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Boat Review: H2O Voyageur 17 Canoe

Two women canoeing down a rapid in the H2O Voyageur 17 canoe
Feature Photo: Rapid Staff

Who wouldn’t want to go river tripping with a canoe that gives you all the performance, but less weight than usual? That’s the promise of H2O Canoe Company’s voluminous 17-foot river tripper, the H2O Voyageur 17 canoe.

H2O Voyageur 17 Specs
Length: 16’11”
Width: 37”
Weight: 49 lbs
Material: Brute Force
MSRP: $3,495 CAD
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all canoes from the H2O Canoe Company ]

The H2O Voyageur 17 is light and tough

The H2O Voyageur 17 canoe caught my wandering eye early this spring as local runs began to flood. Rather than lug my trusty ol’ 80-pound Royalex behemoth to the river’s edge, I visited H2O founder Jeff Hill at his workshop in rural Tavistock, Ontario. I brought back with me the lightest heavy-duty river tripping canoe any of the Paddling Magazine editorial staff have ever paddled. Not to mention, we’ve never used the words lightest, canoe and heavy-duty in the same sentence before.

Origins of the Voyageur 17 canoe

The shape of the H2O Voyageur canoe was sketched out more than two decades ago. Back in 1997, celebrated boat designer Skip Izon dreamed up a tripping canoe for London, Ontario-based rowing shell manufacturer Hudson Boatworks. Izon had the goal of creating a canoe that excelled in whitewater, while remaining efficient on the flats. In the 21 years since, his design has been known by many names and manufactured by four companies.

We first reviewed Izon’s design back in the spring 2003 issue of Rapid Magazine, when it was called the Nemesis and manufactured in Royalex by Raven Works. After Raven Works folded, the Nemisis mould went to Scott Canoe where it was used to produce a canoe named the Missinaibi—its namesake a northern Ontario river known for its excellent whitewater and lengthy flats. Then Scott Canoe’s parent company, Mid-Canada Fibreglass, closed its doors in 2013.

H2O acquired the original cedar strip prototype from Izon’s workshop—Izon was still paddling it all these years later. Using the original plug to create a mould in 2016 Hill started manufacturing another new canoe in an ultra-durable composite construction. Two decades after the original incarnation, Izon’s design lives again, this time modernized in material but traditional in name—the Voyageur.

New Brute Force Innegra layup

Thanks to H2O’s proprietary Brute Force layup, the Voyageur dropped 25 pounds compared to its previous Royalex incarnations—as a point of historical reference, that’s roughly one-third of a voyageur’s bundle.

In the Brute Force layup, polypropylene-based Innegra fibers are woven with basalt mineral to make an outer and inner skin. A center layer of Kevlar and Kevlar ribs laminated with an impact-flexible epoxy resin round out the composite sandwich. Certainly, the svelte 49 pounds is impressively light for such a large and tough whitewater canoe.

H2O debuted Brute Force in 2016, back when the canoeing market was still reeling from the loss of Royalex. It was a dark but exciting time in canoe history. Manufacturers were experimenting with all sorts of different composites to find a suitable replacement for plastic recreational canoes and river trippers. However, the release of a Royalex-alternative material later the same year swung much of the market interest back to plastics, says Hill. But not all.

“There was a period of time when everybody was looking for composite solutions. Now many of those same people just aren’t in the market anymore. There’s a familiarity factor with plastics, but also the price of plastic canoes is lower,” says Hill. “Our audience in 2018 is middle-aged and older people who are not interested in river tripping with an 80-pound canoe.” He can add to his list one 30-something editor.

Brute Force can handle just about anything the river throws at it, says Hill. Of course, just like any composite canoe, the H2O Voyageur 17 isn’t an ideal canoe to simply bash down your local run—the material will stand up best in competent hands with intermediate skills.

You will have to learn to turn and pick your lines,” says Hill. “The Voyageur is capable of handling any level of paddler, but it’ll demand you develop your skills too.”

Negotiate rapids with ease

On flooded spring rivers following a late ice out, we found this tandem tripper to be all Hill—and Izon before him—promised.

Thanks to aggressive four-inch rocker in the bow and two inches in the stern, the Voyageur is a quick-turning canoe for a 17-footer, carving in and out of eddies with ease. It’s a dry ride, with plunge-resistant overhangs and flare in the bow and stern.

“The Voyageur is capable of handling any level of paddler,
but it’ll demand you develop your skills too.”

Izon kept the waterline sharp for flatwater and flared above the waterline for crashing through big standing waves. The H2O Voyageur 17 is also a deep canoe, with 21 inches in the bow and 15 inches at center. An ultra-broad 37-inch beam makes the Voyageur feel oh-so stable at any time, and tumblehome in the paddling positions narrows up the width for easy strokes.

