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My stroke and its effects killed my dream and plan of building two cedar-strip Prospecters ("Beaver" and "Otter") and � among other things� treating some blind kids to the inimitable pleasures of quiet river trips. I still get goose bumps, however, just revisiting the dream.

For the ultimate in satisfying canoeing experience, build your own cedar-strip, of any model that's detailed in the marvelous Canadian book whose name and author escape my rickety memory. (I'll post 'em if I remember 'em.) You haven't begun to sample the real pleasures of the water world until you've spent some time in canoes.

I've white-watered (bow paddle! wet job!) in a 19-foot square-stern Grumman in Alaska � much rather have a cedar-strip Prospector for general canoeing.

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If, and it is a big if, I get to go to the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding, strip canoes and kayaks are what I want to build. I was there last month and saw one built by a student and it was beautiful beyond words. I can do that even with the limitations from my injury. I have built two wood and canvas canoes and they were great but would not begin to compare to a strip canoe.


The first time I shot myself in the head...

Meniere's Sucks Big Time!!!