Blast--the Pathfinder is a brick..it sort of paddles like one too and these flat bottom "sportsman" canoes earned the nickname of Pusher..not much glide between strokes but they can be bent just about in half and pulled back into shape and the floor stomped flat again..the gunwhales of course would need repair but you could get back home again with the clever use of some duct tape..Royalex is soft and a run-in with a sharp rock will leave a small curl of plastic at the end of the scratch.round boulders and logs don't seem to bother it.i have fiberglass "grunch" pads at bow and stern that take up much of the damage if i hit something.the woodwork needs care and Oldtown no longer offers this boat with wood trim but the plastic is well done...price??i payed $600 for mine in 1985 but check Oldtowns site for an updated price.
the Bell Prospector was $2500..handmade with a craftmans touch to the woodwork..Ash and Teak..Kevlar picks up alot of scratches but is light and tough,i don't think you could fold it over a rock in the rapids and stomp it back into shape--at 37 pounds i can carry it over any portage--so far--
so your thinking about another canoe???..
heres the Prospector on a bog portage.a light canoe is much safer as you don't have the stress of hauling something like a 85 pound aluminum boat.i made this carry with my 57 pound Pathfinder and at the end set it down with a "clunk" rather that just rolling it off my shoulders and setting it down like this one.