mastertangler wrote on Oct 8
th, 2010 at 5:58pm:
How did you mount the strap to the side of your canoe? I have been wanting to mount it to the side as well.
I picked up some cheap plastic clips from a local discount store (its called Big Lots here.) They have a foam/adhesive back to them, which I get rid of in favor of a stronger bond to the canoe. I then super glue them to the interior hull. (I start with the gel form of the glue and once its dried, I'll fill in any gaps with the liquid form.)
The clips have a circular plastic loop that is a permanent part of the clip at one end and has a "latch" on the other end. I slide one side of a plastic strap guide (it looks like a squashed number 8) into the circular clip and then run the nylon strap through the other side. The straps I use are 1/2 inch nylon (with their own buckle) and perfectly fit the strap guide. I use two of the clip arrangements, vertically about 8 inches apart, to secure the blade part of the canoe.
One word of caution. I have a kevlar hull which will flex and I'm also dropping a back beside the lashed down paddle. Eventually, the clip will pop loose. So I always take a couple of spare clips and super glue for "in the field" repairs ... 1 such repair over a 2 week trip is not uncommon. To minimize the flex issue, I'll generally place the clips near one of the internal stiffeners of the canoe. (It seems that the top clip pops much more often than the bottom one, so I suspect the detachments are more a function of a pack load/unload than portaging.)
BTW: I use these same clips as mounts for the golf club sleeves I use as rod/eyelet protectors ... on each side of the bow ... and as a lash point for the back-end of the rod/reel. I use velcro straps for the sleeves and "deal-e-bops" around the butt end of the rods. This is part of the "counter weight" that the paddle balances out. This makes for a pretty workable rod "holster" from which the rods can be easily extracted.
My canoe is sufficiently balanced with these "extras" inside that I rarely have more than 1 hand on the gunwales while I'm portaging the canoe ... if the terrain is relatively flat ... sometimes no-hands.
dd