Two women canoeing down a rapid in the H2O Voyageur 17 canoe
Feature Photo: Rapid Staff

The Voyageur 17 is flatwater-friendly

Few good rivers trips are all rapids.

The Voyageur was also designed with flatwater efficiency in mind. This shows in the sharp entry lines of the bow and stern. At the waterline, the H2O Voyageur 17 is more reminiscent of my touring canoe rather than my bulbous weekend playboat.

[ Plan your next canoe tripping adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

“It’s a big, friendly boat. It’s easy to design a big canoe to carry a lot of stuff, and make it very maneuverable,” says original designer Izon, who restores canoes and rowing shells in his Grand Bend, Ontario workshop. “The challenge was to build some speed into it.” He used his expertise in designing rowing shells to shape the Voyageur’s bow for optimal glide.

I’d be remiss not to mention the extravagant interior space the Voyageur provides. I think I could fit a quartered moose in here or 1,000 pounds of fur pelts and salted cod. For sure it fits four blue tripping barrels—if that’s more your style.

“We often refer to the Voyageur by the name Skip affectionately gave it early in the design stage—Big Mama,” says Hill.

The extra room at the center of the boat is appreciated because the sharp entry lines at bow and stern cut down on usable storage space in those areas. You won’t notice this if you’re packing flotation, as Hill recommends. Our loaner came standard with webbed seats, ash yoke and aluminum trim. For serious river tripping, we’d recommend whitewater outfitting, including knee pads, straps and air bags.

“We often refer to the Voyageur by the name Skip affectionately gave it early in the design stage—Big Mama.”

Try out the H2O Voyageur 17 canoe

“I’m just happy she’s found a home all these years later,” says Izon of the H2O Voyageur 17 canoe. In his garage, Izon has a new Voyageur hanging next to the original cedar strip prototype he loaned to Hill. It’s white, made of Kevlar and he calls it Big Mama, too.

“It’s my favorite canoe,” he says. “I have the first one and the latest one.”

This article was first published in Issue 54 of Paddling Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.


Video of H2O’s New Voyageur 17 and Brute Force Lay-Up:

 

Boat Review: Necky Looksha V

Man paddling a Necky Looksha V sea kayak
Feature Photo: Liz Burnside

Sometimes it seems like kayak designers share the same obsession as the magazine headlines at the grocery store checkout. Everything’s getting skinnier. At almost 24 inches wide, the Necky Looksha V is one boat that’s bucking the diet trend.

Necky Looksha V Specs
Length: 17’4”
Width: 23.75”
Depth: 13.5”
Weight: 65 lbs
Cockpit: 33” × 17.25”, 155 L
Bow Hatch: 16” × 9.5”, 63 L
Stern Hatch: 16” × 9.5”, 85 L
MSRP: $1,619 USD or $1,999 CAD

Necky’s Looksha V offers a roomy ride

There is an undeniable pride and grace to be felt slipping into a kayak that’s nary wider than your hips. But there may come a time when you paddle your 21-inch-wide kayak through a four-foot chop and notice your paddling partner blithely snapping photos and popping his skirt to pull out a snack while you’re white-knuckling your paddle and grinding the enamel off your teeth to endure the pain of cramping obliques. And it will be quite likely that your grinning buddy will be paddling the Looksha V, the latest in Necky’s popular Looksha series of multi-chined tourers.

[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all touring & sea kayaks ]

Economies of scale

The heft of a 17-foot polyethylene hull (the only material currently offered) is undeniable, but so is the surprise of its speed and manoeuvrability. At tripping speed, the Necky Looksha V has no problem cruising alongside those calorie-counting kayaks with British accents.

Man paddling a Necky Looksha V sea kayak
Feature Photo: Liz Burnside

The wider girth has the advantage of providing a more rounded rocker on a tilt—the Looksha V spins quickly on its side—yet tracking is excellent, obviating the need to deploy the rudder except in some following seas and rear quartering winds. Initial stability is moderate to high and secondary stability is exceptional—you really have to throw your weight around to flip over.

Details of the Necky Looksha V sea kayak

A simply strapping boat

The “Extrasport XtraComfort” foam rubber seat integrates a water bottle holder. Foot braces are shock-corded on the bow end and connect to the rudder cables with adjustable straps. A clever under-deck shelf keeps pumps and other essentials out of the way yet accessible.

Large, easy-to-pack oval hatches incorporate the tried and true combo of a neoprene seal and a rigid plastic cover to protect from sun and waves, all secured by the bra-like “Cross-Lock” four-strap system that does up with one quick clip.

