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Archive for December, 2009

Theme:  A “Blue Moon” New Year’s Eve

Author: PK Blogger
December 31, 2009

Here’s a wish to all our Inflatable Kayak Blog readers for a wonderful 2010! Not sure if you realize that tonight marks a very unusual New Year’s Eve. We’ll be celebrating A Blue Moonunder a “Blue Moon”, which is the second full moon in one month. According to NASA a “Blue Moon” occurs once every two and a half years; the last one was in June of 2007. Considering how rare the occurrence is, I’d say this New Year’s Eve “Blue Moon” may be a once in a lifetime thing. I guess it’s only fitting that it happens now, in the midst of all the “Twilight” hoopla and other vampire related trends.

So raise a toast to the end of 2009 as we celebrate under this rare “Blue Moon”. And thanks for visiting the Inflatable Kayak Blog. Come back soon and have yourself a very a special New Year’s Eve and a happy, healthy and paddle-worthy 2010!

Theme:  Merry Christmas 2009

Author: PK Blogger
December 25, 2009

PK ChristmasCard 2009
From PortableKayaks.com a very heartfelt wish to you and yours this Christmas day. May the joy and happiness of the holiday season continue to fill your life throughout the coming year. Let peace on earth, good will toward men be the order of the day, not just the passing wishes of the season. May you paddle safely into the uncharted waters of 2010 and may your wildest dreams come true!

Theme:  Free Overnight Shipping from The North Face

Author: KayakGuy
December 21, 2009

Procrastinators rejoice! I ran across this last minute shopping special from The North Face. In case you don’t know, The North Face is a company that makes some excellent quality outdoor clothing for kayaking and other outdoor accessories, such as tents, that any outdoor lover on your list will enjoy. For one day only, December 22, 2009, The North Face will upgrade customers to Free Overnight Shipping on orders over $150 to ensure delivery by December 24. Orders must be placed by 11:59 PM EST on December 22. The offer will automatically show up in the checkout if you click through on the link below. There’s no promotion code required. Shipping costs will automatically be removed at checkout once minimum is reached.

Here’s the link … One day only – Dec 22, upgrade to Free Overnight Shipping on orders over $150.

Theme:  Kayaking Books

Author: PK Blogger
December 11, 2009

Complete Inflatable Kayaker BookIf you’re looking for a last minute gift or ‘stocking stuffer’ for the kayaker on your gift list, check out the new selection of kayaking books that have just been added to PortableKayaks.com. Some of them feature content that deals with techniques and tips about the “how to” of kayaking. Others feature some of the incredibly scenic locations around the world where kayaking is popular. And, iIf you don’t find the perfect book in our selection, we have an easy to use search box where you can search Amazon.com for kayaking books or any other type of books that might interest you.

Theme:  Outdoor Tip – Black Pepper

Author: The Tipster
December 9, 2009

Here’s a use for Black Pepper that’s unusual, but handy. Black PepperWhether you’re camping, on a kayak trip or in your kitchen at home, remember this tip. Next time you nick yourself with a knife or other sharp utensil, reach for the black pepper. First, run cold water over the wound to clean it. (use soap if you were handling meat). Then sprinkle on the pepper and apply pressure. The bleeding will stop very quickly. Who knew that black pepper has analgesic, antibacterial, and antiseptic properties? And the best part is that black pepper doesn’t sting.

December 7, 2009

Jim Schutze is a writer from Texas who purchased a Puffin Kayak from PortableKayaks.com. He was kind enough to allow us to share the story of his paddling trip to Quetico Provincial Park in Ontario in August of 2009.

We planned our six-man canoe trip into Quetico Provincial Park in Ontario for a year before assembling in Ely, Minnesota at the end of August, 2009. Quetico, the Canadian half of the boundary waters canoe area, controls entry much more strictly than the American side. You have to make reservations months in advance just to get in. Then you must persuade the Canadians to give you a “remote area border crossing permit.” You had better hope you have never had a drunk driving conviction, or they won’t give you the pass. (That eliminated some of my favorite candidates for the trip.) Then on your day of entry you must keep an appointment with provincial park authorities at a remote crossing point on the international border.

Jim Portaging his PakBoats Puffin 12Our group – four old guys and a middle aged guy — was thrown for a loop when one member had to bail at the last minute because of a blown-up knee. He was to have been my canoe-mate. The normal solution would have been for three of us to go out in a Minnesota three-man canoe. I just didn’t want to do that. Some of my distaste for the idea was based on a misunderstanding of the “Minny Three,” which I thought would weigh a third more than the two-man Kevlars. Our age range in the group was 57 to 83, not counting the guide. I thought the three-man would be difficult to portage. I was wrong. They weigh only a few pounds more, maybe 47 pounds instead of 43 or 44. But, ehh … what can I say? Rub-a-dub-dub. I still think three men in one tub is too many. So I told everybody I had this kayak I could bring on the plane. I did not tell them that I had just purchased my Pakboat Puffin 12 from Portablekayaks.com and that it had never been in the water. They only learned that fact as the sound of the outfitter’s motorboat was fading in the distance, with the wilderness looming ahead. I detected signs of consternation.

I zipped the deck off the Puffin, pulled everything out of my 45-pound portage pack, stuffed all of it into the boat and in deck bags, and away we went. We had headwinds to buck, white caps and cross currents coming out of the river we were trying to get up into. The guide looked plenty concerned about me and my boat. The end of the story is this: the Puffin 12 did a yeoman job of carrying me out into Quetico. Especially when it was heavily loaded, the boat handled all kinds of water and wind very well.

