From its inception in the late 1940s through about 1984, Wacanda Marine, Inc. was owned and operated by Forrest Collins, Colville, Washington. From 1984 to 1988, the company was owned by the Yakima Indian Nation, Wapato, Washington, although Mr. Collins managed the production
According to the company owner, the name of the company, "Wacanda", was in recognition that early on, about half the boats were being sold in Washington State, half in Canada.
During the course of its operations, Wacanda Marine Inc. produced a series of 12' to 21' fiberglass boats. The boats were typically operated on the lakes and white water rivers of the Pacific Northwest and western Canada. Mr. Collins has indicated that he does not know exactly how many boats the company produced over the years, although it was several thousand.
Also, in the mid-1950s, Mr. Collins designed the V-hulls with an inset transom that carried forward through the end of production. This inset transom hull design was somewhat innovative at the time, although it was later seen on boats from other manufacturers.
In an early 1960s product brochure, the Evinrude Outboards featured a 16' Wacanda "Husky" v-hull model blasting through Snake River rapids (on the Idaho/Washington/Oregon border).
In the early 1970s, Wacanda began producing an 18' Cathedral hull that was available in three configurations: cabin ("Dolphin"), open bow ("Viking") and a forward control version ("Barracuda"). Mr. Collins has indicated that the 18' Tri-hull was loosely based on a 17' Thompson Boat tri-hull model.
During the last few years of production, the company introduced a 20' tri-hull, loosely based on the 18' model. All the 20' tri-hulls were sterndrive or Pump-jet.
Inboard jet drives remained a power choice for Wacanda through the end of production in 1988, frequently with drives built by Berkley Pump Co. (California) or Eliminator Jet (Idaho). However, Wacanda boats were most commonly powered with or Sterndrive power plants.
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