Adjustment options in the cockpit of the Necky Looksha V will leave you agog: one strap on each side for seat bottom angle, backrest angle and foot pedals. Plus a six-point height adjustment on the backrest, sliding thigh braces, and comfy under-deck foam padding.

[ Plan your next sea kayaking & touring adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

Take a closer look at the Looksha V

The Necky Looksha V promises to be a reliable workhorse for outfitters and mid- to large-sized paddlers looking for a durable, affordably priced ride with a rich array of features.

This article was first published in the Early Summer 2006 issue of Adventure Kayak Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

 

Boat Review: Liquidlogic Remix Kayak

Person paddling a Liquidlogic Remix kayak through whitewater
Feature Photo: Scott MacGregor

David K. Foot, professor of economics at the University of Toronto, is the author of the best-selling book Boom, Bust & Echo: How to Profit from the Coming Demographic Shift. Foot is a demographics expert who makes the aging of society relevant to any group—even whitewater paddlers. He explores how changing demographics, especially the aging of the massive boomer generation and the entry of their children, the echo generation, into the marketplace will redefine society’s needs. Reading between the lines I think you’ll find the reason behind the Liquidlogic Remix.

Liquidlogic Remix Specs
(47 / 59 / 69 / 79)
Length: 7’4” / 8’6” / 8’9” / 9’0”
Width: 20.9” / 25.2” / 25.6” / 26.4”
Volume: 47 / 59 / 69 / 79 U.S. gal
Weight: 26 / 40 / 44 / 44 lbs
Weight Range: 40-121 / 110-201 /
130-204 / 181-280 lbs
MSRP: $729 / $1,049 / $1,049 / $1,049
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all Liquidlogic kayaks ]

The Liquidlogic Remix comes back around

Joe Pulliam, the founder of Dagger Kayaks and now consultant for the Paddlesports Industry Association estimates that the heyday was in 2000 when the whitewater market was 32,000 boats strong in North America. Dagger, he figures, sold just over 6,000 RPMs that year. Why?

Foot would first look at census data and age of Rapid’s readership. In the late ‘90s the largest population group in North America was in its whitewater years—somewhere between university and 40. The boomers grew up with Deliverance and thrived on the first wave of roto-moulded plastic kayaks. The RPM, released in ‘96, was the perfect river runner and playboat for the average boater.

Soon after, boomer paddlers’ lives began to focus more on their young children. They just weren’t getting enough river days to justify buying a new boat.

Besides, they thought, nothing was better than their RPM for river running. Until now.

[ Plan your next kayak river running adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

The Remix fills a niche

Fast forward to 2008. Liquidlogic is hoping that this large group of paddlers will be returning to rivers and bringing their children. Liquidlogic’s Remix, available in four sizes (the 47 specifically for their kids), is going to help make the transition back to the river a smooth one because it’s a boat they’re used to—remember, the boomers missed the entire freestyle craze.

Person paddling a Liquidlogic Remix kayak through whitewater
Feature Photo: Scott MacGregor

“When I learned how to paddle, all the boats were fast,” says Shane Benedict, designer of the Remix. “And that was one of the big things that made peel outs, eddy turns, ferries and control pretty manageable. That speed carried you through rapids, it gave you more ability to cross over currents or get deeper into the calm spots instead of spinning out on eddy lines.”

It’s a quick learner boat

Last fall I attended a paddling symposium in Fort Henry, Maryland, where the Remix was the most talked about whitewater kayak. This group of top instructors, mostly boomers themselves, strongly believe kayaks need a minimum amount of speed, stability and tracking for beginners to understand the basic concepts of paddling whitewater.

The Remix is also going to be popular with class-III river runners and big-water paddlers and maybe even some creekers looking for more speed, rocker and bow and stern volume that keeps the boat at the surface. Good old front surfing in the Remix is a blast. And everyone enjoys the modern safety and convenience features like bomber anchor and tow points, drain plug and innovative outfitting that had not been thought of 10 years ago.

Bust out with the Liquidlogic Remix

Foot contends that with an understanding of demographics you can understand the past and create a vision for the future. Demographics, Foot says, explains two-thirds of everything. The rest may be left up to fashion, for which Liquidlogic offers limited editions of the Remix with surfer flowers and flames. These come at a $50 premium, which is perfect really because baby boomers also have lots of money.

This article was first published in the Fall 2008 issue of Rapid Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

 

Boat Review: H2O Prospector 15-4 Canoe

H2O Prospector 15-4 tandem tripping canoe | Feature Photo: Kaydi Pyette

When H2O Canoe Company owner, Jeff Hill, dropped off a fleet of three Prospectors at Paddling Magazine’s riverside office, there was one design that immediately caught my eye: the H2O Prospector 15-4 canoe.

