Cataboo, remember to let me know if you ever want to sell that Tempest 165. I love that boat for all the reasons you cite. Great post, BTW.
Cataboo, remember to let me know if you ever want to sell that Tempest 165. I love that boat for all the reasons you cite. Great post, BTW.
Oh, other small person plastic boat - p&h delfin, p&h capella, valley avocet lv
And for all the reason I posted, I still keep it around - so it may not be something I'm selling anytime soon, I will tell you if I ever see someone sellling one used though. Its funny at any of the local kayak club's rescue training, about 80% of the boats that people arrive with are tempest 165 or 170s... It's just that useful of a boat, and noone wants to scratch up their composite boats.
But you're welcome to come up & borrow it - we never actually have gotten together.
We tested out how strong a tempest 170 was on Saturday, by doing this to it twice. Long story as to why:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIy3_-ZQ1QM
Thanks for the list of other small person plastic boats. I don't consider myself particularly small at 5'-6" and 127 lbs, but the Tempest 165 is perfect for me.
AND, you're welcome to come down and bring your boats. I live one mile from the river--downriver from the rapids on the nice, flat water. Shoot, we can paddle all the way to Jamestown.
Tulip, you definitely count as one - you're a lightweight paddler & you're going to have the same problems as a shorter paddler. when most kayaks are designed for 180-220 lb guys to be able to carry another 40 lbs of gear... And then when most kayak manufacturers don't bother to actually redesign them as a low volume boat, but just cut down the deck height & then claim they're a lv boat....
how much sewage went into the james in the last few storms? At least 500 million gallons went into the chesapeake...
I've been avoiding urban waterways lately.
*shudder*
I don't know, I didn't go down to look at the river...I did paddle on a tributary of the Rappahannock after the hurricane, and I would not have wanted to do a wet exit. Thank goodness for floating docks, is all I can say. But it was still a nice paddle.
Years ago, I organized a trip for my office out of Bladensburg Marina on the Anacostia. My boss got dumped in that water. Ewwwwww. Perhaps that's why my career there came to an end shortly thereafter...hmmm.![]()
I paddled the Anacostia for the first time this year... Yeah, yay for floating docks! I did not put my feet into that water.
It is a gorgeous paddle, the aquatic gardens are beautiful and it's a great variety that you see on it.
I got some pretty pics... but the most striking ones were the ones of trash in the water:
https://picasaweb.google.com/1178064...AnacostiaRiver