|
Canoeing.com caught up with Brown in his cozy, knick-knack filled Apple Valley home to talk about canoes, canoe-building, and canoe design with someone who has been doing it a long time. When you drive into Brown’s driveway, you know you’ve found the right house – his pick-up truck topper is decked with racks and boats decorate his backyard.
“I got into canoe design because there were no good solo canoes on the market,” Brown tells me over cookies at his kitchen table. “The only solo canoes on the market at that time were by Gene Jensen, and they’re racers. Everything Gene designed is a racer; everything Dave Krueger designed is a racer. I wanted something other than a racing canoe and started playing around with my own designs.”
For all the popularity of racing designs, Brown preferred a boat with a different feel and capabilities.
“I wanted something that would turn easier, number one; something that was more weatherly – not affected by wind nearly as much as the racers are and something that would handle waves better; and also something that was lighter,” he specifies.
Brown’s first designs to make the commercial market were the C.J. Solo, which Cliff Jacobson – the C.J. – built the prototype of and sold to Mad River Canoes, and the Ladyslipper, which Brown also teamed with Jacobson on to sell to Mad River. That design was later renamed the Slipper.
Brown also designed the Bell Fusion and Bell Traveler.
Brown characterized the Fusion as a boat “similar to the Mad River Malecite” and the Traveler as “a long, skinny, straight-tracking canoe by my standards. It paddled very, very easy for long distances.”
Brown’s preference for more tolerant boats is a theme in his designs. He has an affection for the designs of his friend Dave Yost, an upstate New Yorker who has designed boats for Bell Canoes and Swift.
“Dave and I both have similar thoughts – that it’s got to be more forgiving boats than these racing boats,” Brown said. “More comfortable, easier … more user-friendly than the racers. So we both kind of went parallel directions.”
|