H2O Prospector 15-4 Specs
Length: 15’4”
Width: 35”
Rocker: 2.5”
Depth at center: 14”
Weight: 32 lbs
Material: Epoxy Pro Series, Clear Carbon
MSRP: $3,695
www.h2ocanoe.com
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all canoes from the H2O Canoe Company ]

The H2O Prospector canoe is sleek and nimble

Sleek. Black. Sexy. The H2O Prospector 15-4 canoe in carbon is surely the Corvette of the tandem-tripping world. Given Hill’s background in manufacturing world-class composite rowing shells, the svelte and speedy shape of the 15-4 should come as no surprise.

Blending old and new

A scaled down version of H2O’s bestselling 16-4, which takes its lines from a Chestnut Canoe Company original, the 15-4’s symmetrical hull and two-and-a-half inches of rocker in bow and stern create a nimble craft. Its initial stability may feel loose for beginners, but more advanced paddlers will appreciate its maneuverability and responsiveness to tilt. I was impressed with its ease of handling while paddling upriver solo and unloaded, in a headwind.

[ Plan your next canoe tripping adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

Modernity and tradition meld in this design. The dished yoke and molded carry handles are made of durable poplar and stained near black. H2O’s attractive integrated composite gunwale system is ultra stylish, featuring a foam-cored gunwale wrapped in carbon, with an outer aluminum trim—it cuts the weight of regular aluminum gunwales almost in half.

Yet, for such a contemporary canoe, the H2O Prospector 15-4 retains elements of its heritage—there’s a gentle re-curve in the bow and stern, and the sharp entry lines of its traditional shape flare out quickly.

Clear Carbon lay-up is a winner

Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, H2O has made a name for itself producing lightweight, high-end composite canoes. New for 2015 is their Epoxy Pro Series, of which our tester is a part. This premium series features three all-new lay-ups, each of which combines Kevlar, carbon and a basalt-Innegra blend in varying degrees to get different combinations of strength, impact resistance, weight and price.

Our 32-pound Clear Carbon tester, the lightest and priciest in the series, boasts a primarily carbon hull with a carbon-Kevlar interior and basalt-Innegra lining. The H2O Prospector 15-4 canoe is also available in a mostly basalt-Innegra composite, the toughest lay-up in the Epoxy Pro Series and weighing in at 40 pounds, as well as a mostly Kevlar lay-up, a compromise between weight (37 pounds), durability and price.

H2O Prospector 15-4 tandem tripping canoe | Feature Photo: Kaydi Pyette

H2O was one of the first canoe manufacturers to integrate ultra-tough basalt-Innegra blends into their hulls, a move that is a growing trend in the industry. It’s because H2O is a smaller company that they’re able to adapt and incorporate material innovations quickly, Hill tells me. “We’re becoming the biggest little company; if there’s something out there, we’re going to try it,” says Hill.

Big plans for our H2O Prospector canoes

The H2O Prospector 15-4 is a stylish and maneuverable composite canoe perfect for tandem trippers. The Clear Carbon lay-up is a lightweight dream, sure to help you power through portages. As for the other two Prospectors H2O loaned us? We have plans to paddle our H2O convoy on a long weekend summer trip—stay tuned for more.


Video of the H2O Canoe Company’s Epoxy Pro Series:

Scott MacGregor speaks with H2O Canoe Company owner, Jeff Hill, about the all-new Epoxy Pro series. Using a combination of new and traditional hull materials, the H20 team set out to design 30- to 40-pound boats that have the strength and durability associated with far heavier layups. Hill showcases the all-new light and durable series, including the H2O Prospector 15-4 canoe:

 


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This article first appeared in the Fall 2015 issue of Canoeroots Magazine.

Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.

Boat Review: Islander Hula Sit-On-Top Kayak

Woman paddles an Islander Hula sit-on-top kayak
Feature Photo: Islander Kayaks

At Paddling Magazine we are working to produce a magazine promoting accessibility in kayak touring. Columns like “Urban Adventures” get people off the couch for an evening paddle and featuring boats like the Islander Hula sit-on-top kayak, brings paddling to those who might otherwise settle for surfboards or pool noodles.

Islander Hula Specs
Length: 8’7”
Width: 26.75”
Weight: 32 lbs
Max Capacity: 225 lbs
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all sit-on-top kayaks ]

Introducing the Islander Hula kayak

The Hula from Islander Kayaks is an endless possibility toy for kids aged four to one hundred and four. It first appears to be a simple sit-on-top, but we were surprising by the number of well-designed features. Generous features are not important on a castaway raft, an alien water taxi or a pirate ship, but they might come into play on an evening of solitude, when learning to surf or just sun tanning.

