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#1
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Started out with inflatable Kayaks from Wal Mart. They were Colemans
for about $60. I thoroughly enjoyed them, but they were slow. I moved up to a Perception Swifty. I recently tipped over in a rapid , and think I would have done better in the Coleman. I am thinking that I need several kayaks of various types to meet my needs. I want to do all sorts of kayaking including SOTs . Is there something wrong with this thinking? I also want to do kayak sailing and Kite sailing! I am 59 years old and want to take lessons of all sorts. William R. Watt wrote: Randy Hodges ) writes: John, You have made many good points. And I could respond to each but my guess is that this thread has about reached its useful limit. My overall point has been and will continue to be that many/most people will enter this sport by buying a recreational kayak. When we as a community show disdain to them, we are often loosing a great opportunity to bring them into a world of better boats, better training, and increased safety. My other point is that many people do not intend on ever "pushing the limits" - Rec Boats are a good choice for them. Randy last weekend I attended a "fun" canoe race on a local river during spring runoff. most of the paddlers did not know how to navigate a river. I chose a spot to watch the race where I knew there were rocks in the river. I haven't laughed so much in a long time. one canoe would head right for curling waves in the centre of the river and a whole bunch would follow right behind, ignoring the deep water "V"'s to each side. it was kind of sad watching those expensive canoes being banged and scraped over the rocks. it was a joy to watch a few skilled paddlers pick the fastest clear path down the river. in an affluent society people have more money than sense. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ National Capital FreeNet www.ncf.ca Ottawa's free community network website: www.ncf.ca/~ag384 "Tank, take me in." ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
#2
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Nothing wrong with owning all sorts of boats!
"ronwagn" wrote in message ups.com... Started out with inflatable Kayaks from Wal Mart. They were Colemans for about $60. I thoroughly enjoyed them, but they were slow. I moved up to a Perception Swifty. I recently tipped over in a rapid , and think I would have done better in the Coleman. I am thinking that I need several kayaks of various types to meet my needs. I want to do all sorts of kayaking including SOTs . Is there something wrong with this thinking? I also want to do kayak sailing and Kite sailing! I am 59 years old and want to take lessons of all sorts. William R. Watt wrote: Randy Hodges ) writes: John, You have made many good points. And I could respond to each but my guess is that this thread has about reached its useful limit. My overall point has been and will continue to be that many/most people will enter this sport by buying a recreational kayak. When we as a community show disdain to them, we are often loosing a great opportunity to bring them into a world of better boats, better training, and increased safety. My other point is that many people do not intend on ever "pushing the limits" - Rec Boats are a good choice for them. Randy last weekend I attended a "fun" canoe race on a local river during spring runoff. most of the paddlers did not know how to navigate a river. I chose a spot to watch the race where I knew there were rocks in the river. I haven't laughed so much in a long time. one canoe would head right for curling waves in the centre of the river and a whole bunch would follow right behind, ignoring the deep water "V"'s to each side. it was kind of sad watching those expensive canoes being banged and scraped over the rocks. it was a joy to watch a few skilled paddlers pick the fastest clear path down the river. in an affluent society people have more money than sense. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- National Capital FreeNet www.ncf.ca Ottawa's free community network website: www.ncf.ca/~ag384 "Tank, take me in." -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- |
#3
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Depends what you can sneak in the garage and claim "No, I've had that for
years. It's not another new boat, I just cleaned it up a little". Ken "Mike B" wrote in message ... Nothing wrong with owning all sorts of boats! "ronwagn" wrote in message ups.com... Started out with inflatable Kayaks from Wal Mart. They were Colemans for about $60. I thoroughly enjoyed them, but they were slow. I moved up to a Perception Swifty. I recently tipped over in a rapid , and think I would have done better in the Coleman. I am thinking that I need several kayaks of various types to meet my needs. I want to do all sorts of kayaking including SOTs . Is there something wrong with this thinking? I also want to do kayak sailing and Kite sailing! I am 59 years old and want to take lessons of all sorts. William R. Watt wrote: Randy Hodges ) writes: John, You have made many good points. And I could respond to each but my guess is that this thread has about reached its useful limit. My overall point has been and will continue to be that many/most people will enter this sport by buying a recreational kayak. When we as a community show disdain to them, we are often loosing a great opportunity to bring them into a world of better boats, better training, and increased safety. My other point is that many people do not intend on ever "pushing the limits" - Rec Boats are a good choice for them. Randy last weekend I attended a "fun" canoe race on a local river during spring runoff. most of the paddlers did not know how to navigate a river. I chose a spot to watch the race where I knew there were rocks in the river. I haven't laughed so much in a long time. one canoe would head right for curling waves in the centre of the river and a whole bunch would follow right behind, ignoring the deep water "V"'s to each side. it was kind of sad watching those expensive canoes being banged and scraped over the rocks. it was a joy to watch a few skilled paddlers pick the fastest clear path down the river. in an affluent society people have more money than sense. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- National Capital FreeNet www.ncf.ca Ottawa's free community network website: www.ncf.ca/~ag384 "Tank, take me in." -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- |
#4
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I think that having several boats is a good idea. I have always kept my
first "rec" boat, a Perception America, and use it for novices or for fairly calm rivers. I have a Current Designs Caribou I use on any large body of water, and an inflatable that I use on class 1-3 rivers. Jim "ronwagn" wrote in message ups.com... Started out with inflatable Kayaks from Wal Mart. They were Colemans for about $60. I thoroughly enjoyed them, but they were slow. I moved up to a Perception Swifty. I recently tipped over in a rapid , and think I would have done better in the Coleman. I am thinking that I need several kayaks of various types to meet my needs. I want to do all sorts of kayaking including SOTs . Is there something wrong with this thinking? I also want to do kayak sailing and Kite sailing! I am 59 years old and want to take lessons of all sorts. William R. Watt wrote: Randy Hodges ) writes: John, You have made many good points. And I could respond to each but my guess is that this thread has about reached its useful limit. My overall point has been and will continue to be that many/most people will enter this sport by buying a recreational kayak. When we as a community show disdain to them, we are often loosing a great opportunity to bring them into a world of better boats, better training, and increased safety. My other point is that many people do not intend on ever "pushing the limits" - Rec Boats are a good choice for them. Randy last weekend I attended a "fun" canoe race on a local river during spring runoff. most of the paddlers did not know how to navigate a river. I chose a spot to watch the race where I knew there were rocks in the river. I haven't laughed so much in a long time. one canoe would head right for curling waves in the centre of the river and a whole bunch would follow right behind, ignoring the deep water "V"'s to each side. it was kind of sad watching those expensive canoes being banged and scraped over the rocks. it was a joy to watch a few skilled paddlers pick the fastest clear path down the river. in an affluent society people have more money than sense. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ National Capital FreeNet www.ncf.ca Ottawa's free community network website: www.ncf.ca/~ag384 "Tank, take me in." ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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