A Photographer Afloat

Blowing up the blue balloon – first impressions of a packraft

October 18, 2018 10 Comments

For a long time now, I have been looking for an easy solution to the problem of doing an unsupported on-way trip, and still ending up reunited with my transport. Inflatable or folding canoes tended to be bulky and heavy. Various ideas came to mind, but with a hard shell canoe, the only solution I could see was to buy, make or adapt a trailer to tow the boat behind my bike.

Trailers do exist, but are quite expensive, would occupy a lot of room in the boat, and realistically limit the cycling part of the journey to rods and level tracks. I wanted the freedom to do more! Blogs on the Song of the Paddle pointed me in the direction of packrafts. These are lightweight inflatable boats, specifically designed to be compact and easy to carry in a rucksack or on a bike. At first glance they look like odd-shaped beach toys, but perform like ‘proper’ boats. So after a lot of research, I took the plunge, and ordered a DE260 packraft from Longshore International, a UK-based firm.

Their website is very informative, and gives easy access to all the specifications for the models they sell. I went for this one because it was a good compromise for what I wanted to do – single and multiple day trips, on foot or with the bike. Longshore packrafts are a bit heavier and bulkier than alpaca rafts, which use a lighter single-coated fabric for their hulls, but these things are relative. The De260 weighs in at around 4.5kg with all the attachments, compared to around 3kg for the alpaca llama, but it is significantly cheaper, and comes with a removable cruiser deck, a nice refinement for colder or wetter days. The cockpit is slightly longer too, which suited me.

Service was excellent – I ordered via their website yesterday morning, and had an email from Tim, the owner of the company, confirming dispatch that afternoon. The boat and four-piece paddle arrived this morning. The boat-in-a-box contained the boat itself, the deck, a repair kit and spare valve, an inflation bag and a storage bag.

 

 

There was just now way that was going to turn into a boat that could carry 100kg of me, plus a bike and gear… The boat unrolled into this:

 

 

Which soon inflated into this:

 

 

The inflation bag simply screws into the valve, and you squeeze air into the hull. It took me more than the advertised three minutes to inflate – there is a knack to filling and closing the bag, but it doesn’t take long to get the hang of it, and Im sure I will be quicker next time. Hull pressure was topped off by inserting the second part of the valve and using lung power.

 

 

The seat and back rest are also inflatable, and seemed quite comfortable . The cockpit felt a bit smaller than the specifications suggested, but still had ample space for me. I would be able to fit a day-sack ahead of my feet without a problem, though larger loads would have to sit on top of the bow tubing. However, there are tie-downs specifically for this both on the bow and stern.

The cruiser deck was easy to fit with a combination of two zips and a velcro strip. It has an inflatable panel to reduce pooling of water round the paddler’s waist, and looked like it would cope with moderate splashes easily. It was also easy to pull off to exit the boat, with a grab loop of tape on the left side.

 

 

 

The whole deck can be stowed as a roll at the bow should you want it available but not in place.

 

 

The final touches were to add short grab loops of cord to bow and stern. The boat doesn’t have any handles, so these will make it much easier to hold onto when launching/recovering.

 

 

That has to be the quickest bit of outfitting I have ever done!

It was now too late in the evening to hit the water, so all that remained was to deflate my new blue ballon and pack it away. This was very easily done – simply deflating the seat and backrest, then unscrewing the Boston valve at the stern and rolling the boat up to deflate it. I decided to leave the deck attached, so this and my inexpert folding gave me a slightly bulkier package than had arrived, but it was still impressively small, and fitted easily into the supplied storage bag along with the spare parts and inflation bag. Even the paddles packed down to a size that would fit in a rucksack.

 

 

So roll on next week, when I can test it out on a river trip…

 

 

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Comments

  1. Anthony says

    May 17, 2020 at 5:28 am

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    Reply
    • Gordon Gibbons says

      June 3, 2020 at 7:52 pm

      Thanks Anthony, glad you enjoy the blogs.

      Reply
  2. Kimora Marina says

    May 16, 2020 at 2:33 pm

    Hey there! Quick question that’s totally off topic.
    Do you know how to make your site mobile friendly? My weblog looks weird when browsing from my iphone4.
    I’m trying to find a theme or plugin that
    might be able to correct this issue. If you have any recommendations,
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    Reply
    • Gordon Gibbons says

      June 3, 2020 at 7:48 pm

      Hi Kimora

      I’m afraid I don’t know much about the background technologies behind the site, only that the theme this site uses is a responsive theme, which will adapt itself to a mobile platform.

      Reply
  3. William says

    May 13, 2020 at 2:29 pm

    I don’t know whether it’s just me or if perhaps everyone else
    encountering issues with your website. It looks like some
    of the text in your content are running off the screen. Can someone else please provide feedback and let me know if this is happening to them too?
    This may be a problem with my web browser because I’ve had this happen previously.
    Thank you

    Reply
    • Gordon Gibbons says

      June 3, 2020 at 7:46 pm

      Thanks for your feedback William. I haven’t found that problem myself when accessing my site on chrome, safari, Microsoft edge or on my phone.

      Reply
  4. Justin Hamilton says

    March 17, 2020 at 2:16 pm

    Long time reader, first time commenter — so, thought I’d drop
    a comment.. — and at the same time ask for a favor.

    Your wordpress site is very simplistic – hope you don’t mind me asking
    what theme you’re using? (and don’t mind if I steal it?
    :P)

    I just launched my small businesses site –also built in wordpress like yours– but the
    theme slows (!) the site down quite a bit.

    In case you have a minute, you can find it by searching for “royal cbd”
    on Google (would appreciate any feedback)

    Keep up the good work– and take care of yourself during the coronavirus scare!

    ~Justin

    Reply
    • Gordon Gibbons says

      April 1, 2020 at 6:24 pm

      Hi Justin

      The theme is Beautiful Pro, on a Genesis framework

      Reply
  5. Erlint Alitsani says

    April 28, 2019 at 3:46 pm

    Do you still enjoy it? What’s your opinion on that packraft half a year later? Would you have went for the EX280 if given the chance?

    Reply
    • Gordon Gibbons says

      April 29, 2019 at 12:56 am

      Hi Erlint.
      Yes, I’m still enjoying the packraft, though having several hardshell canoes and kayaks as well, it doesn’t get used as often as it could. Its been great for exploratory trips on my local rivers, where I have been unsure if the whole route will go by boat. It’s light, easy to handle on the water, and if it turns out I need to portage, or walk back to the car because of impassable sections, that isn’t a problem. The boat itself is very tough too, handling the sandpapering effect of gritstone boulders without a problem.
      Regarding the DE280 – I bought blind when I chose the DE260, but I think I got the length about right. It is a bit slower than the longer hull, as you would expect, but it packs smaller, and is easier to handle in a wind with less sail area. It still needs some weight in the bow to improve handling, but a longer hull would need more, which works against the lightweight trip philosophy of pack rafting.
      I have one or two trips to write up from the winter, which I will publish as soon as I can, and also have I’m mind some longer overnight or multiway trips which will be much easier with the pack raft than a hardshell boat.
      If you have any specific questions I can help with, get in tough.
      Cheers, Gordon

      Reply

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About Me

With more than thirty years of paddling and at least a decade of landscape photography behind me, it was only a matter of time before these two passions combined. This blog is about my adventures with canoe and camera, a photographer afloat.

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