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Originally Posted by bigfishy
Thats pretty fricken cool!!! Good luck with the build and welcome to the site 
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Thanks!
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Originally Posted by Flukemeister1
By car maybe but you are not going from Kingwood to the Water Gap by boat in an hour. There are some real hairy rapids between Kingwood and the Water Gap.
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That's what I meant-from my house in High Bridge (near where 31 intersects 78) I can get to Kingwood in 20 minutes or Poxono in just under an hour.
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Originally Posted by Flukemeister1
There are access ramps on both sides depending on where you are. There are ramps in Upper Black Eddie, Riegelsville NJ, Easton and Phillipsburg, Sandt's Eddie. Probably one of the nicest areas is the New Smithfield Ramp in PA north of Shawnee. I have been running the Delaware from Point Pleasant PA to Port Jervis since I was four, I am now 52. There are rocks pretty much everywhere and local knowledge is essential. Busting props is just the price of doing business on this river. Even experienced guys hit rocks especially when trying to get in certain spots to fish. Do yourself a favor and buy a spare and a spare set up (lock nuts, cotter pins etc.) If you don't like the idea of prop damage get a jet set up. Google Earth can help but the best way to learn the river is with someone who already knows it and will show you where to run. There is great fishing in the Delaware but it can also be a river that bites. It is the fastest rising and falling river in the country and is the fastest flowing east of the Mississippi. Have fun and be safe.
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Good advice-thanks. I took my wife on a river cruise out of New Hope last weekend for her birthday and had a good conversation with the captain about navigating the river. He had some good tips including contacting the DRBC-apparently they used to (not sure if they still do) publish some really good river maps.
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Originally Posted by Flukemeister1
you will want to put one by threes on the bottom to fend off the rocks. They will help to keep the rocks from contacting directly with your plywood bottom and this will help to spread out the forces applied by any rocks. They will also help to strengthen the bottom in general.
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I actually just picked up four rough sawn oak 2x4x8s for free that I'll be using for skegs. Should help with beaching as well.