Get started in a sit-on-top

A sit-on-top kayak like the Islander Hula is a great starter boat for people of any age. Designed as a wave catcher, the Hula is very manoeuvrable and although it turns pretty quickly, even complete beginners had it moving along in a matter of minutes with our quality instruction, “you’ll figure it out.”

The stable platform and drain holes make the Islander Hula an ideal toy for summer fun. Righting the kayak after a tumble is a snap and you’re instantly ready again. With a bunch of touring boats scattered around the local public beach, the hula was without a doubt the most appealing to new paddlers and kids. Without a cockpit and the fear of claustrophobia, beginners dragged it into the water and paddled around in their own comfort zones.

A well-appointed plastic craft

The Hula offers comfort and good bracing points with a molded plastic seat and incorporated foot wells that fit six year olds and six footers. We’d recommend the optional thigh braces for extra contact with the boat and more control in the surf and even for crossing the lake. Harmony thigh straps are available for $45-$70 CAD. The thigh braces can be quickly clipped and unclipped from the existing eyelets.

After taking in water from crashing surf, the self-bailing hull on the Islander Hula means you never have to pump gallons of water from your sit-on-top kayak; it also means it is pretty much impossible to paddle the Hula and keep your shorts dry.

Woman paddles an Islander Hula sit-on-top kayak
Feature Photo: Islander Kayaks

The carrying handles offer a great grip for carrying or loading the kayak with more than one person, but there’s not much option for solo loading or carrying other than dragging and dropping. We thought it would be clever if they recessed the stern handle so it doesn’t scrub your belly when climbing on from the stern. A drain plug was a smart addition in case water eventually makes its way into the molded plastic.

[ Plan your next beginners’ kayak adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

The Islander Hula sit-on-top kayak is pure paddling fun

The Islander Hula is a great way to dip your toes into the world of sit-on-top kayaking. If you’re looking for a fun, economical excuse to get out and enjoy a recreational paddle, say… “Hula Hula!”

This article was first published in the Fall 2002 issue of Adventure Kayak Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

 

Boat Review: P&H Cetus Kayak

Man demonstrates paddling in a P&H Cetus kayak
Feature Photo: Alex Matthews

The newest boat from P&H Custom Sea Kayaks is a good blend of sleek Brit sea kayak and serious load-carrying expedition workhorse. The P&H Cetus is a very attractive kayak with an upswept bow and stern, full perimeter lines, three bulkheads, a drop skeg and four rubber Kajak-Sport hatches. That’s right: four hatches!

P&H Cetus Specs
Length: 17’10”
Width: 21.5”
Depth: 12.2”
Cockpit: 34.25” × 20”, 100 U.S. gal
Weight:
64 lbs (fiberglass/Diolin)
57 lbs (Kevlar/carbon)
MSRP:
$3,399 USD (fiberglass)
$3,899 USD (Kevlar/carbon)
$4,199 USD (Ultralight clear hull)
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See the P&H Cetus kayak ]

The P&H Cetus is ready to haul

Build quality looks good on the P&H Cetus and fit and finish is clean inside and outside the kayak. In the excellent seat, the fit is roomy enough for bigger paddlers to be comfortable, but not so big that smaller folks feel lost. The fore deck is surprisingly low considering the inclusion of that fourth hatch. P&H has done a great job divvying up the available space of the Cetus so that the hatches don’t cramp the seating area. One weaker aspect is the almost vestigial thigh hooks, which left me longing for a better grip on the boat.

Cetus sits on edge

Official specs put the P&H Cetus at 17 feet, 10 inches long (correct) and 21.5 inches wide (incorrect). In actual fact the boat is closer to 22 and 3/8 inches wide, but this is neither here nor there as the kayak feels both efficient through the water and easy to place on edge. Primary stability is very solid as is secondary, with the P&H Cetus happily sitting on edge and yielding very tight turns for such a long kayak.

Man demonstrates paddling in a P&H Cetus kayak
Feature Photo: Alex Matthews

Unloaded and with a light paddler, the Cetus exhibits very light tracking and easily wanders off course. Dropping the skeg a little solves this problem and with heavier cargo tracking improves. Of course everything is a compromise, so when surfing, the rockered hull and light tracking are pluses, making controlling the boat and milking longer rides that much easier.

Extra expedition-ready

Although the P&H Cetus doesn’t really feel like a big kayak, there’s a ton of room below deck. This is really where the Cetus stands out. There are quite a few “British style” sea kayaks that are fun to paddle and that handle very well in wind and waves, but not many can swallow gear like the Cetus.

Details of the P&H Cetus kayakIn addition to the usual oval stern hatch and round day and front hatches, the P&H Cetus has an extra day hatch in front of the cockpit. This is a great feature that we’ll likely see more of. A brilliant little hatch on the fore deck provides access to a small but handy storage compartment for items like sunscreen or snacks.

