As noted in Matt's instructions, The Trapper canoe has what could be a difficult bend at the ends of the gunwales.
I had an uncle who used to kerf boards and sticks to bend them.
Would kerfing be okay on a major structural piece such a gunwales?
Or would it weaken it too much?
I'm thinking epoxy saturation would restore any strength/integrity lost to kerfing - Please correct me if I'm wrong about that.
Thanks Bob,
I will try to force the bends without kerfing and only try kerfing as a last resort.
I have no table or band saw,; but with proper jigging probably I could make thin strips for lamination with my hand held circular saw; there at least 2 maybe 3 Trapper builds journaled on this forum so I know some have successfully bent the gunnels all the way to the end of the bow.
One factor is that it is hard to find long pieces truly clear of knots and at a knot they will likely break rather than bend no matter how thin the strip is - kerfing might make a piece with knots work okay.
and Matt gives the tip of bending the gunnel far as it will go and leaving it like that for some days, then bending it more and again leaving it a while, then maybe it's ready to do the complete bend. "Training" the wood strip over time.