I have to make the engine and the boiler a common module possible to detach, since the canoe must be transported upside down on a car roof, as a typical vertical fire tube boiler or a monotube boiler as I have in mind will both be a good bit higher than the canoe hull thus making upside-down mount on car roof impossible. I don't have every answers when it comes to condenser tank and water pumps connections, I'll probably have a water inlet through the hull, feeding the boiler pump through some flexible tubing with a valve and connector, or something along those lines.
But, even modulized for car transport, it does not have to be a matter of minutes to assemble/disassemble. It will only be at the start and end of each trip, I'll keep the boiler/engine/alternator module separate from the boat only in car transport and in storage. Battery pack will be separate from the boiler/engine/alternator module, answering your campsite question since battery pack can be brought to the lavvo (tent), genset left mounted in the boat. My campsites are usually by the water anyways, but - no problem.
Steam-electric is inefficient yes, but I cannot have an inboard propeller in a canoe, and still use it for normal paddling, pulling it up on the shore, not to mention transporting it across terrain (a small 2-wheeled cart stuffed in the canoe is used for the purpose). But, my fuel is usually in abundance, so I battle efficiency where I can and leave the rest. Besides, even if I used an inboard prop for propulsion, I'd still need a generator and batteries for my electronics, albeit with better propulsion efficiency, granted. The thought have evolved around countless campfires, thinking about all that energy yet I had little or no electricity (not only PC for work, but flashlights, GPS, phone, possibly some music, etc).
Endurance should be two weeks possibly even more. I can't carry along batteries for the ride, and solar power ain't made for northern countries like mine. Hence steam.
No crap-o-cad drawings just yet, envision a fairly large canoe with a seat at the stern I will use (with the outboard motor). At my legs; some bags of fuel wood, in front of me the boiler (facing me), and in front of that the engine (alternator on bow end of the steam engine). I'm thinking of using a piece of heavy wood bench plate as base for the both motor box and boiler, with steel screen under the boiler and behind it against the box, the engine and alternator will be boxed in a wooden box. The hull of the boat will get some epoxy/woodstrip laminated knees (for baseplate to rest on / mount to). In front of the engine is just cargo capacity and seats (two seats in front of the engine, one of them removable for more cargo space).
But first ofcourse comes the engine itself (will take time) followed by matching it to a
permanent magnet alternator (easy), and the DC/DC battery management, which could also function as a load management as we can regulate charge current with charge voltage (electronics and uC prog, easy). But the canoe is the envisioned end use, I was originally going to leave that part out for people not to see me as completely mad.