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Sean,
Here is a link to a web sit of my last decked whitewater boat project. It's not a wood boat but just think plywood and it's all the same. Process is the issue here not materials
mountaindogs.net/plascorehull
If you wish to make things self bailing then all the floor levels must be above water line and you will need to make a best guess as to where that line will be. Another option is to use small 1 amp 500 gallon pumps and not worry about floor levels. Most boats are open drift boats for shorter runs and setup for fishing and mostly on class III runs. When moving up to class IV water it's time for most to leave the open boats home.
The folks here are mostly building traditional framed all wood boats. Montana-riverboats.com has a forum which is more stitch and glue. People are starting to build with composites as well as wood.
Most white water rowers build the classic flat bottom Briggs dory with higher sides. I prefer the Mckenzie boats but with higher sides also. You will need to dig a bit to find out more about each design.
Well,
I am from Philadelphia as well but, 30 years ago. Got cut up on the rocks of the Lehigh once and never went back. Had a few fun trips on the Yough. A high school friend's family had a Delaware river front house on the Jersey side near French Town. Spent a lot of the summer of 71 at that place. From the news a few weeks back I saw film which indicated you could have run a drift boat down the streets of Manayunk. That would have been sweet.
If you have not had the chance to row a decked boat on some big water you might think the gunwale could roll them but, as they start to pitch over they get more stable the higher they go. If by chance you get caught on a big ferocious eddy line and the gunwale does go under the water, the current is likely going to take it all the way.
The hard outside chine cap of the framed boats can also get caught by current when on a hard ferry angel. Chine dip is really startling the first time it happens to you.
With stitch and glue construction you could have the deck and sides meet and fiber glass the intersection. Just need to come up with an ora lock setup but, if the deck is too high it will make it difficult to push the oar handles down making for other issues.
Sean, I'm also a Pennsylvanian (lehigh valley area). I have a 16' traditional double ender and frequent the Lehigh, Delaware, and some other rivers. Generally, on the lehigh I stay below GlenOnoko Falls unless I'm in a cataraft. The main reason being not the size of the water (an open river dory is more than capable of drifting that water), but more so the depth. In my opinion, unless they are having substantial releases (say >1500 cfs at white haven), that is some pretty skinny water. In my opinion, a boat with decks would only make it skinnier.
Secondly, a smaller lighter open boat would allow access at some of the harder to reach put-ins and take outs.
Third, You should also check the regs for boats going through the gap - they are required to have some kind of flotation. I don't know that decking would qualify in the Park service's eyes. It is something worth checking out. If that is indeed one of your target rivers.
A more optimal solution is probably using flotation in an open boat. Really, the only way you'll get water over the rails is if you wreck. So its not the same scenario as in some of the big waters out west where waves are crashing over the sides and you need a self-bailer. My current muse is to build a smaller, lighter, double ender to do these upper stretches. Something small and nimble that can be equipped with floatation. Just my $0.02 - It also greatly depends on the other rivers you intend to float. John g.
I had no idea there were that many eastern guys posting on this site. That gives me a lot of encouragement. A word on the lehigh. The corps of eng. has a facebook page and lets people know when they will draw down in prep for storms, and it has enabled us to float that river at levels I would have never thought possible. Were talking 5000cfs ina kayak(my personal limit in that boat) and rockport/glen onoco over 11,000cfs R3 in my 13' raft. That high water day in the raft we had haystacks as tall as the boat is long and solid class3 a hundred yards into the trees. A lot of fun but pretty darn scary too. Everything went perfectly and its a good thing because I think if we wound up out of the boat we would have ended up in delaware on Dewey beach; end to end one hour and twenty minutes.
Back to the boats though, what I probably need is some experience behind the oars to see how these boats behave. What I hope to do is run some on water tests with some temp bracing and oars before I actually deck the thing just to be sure that is in fact what I really need. I'll at least be getting the plywood soon and as soon as I have something to report I'll be posting with pix. Again thanks to all for your insights.
Where you you planning to get your plywood? If there is a good supplier in your area it would be worth my drive. I know Dave Z has been going to Ohio. I think we have enough people in PA to put together a group float somewhere in the spring or early summer!
Regarding the wood - For Boulter, I bought Okoume ply and mahogany. For the shorter and less critical pieces, I used FAS lumber from some smaller mom&pop operations like Fleetwood lumber near reading. If you don't mind losing some wood to various defects in the grain, it is great and saves much $$ (not to mention some nice wobbly grain adds some character to certain elements). For long pieces like rails, this is obviously not a suitable option.
Regarding the float - no real preferences though I am a fisherman that boats and that fishing thing usually comes into the equation. I guess this is the reason you'll never find me on the upper lehigh at 11,000 cfs (well, that and self preservation) - though it really does sound fun. I would always be willing to travel - have been thinking some about the PA grand canyon in spring. I don't have a ton of trips up my sleeve (just built the drifter 1.5 years ago and still exploring. If it's Lehigh/Del, I have several floats (day & multi-day), otherwise I'm open to suggestions. Either way, it would all be good.
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