alone, or bringing your family?
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9
Take into account how you will be transporting your canoe when you buy it.
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