Quetico is thousands of lakes separated by rocky portage paths, with granite shelves and outcroppings lurking beneath the surface of the water everywhere. I did my best to protect the hull of the Puffin, but I couldn’t avoid a few bumps and scrapes, which it shrugged off with barely a scratch mark. At one key point, the guide had to get out and line the two canoes up a rapids by rope. I was able to paddle up the rapids with one small assist from the guide where I had a tight corner to make. I think I would have made it on my own had he not helped. On the way home I shot the rapids while the others tramped through the woods.

Portaging was a challenge. I took the deck off and tried to carry the Puffin over my head, which meant on my head. A younger man might have managed this better. I found that at 63 years of age I was not comfortable clambering over rocky trails wearing a 21-pound hat. Eventually, however, I devised a system by which I carried the boat on a shoulder, balanced by a bungee cord to one of the forward d-rings. I tied socks around the frame joints where they dug into my shoulders. It didn’t occur to me until I was on the plane home that I should have carried the boat while wearing my portage pack, which has thick padded shoulder straps, instead of carrying it with a smaller lighter duffel bag in one hand. My fellow travelers got tired of waiting for me to pack and unpack the boat at portages. One of them wisely suggested I not do that and just dump my Duluth pack in their canoe instead. That worked well and speeded up the portages, although my boat handled less well, at first, without the weight.

Every boat and paddler must come together over just the right stroke, and I didn’t work that out until the last days of the trip. When I did – a longer stroke, sweeping back closer to the hull – the handling problems went away and I made good speed with good tracking. Before I got the stroke down, I had trouble keeping up with the canoes, sometimes lagging a full lake behind them, which meant they had to wait for me at the portages. Once I got my stroke, I kept up easily.

As gentle as I tried to be with the boat, I still dropped it and banged it on trees and bumped it on boulders on the portages. No element of the frame ever popped out of place. It sat upside down in the sun for three days at our base camp, after which the sponsons were deflated very slightly. I pumped them back up, and they remained taut.

I got lots of comments from other canoeists, mainly along the line of, “What is that?”
All in all, I was very pleased with the Puffin 12, extremely proud of it for carrying me and my gear so well on a nine-day expedition with lots and lots of portaging. I am tempted to go back out into Quetico on solo trips, which most people do by paddling a Prism one-man Kevlar or similar canoe. But I sure am fond of my Puffin 12, and I’m thinking seriously of trying a solo in it.

The other question I got from the other people who saw me carrying the Puffin kayak on the portages was, “How much does that thing weigh?” When I said, “‘21 pounds’ (without the deck),” I could see obvious envy on their faces – especially the ones anywhere near my age. Envy and a big light bulb. I predict in years ahead there will be more gray-beards in Pakboats in Quetico. I would say, “more girls,” also, but all the girls we saw out there were stronger than us.

Theme:  For The Kayaker on Your Gift List

Author: KayakGuy
December 4, 2009

Planning on getting someone a kayak or kayak accessory as a gift? If so, I have a few suggestions. Make sure you buy them something they’ll like. In other words, you might not want to make it a total surprise. A little research goes a long way and you’ll be glad when your gift is welcomed with open arms rather than a confused facial expression.

Gift Wrapped BoxIn the case of avid kayakers, you should be familiar with what they are paddling now and whether your gift will fit their preferences. Kayaks are kind of like shoes. One size or type doesn’t “fit” all. Ask their friends, fellow paddlers or significant others for advice. A portable (inflatable or folding kayak) may not be the perfect choice for someone who’s used to paddling a hard shell kayak. However, if they’re tired of storing or car carrying the hard shell, a portable kayak might be the perfect gift. Accessories, especially paddles, can also be very user specific. Find out what they have, then buy them what they’d like to have.

If you’re buying for a newby it’s even more important to research your choice. I’ve seen a few situations where a wife or husband has purchased a tandem (two person) kayak without consulting (or even hinting to) the other person only to be disappointed when they experienced that “confused facial expression”. The hassle and expense of returning the kayak could be easily avoided if you could have discovered in advance that the “giftee’s” idea of water sports is lounging on a Caribbean Cruise or maybe they have an aversion to paddles or … you get the idea.

If you need a few gift suggestions, maybe these will help you out. A Sea Eagle 330 or 370 is a great gift for a beginner who wants to start out paddling. Sea Eagle Explorer Kayaks (340, 380 or 420) or any of the Innova inflatable kayaks are terrific for someone who wants to upgrade from a beginner level kayak. PakBoat’s Arrows or Puffins folding kayaks are nice for a hard shell kayaker who’s tired of carting around and storing that hard shell kayak. PakBoats track very much like a hard shell, too. And, of course the TRAK adjustable kayak is perfect for the kayaker who has everything and wants more. All of the above also travel very well on planes or in car trunks or the back of a minivan. Some kayak accessories you might look at include these items that can all be used by any type of kayaker, traditional hard shell or portable. You could buy someone a new, lighter fiberglass or carbon Cannon paddle, a PakPod Deck Bag/Paddle Float or one of the new WindPaddle™ sails that fit most any type of small boat, kayak or canoe. If there’s a paddler on your list that’s also a photographer, an AquaPac 100% waterproof/sand proof case is a nice gift. There are also AquaPac cases for cell phones and MP3 players.

There’s some great gift ideas here, made even better by a little advance ‘gift giving’ research.