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Grand Lake Stream
Traditional Canoe Paddles

Grand Lake Stream

$251.00
WoodAsh

When you’re out in a Grand Laker canoe, fly-rod in hand, you don’t need a blade that drags—you need one that moves plenty of water and feels effortless. The Grand Lake Stream paddle does exactly that.

  • Designed by a Maine guide specifically for the legendary Grand Lake Region and fly-fishing canoeing. It gives you control, not fatigue.

  • Featuring a blade that is around 7½" wide x 27" long , this paddle strikes an excellent balance—large enough to drive with authority, yet forgiving enough to conserve strength on long paddles.

  • Crafted exclusively from solid hardwood, its smaller oval shaft delivers exceptional flex and durability—because rugged pursuit demands nothing less.

Why This Paddle Speaks to You

  • Heirloom Quality: Hand-shaped by seasoned craftsmen, each paddle is more than a tool—it’s a legacy you can pass down.

  • Unmatched Maine Tradition: Made in Orono since 1858, Shaw & Tenney’s reputation for excellence has been built over generations.

  • Customize Your Experience: Choose from premium hardwoods—Ash, Soft Maple, Cherry, Curly Maple, Sassafras—and finishes including Unfinished, Oiled, or Varnished. Optionally, add up to 10 characters of personalized engraving for $15.

Fall 2025 lead time: approximately two weeks.

Our History

While technically founded in 1858, this hand painted sign dug up from the archives shows that the company was actually doing business two years before that. Either way, we're still the second oldest manufacturer of marine products in the United States today.

From our simple workshop on the banks of the Penobscot River, we still employ time-honored manufacturing traditions. Here, a long time Shaw & Tenney craftsman sculpts an oar on a drum sander that’s more than 100 years old.

Our oars and paddles are all made to order right here, in our Orono, Maine workshop. Meticulously hand sewing oar leathers takes years (and years) of practice.

We’ve been dipping our paddles the same way for over 100 years. Of course there are probably easier ways to do it, but we’re convinced there’s no better.