Rather than a cable, the Cetus relies on an unconventional shock cord to hold the skeg in the down position and a string to pull it up. The slider rides on a notched track and moves when you squeeze a trigger.

P&H has the seat dialed; it’s both supportive and super comfy. The corrosion-prone rachets previously used to adjust the backband have been replaced with new buckles that look bombproof.

[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all P&H kayaks ]

Set out in the P&H Cetus kayak

The P&H Cetus is set to make friends with serious expedition paddlers who need a kayak with large capacity and an efficient hull. Or indeed with anyone who wants a Brit boat but doesn’t fancy scrimping in the packing department. Try out those four hatches for yourself.

This article was first published in the Fall 2008 issue of Adventure Kayak Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

 

Boat Review: WaveSport Project X Kayak

Man does a freestyle trick in a WaveSport Project X kayak
Feature Photo: Shane Grooves

This winter witnessed two milestones at WaveSport Kayaks. First, the release of a long-awaited new freestyle design—the WaveSport Project X. And second, just days later, the departure of longtime WaveSport lead designer Robert Peerson. The timing may be a coincidence. Or it may be that Peerson wished to see through this one last project before moving on.

WaveSport Project X Specs
(48 / 56 / 64)
Length: 5’9” / 5’11” / 6’1”
Width: 25” / 25.8” / 26.5”
Volume: 48 / 56 / 64 U.S. gal
Weight: 31 / 32 / 34 lbs
Weight Range: 100-170 / 140-210 / 180-250 lbs
MSRP: $1,049
www.wavesport.com
[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all freestyle kayaks ]

WaveSport’s Project X has come to fruition

The beginnings of the Project X and Peerson intertwine, stretching back to 2004 when the young designer stepped in to fill the shoes of previous WaveSport lead designer Eric Jackson and the wildly popular X and EZ play­boat series. That year, Peerson worked with Team WaveSport to develop the very successful ZG (Zero Gravity). Two years later, he reworked that platform and helped usher in a new era of big-air freestyle with the WaveSport Project. In 2008, seeking to evolve the Project design and demonstrate the potential of an emerging material in freestyle construction, Peerson and WaveSport produced the limited edition, carbon composite Project 54 Cx.

The WaveSport Project X draws on this wealth of design research, along with a half-decade of paddling the much-loved Project in every kind of play feature imaginable.

Project X has tricks up its sleeve

The new boat shares the original Project’s trademark WaveSport drop chines, smooth deck lines and propensity for flight, with major changes focused on the rocker profile, ergonomics and volume distribution.

The result is a hull that planes up to speed faster, pearls less when surf­ing and suits a wider range of paddlers across three size options than its predecessor. Bryan Kirk, WaveSport team manager and top freestyle competitor, says that centering volume around the cockpit addresses the demand for quick and easy directional transitions integral to new school combo moves.

Man does a freestyle trick in a WaveSport Project X kayak
Feature Photo: Shane Grooves

The volume distribution also makes the WaveSport Project X a monster in holes. Throwing it around our local, spring-melt play spot, we found it explodes out of the water for loop tricks and the slicey ends feel well-balanced for cartwheels, stern squirts and bow pivots—an exceptional combination for moves like McNastys and phonics monkeys.

Peerson and the design team also looked beyond the river for inspira­tion—to the wave-loving, hard-carving surf-shoe kayaks used for ocean play. We’re glad they did—the Project X is fast, loose and carves in re­sponse to the subtlest edging. This boat rips on fast waves, where light­ning quick edge-to-edge transitions enable huge bounces.

A drier, lighter playboat

The new WhiteOut outfitting combines classic WaveSport comfort and func­tionality with dazzling white vinyl that looks sexy and repels water for a drier, lighter boat throughout the day.

From the outset, Peerson’s design team sought to balance no-holds-barred performance with user-friendly, first-kayak appeal for budding playboaters. “We paddled five separate prototypes on waves and holes of all shapes and sizes until we had a design that no one could find fault with,” says Kirk. From Skookumchuck to the New River Dries to the small­est competition-style holes, WaveSport took the Project X everywhere its future paddlers—from beginners to top athletes—might.

[ Plan your next whitewater kayaking adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

Go for a rip in the WaveSport Project X

The WaveSport Project X is comfortable, forgiving and stable for a freestyle spud­ster, but if these are your top criteria, look to WaveSport’s river play Fuse instead. For those who enjoyed the original Proj­ect, or who simply love to rip, Peerson’s final WaveSport project is worth the wait.

