Aug-25-2015 06:57 PM
Aug-26-2015 06:06 PM
phillyg wrote:
I had a 14' tandem yak and an F150 with a 5-1/2' bed. I bought a Darby Extend-a-Rack that can be used with a front receiver or on the regular rear receiver. It can be used horizontally or vertically on the rear.
Aug-26-2015 05:17 PM
Aug-26-2015 10:50 AM
Aug-26-2015 10:46 AM
Aug-26-2015 10:26 AM
Aug-26-2015 09:44 AM
Aug-26-2015 08:25 AM
Danattherock wrote:
You can use many plain ole lumber racks or ladder racks as they are called. I found the Thule XPorter rack system recently, and it looks to be very high quality. My suggestion, get it up out of you bed space and use that room for other stuff. Compare weights of kayaks carefully. I own five, going back 20 years. You go to Dicks and get a $259 yak, that's one thing. An easy mistake to make, unless you are a very infrequent casual paddler.
Find a real paddle shop and look at Wilderness Systems Pungo, new or used. Great boats and two of ours are 12 footers weighing about 50 lbs. this will matter if your loading up high. The smaller you are, the more so. I will caution you against buying a cheap (often heavy) yak. A double worse version of this played out a thousand time story is buying a cheap/heavy shorter kayak, to save money or reduce weight over the long cheap heavy yak.
A 10-12' or longer yak up to 14' will track considerably better, be faster, more efficient, and have ample room for your comfort and a fishing rod or three, soft sided beverage cooling system, portable water proof classic rock machine, or whatever. They last forever if cared for, avoid warping from improper storage in sun, and wipe down twice yearly with liberal application of Aerospace 303. Get a good boat. That's my advice.
Ally pack canoe....
If space is really an issue, and money not so much, check out the Ally Pack Canoe. 16.5' DR (downriver) model. Now sold at REI to my surprise. I've had one ten years and floated numerous remote rivers in Alaska with it, mainly above arctic circle, hundreds of miles from nearest town/village, 80-120 miles each trip. My buddy bought one too, for same reason. Holds about 800 lbs, I'm 6'6" 320 lbs and carry wife, two weeks of food, gear, guns, fly fishing gear, tent, stove, fuel, etc.
I've tested personally, and is great in class I-II rivers easily. Great on ponds and lakes of course. Aquabond will custom make two piece canoe paddles. Canoe breaks down and stores in large backpack. Skin is made of incredibly durable Tarpulon, a lighter version of Hypalon used on Zodiac rafts. Ally is original pack canoe, made in Norway, and used in expeditions all over the world since the 70's. It's the bees knees man. Love it.
Ally pack canoe on REI
Bergans of Norway
Dan
Aug-26-2015 07:10 AM
Aug-26-2015 05:48 AM
Aug-26-2015 05:33 AM
texasAUtiger wrote:Hiker_01 wrote:texasAUtiger wrote:
Do any of you do this? How does it work? Have any size suggestions for how long of a kayak this would work for?
The tandem kayak we have (hard sit on top) is 13'6", which is about normal for tandems. That will give you an idea of how long it might be.
Does it work okay traveling with about half the kayak sticking out the bed of the truck?
Aug-26-2015 03:44 AM
texasAUtiger wrote:
I tow with a pickup that has a 6.5' bed and am thinking about getting a hard-sided kayak---preferably a tandem kayak---to bring with us.
I was thinking it would just need to be strapped down in the bed with a good bit of it hanging out over the tailgate.
Do any of you do this? How does it work? Have any size suggestions for how long of a kayak this would work for?
Aug-26-2015 03:41 AM
Aug-26-2015 03:32 AM
Aug-26-2015 03:32 AM
Jetta03 wrote:
Tandem Kayak will be pretty long, 12-13 feet plus. We use a basic over the cab roof rack same as you would do on a car or suv. It keeps the kayak out of the way of the trailer and leaves the box free for other stuff (mtn bikes etc.)
Aug-26-2015 03:22 AM