View allAll Photos Tagged canoing
This shows the board in the fully down position.
If the board was a single fixed board with a weight at the bottom the lever arm required to pull up the board would be the weight x the distance from the weight to the red pivot pin.
The secondary pivot halves the force required to raise the weight of the board because if halves the lever arm.
I saw this shaped ceramic bowl with succulents in it at the hairdressers and had to have one. I couldn't find one anywhere so I made one instead, out of exterior ply, fibreglassed the joins, gave it a coat of resin, painted and sealed it and now I'm going to polymer and TG it!
Lining the canoe up to the carry trail around The Hulling Machine on the East Branch of the Penobscot River, Maine.
Asian sculpture from the Nelson Gallery manipulated with the fantastic paint engine plugin with settings I've named blowing sand. I'm fascinated by the pixelated nature of the photo at the larger size.
This is the base of the same artwork as the previous photo.
Canoes and kayaks the police confiscated from water protectors and destroyed at the bottom of Turtle Hill.
Shot at Fjorda in Hadeland, Norway in July 2010 during the gangs annual canoe camping trip. No edits performed, only converted from NEF to JPEG.
Immaculate, home-built, cove & bead, cedar strip canoe. Covered inside & out with fiberglass. Finished bright and clear coated. Caned, scalloped seat suspended from scuppered inwales (Less weight? Drains water better from an overturned canoe with tumblehome? Beer cooler easily lashed between gunwales?) • Companion photo to... www.flickr.com/photos/mathersteve/28305943739/
2009 Cleveland Ohio USA boat show; Cleveland Amateur Boatbuilding and Boating Society booth (CABBS.org)
Canon point & shoot • Canoecraft by Ted Moores and Merilyn Mohr, may still be the iconic book on building this type of canoe. Copyrighted in 2000. Mine was copyrighted in 1983.
I took this photo while canoeing on the Armand Bayou with a group of friends. I didn't dare to use my big camera on the canoe. The original already had an impressionism feeling to it, so I decided to enhance that aspect to the photo.
...canoeing water fight on a hot August afternoon on the Speed River in downtown Guelph, Ontario Canada
A pair of protective keel strips are screwed on each side of the main keel. These would likely have been installed at the factory by Earl and Floyd Willits of Tacoma, WA.
Part of a day of antique canoe restoration and clay pigeon shooting in Elburn, IL.
Found these canoes wedged into rocks on our way out of Terlingua, Texas...wonder what the story is behind it???