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Name: tsbrown

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People often refer to this canoe as a super tanker or an 18 wheeler because it is such a big canoe with such a high volume, while they aren't wrong I don't think that really captures what the Itasca is. The Itasca is better thought of as the monster truck of canoes.

Monster trucks are an outgrowth of offroad racing vehicle design, they aren't designed for racing but they are still fast. Similarly the Itasca's design begins from a Jensen/Wenonah V1-pro racing tandem (notice the similar gunnel lines that allow near vertical paddle strokes), but from there the hull is given a bit of rocker, fattened up, and the bow/stern are flared out and gunnels raised up from the low waterline clearance of a fairweather racer to a truly seaworthy height that provides a massive amount of cargo space.

While the Itasca is easily the most seaworthy canoe I have ever paddled (more in the category of a long sea kayak then a traditional canoe in terms of open water capability) and while it can pack near absurd amounts of cargo, it is still designed around racing lines. The hull is 19'ft long with narrow bow and stern lines that make the Itasca categorically faster than most other paddle boats shorter than 19' ft.... except for exercise/racing hulls that are more nice weather toys rather than a boat you could go on a month long expedition while periodically running over a row of junkyard cars at full speed... Also while the Itasca has a big broad bottom to its hull, unlike most other tripping hulls, it isn't a flat bottom (which provides the maximal FEELING of stability) but rather an enlarged version of a rounded kayak-like bottom to provide better speed and better stability in rough water than a flat bottom.

I paddle this canoe regularly in southern puget sound where there are serious tidal currents, changing winds and complex cross chop from motorboats/wind waves mixing in the swirling currents. I have definitely been out in conditions that have made me as a paddler a bit anxious, but my Itasca isn't even remotely fazed. I have been through some weird, sketchy chop and I don't think a wave has ever gotten over the gunnels. Honestly, I would be terrified to take this thing out in conditions that actually pushed what this boat was capable of.

All this being said, even as an extreme design that attempts to maximize speed/ease of paddling, seaworthiness and cargo capacity the Itasca functions perfectly well as a normal derp-around canoe. A monster truck would be a terrible vehicle to do an everyday run to the grocery store in and here is where my bad metaphor breaks down because the Itasca is just as practical and fun as an easy going day paddler as it is as a once-in-a-lifetime expedition vehicle. The rocker makes the canoe not track quite as well as more traditionally wenonah designs with zero rocker, but it makes maneuvering the 19' length down narrow rivers much easier than it would appear (also, I imagine when you load this thing down with hundreds of pounds of gear you need that rocker to turn at all). In tuf-weave this canoe is only about 70 pounds and it has zero watercanning, the hull is stiff as an arrow unlike say a royalex old town tripper that only gets rigid once you pack it in with gear. The Itasca will catch a lot of wind when it is isn't loaded down with gear, but I have gotten in the habit of bringing a 7 gallon water tank (one of those blue ones people get for car camping) full of water that I put in as ballast when going out into open expanses. Loaded down the wind really doesn't bother the Itasca much and I consider water ballast important in unsettled chop and wind no matter the boat anyways so I don't consider this a flaw. The midsection easily accommodates a 7 gallon water tank with enough room to shift the tank forward/aft which makes dynamically shifting the center of balance of the boat for wind, waves and paddlers of differing size as easy as a quick yank or kick of the tank.

My particular Itasca has adjustable bucket seats forward and aft which is immensely practical and should be standard on all canoes...

If I had to say this canoe has a flaw, it is that while the bow paddling position has WAYYY more space than a narrower canoe such as a Minnesota II (and thus can accommodate a much wider variety of human body types) the gunnels pull in nice and vertical to allow ease of paddling. For a newer paddler in the bow position this can give the feeling that you are stuck wayy out on the end of a narrow stick with a panoramic view of the water around you as if you were strapped to a bowsprit. It can feel a bit exposed to a less experienced paddler in front because you don't have the visual (like the stern paddler does) of a stable 19'ft canoe hull supporting you. As a stern paddler of the Itasca it becomes almost comical how little the hull seems to care about riding over chop and waves and it is easy to terrify the living daylights out of a newbie bow paddler by sending the canoe careening over rough water. This is just a feeling though, there is plenty of space upfront and if the wave the bow was ACTUALLY heading into a wave big enough to crash over the gunnels I would seriously have to wonder what on earth you were doing out in that kind of weather/environment.... Just something to keep in mind.

On the topic of kids, it is worth pointing out that many couples seem to get a pair of single kayaks when they have a kid and then try to figure out a third kayak or a double kayak for a growing kid so they can take them. The Itasca can easily seat a third person in the middle or it can just as happily not. The person in the middle isn't going to be paddling really, but they don't need to, the canoe is fast enough with two paddlers (I mean, it is fast enough with one person paddling 99% of the time really). I think way more families would be happy buying an Itasca and not worrying about how to bring along their kid (or dogs). A grown adult can sit comfortably in the midsection which makes figuring out what to do with an "extra" person so much easier. Bring whatever cargo you feel like, go wild, take the beer coolers from everybody else in your paddling group and throw them in, you get to drink their beer and the canoe just rides better :P.

Ok, one more final note, you can do sick wheelies in this canoe (like a monster truck) by sitting in the bow or stern seat and paddling around in circles while the other end hangs completely out of the water. Not as impressive as a monster truck doing wheelies, but oh well.

All in all unless you are exclusively going down narrow whitewater rivers and streams, I don't see a good argument for going for a shorter, less capable canoe. Conclusion 10/10: a monster truck of a canoe that is still great for everyday paddling.