cruisertoy
Explorer
I honestly would not rule out an aluminum canoe. I own two old Grummans. Almost indestructable. If you leave them out in the weather for years they will oxidize and be messy, but even though mine are from the 70's they don't put off much black. If your going with something other than Aluminum check some long term feedback on the material you are choosing. I've seen many of the Polyethylene and ABS boats warped just from sitting on top of a truck in direct sun for too long or out on the lawn for that matter. Materials are always improving though. I work with injected molded plastics and vacuum form 8' square pieces of different plastics every day.
The fiberglass canoe I had before my two used aluminum ones could not handle the abuse of river and rock use. I had to carry a large glass repair kit on every trip and spent several hours on a few trips fixing instead of paddling. Glass is fine for large lake water stuff, but it doesn't dent, it cracks. I wrapped my first aluminum canoe around a rapid on the white river in New Hampshire and bent it in half. Popped 30 rivits out of the Keel. We were able to get it to the side and smash it back into shape, put a piece of duct tape over the rivit holes and make it to our vehicle. The glass canoe would have been splinters.
The fiberglass canoe I had before my two used aluminum ones could not handle the abuse of river and rock use. I had to carry a large glass repair kit on every trip and spent several hours on a few trips fixing instead of paddling. Glass is fine for large lake water stuff, but it doesn't dent, it cracks. I wrapped my first aluminum canoe around a rapid on the white river in New Hampshire and bent it in half. Popped 30 rivits out of the Keel. We were able to get it to the side and smash it back into shape, put a piece of duct tape over the rivit holes and make it to our vehicle. The glass canoe would have been splinters.