Luck of the draw: Turkey hunter wins vintage canoe in raffle

FALLS VILLAGE — A visiting turkey hunter from New Hampshire, who purchased just one ticket, won a restored 1927 Old Town canoe (and a handmade Adirondack pack basket) at a raffle sponsored by the Great Mountain Forest.The winner, Larry Fortier of Bow, N.H., was chosen from 500 entries Saturday, June 18, at The Shelter in Norfolk — an open building that was originally attached to a golf course. The property was purchased by the Childs family and subsequently turned over to Great Mountain Forest, and the course itself has long since given way to trees.The 17-foot canoe is from the estate of Frank Arrigoni, an East Canaan resident who was an auto mechanic and “a real sportsman,” according to Jody Bronson, the forest manager.A year after Arrigoni’s death in 2009, his son Chuck (a former forestry intern at the Great Mountain Forest) gave the wood-and-canvas canoe to Bronson.The vessel had been stored for years in a barn, and was in rough shape. “It was held together by two nylon straps,” Bronson said. Falls Village resident Brian Munson and Bronson brought the canoe to the Great Mountain Forest carpentry barn, and decided it should be restored in memory of and in honor of Arrigoni. Schuyler Thomson of Norfolk, who restores old canoes for a living, volunteered his workshop and expertise, and Bronson was also able to assemble a team of volunteers, many of whom were on hand for the raffle.The canoe’s interior is highly varnished mahogany, with a removable floor deck and a movable backrest.It was a time-consuming task. According to Bronson the community restoration effort took about 120 man hours to complete, and Thomson expressed his delight that several of the participants now had their own canoe projects in the works. The boat almost looks to good to be put in the water, but Jean Bronson said that Fortier planned to use it.Joe Brien of Lost Arts Workshops was on hand, making a very successful mulligatawny soup and biscuits in a couple of Dutch ovens and a reflector oven. Thomson and son Andrew demonstrated canoe portaging techniques.

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