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Wilko Wilko is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 168
Default I need a sea kayak paddle

John Fereira wrote:
Wilko wrote in :

John Fereira wrote:
I don't think I've ever seen anyone complain choosing a better, more
expensive paddle than a cheap one. Over the years that this group has
been "in business" there have been lots of people coming here asking
for reccommendations on a paddle and the advice has always been not to
scrimp on buying a paddle and there is a good reason for that.

That said, I don't believe that a $400 super light carbon fiber paddle
is for everyone. While many of the experience paddlers here would
hardly blink about spending that kind of money on equipment for their
passion, that's a significant commitment for someone just entering the
sport and still not sure how into the sport they're going to get.

I've gone from the heavy Schlegel paddles to Spiderpaddles (prepreg
glass blades with a double thickness carbon/kevlar bent shaft) about
six years ago. Those paddles take several years of abuse (rock bashing
on low level streams) and gradually wear down the blades.

The one I have now (for the past two years) cost about 175 US$, the
previous one cost about 140 US$ at that time. Decent price for a good
paddle. I can't justify anything like 400 US$ on a paddle, no matter
how nice it is. Boats tend to outlast my paddles by a factor of at
least two, even though I haven't broken a paddle in maybe six or seven
years, that's just too much money for my taste.


Of course you're a whitewater paddler and the paddle I bought is a touring
paddle. I would imagine that sea kayak paddles tend to last a *lot* longer
than a WW paddle. Many sea kayakers will spend $2000-$3000 (or more) for a
touring boat. I know that prices on WW boats have gone up quite a bit over
the past few years but even $1500 would be at the top end. My guess would
be that equipment costs for sea kayaking (I'm not talking about recreational
class boats that sometimes sold as sea kayaks for beginners) are
significantly higher than for ww paddling.


You have a point there, John. For a starting paddler, it's probably
quite a bit more expensive if you buy everything new (I'm not familiar
with 2nd hand sea kayak prices). I'm not so sure that the hobby as a
whole costs more though, especially since boats and paddles do wear out
on whitewater, especially when (ab-)used by beginners, and the 2nd hand
prices of used boats remind me of those of used cars... The moment you
walk out of the shop, devaluation of the boat has already started.

I guess that when we're talking about the cost of the two branches of
kayaking as a whole, a lot depends upon where you live. In my country, a
lot of people sea kayak, simply because flat water and the North Sea are
available. Getting to whitewater involves long drives (at 6+ US$ per
gallon) and with our 40% tax (BPM and BTW) on cars, driving is a lot
more expensive per driven mile than it is on the other side of the big pond.

Then again, if you live in Colorado, sea kayaking might be the more
expensive hobby, purely based on the distance from the nearest available
salt water (Unless Salt Lake city counts... ;-))


--
Wilko van den Bergh wilkoa t)dse(d o tnl
Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe
---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.---
http://kayaker.nl/