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Inside Out


THE RUMOUR by Current Designs


specs length: width:


depth: weight: cockpit:


16 ft 5


19.75 in 12 in 44 lb


25 x 15 in


bow hatch: 9.5 in stern hatch: 17.5 x 10.75 in total volume: 263 litres MSRP:


$2,849 US fibreglass $3,249 US Kevlar


www.cdkayak.com


EVER NOTICED that as the population’s girth gets larger, the coolest kayaks get narrower? We thought we’d seen the end of this irony, yet here’s a bold new sub- 20-inch-wide offering from Current Designs, a company whose management fortunately missed the movie Super Size Me. Designer Nigel Foster calls his Rumour a “day-boat/


play-boat” for the smaller paddler. “I wanted to shape a small boat that would serve the small paddler in the same way a larger kayak serves the larger paddler in terms of initial stability, secondary stability and speed,” says Fos- ter. Not only is the length nearly two feet shorter than Foster’s most popular design, the Legend; the Rumour is also narrower and lower-volume overall—and of course much lighter and easier to schlep. Foster designed the hard-chine, shallow-arch hull to let


bantam-weight paddlers effortlessly dial in an outside-edge turn. The quick transition from edge to edge will intimidate novices, but offers experienced paddlers easy and precise carving that’s especially fun in surf. Indeed, Foster, who is big for the boat at six feet and 165 pounds, keeps a Ru- mour in his quiver for short paddles and surf play. The buoyant bow provides a dry ride and reasonable


capacity. Ignoring the 150-pound max recommended paddler weight, we crammed our demo full for a four-day weekend and gave the keys to a 175-pounder. Low-profile, speedy and easy to steer with the hips, the Rumour was a pleasure to paddle in all conditions, even overloaded, and seemed capable of handling any size paddler it can fit. Small paddlers with advanced skills should rejoice


that there’s a new boat built especially for them, and medium-sized paddlers should not overlook the Ru- mour for day trips and play trips—not to mention it be- ing a great reason to stay slim. —Tim Shuff


46 | | ADVENTURE KAYAK fall 2006 Mini-size me


The padded, moulded plastic seat has a slim, low-slung backband for mini- malist support, backed by a curved and sloped bulkhead. The cockpit open- ing is small—a cross between an ocean cockpit and keyhole—but has plenty of legroom inside for six-footers.


Left leaning


Skeg control and day hatch are on the left. Foster explains, “Take any group out onto choppy water and ask them to brace with one hand and raise their other hand, and almost without exception people raise their left hand.” Who knew all those build- ers that put day hatches on the right are doing lefties a favour?


Bean there


Bean-shaped Sea Dog plastic foot braces, instead of the more common aluminum Yakimas, provide on-the-fly adjustment with a release tab that you can reach while sitting in the cockpit. At Nigel Foster’s request, CD installed fibreglass bulkheads.


PHOTOS: TIM SHUFF


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