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Related story: Leslie Buys a Kayak and Smuggles it Past Customs
We asked our friends on Usenet's alt.boats.paddle about car-topping and were rewarded with more than a few cautionary tales and just plain weird stories. Here are our favorites:
THE BOW-LINE OF PERIL
A bow line is very cheap insurance against rack failure and possible injury or death to those on the road behind you. A must, in my opinion.
A caution, though. It's not unheard of to attach the bow line to the canoe, put the canoe on the rack, tie it down to the rack, and then drive off! If the bow line is long enough, it's only a matter of time before the front tire drives over it. Then one, or more, of the following happens:
1) the bow line breaks (best case);
2) the canoe breaks (2nd best; wait 'till you read the third!)
3) your windshield pops, your front columns collapse, and your roof pushes you down into your seat (least pleasant).
My habit is to drape the bow line over the windshield in plain view of the driver's seat while I'm putting the canoe on the rack, tie the front strap, then pull the canoe securely into the front strap with the bow line before tying it to the car, then tying the rear strap.
And please, please don't ask me how I know about this.
Brad Snow
WHAT THE HELL WAS THAT?
Saw a full size open canoe on top of an MG-B. Looked like a motorized 4-poster bed. The guy had built a metal rack with a post up from each corner of the bumpers to support crossmembers.
Tom McCloud
EASY LOADER
This is about car topping a kayak. Except it's a truck. Anyway, I'm a gimp that can't walk without a cane (a progressive nerve degeneration thing -- but that's another story) but I still kayak. I've bolted a couple of v shaped boat trailer rollers on the top of my camper, and then bolted a boat trailer winch on too. I stand by the winch and crank my kayak up onto the rollers and onto the top of the truck. It's slow, looks silly, but it works. Best of all the whole rig, brand new, cost me well under $100.
Galen Hekhuis
CAR-TOPPING ON LITTLE CLOWN CARS
I topped two ww K1s [whitewater singles, usually a small boat]on my Ford Festiva for a 400 mile trip. I used those little foam blocks you can find just about anywhere and a set of nylon ratchet straps plus a couple of ropes to the bow and stern of each boat for good measure.
Worked great until I missed that
curve and hit the ditch bank that brought my car to a sudden stop. The rain that had slickened the road causing my near bald tires to lose traction did the same thing to the foam pads on my roof. The boats kept on going, at least until they took up the slack in the bow and stern lines created when the foam blocks slipped out from under the boats.
Gary Heil
DANG. THERE GOES ANOTHER ONE.
If you can't see the boat you won't know if it still there WITHOUT A LINE TIED OFF TO THE FRONT BUMPER!
I'm just suggesting a line from the boat to the front bumper as a visual indicator that "My boat is still there", or "My boat must be blowing around on the roof, 'cause the line there in front of the windshield is cocked way over on the diagonal suddenly" or "There is NO line in front of the windshield anymore; guess I better pull over, eh?"
Mike McCrea
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Car-topping Small Boats
Please don't ask me how I know about this
text
by Leslie Strom
Illustrations by Laurie Cunningham
exerpts from The Sculler At Ease
by Frank Cunningham & Leslie Strom
It's been my observation that among small boat boaters, rowers know bupkus about cartopping a craft, and paddlers, who spend a lot more time with their boats in transit, can be downright Spartan about the whole subject, with a spare and elegant technique that's a marvel to behold. I learned to cartop a small boat from Tom Bush, who used to sell sculling boats and comes from a long line of sailing folk. He was most insistent that I learn this skill, and I found out why: I was then the only other person in our rowing club who knew how to secure a shell to a car-top without resorting to bad macrame and random, hopeful knotting.
Sometimes, if you're not going
far or very fast, you can pop the boat on and just tie it to
the rack. I've seen this done to get a boat down the street and
no further. For every other instance, there is a risk of sidewinds,
the boat flying into the windshield of the hapless car behind
you (killing all passengers), the rack peeling off, losing the
boat on a back road, getting stress fractures on your boat that
render it unseaworthy, or worse. You need to secure it to the
rack in two places, then tie it down fore and aft to your car
bumpers. This latter skill, which starts with the tying of a
trucker's hitch, is what separates the experts from the idiots,
and what I intend to impart to you today.
The first couple times I car-topped my new used kayak, I made
my passengers get out numerous times to check that it was holding.
It was understandable paranoia to not want to lose a new boat
before I'd had a chance to run it up on some big rocks myself.
The rack, built by a mechanic friend, is bullet-proof, and mounted
on a sturdy camper. The boat was tied within an inch of its life.
McBee, the wag, would leap out of the car and shove the boat
and rack assembly so hard the whole truck rocked. "I think
it's okay!," he shouted. "Everything looks good!"
(rock, rock, rock.) "All's well!" (shove, shove, shove.)
