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The only
drawback that I saw was that it felt a tad sluggish. If you haven't paddled one it's definitely worth a try. snipThe only drawback that I saw was that it felt a tad sluggish. If you haven't paddled one it's definitely worth a try. John, thank you for your answer. I got so swamped here for awhile, I forgot I had posted a question. I'm afraid that one drawback would kill the boat for me. I live very close to a 7 mile long very narrow lake, and even though I do get to take a few good multi-day trips a year, the huge majority of my paddling is of the 2 or 3 HOUR variety or very short 1 nighters where I leave late in the day, paddle in at night, and come back out pretty early the next day, so I want a boat that is very fast to paddle for a workout, but will still hold enough gear for the occasional 2-3 dayers. Speaking of trying boats, given the opportunity I'm about to break the golden rule of boat buying. I have lots of time to run off and paddle, because that's something I can get done in 3 1/2 or 4 hours, but I have almost no time to go somewhere and rent or borrow boats to try. So, if I get a shot at a good fast composite sea kayak between 17 & 18 feet for way cheaper than I deserve, I'm gonna jump on it & live w/ the consequences. The little lake is so weird, there's a 9 1/2 horsepower limit so all the traffic on the lake is limited to few little fishing boats which is very good, but there is also an 18 foot limit and they actually measure. Manufacturer's specs or the paddler's word mean zilch to these Ricky Ranger dudes. A fiend of mine who lives about 7 minutes from the lake got a great deal on an 18' plus racing skull and he couldn't get a waiver for that boat try as he might for many weeks..... Thanks again. Must be a rare boat if no one else posted a review. Unless just nobody comes here anymore? Nace |