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Just food for thougth - canoes are more or less alike, maybe 80% - the last 20% of difference is all trade-offs. So it depends on what your preferences are, to best fit that 20% to your liking. You mentioned "that will track straight" for instance. If you are a good driver, any canoe will track straight - if not, and that is a high priority, then the Wenonahs are probably better (marginally) than the Bells - BUT, the straighter the boat tracks, the less manouverable it will be - that's your tradeoff. Typically, a long and lean faster boat will be less stable thatn a slower, wider boat. Bottom shape comes into play there as well.
Are you intent on NEW? If not, just keep an eye on Craig's list and pick any one of the boats mentioned in this thread already if you find a good deal.
Be practical - you mention Wenonah and Bell - if they are the only dealers in your vicinity, then no point in considering a Swift or Clipper or Souris or whatever - so choose something that is within your driving distance - don't plan on having a composite boat shipped - really risky unless you pay a lot for crating.
If you go new, then first set your priorities: tracking, stability, speed, weight, capacity, probably are the prime ingredients. If you put stability over tracking and/or speed, you come up with a different answer. If you put capacity on top, you get a different answer. That's why there are so many different boats that people like and "endorse" - they have a boat that fits thier criteria, and think it will fit yours - maybe so, or maybe no.
Between the Encounter and the Magic, if those were the only two choices, I'd pick the Magic, because it better fits my own preferences for a shorter, more manouverable boat. I've been toying with buying a new solo off and on - can't decide myself between the Magic and Merlin - Merlin more manouverable, shorter by a foot (I like to travel small streams) and with more rocker, easier to control in high winds vs the Magic, a touch faster, a bit less manouverable.
Probably, what you need to do first is decide on how much weight you will really need to carry, 90% of the time. You mention 3 weeks or more ? I could pack 4 weeks of food and gear in any of the solo boats, since I pack light - do you? if not, you need a pretty good idea of what your weight would be for a 3 week trip or a four week trip or?, plus you - that might make the Encounter the better choice for carrying it all.
You can find a couple of more or less meaningless reviews on Paddling.Net for the Wilderness. It would be slower than the Encounter, and slower than the Magic, if that matters to you (and that's just me guessing) - and probably more stable than either of those two. between the Magic and the Wilderness, I think I'd still go with the Magic.
If you have any interest in a more all around boat, more river friendly than you might take a look at the Rendezvous in composite (special order), maybe the Osprey also, and the Merlin - though it seems that you are looking for a lake boat to me.
And last but not least - its just a stupid boat. Buy the one that you think is best for you - if you don't like it, sell it, and buy another. This isn't a do or die choice you are stuck with - hell keep it and buy another, or two - that's the best way to have the "right" boat.
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