Monday, January 25, 2010

Keeping A Kayak In A Carport What Kayak Would Be Suitable For Multi Day Trips?

What Kayak would be suitable for multi day trips? - keeping a kayak in a carport

I am looking for a kayak that would be good for the weekend, maybe three or four days. I need something to allow more gear to keep things dry (DUH) and to handle large flows of the situation. (Do not use for anything) on the bench, or perhaps a quick class 1 I have a kayak in mind, a tsunami of 120 or 125, but not sure. Any advice would be great!

1 comments:

awaywa said...

Your most important consideration is the ability of the kayak. The capacity indicated by the tsunami from 125 to 300 pounds. It depends on how much you weigh and pack as needed. For example, would be enough for me, and with a weight of 210 and often contain 100 pounds. Arts (yes, I know not easy to pack - fresh food, wine, size Thermarest, maybe even a little wood or coal). If you are a traveler, you probably know very well how much weight you carry.

Kayaks handle slightly differently when they are exceeded. They are usually a little more stable but slightly slower. If possible, try using a kayak before you buy fully loaded. If they can not forget that if the boat feels a bit slow, or sit so low on water, and will probably not happy with him, if he has a lot of art in itself.

I also recommend a boat with hatches and bulkheads fore and aft, both of them. Your team will have a better chance to stay dry, and it is in the interests of goodSecurity. Drybags are recommended for the arts, in any case, many small bags are easier on a boat a few large companies.

If you have an idea for long trips in open water, see my reply to the dispatch sea kayak: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index? ...

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