I have been using Keeleazy keel strips on my three main kayaks. The Romany that I use for guiding day trips along the Pictured Rocks (Article on repairs to my Romany due to trailering), my Anas Acuta which I use for playing around and my Explorer which I use for tripping.
The Romany gets the most use and abuse getting dragged through sand a bit. The Keeleazy keel strip on this kayak has failed around the skeg and that is causing it to peel off from that point forwards and backwards. Other than that there are no compromises.
The Explorer had a tear in the Keeleazy keel strip from last year's trip on Isle Royale. This year I used it to explore the islands in northern Lake Michigan and then to paddle around the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan's UP. The sand of the Lake Michigan islands had little effect on the keel strip. Paddling solo around the Keweenaw was another story. The keel strip has many places where it is shredded and has many holes in it. While it may have protected the gelcoat, it is no longer doing that and I am not sure that the gelcoat would have taken much damage on this trip, but there is no way to know.
In the future, I will replace the Keeleazy keel strip on the Romany and Explorer with gelcoat keel strips which I hope will work better and be more resilient to the type of use/abuse that I give my kayaks.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Sunday, June 17, 2018
Recap on NDK Romany hatch repairs
Last year I performed a few repairs on my Romany that I use for guiding. I paddled some 450 miles guiding and my kayak probably road on the trailer 2-3 times that distance. This past year I made sure that it only rode on the good trailer and that the people loading trailers knew not to tighten it with all their strength. So, all my repairs from last year (hatch rim re-attachment, bulkhead patch, and keel strip) held fine for over a year now.
The KeelEazy keel strip is not staying on around the skeg, but is working great in other places.
The KeelEazy keel strip is not staying on around the skeg, but is working great in other places.
Saturday, May 12, 2018
Neoprene gloves in frigid water, air and wind.
This is another post I had made to the Facebook group Inland Seas, Paddling the Great Lakes:
As a bit of a follow-up to yesterday's post on wetsuits in cold water...
The guides are finding that their hands are the hardest thing to keep warm. Their hands are always getting wet due to strokes, spray and the exercises we are performing. Wet hands get colder when the wind causes evaporative cooling to act on them. They and I are finding that neoprene gloves can often be worse than no gloves at all in those conditions, especially when the sun is out. On the days when the high gets into the 50's it isn't so bad. On days when the highs are in the low 40's or high 30's the only real solution is to keep your hands dry, except that we are kayaking...
As a bit of a follow-up to yesterday's post on wetsuits in cold water...
The guides are finding that their hands are the hardest thing to keep warm. Their hands are always getting wet due to strokes, spray and the exercises we are performing. Wet hands get colder when the wind causes evaporative cooling to act on them. They and I are finding that neoprene gloves can often be worse than no gloves at all in those conditions, especially when the sun is out. On the days when the high gets into the 50's it isn't so bad. On days when the highs are in the low 40's or high 30's the only real solution is to keep your hands dry, except that we are kayaking...
I have neoprene gloves which don't have an outer nylon layer so they
are smooth and they shed water quickly and it doesn't get to evaproate
off. I have several pair and have been loaning them out. The company
has neoprene gloves with an outer woven nylon layer which holds water.
Yesterday about half of the students were paddling without gloves and
tucking their hands into their PFDs to warm them during breaks even
though they had gloves available. There is just no way to warm your
hands when they are in cold wet gloves in the wind!
Some observations using wetsuits in frigid water, air and wind.
This is a post I originally posted on the Facebook group Inland Seas, Kayaking the Great Lakes:
Hopefully this information is interesting and useful. Keep in mind that everyone's thermostat is different and what works for one person in a certain temperature environment may not work well for the person next to them.
As you have seen from my recent post(s) I am currently training guides for the summer season of guiding on Lake Superior. We have had a cold spring and the lake is still quite cold. We have seen some form of ice each day on the beach we are launching from. In fact we had fresh ice this morning. The guides in training and I have done assisted and self rescues Tues, Wed and Friday this week. I do more swimming/demonstration than they do (by design) since they are in wet suits and I have a dry suit.
Hopefully this information is interesting and useful. Keep in mind that everyone's thermostat is different and what works for one person in a certain temperature environment may not work well for the person next to them.
As you have seen from my recent post(s) I am currently training guides for the summer season of guiding on Lake Superior. We have had a cold spring and the lake is still quite cold. We have seen some form of ice each day on the beach we are launching from. In fact we had fresh ice this morning. The guides in training and I have done assisted and self rescues Tues, Wed and Friday this week. I do more swimming/demonstration than they do (by design) since they are in wet suits and I have a dry suit.
They are doing quite well with wet suits with poly base layers
underneath and a fleece over the wet suit and a spray jacket over that.
The big complaints are hands and feet and ice cream headaches on those
occasions where their heads (or mine) get underwater. We try not to get
our heads wet except the first day when a wet exit was required.
I am wearing a dry suit with a light wool/synthetic blend top and bottom as insulation and a fleece shirt and heavy wool socks. Surprisingly even being in the water to demonstrate all the rescues before they got to pick one to try (maybe about 20 minutes) I was ok, with my feet and hands getting coldest. I would have thought that the light base layer on the bottom would be way insufficient. I think that the feet getting cold is a combination of two things. They are in water in the bottom of the kayak after self rescues and the neoprene booties over the dry suit are probably compressing the wool socks too much.
For those of you who say a wetsuit is inappropriate for this environment, yes, it probably is, by itself, but it can be augmented to work. Would they want to be in the water for more than about 5 minutes or so? No! But that is why I damper down other risks (waves and such) on cold water/weather days. The cold in itself adds the risk back.
I am wearing a dry suit with a light wool/synthetic blend top and bottom as insulation and a fleece shirt and heavy wool socks. Surprisingly even being in the water to demonstrate all the rescues before they got to pick one to try (maybe about 20 minutes) I was ok, with my feet and hands getting coldest. I would have thought that the light base layer on the bottom would be way insufficient. I think that the feet getting cold is a combination of two things. They are in water in the bottom of the kayak after self rescues and the neoprene booties over the dry suit are probably compressing the wool socks too much.
For those of you who say a wetsuit is inappropriate for this environment, yes, it probably is, by itself, but it can be augmented to work. Would they want to be in the water for more than about 5 minutes or so? No! But that is why I damper down other risks (waves and such) on cold water/weather days. The cold in itself adds the risk back.
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