I'm outfitting an old fiberglass river kayak for flat water. This boat's a lot like the one that I used for a couple of years before I got the Necky Looksha Sport LV, so I didn't have any reservations about adopting it.
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The red river kayak |
I got this as an almost-bare hull (it had foot pedals) and I added deck bungees fore and aft of the cockpit, a temporary seat made from an old PFD, a temporary strap-in skeg, carry handles at the bow and stern, and shock cord (from a ruined tent fly) to keep the handles from flopping around.
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Deck rigging and the temporary seat |
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Grab handle on the bow |
I also added grab lines along the gunnels. The forward ends are connected with the same bolts that anchor the foot pedals, and the after ends are just tied around the stern. I plan to eventually replace the lines (which are currently cheap braided plastic rope from Harbor Freight) and add some kind of anchor points for the stern end of the lines.
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Stern rigging |
There are holes thru the bow and stern ends for lines to use for carrying the boat. I used some thin cord thru these holes to anchor the carrying handles because I wasn't able to disassemble the handles and run the attached cords thru the holes in the boat. This arrangement seems to work--for now. Like everything but the deck bungees this is likely to be temporary.
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The kayak before its first sea trial. |
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The kayak on the Carquinez Strait. |
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The Tyne folding kayak |
I bought a Tyne wooden-frame folding kayak at a garage sale a couple of months ago. (The boat was made be Tyne Canoes Ltd., or Tyne Folding Boats Ltd.--I don't know which is correct yet.) The seller mentioned that it needed work, but neglected to mention that one of the bulkheads was missing. I've managed to replace or repair many of the parts (both wood parts and brass parts; some of the new parts need more work), and because I was sufficiently distracted by the missing or broken things I didn't realize that the center bulkhead was missing altogether. I can make a replacement bulkhead, but after having done the rest of the repairs, and thinking I was almost done, finding that a major part of the frame was missing has killed my enthusiasm for the project. If you want to buy a project boat (wood frame and hypalon skin, for what it cost me so far), let me know.
Note, November 2012: I bought a
Folbot Super at another garage sale. It's similar to the Tyne, but newer, and complete as-is, so that it's not really a project boat. I'm probably going to sell one or the other of them if I ever finish making parts for the Tyne and get it on the water.
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