ahhh...a good boating trip is always a good time (you can carry more stuff!)
thanks for sharing AS
ahhh...a good boating trip is always a good time (you can carry more stuff!)
thanks for sharing AS
"Every day is a new day to a better future"
"Of all the things that matter, that really and truly matter, working more efficiently and getting more done is not among them." ~ Mike Dooley
"What if I told you that you couldn't have anymore of anything... No more friends, no more money, no more anything, until you first got happy with what you have?"~ Mike Dooley
"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." ~ Socrates
What kind of kayak do you use? How long of a trip can you take in it gear wise? How do you keep your hammock dry? Great pics, it looks likes alot of fun.
"In your face space coyote"-HJS
for me it depends on the trip, short trips on fast moving water I have a dimension typhoon that works great, but it won't hold much gear. For long trips on flat water I'll use a Perception Carolina, it's a touring kayak and can pound out mileage with ease. I also have a Perception Sundance that is in between, it's sleek enough to work well on flat water, but short enough to turn well when I need to.
AngrySparrow, as usual, took a different approach and got one kayak that is diverse enough for any trip. His Native Watercraft MantaRay has been through class III rapids and made a 70 mile trip on flat water. It holds a ton of gear, is comfortable and very well designed. I've tried it out and I want one (I may have a severe gear habit ... maybe). For long trips I'm taking the Carolina, but the scupper holes and seat on the MantaRay make me jealous.
Longest trip I've done is 3 days, but we are planning a 10+ day trip and if I can't fit what I need in my Carolina I'm sure I can stuff some things in the MantaRay
To keep everything dry we use standard dry bags. I use several different sizes and nest them. I find that water will always get in, you take something out, use it, it gets wet, then you put it back in the bag. But if you nest the bags you can keep the stuff that has to be dry separated from other gear that may have gotten wet. I keep my hammock, tarp and sleeping bag in one 10L dry bag and then nest that inside a 30L along with several 5L bags. If the tarp gets wet I'll move it out to the 30L and my hammock and sleeping bag still stays dry.
Live by the sword, die by the arrow
Great pictures, and report.
thanks much for sharing!!!
...Says Pawfoot, thats who!! [ Cuz thats how I roll ]
and Coffins ARE used for transportation...
A Great adventure awaits the ones who go! The rest of us gets to look at pictures! These pictures put me back on the creek bank and my mind away from work! Thanks Sparrow!
If you're TRULY a gear junkie- get into kayaking!
Oh, and if you're a DIY gear junkie, you can build your own boat. Make that "boats". And paddle. Make that "paddles", they're like hammocks- just one is FAR too limiting! And spray skirts. And racks, carriers, trailers, and goodness knows what else. Hey, you've already got the thread injector and know how to sew waterproof materials. You're halfway there!!!
http://www.guillemotkayaks.com/guill...edition_single
If you want to read about traditional qajaqs, check out this newsletter:
http://www.qajaqusa.org/QUSA/newsletter.html
Many traditional kayak builders hang online here:
http://www.qajaqusa.org/cgi-bin/Gree...orum_config.pl
Many wooden kayak builders hang out at www.kayakforum.com, which is sponsored by www.guillemotkayaks.com This is very cool stuff, I tell ya.....
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