I have three boats, and for the longest time, all three were in my closet, but now I leave one or two assembled in various places around New York City. None are difficult to assemble or knock down; it actually takes more time to go to a storage place, get the boat out, tie it on my car roof etc. than it takes to make any of them. But it is an awful lot to carry one up three flights of stairs at the end of the day to my apartment. Besides, how will people in other cars on the highway know I am a tough seakayaker unless I have one strapped on the roof of my car. :-). Here are my boats: A Klepper Aerius II double, Classic skin. (35 inch beam, 17 feet long, 75 lb weight) This one I have had for 10 years and will never give up (and probably won't have to since I am certain it will outlast me!). It has seen me through paddling situations in which by all rights I should have not been able to stay upright. Such as a real dumb launch through mounting surf in which I went totally broadside to the breaking waves and should have windowshaded, but somehow the boat on its own saw me through. It is nice to have beneath you a kayak you know has crossed the Atlantic and is used by military forces the world over; hell, if it can do all that it certainly is up to anything I am up to. An extremely tough boat with a stellar record of seaworthiness. And the quickest boat to assemble of any folding one. I have done it in 7 minutes with my wife (even before getting heavily involved with folding kayaks) and it has been done in 4 minutes by a factory team. I will probably be buried Viking style in that classic boat. A Feathercraft K_light. It is my take everywhere boat. Light as a feather (or well lots of feathers) at 33 pounds (13 feet long, 25-26 inch beam). And so easy to cart around in it backpack harnessed carrying bag. Easy to assemble, ease to paddle. It is a fun boat. I think everyone should have one in their closet, whether one paddles folding or rigid kayaks. The K-Light is the best selling folding kayak currently and with good reason. A Nautiraid Raid 1 (51 pounds, 15.5 ft long, 28-29 inch beam). I recently sold a Klepper Aerius I Expedition in order to buy this boat. I liked my Aerius single and it saw me through a lot, but its weight (62 pounds or more) was getting to me. I still am learning about my new Nautiraid. I feel it takes time to catch on to the nuances of any boat. I like everything I have discovered thusfar of the Raid 1. I like its small cockpit and taut skin and its relative speed. Like the Aerius I, the Nautiraid doesn't track well. Over time I learned to make the Aerius I go as straight as an arrow no matter what winds and seas were doing on my beam. The Raid 1 has its own way of reacting to side forces and I think I am just about now in command of it as I was of the Klepper single (I don't use rudders on single boats). As you may have guessed I have a Three Bears approach to kayak ownership, I need a Pappa, a Momma and a Baby Bear in my fleet. ralph -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Ralph Diaz . . . Folding Kayaker newsletter PO Box 0754, New York, NY 10024 Tel: 212-724-5069; E-mail: rdiaz_at_ix.netcom.com "Where's your sea kayak?"----"It's in the bag." ----------------------------------------------------------------------- *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net ***************************************************************************Received on Wed Feb 18 1998 - 08:27:55 PST
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