This article was first published in the Early Summer 2011 issue of Rapid Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

 

6 Home Decor Ideas To Repurpose Your Old Canoe

a canoe bookshelf, one of 6 home decor ideas to repurpose your old canoe

The best use for a canoe is to paddle it. Sometimes though, canoes reach the end of their lives or we find a cheap (or free) one at a garage sale that won’t last a day on a class II river. If you have a canoe you aren’t using, explore one of these canoe decor ideas to repurpose it and get cracking on a great winter project.

Home decor ideas for your old canoe

1) Canoe light fixture

Home decor doesn’t get much more elegant than this living room light fixture made from an upside-down canoe. Consider the color of the inside of the canoe and how that will affect the light quality this fixture emits.

An upside-down boat refurbished as a light fixture

2) Canoe bookcase or wine rack

A canoe can be repurposed into a bookshelf, coat rack or wine rack by cutting off one end to create a flat surface. Add panels of wood across and diagonally to rest wine and other items in a visually appealing way.

Canoe decor idea: A canoe cut in half to use as a wine rack

3) Canoe bed

Create a cool lounging space or day bed in your living room by suspending an old canoe from the ceiling with ropes and filling with down, pillows and wool blankets.

An old boat repurposed as a bed

4) Canoe planter

Get your outdoor decor going by planting herbs and other plants in an upright canoe. If you really want your garden to make a statement, paint the canoe a splashy red, blue or yellow.

Canoe decor idea: A garden planter

5) Canoe bookshelf above your desk

Mount a canoe on the wall above your desk to create a unique bookshelf. The gunwales and planks of wood added through the inner hull will create neat compartments to keep your things organized.

Turn your boat into a bookshelf

6) Canoe bench

A canoe turned upside down with a flat seating foundation added along the keel makes a cool and unusual bench. If you aren’t going to be sitting in it on the water, sit on it on land. This could make a great addition to a garden or a patio as well.

Canoe decor idea: A canoe repurposed as a bench

[ Need a new canoe? See all canoes in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]

 

Dane Jackson’s First-Descent Of 134-Foot Salto del Maule Waterfall

Dane Jackson dropping the Salto del Maule waterfall in Chile
Dane Jackson makes the first-ever descent of the 134-foot Salto del Maule waterfall in Chile. | Feature Photo: Novus Select

On a roll with his jaw-dropping, record-setting kayaking, Dane Jackson puts another huge accomplishment on his record. On February 7, 2020 he became the first person to drop the 134-foot Salto del Maule waterfall in Chile. This waterfall is now listed as the second tallest waterfall to ever been run in a kayak next to Washington’s Palouse Falls (189 feet).

Salto del Maule is not the only record to fall

This news is coming only months after Jackson’s Green Race victory where he not only came in first place, but also managed to set a new course record while doing it.

Dane’s first descent of Chile’s Salto del Maule was over four years in the making. “It’s the most glorious feeling coming over that blind horizon and then staring down the beast,” he said.

The 26-year-old Jackson, who has now completed six waterfalls that are at least 100ft (30m) high, has spent the last decade traveling the planet in search of new places to freestyle kayak as well as dominating the competition scene since he won the Whitewater Grand Prix in 2011.

We had a chance to catch up with Dane to learn more about the preparation, the feeling as he was crossing the lip, and why he had his eyes on this waterfall.

Dane Jackson dropping the second highest waterfall
Dane Jackson makes the first-ever descent of the 134-foot Salto del Maule waterfall in Chile. | Feature Photo: Novus Select

5 questions for Dane Jackson about his Salto del Maule first descent

1) Choosing this waterfall

Paddling Magazine: What led you to want to drop the Salto del Maule waterfall specifically?

Dane Jackson: When my friend showed me a photo of the drop a few years ago it just looked so unreal. Over the last few years, I’ve constantly seen photos and been watching videos and always felt it was doable. This year when that same friend sent me an Instagram video, I knew it was time to find out.

2) Breaking personal records

PM: What was the highest waterfall you had dropped before doing the Salto del Maule?

DJ: I’ve done five other drops over the 100-foot mark, my highest was probably Alexandra Falls at 110 feet. When scouting the drop, I thought it was around 110, so I felt really confident in the line. I’m glad I waited till after I ran it to measure it because if I had known its height beforehand maybe it would have messed with my confidence on doing it right.

3) Prep work for the plunge

PM: What kind of preparation goes into a first-descent of a waterfall and specifically what you did to prepare for this one?

DJ: More than anything, just made sure it looked good to do. I got to see it without water which allowed me to see it was deep enough in the middle. Then with water, the lip and landing looked great. In terms of preparing, I only knew I was headed to check it out a month before, and I didn’t know it was the second tallest drop till after. But over the last year, I have run a lot of waterfalls, so it came at a good time because I am super confident in my control on drops right now.