"You might need new shocks, though!" (rock, rock, rock.)
Anyway, it's okay to be overly cautious.
STUFF YOU'LL NEED TO CAR-TOP
A car. You'd be amazed at the lengths people will go
to pile on boats (see sidebar). Chances are if you have a small
car and you're determined, you'll find a way.
A roof-top rack, if you're going to do this often.
Specialty places and factory-installed racks are a place to start.
Yakima and Thule make systems, and there are some budget and
homemade options. The thing to keep in mind with all of them
is that a rack is as reliable as its components: the bolts that
hold it to the roof, the material it's made of, the roof it's
attached to. If any of these fail, there (possibly) goes your
boat. Jiggle them, whack them, shove them hard, make sure they're
on there GOOD. Wind load on a canoe or kayak can be brutal.
Foam cradles ($15) or actual boat carrier cradles ($100)
for your roof rack system (another $150). Foam cradles can be
used to cartop directly to the roof of your car. Make sure the
car has enough real estate to support the boat. I use foam cradles
on my homemade rack.
Get a sturdy box to keep your gear in your car or truck,
so all you have to do is grab it and go. I keep my tie-down gear,
PFD, paddle float, pump, spray skirt, and the regular emergency
stuff in a lidded storage box in back of my truck's camper.
Good rope for bow and stern tie-downs - estimate the
length from bumper to boat to bumper plus length for loops and
a truckers hitch. If you start with one 50 foot length, this
will probably take care of both ends. Extra leftover rope is
always handy.
Two webbing straps with metal toggles ($20) I got 12
foot ones, and they need trimming for the kayak. They're just
right for a tubby canoe.
Red flagging for end of boat - a bandanna works well,
though I've used socks and plastic flagging. Required by law.
Duct tape - seals rope ends, keeps excess strapping
from flying around, good for many things.
A lighter and a good knife... you'll want to
seal the cut rope ends and the strapping after you trim them
to length. A car lighter and a fingernail clipper, by the way,
don't do the job at all. Please don't ask me how I know about
his.
NAUTICAL SKILLS THAT ARE HANDY
Know how to tie a truckers hitch, half hitch, and bowline.
Know how to coil and bundle rope.
CAR-TOPPING
Now that you have your gear together, it's time to put the
boat on the car with an economy of rope and macrame. (Check your
state's department of motor vehicles for length limitations if
you're hauling long rowing boats..) See the sidebar for a thrifty
invention you can utilize yourself for loading a heavy boat on
a high camper.
On
my own truck, I run the strap over the boat, under the horizontal
bar, back over the boat, under the other horizontal bar, and
secure it.
If you tie your boat directly to the car top, be sure to pad
the roof with foam or towelling. If it is practical, tie through
the interior structure of the boat rather than around the hull.
You may be travelling on the freeway or in windy areas, or
going a long way, or perhaps be carrying more than one boat.
You will want to arrest sliding and bouncing by stabilizing the
ends of the boat. This can be done very quickly with nylon rope
and a bit of padding. To do this:
1: Place a pad on top of your car. Unrig your boat and put
it upside down on top of your car, centering the weight of the
boat. With a kayak with hatches, place the bulkheads over the
rack supports where it's strongest.
2: Tie a loop on one end of a rope about 20 feet long. Slide
it securely over the right side of the front bumper. Throw the
loose end of the rope over the boat or through the painter fitting,
and wrap it once around the existing rope. Don't knot anything.
The bracing must be able to slide and self-adjust in order to
work as a system. If the boat is particularly fragile, put a
bit of padding between the rope and the boat's skin.
3: To make a Trucker's Hitch, tie a small leverage loop in
the rope about two feet above the left front bumper.
4: Run the loose end of the rope around the left side of the
bumper so it is snug but not tight, and thread it back through
the leverage loop.
5: Pull the rope downward, using the loop as a pulley. Secure
the rope loosely with a half hitch for now.
6: Do steps 25 to the rear bumper, and tighten, finishing
with several half hitches.
7: Go to the front bumper and re-tighten the fastening. Neither
end of the boat should move in any direction, but don't overdo
it so that the rope stresses the boat with normal car vibrations.
8: Secure your red flagging on the end of the boat. If your
boat has a moveable rudder, tie it down. If you put a cockpit
cover on a kayak, do give the boat a chance to air out later.
SECURITY - KEEPING YOUR BOAT FROM THIEVES
It helps to have a rather disgraceful boat that no one wants
to steal, but not everyone can be so lucky. With canoes on homemade
racks, link chain and a padlock can be run through the thwart
and onto the car bumper, though it's a bad idea to drive this
way. Yakima and Thule make locking systems for people who like
to keep their boats on their cars ready to go in the warmer months.
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Knots for the Outdoors
Okay, so you got carried
away... Celtic
Knotwork Designs
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