Home ] Up ] Books ] Search Inquiry ] Contents ]
How to Build Sleds

Ammunition Sled ] Arctic Hand Sled ] Bob Sled ] Bobsled Steering ] Bob-Sleigh ] Chair Sleds ] Equipment Sled ] Eskimo Sled ] Eskimo Sleds ] Get-There ] Gummer ] Ice Boat ] Jumper ] Ohio Sled ] Pioneer Bob Sled ] Skiboggan ] Toboggan ] Toboggan Camping ] Van Kleeck Bob ]

 

How to Build Sleds
How to Make Snowshoes
Hudson Bay Capote
How to Make Skate Sails
Layering
Survival Kits
How to Make Moccasins
Snow Ballista, Catapult
Equipment List

 

Search Now:

 

In Association with Amazon.com

 

C_of_buffalo_sled.gif (40534 bytes)Basic Boy Scout Klondike Derby Sled Plan (additional styles below):

Copied from an "actual" Klondike Derby Sled, 12-7-63.  Redrawn 9-20-66.  Drawing reissued for Klondike Sled Derby in conjunction with Winter Festival, 1967.  From the Niagara Frontier Council.

 

 

Copy of sled2.gif (24881 bytes) Equipment Gear Sleds:  

Made from child's molded plastic toy.  PVC pipe prevents sled from hitting your legs while going down hill. 

 

 

Copy of sled3.gif (43836 bytes) Ben Hunt's Klondike Sled Plans:

I made these drawings from a real honest-to-goodness Klondike sled brought from Alaska. This sled plan, by Ben Hunt himself, is sure to attract attention at your Council's next Boy Scout Klondike Sled Derby!

 

Dan Beard's Eskimo Dog Sled

Designed by one of Scouting's Founders, this is another authentic sled plan for Klondike Sled Derby perfectionists.  Complete with plans for the dog harnesses!  

 

 

 

sledge1964-.gif (47584 bytes)Klondike Sledge Plan 

"Copied from Sketch Issued by National Council.  Redrawn 4-1-70 (First Issued Jan. 1964)."

 

 

Copy of Eskimo~1.gif (49181 bytes)Ben Hunt's Eskimo Komatik Sled:

This is the type of sled used by the Eastern Artic Eskimos of Canada.  Runners are usually made of spruce, split out of logs or of planks bought from a local trading post.  This is a rugged sled, easy to build and well suited for the Klondike Derby.  Cross pieces are lashed to runners with 1/8th cotton cord.  Eskimos prefer cord to rawhide because their dogs will not chew it.

 

 

 

 

Copy of Packra~1.gif (38273 bytes)Ben Hunt's Packrack Sled:

With a pack like this, when your shoulders begin to ache, all you have to do is reverse the duffel on the rack and pull it along.  Not a bad deal for Boy Scout winter camping and easy to build. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copy of Trailt~1.gif (53429 bytes)Ben Hunt's Cree Trail Toboggan 

Up in the Canadian wilds, the Crees and other Indians use these long, narrow toboggans to haul their hunting & camping equipment and to bring back the meat.  These toboggans follow in the deep snowshoe trail where wider sleds would not.

 

 

 

 

 

Ben Hunt's Artic Hand Sled

This is a picturesque sled and well adapted for winter hikes and overnight camping trips. This sled is not intended for coasting but for hauling equipment only.  

 

 

 

Dan Beard's Tom Thumb Ice Boat:

Although a full-rigged, delicately balanced ice-yacht looks like a very complicated piece of mechanism, when it is carefully examined the framework will be found to consist of two pieces crossing each other at right angles.

 

stoneboat.gif (84374 bytes)Stone Boat Sled

 

 

 

Dan Beard's Toboggan

This sled, familiar to all who visit Canada during the winter months, is more like a mammoth snowshoe than the ordinary sled, sleigh or jumper that we are accustomed to see.  It is suitable for the deep snow and heavy drifts of the northern countries, where the runners of a common sleigh would be liable to break through the crust and bury themselves.

 

Dan Beard's "Skiboggan" 

In the New England States, where the snow is seldom soft and often is coated with a hard crust of ice, the runners of the native sleds, only a few inches in height, appear very low compared with the Ohio sled; even sleds with no runners at all are sometimes used.  On steep, icy hills any old thing will slide, and here it is that the Skiboggan is seen in all its glory.  In construction this cranky sled is simplicity itself.

 

Dan Beard's Double-Runner, or Bob Sled 

If you desire to further test your ability by building some thing more difficult than a simple Ohio Sled, you may try your hand in the construction of this sled.  Possesses many advantages over the long sleds formerly used west of the Allegheny Mountains.  

 

Dan Beard's Bob Sleigh

Is made by joining with a reach-board two low-runner sleds or "bobs." 

 

Dan Beard's Van Kleeck Bob Sled 

The swiftest bob-sled of my acquaintance.  This fast bob-sled is neither so simple nor so crude as the rustic jumpers described some time ago, and it will test your skill to build it properly, but with all the plans and measurements before you the task should not be too difficult for even a boy who can handle tools.

