HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN DIY STRIP CANOE

The DIY Strip Canoe project continues with the addition of the gunnels.  The Gunnels, also known as gunwales are the trim pieces that line the top edge of the canoe opening.

 

There are evidently several ways to add the gunnels.  Who knew?   The recommended way is to attach the gunnels with screws.  Mr. Hobby was not a fan of that method so he came up with his own plan.

We lost our images sorry. If you make this, please email us your pictures.

To make the gunnels, he needed very long strips of wood that would span one side of the canoe from front to back.  In order to have a piece long enough to do this, a scarf joint was cut on two strips of walnut that were then glued together.   A scarf cut gives a lot of surface area for gluing two pieces together, thus making a stronger joint.

Four long strips are needed, two for each side of the canoe.


In the picture above, you can see two of these strips are used to sandwich either side of the top edge of the canoe.  To attach them, Mr. Hobby used a biscuit joiner with biscuits and epoxy.

You can see the strips overhanging the front of the canoe in the picture above.  They will eventually be trimmed

The strips of walnut start out straight, but they need to bend along with the curve of the canoe.   Mr. Hobby used heat applied to the wood to bend it before attaching.

The outside of the canoe in the below picture shows the film of dust left from the multiple sandings.

Wow, look at the amount of clamps that were used to hold the gunnel in place while the epoxy dried on just one side of the canoe!  I think just about every clamp Mr. Hobby owns is being used to hold the strips in place.

Wax paper was used to keep the clamps from sticking to the epoxy and canoe.

In the above picture, you can see a strip of walnut lying across the top of the canoe.  This is one of the gunnel pieces that will be used for the other side.

Because the weather has finally warmed up, the canoe was moved from our basement into the garage for the finish work.  The canoe is amazingly light which made it very easy to move.  This is exactly what Mr. Hobby wanted.  He will have no trouble carrying the canoe over land to water on his own.

READ  Using Pinterest to find Fine Foliage

In the above picture, Mr. Hobby inserted braces in the interior of the canoe to help maintain the shape while the gunnel work is being completed.

To finish off the gunnel, Mr. Hobby cut a thin piece of walnut that will “cap” the sandwiched gunnel strips.  This strip needs to bend with the curve of the canoe as well, so heat was applied to help with the bending of the wood.

In the picture below, you can see that he is starting to clamp the thin cap strip along the top edge.

Epoxy is messy stuff.  There are several areas of drips that will need to be sanded away eventually.  These steps will need to be repeated for the gunnel on the opposite side of the canoe.

Coming up next, Mr. Hobby will build and attach the decks, thwarts/yoke and seats!

Thank you!

Pole Pruner For Tree Branches — Best Pole Pruners for Tree Branches
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Pole Pruners for Tree Branches

Reaching into a tree from a ladder is the single most dangerous job in a home garden. A good pole pruner — manual or powered — keeps both feet on the ground and turns a one-day job into an afternoon. The trade-off is

Read More »
Bypass Pruners Small Hands — Best Bypass Pruners for Small Hands
Buying Guides
Rosa Calloway

Best Bypass Pruners for Small Hands

Most pruners are built for a 90th-percentile male hand — too wide a grip, too stiff a spring, too long an overall length. If you’ve got smaller hands, an arthritic thumb or any wrist tenderness, the wrong pruners turn

READ  Painting Clay Pots
Read More »
Hori Hori Garden Knife — Best Hori Hori Knives for Weeding
Buying Guides
Harriet Greenfield

Best Hori Hori Knives for Weeding

If you only own one hand tool, make it a hori hori. The serrated, pointed Japanese soil knife divides crowns, slices through dock and dandelion roots, opens seed packets, plants bulbs at depth, and handles roughly 70% of

Read More »
Manual Hedge Shears — Best Hedge Shears for Tidy Borders
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Hedge Shears for Tidy Borders

Powered hedge trimmers are loud, leave a bruised cut, and are completely unnecessary for the small box, lavender or rosemary borders most home gardens actually have. A good pair of manual hedge shears is faster than you’

Read More »
Best Loppers for Thick Branches
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Loppers for Thick Branches

Loppers cover the gap between hand pruners (anything you can squeeze with one hand) and a pruning saw (anything you’d actually be sweating to cut). For most home gardens that means cutting back ornamental branches up to

Read More »
Garden Fork For Compost — Best Garden Forks for Turning Compost
Buying Guides
Harriet Greenfield

Best Garden Forks for Turning Compost

A border fork is a vegetable bed tool. A digging fork is a soil tool. A compost fork is its own thing — usually four narrow tines, sometimes five, designed to slide into a heap of half-rotted hay, leaves and kitchen sc

Read More »

Back to top button