MY PLAN: BUILD THE ULTIMATE RED RIVER TOURING BOAT!

 

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MEET WILDWOOD DEAN

WILDWOOD DEAN IN THE NEWS

THE WILDWOOD DEAN STORY

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DOGWOOD HOOP FURNITURE

DOGWOOD FURNITURE GALLERY

STICK ART PHOTO JOURNAL

TREASURE RIVER

ABOUT THE AUTHOR page 1

ABOUT THE AUTHOR page 2

TREASURE RIVER REVIEWS

WILDWOOD DEAN'S COMMENTS

WHO SELLS TREASURE RIVER?

RIVER OF DREAMS

RIVER OF DREAMS page 2

THE RED NARRATIVES

MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

THE AUTHOR - page 2

THE RED RIVER SCHOLAR

RED RIVER NEWS AND VIEWS

RED RIVER LINKS

NEWS AND VIEWS ARCHIVES

FISHING IN RED RIVER

MY BIG FLATHEAD CATFISH

A CAT NAMED BLUE

THE GIANT ALLIGATOR GAR

ALLIGATOR GAR - page 2

ALLIGATOR GAR - page 3

BOATING ON RED RIVER

BETTER DREAM - page 2

RUN-ABOUT - page 3

BETTER RUN-ABOUT-page 4

THE SCHOONER - page 5

CONTACT WILDWOOD DEAN

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The Evolution of the Red River Schooner - page 4
She's well on her way to becoming the ultimate touring boat.  CLICK!
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I retired from twig designing in 2002. I had paid my family debt; that of taking care of my aunt and mom. Dad's dream of floating down Red River; a dream of long, long ago, rekindled itself in my mind, and I couldn't put out the flame. I began working on
my canoes... again. This time my plans were to build the ultimate Red River touring boat. I began the tedious process of building a deck between the two canoes. In order for the canoes to run true, I must keep the keels of the canoes exactly the same distance apart, from one end to the other. Finally, after several attempts, I had a jig constructed that would keep the keels lined up while I made the deck. I made the deck out of 3/4 inch plywood and attached it with stainless steel screws. The transom was a simple matter of bolting aluminum tubing and plywood across the flat ends of the canoes. The Go-Devil motor arrived and I bolted her down and then put the rig in my pool. She floated well. The temptation was too great; I fired the motor off and puttered around in the pool. I built a trailer that just fit the run-about and then headed to Red River with my new rig.

After putting the boat through rain, blowing sand and cold, early-morning fog, I came to the conclusion that she wasn't the ultimate boat yet ... she needed a top, like a covered wagon. I purchased some material and headed for our local seamstress.
I planned to launch the last day of May on my Red River expedition and the trip would take at least two weeks, maybe even longer. I wanted to be able to take whatever Red River could dish out.
Only one thing lacking, CLICK!
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GO TO → THE SCHOONER - page 5

May all your goings be downstream easy!

SHE NEEDED A TOP ... LIKE A COVERED WAGON!