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Hollowing a Dugout Canoe — Fire and Adze Method
Woody

Created by

Woody

23. March 2026

Hollowing a Dugout Canoe — Fire and Adze Method

Build a dugout canoe by felling a large tree and hollowing the trunk using controlled burning and stone adze work. Dugout canoes are among the oldest watercraft known — the Pesse canoe from the Netherlands dates to approximately 8000 BCE. This technique produces a stable, durable vessel suitable for river and lake travel.

Advanced
40-80 hours over several days

Instructions

1

Select and Fell the Tree

Choose a straight-trunked tree at least 50-80 cm in diameter and 3-5 metres in the section you will use. Poplar, pine, basswood, and tulip poplar are preferred because their soft, straight-grained wood is relatively easy to hollow. Oak is harder but produces a more durable vessel. Fell the tree by building a fire at its base and chopping the charred wood with a stone axe, alternating burning and chopping until the tree falls. This technique was documented by early European observers of indigenous canoe-building. Trim the log to length and remove all branches.

2

Shape the Exterior

Flatten the bottom of the log by adzing or burning so the canoe sits stable when upright. Taper both ends to form a bow and stern — the bow should be somewhat narrower and more pointed for cutting through water. Use a stone adze (a ground stone blade hafted at a right angle to a wooden handle) to shape the outer hull. Remove bark and sapwood, leaving only the denser heartwood. The hull should be roughly symmetrical along its centreline. Work with the grain whenever possible to avoid splitting the wood ahead of the adze cut.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Hollow the Interior with Fire

Apply wet clay or mud to the areas you do not want to burn — the outer hull, bow, stern, and the gunwale (top rim) that defines the canoe's sides. Place hot coals from a separate fire along the top centre of the log. The coals char the wood beneath them, which you then scrape away with a stone adze or shell scraper. Repeat this cycle — burn, scrape, burn, scrape — gradually deepening the hollow. Control the fire carefully with small applications of water to prevent burning through the hull walls. This combined fire-and-adze method removes wood far faster than adzing alone.

4

Thin the Walls to Uniform Thickness

As the hollow deepens, monitor the wall thickness by drilling test holes from the outside using a pointed stone. Some builders insert pegs of known length through the hull to gauge thickness from inside. The hull walls should be a uniform 3-5 cm thick — thin enough to keep the canoe light, thick enough to maintain structural strength. The bottom should be slightly thicker (5-7 cm) because it bears the most stress. If you accidentally thin a section too much, it can be reinforced later by lashing a wooden patch over the weak spot with sinew and sealing it with pine pitch.

Step 4 - Image 1
5

Seal and Launch

Smooth the interior with a stone scraper to remove all char and rough spots. Seal any cracks or thin spots with pine pitch or a mixture of pine resin and charcoal powder. If the canoe is to be used in open water, add thwarts (cross-braces) lashed between the gunwales to prevent the sides from spreading or collapsing. Float the canoe in shallow water and check for leaks — mark any seeping areas and seal them. A finished dugout canoe is remarkably stable and durable; archaeological examples show repair patches, indicating these vessels were maintained and used for years. Paddle with a simple flat-bladed wooden paddle carved from a split plank.

Materials

  • Large tree trunk (poplar, pine, or oak) - 1 log, 3-5 m long, 50-80 cm diameter piece
  • Firewood and coals (for controlled burning) - large supply piecePlaceholder
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  • Water (for controlling burn area) - several litres piecePlaceholder
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  • Clay or wet mud (for masking areas not to burn) - several kg piecePlaceholder
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Tools Required

  • Stone adze (ground stone blade lashed to handle)Placeholder
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  • Flint scraper
  • Fire-starting kitPlaceholder
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