Wooden Canoe Restoration:
Bring a Classic Canoe Back to Life
Canoe restoration is more than repairs—it’s the process of bringing the history, craftsmanship, and spirit of a beautiful wooden canoe back to life. Whether you own a cedar-canvas canoe or another vintage wooden build, restoring it means preserving a piece of family heritage and keeping it on the water for the next generation.
Why Wooden Canoes Matter
What makes a wooden canoe so special?
For many owners, it’s the memories:
- Backcountry trips with friends, trekking across land, lake, and river
- A parent or grandparent paddling their cherished Chestnut canoe
- The romance and nostalgia of a antique Peterborough courting canoe
- A family heirloom passed down through generations
These vintage canoes aren’t just boats—they become part of a family story.
A Living Link to the Past
Floating in a wooden canoe—whether cedar canvas or antique ship lap—creates an immediate connection to earlier times. In Muskoka and the Algonquin region, early settlers relied on wooden canoes for travel and survival. Picture a full day of hiking and paddling to reach the nearest settlement for supplies. That quiet, steady journey is the kind of experience wooden canoes were built for—and it’s still what they do best today.

Cook Craft Canoe Restoration (Heirlooms Welcome)
The most common work I do at Cook Craft is restoring cherished family canoes. Many of the boats that come through my shop were paddled by grandparents—and sometimes even great-grandparents. Sentiment, nostalgia, and pride of ownership make people want to protect them, restore them properly, and keep them in excellent condition.
I understand how much these canoes can mean. It’s an honor to help families preserve a canoe’s story—and keep it in the water where it belongs.
Experience Restoring Many Canoe Types (Including 1800s Builds)
I’ve worked on hundreds of antique and vintage canoes, and every one has its own history. While canvas canoe restoration is the most common, I also restore older and less common wooden canoe styles, including:
- Ship lap
- Lap strake
- Rib and batten
- Cedar rib
Some of these canoes date back as far as the 1880s. No matter the style, I treat each restoration with the same respect and care—because these aren’t just boats. They’re irreplaceable pieces of craftsmanship and history.