LOL well I'm a bit of a collector. One day I would actually like to open a museum for real. I have several here at my buisness, several in my garage. I keep 2 in the adrondaks, 2 in minnesota, 1 in georgia, a 1910 wood canvas Old Town is getting restored in South carolina right now, and a few at my folks house.
Most of my boats I have acquired over the last 12 years. I primarily am interested in composite canoes developed in the 70's and 80's that had some "new" design features that are now standard in the high tech canoes you get now. For example the Bell Magic solo. I have one and it's 3 predecessors design by David Yost, none of which are Bell canoes. They are sawyer, and Curtis canoes since Bell wasn't around then, David designed for them. You look at the evolutiuon of Davids designs on all 4 canoes and it's amazing how similar but progresivly different they are.
I am also a big freestyle canoe fan and had had the honor working with a great paddler named Mike Galt. I have acquired almost every design he made. He is no longer with us but in the modern canoeing times this guy developed some great boats and techniques that are standards in skilled paddling now.
My favorite canoe that I actually use is my canadiane 17 by Bell. It was design by Ralph freez the owner of Chicago land canoe base in the 70's He wanted a peformance retro style canoe that was made in composite for mass production. He designed 16 ,17,& 18 size models. They were made by Old town Canoe till the mid 90's when Oldtown got out of high end canoes. The molds were sent back to Ralph and he made a few over the years at his shop till he signed a deal with Bell to make the 17 and 18.
My 17 was built as Ted Bells personal Canoe for his family. He got a call from Ralph who had a customer going to the Boundary waters and wanted a Canadian. So ted said well send mine I'll build another. Ralph ended up selling the customer a different canoe. So the canoe ended up at carl's paddling in Wisconsn instead. They had a customer who wanted one and ended up getting something else. Later that year I went to the first Bell Experience in Wisconson And Carl from Carl's paddling had a Canadian on his roof. I asked him about it and got the story of the canoe. He was returing it to Ted Bell since it all along was suposed to be his personal canoe. Of course Ted and I have the same taste in outfiting so it was built to my standards LOL. So I told ted I had A guy n florida that was dying to get one (me), and that day I headed down the river for a 5 day trip on the namakogen river in my new Bell canadian 17. The cool thing about this canoe is it is Carbon fiber & wood trim but was the first one color matched to the original Old Town green color. I called Old Town and had them ship me the remaining Canadian Decals they had since Bell had not got theirs printed yet. So I have the only Bell branded logo on the Bow and the Old Town Canadienne logo on the back with color matched Gel laid up in Black Gold lamination with wood trim a kneeling thwart and web seats. If your not a paddler that is probably greek but it basically means it loaded out and one of a kind. I have paddled it on the Namekogen in Wisconson, The colorado & green rivers in utah, the bufffalo in arkansas, the adirondacks, all over florida, south carolina's lake jocassee, keowee and Edisto river, Great Salt lake, and I might take it to Idaho but have not decided how many canoes I'm bringing LOL
Most of my boats have crazy stories behind them, so for me it's fun to talk about as you can tell by the long post. I'm a bit of a canoe nut :xxrotflma