A 21st Century, Solo Cruising 
                  Sailing Canoe
                19th century sailing canoes, 
                  in W. P. Stephens’s prints, caught me in the 1980s. The 
                  boats’ ideas and their elegance have held me since. They’d 
                  promised fine travel a century ago, and they’d given it. 
                  They had a nearly infallible auxiliary, were handily portable 
                  by train or muscle powered cart, and they were fast. But their 
                  usage and evolution slumped after bicycles and better roads 
                  were built, and fossil fuel came to small boats.
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘97 1) Puffin 
                        on oyster shell Corrigan Reef, Cedar Key, Florida, with 
                        her first rig, a battenless gunter. 
                      click 
                        images to enlarge  | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘99 2) Serendipity 
                      with Meade Gougeon and her first rig on the Saginaw River, 
                      Michigan. | 
                       
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                I studied photos and drawings, and reread their stories. At 
                  Mystic Seaport and the Adirondack Museum, their graceful shapes, 
                  and clear-eyed sincerity seduced me.
                John Dowd’s, Sea 
                  Kayaking: a Manual for Long Distance Touring, 
                  1983, told me about folding Kleppers and their extraordinary 
                  accomplishments. They were often fitted with a sailing rig, 
                  placing them, to me, in the same genre of boats---sailing and 
                  paddling about equally well---although Kleppers are built skin-on-folding-frame. 
                
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘01 3) Serendipity 
                        full reef back to Spragge, Ontario, Canada.   | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘02 4) Puffin 
                      with batwing gunter, Serendipity, and Spirit with 
                      Jan Gougeon, North Channel of Lake Huron, Ontario, full 
                      reefs. | 
                       
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                My mind’s eye saw gliding in the mist a sensual curve, 
                  a bit of sheer---a modern decked, cruising sailing canoe.
                In ‘86, beginning with a twenty foot Eddyline San Juan 
                  three-holer, I invested in producing sailing kits for kayaks 
                  and canoes. I fitted rigs to solo boats, and to smaller and 
                  larger doubles and tandems, including Valerie Fons’s and 
                  Verlen Kruger’s decked canoes. I tried many small boat 
                  rigs, from the simplest to high aspect fully battened sails. 
                  I kept testing and experimenting. 
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘02 5) Serendipity 
                        bare poles back to our takeout at Spanish, Ontario. Ron 
                        Sell made our paddles.  | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘03 6) Serendipity sisters, 
                      Saginaw River, first reefs. | 
                       
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                In ‘93 I sketched a multi-chine hull, borrowing some 
                  of the shape from Russell Brown’s Brown Pelican kayak.
                In ‘95 Ron Sell decked a Bell Canoe Works “Starfire” 
                  hull for me, after we’d marked and cut a new sheer below 
                  the paddlers’ pinched sheer. Dave Yost had drawn the 15’ 
                  x 34” Starfire for formal freestyle competition, paddled 
                  as a tandem with single blades. The displacement and most of 
                  the Starfire’s characteristics, particularly her deep 
                  rocker and relatively full ends, work well for sailing cruising. 
                  After I rigged her with a leeboard, rudder, spars, sail, and 
                  seat, she became Puffin. 
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘03 7) Walela 
                        with Kayann paddling single blade at Cedar Key, first 
                        reef.  | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘03 8) Walela 
                      with Kayann at Cedar Key. | 
                       
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                In ‘98 Meade Gougeon saw Puffin sailing and 
                  wanted to buy her. Based on another carbon and Kevlar Starfire 
                  hull, I built Serendipity for him and he built her 
                  a new rig. 
                Then came six sisterships with the Gougeons’ help. But 
                  instead of wood composite decks these were vacuum bagged, carbon 
                  skinned and foam cored, except Howard Rice’s Sylph 
                  which has a wooden deck like Serendipity’s. Jan 
                  Gougeon added to his Spirit the best notion I’ve seen 
                  for leeboard control, which I copied for my wife Kayann’s, 
                  Walela.
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘04 9) Meade’s 
                        Serendipity Sister, Shiawassee National Wildlife 
                        Refuge, Michigan, with the fattest fathead.  | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘05 10) Puffin 
                      with Jan, and Serendipity, inside Atsena Otie Key, 
                      Cedar Key. | 
                       
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                Meade’s style rig moves all the Serendipity sisters except 
                  Howard’s. Puffin first had a battenless gunter, 
                  the successor of which I built for Meade’s Serendipity. 
                  Stu Hopkins suggested a true batwing gunter for Puffin. 
                  Bill Ling’s gunter, shown on Bufflehead, is the 
                  successor to Puffin’s batwinged gunter, and the 
                  prototype for Bufflehead gunters.
                Yost’s Starfire hull was my gauge and baseline for developing 
                  the 15’ 5” x 33” Bufflehead design for plywood. 
                  After twenty years of experiments and experience sailing canoes 
                  and kayaks, with help and encouragement from many remarkable 
                  people, Bufflehead is the result of the multichine shape I drew 
                  in 1993. 
                
                   
                      | 
                      ‘05 11) Sylph 
                        reefed, Howard Rice, Lake Michigan.   | 
                  
                
                
                   
                    | ‘06 12) Sylph 
                      and Howard with his main and jib on Brevort Lake, Michigan’s 
                      Upper Peninsula.  | 
                       
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                The goal is to improve the cruising sailing canoe, not duplicate 
                  or reinvent it. Bufflehead’s intended use, however, is 
                  the same as the 19th century sailing cruisers---pleasurable 
                  travel after the adage, ‘Sail when you can; paddle when 
                  you must!’
                 ~Hugh Horton - hortonsailcanoe@wowway.com~