by PDBLK25 » November 1, 2015, 6:43 pm
Back to the original subject. Are all the true Canallers gone? What about the West Indies Transport (WIT) people. they bought many Canallers for stationary use - that isn't hard on hulls, maybe there are some left. As for Canaller hulls - there is no shortage of them. The Adrian Iselin, Tampico, Bob-Lodoc, the very-well preserved example at ADM-Windsor. That's just off the top of my head, there may be more. The big problem is finding an engine & upperworks. Low H.P. Triples, Unaflows, and Diesels aren't common, but they're out there. At worst - find the hull & rebuild the houses according to original plan. Expenssive: yes, initially. But in the long run, maybe not. Unlike 730-footer, you have a small hold that lends itself to everything from a bar or restaurant to secured storage, Put it in Toronto - they just lost a successful floating rrestaurant. It wouldn't be a truly original Canaller, but it would be realistic. Isn't it worth saving a piece of Canadian history almost as important as the Canadian Pacific (which united the Provinces)?
Back to the original subject. Are all the true Canallers gone? What about the West Indies Transport (WIT) people. they bought many Canallers for stationary use - that isn't hard on hulls, maybe there are some left. As for Canaller hulls - there is no shortage of them. The [i]Adrian Iselin, Tampico, Bob-Lodoc[/i], the very-well preserved example at ADM-Windsor. That's just off the top of my head, there may be more. The big problem is finding an engine & upperworks. Low H.P. Triples, Unaflows, and Diesels aren't common, but they're out there. At worst - find the hull & rebuild the houses according to original plan. Expenssive: yes, initially. But in the long run, maybe not. Unlike 730-footer, you have a small hold that lends itself to everything from a bar or restaurant to secured storage, Put it in Toronto - they just lost a successful floating rrestaurant. It wouldn't be a truly original Canaller, but it would be realistic. Isn't it worth saving a piece of Canadian history almost as important as the Canadian Pacific (which united the Provinces)?