It's light enough to pull, even carry from a parking, but it's better to inflate near the put-in if you can. If you store it inflated, I would recommend a cool place and only inflating to about 3/4. Left inflated to 2psi in a hot location will cause it to expand and potentially burst a seam.
Hope this helps.
sparkr
On Wednesday, May 9, 2012 11:48:58 PM UTC-4, Barracuda wrote:
-- On Wednesday, May 9, 2012 11:48:58 PM UTC-4, Barracuda wrote:
I've been intrigued by the glowing reviews of a number of inflatable
kayaks here and have been contemplating getting one myself. Not
because I don't have room to store a regular kayak; I do. But because
I often like to put a kayak on the river where it's a bit of a trek
from the parking lot. Or paddle it upstream and float down. Plus I'm
getting older and I'm getting tired of putting my 58 pound canoe on my
car and taking it off. Seems like the inflatables will save quite a
few pounds.
But a question: how well do they do paddling upstream. I know this is
an area where a good kayak will far outperform a canoe. What about the
inflatables? Are they better than canoes but maybe not quite as good
as a plastic or (fiberglass) kayak?
Also, if I've got room to store it without taking the air out, is that
okay? Or should they be deflated for storage?
Thanks for any information/help.
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