So for the floatation, I had an idea. The boat is 2900lb dry, and I estimated very generously for on board gear etc. The fully submerged boat with gear comes out to 1341lb. Safety factor of 2 brings it to 2682 lb.
Air seems to be the best way to float a boat. The problem with air is reliably encasing it. One cubic foot of air displaces 62.4lb of water, or provides 62.4lbf of buoyancy. So, that's 43 cubic feet of air that I need to encase to float two of my boats.
At work, we use 5 gallon square pails to transport small quantities of liquid chemical. These pails are extremely durable and pretty flexible. The actually capacity of these pails is about 6 gallons, or 0.8 feet. That's 49.9 lbf of buoyancy per pail of air. I can fit 6 pails under the deck on each side between the outer stringers and the hull as well as between the inner and outer stringers. That's 24 pails, 1200 lbf buoyancy. In the cabin, I can fit another 2 on each side, plus 3 up front. Now we're up to 1,450lbf.
On the gunwales, there are two spots on each side, about 6"x6"x8' that I can turn into long boxes. In these, I'll use an inner tube from an old car tire, cut and reseamed, to create 4 x 2 cubic foot air bladders in these boxes. Now we're up to 1950lbf buoyancy.
11.73 cubic feet of air unaccounted for. I measured the boat to have a total of 12 cubic feet of foam in it total. There we have it. I'll probably add additional foam in places like under the battery boxes as well.
So even if the foam absorbs water, I have these huge air bladders throughout the boat to provide the necessary buoyancy. I'll probably get fancy and cut/plastic weld the pails to make multi-cell pontoons out of them, but that's the jist of it.
The idea here is to conceal bulk amounts of air within the hull without relying on wood and glass to hold the air. Having the air in multiple cells means that if I hit something and puncture the hull, I may lose a camper or two, but the majority of the cells will still hold air.
I saw a guy somewhere say that his floatation is a swim to shore and a fat boat insurance policy. That may be the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Maybe he's on a small lake, but if not I sure hope his insurance policy is buoyant. Id rather give my dad something other than a life jacket to depend on if something goes wrong.