4) Experiencing the sublime

PM: Tell us a bit about what it felt like going into the drop.

DJ: More than anything, I was just stoked. It was a waterfall I had wanted for so long so to know I was going to get to experience it. Once it was game time, it was like 30 seconds of making it to the lip. Once I was going over it was hard to not be mind blown on how epic that view was. Salto del Maule is definitely one of the most incredible locations I have ever experienced, and the drop too.

5) What’s on the horizon

PM: Do you have other waterfalls in mind for future first descents?

DJ: Just want to keep doing it all! Definitely a few drops in mind. Right now, I am headed to Indonesia for two months so I imagine there is a lot of falling in my future.

[ Plan your next Chilean kayaking adventure with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

Video of Dane Jackson’s first-descent of the Salto del Maule waterfall:

 

Boat Review: Wenonah Minnesota II

WENONAH MINNESOTA II | Feature Photo: Kaydi Pyette
Performance touring in the Wenonah Minnesota II. | Photo: Kaydi Pyette

One weekend this spring a group of Paddling Magazine diehards planned to take a quick backcountry canoe trip to fly across the portage trails for a few days. Our ride for this ambitious 60-kilometer weekend route was the sleek and speedy Wenonah Minnesota II.

Wenonah Minnesota II Specs
Length: 18’6”
Width: 35”
Volume: 13.5”
Weight: 42 lbs
Material: Ultralight layup
MSRP: $2,699
www.wenonah.com

The Minnesota II is a racer at heart

Late to the put-in on Saturday morning, Geoff and I set off an hour behind our friends. We caught up in half the time, our Minnesota II easily outstripping the Prospectors our friends paddled.

[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all lakewater & touring canoes ]

Right away I could tell the Minnesota II is a design any glide-junkie will fall in love with. Shallower and narrower than the average tripper, the Minnesota II’s roots are in the Gene Jensen-designed Whitewater II, a go-fast downriver racer.

“There’s been many changes and improvements to the design since,” says Wenonah Canoe vice president Bill Kueper. The tweaks may have turned a race boat into a touring-friendly model, but paddlers can still feel Jensen in the Minnesota II’s minimal rocker, sharp lines and unbeatable cruising.

“Jensen was famous for his pursuit of tracking and efficiency,” adds Kueper, and we found the Minnesota II has stayed true to those straight-tracking and performance-focused dreams. With a standard bucket seat and foot brace for the stern the design favors a sit-and-switch stroke, but can be paddled any style. Since its release in 1987, the Minnesota II has become Wenonah’s second most popular design, falling in just behind the more newbie-friendly Spirit II.

An extra-strong and speedy canoe

Despite tipping the scales at a mere 42 pounds in Wenonah’s Ultralight lay-up, the Minnesota II surprised me with its durability. After missing the portage in a maze of channels and with a burly rapid ahead, our group decided to bushwhack downriver.

Everyone wanted the airy Minnesota II for this trail-less portage—our friends’ repainted fiberglass canoes were easily twice the weight. By way of a game of rock-scissors-paper, Geoff won. While tramping up a steep slope a mat of moss gave way sending both paddler and canoe careening onto rocks below. Despite landing between a rock and 250-pound Geoff, the Minnesota II was no worse for wear, with just a couple surface scratches. It can certainly take abuse not normally associated with a lay-up termed Ultralight.

Downstream and back again

Despite boasting exactly zero inches of rocker, the Minnesota II handled well in the straightforward class I and II rapids we ran, feeling more responsive than its 18.5-foot length should allow.

WENONAH MINNESOTA II | Feature Photo: Kaydi Pyette
WENONAH
MINNESOTA II | Feature Photo: Kaydi Pyette

Paddling in mid-May in a high water year, as we headed back upstream we fought a slow but constant current. The Minnesota II dove ahead on line each time. When the river narrowed we dug in to grunt up swifts.

Get wild with the Wenonah Minnesota II

Minnesota II devotees include all types of paddlers. Some families purchase it for its gear hauling capacity and older paddlers love it for its light weight and efficiency. However, the Wenonah Minnesota II is truly at home in the Boundary Waters and Quetico, a workhorse for paddlers who favor its handling on big lakes and weight on lengthy portages. For anyone who dreams of weeks spent crossing the vast expanses of canoe country, I’m not sure you could find a more suitable design.

[ Plan your next adventure in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area with the Paddling Trip Guide ]

“It’s my boat of choice,” confides Wenonah’s Kueper. “It gets me as far away as quickly as possible. There’s no playing the cake-walk for campsites. I’m looking for pristine wilderness and solitude—this is a boat that facilitates that on water and on the portage.”



This article originally appeared in the Canoeroots
Summer/Fall 2016 issue.

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