My first kayak was a birthday gift from Winnie in July 2010, a 10-1/2 foot “Trophy 126” deck kayak. From the first time out, I was completely hooked on kayaking as a sport, exercise, and just a pleasant way to spend an afternoon out on the water. Of course, a person just can’t get by on only one kayak, so over the years I’ve added both hardshell and inflatable kayaks to my fleet.
Winnie started kayaking with me in 2018, and she quickly mastered paddling around. We now regularly go out paddling together, either in our tandem inflatable or each in a single-seat kayak. We’ve also mastered the art of launching an inflatable kayak from our 18-foot boat Sea Dragon.
Photo Gallery
These are photos of my kayaks and some of the beautiful views I’ve enjoyed while kayaking in different places.
Use the “Slide” link to step through the photos in sequence. Move your cursor over the images to read the description.
Special Kayak Adventures
Desert Kayaking
This link will take you to a collection of photographs taken on a kayak trip down the Colorado River, starting from just below Hoover Dam, on April 30, 2015.
Mallows Bay Ship Graveyard
This link will take you to a collection of photographs taken at Mallows Bay, Maryland side of the Potomac River, and the largest ship graveyard in the western hemisphere. Photos were taken May 20, 2015.
Bonus Video
Winnie captured this video of two horseshoe crabs playing in the salt marshes off Gilgo Beach, on Long Island, New York, while we were kayaking.
The Boats
I’ve had a variety of kayaks since becoming hooked on this sport. Each one has a name and a story.
Trophy 126
My first kayak is a Future Beach Trophy 126 named “Arrau.” An arrau is a South American river turtle commonly found in the Amazon basin. Purchased in June 2010, this boat kicked off my love-affair with kayaking.
Since then, this has become our best-used boat. I used it on a regular basis until Winnie started getting interested in kayaking. Then it became her primary boat. It’s also the boat of choice for our guest paddlers to use. It’s proven to be a rugged, versatile, and very stable kayak.
Sea Eagle 370
We purchased an inflatable Sea Eagle 370 in 2013, named “Nemo.” Winnie suggested naming it after a clown fish, and I made the connection between a clown fish and the movie “Finding Nemo. The name just seemed to fit.
Winnie and I used this boat quite often over the next several years. We paddled tandem on local waters, took it on our road trips, and even figured out how to launch it from our power boat Sea Dragon. I also used it on occasion for paddling solo, when using Arrau was not possible. It proved to be a great boat for our style of casual paddling.
This boat suffered a casualty of multiple deep scratches and cuts on the bottom while paddling in March 2024. These scratches apparently penetrated the fabric, causing leaks and rendering the hull unusable. The scratches were too long to repair, so we scrapped the 370 hull and retained the original seats and paddles. Then we replaced it with another Sea Eagle 370.
We named our replacement Sea Eagle 370 “Nemo II.” Because why not?
Sea Eagle 330
I bought a used Sea Eagle 330 in June 2017 from a private seller, who had stored it outside in his backyard – inflated – for at least the previous several years. The boat was filthy dirty, and the nylon rope rigging was already dry rotted, but it cleaned up nicely. The name “Lucky” just seemed to fit.
I wanted the smaller boat for solo kayaking as I found the 370 was just a little difficult to handle by myself, and a little too large/heavy for easy transport. The 370 seats, foot pump, and paddles were all compatible with the 330 and I had an Ikea “Humlare” duffle bag that the smaller boat fit into quite nicely. This was also suitable for taking with me on business trips. The duffle bag kit was well within size and weight limits for checked baggage on airplane flights.
I used this boat for five years. In April 2022 some of the dry-rotted seams between the floor tubes torn open. This allowed water to flood the boat, but the air tubes remained inflated. It wasn’t worth trying to repair her as more seams would just keep opening. We decommissioned and sent her to the great kayak home in the sky.
HO Sports Beacon
We replaced “Lucky” with an HO Sports Beacon inflatable named “Dragonfly” in 2022. The boat was covered with a patterned green and blue nylon that resembles the colors of dragonfly wings. The boat handled quite nicely, and had some nice features, but was built flimsy.
At the beginning of the third season owning and using this boat, the seam of the nylon covers separated. Given the scope of seam separation, and that this was the second time seams had failed on this boat, we scrapped it.
Native Watercraft Max Slayer
We added a pedal-drive Native Watercraft Slayer Max 10 kayak to our growing fleet in October 2023. More of a one-person boat than a kayak, it’s designed for serious fishing activity. I’ve named this boat “Pedal Fish,” a play on “Paddlefish,” which is actually a real type of fish.
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