 

Dan Beard's "Boy Pioneer" Bob Sled

In the other sled plans the reader can find descriptions of all sorts of bob-sleds, from one made with flour-barrel runners up to the latest and most improved racing bob-sled. But none of them seem so appropriate for Dan Beard's "Boy Pioneers" as does this one, made of the rough material from the forest. 

 

Dan Beard's Ohio Sled

The sled with high runners looks odd to a Yankee, but it has its advantages when the snow is soft and deep, and it may be for this reason that the runners of The Native Sleds of the Ohio Valley average more inches in height than the sled runners of New England, where the snow is seldom slush as it is further south. 

 

Dan Beard's Jumper

The jumper is a sleigh made from green wood, cut in the forest for the occasion; hickory saplings furnish the proper material and the denser the forest the taller and straighter the saplings will be. 

 

Dan Beard's Gummer

The Gummer is a hand sled built on the general plans of The Jumper, and it is called a gummer because it is somewhat similar to the ones used by the men known as gummers who live in the forests and make their living by collecting spruce gum for children and "sales-ladies" to chew.

 

Dan Beard's "Get There" Sled

Instructions as to how to build this famous sled.

 

Ammunition Sled for Snowball Warfare

If properly done, this sled will be almost impossible to break; and, with a rope to pull by, one boy can haul snowballs enough for a dozen companions.  

 

See Also:

How to Make Snowshoes: Build Your Own!

Winter Gear & Clothing

 

Additional Books

Site Contents
[Warning: Large File]

Search  Inquiry Net

Home Up Next


Additional Information:

Ammunition Sled ] Arctic Hand Sled ] Bob Sled ] Bobsled Steering ] Bob-Sleigh ] Chair Sleds ] Equipment Sled ] Eskimo Sled ] Eskimo Sleds ] Get-There ] Gummer ] Ice Boat ] Jumper ] Ohio Sled ] Pioneer Bob Sled ] Skiboggan ] Toboggan ] Toboggan Camping ] Van Kleeck Bob ]

Peer- Level Topic Links:
[ How to Build Sleds ] How to Make Snowshoes ] Hudson Bay Capote ] How to Make Skate Sails ] Layering ] Survival Kits ] How to Make Moccasins ] Snow Ballista, Catapult ] Equipment List ]

Parent- Level Topic Links:
Winter Camp ] Activities & Recreation ] Food & Water ] Gear & Clothing ] Health & Safety ] Programs & Training ] Sleep & Shelter ] Snow & Ice ] Travel & Navigation ]

The Inquiry Net Main Topic Links:
Traditional Scouting ] Adult Association ] Advancement ] Ideals ] Leadership ] Outdoors ] Patrol Method ] Personal Growth ] Uniforms ]

Search Amazon.Com:
W
hen you place an order with Amazon.Com using the search box below, a small referral fee is returned to The Inquiry Net to help defer the expense of keeping us online.  Thank you for your consideration!

Search:
Keywords:
Amazon Logo
 

 

 

 DVDs for Junior Leader Training Weekends!

 

Additional Titles: Scout Books Trading Post

Dead Bugs, Blow Guns, Sharp Knives, & Snakes:
What More Could A Boy Want?

Click on Underlined Green text to follow a hyperlink.  Let me know if you find a broken link, especially those that reference a hard drive :-/

Click on Small Pictures to Enlarge Them.  
If this enlarged picture won't print on a single page, search your software for a printing option like "Best Fit."  This is the default setting in most browsers.  
If the pictures are missing, send me the URL, and I'll scan them for you.  

To Email me, replace "(at)" below with "@"
Rick(at)Kudu.Net
If you have questions, you must send me the URL!
The URL tells me what page you're talking about.  This URL is sometimes called the "Address" and it is usually found in a little box near the top of your screen.  Most URLs start with the letters "http://"
Did I mention that you must send me the URL?

©2003, The Inquiry Net, www.inquiry.net: In addition to any Copyright still held by the original authors, the Scans, Optical Character Recognition, extensive Editing,  and HTML Coding on this Website are the property of the Webmaster, Rick Seymour.   My work may be used freely by individuals for non-commercial, non-web-based activities, such as Scouting, research, teaching, and personal use so long as this copyright statement is included in the text
The purpose of this Website is to provide access  to hard to find, out-of-print documents.  Much of the content has been edited to be of practical use in today's world and is not intended as historical preservation.   I will be happy to provide scans of specific short passages in the original documents for people involved in academic research.  

The Kudu Net is a backup "mirror" of The Inquiry Net.  When linking to this Website, note that pages that end in "inquiry.net" are updated far more often than the corresponding "kudu.net" versions.

Old School Scouting:
What to Do, and How to Do It!

Hit Counter
Since August 24, 2002
+550,762

Last modified: December 06, 2005.