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"PMH" wrote in message ...
Tim Smith wrote: I'd like to get a paddle boat that I can store in the garage, and portage out to the lagoon. Problem is, I'm still rather overweight, and much too ample around the midsection, so I doubt I'd fit in a standard sea kayak (something I would like to work up towards). ... ... Although kayaks are all the rage these days, consider that the basic canoe form is old from time out of mind yet remains one of the ideal - some would say THE ideal - form of personal water transportation. ... My heart is with Pete 100% on this, but the fact is that there's a lot to learn paddling a canoe solo, and a lot of it has to be learned all at once at the beginning. Too, some maneuvers (even some you'll encounter in fla****er) use muscles that modern man uses for nothing else. (Ever wonder what that useless rib-meat is for? Cross draws.) If you're deconditioned, you're in line for a few bad mornings. Your response depends on whether or not you buy into the "No pain, no gain" business. I might go with a sit-on-top. Stable, easy to propel and control, trivial self-rescue, not hard to sell when you're ready. But you really should be working toward the supreme expression of the human spirit on the water, the solo canoe. Hth, Fred Klingener |
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