• Happy Birthday, Senda Berenson (1868-1954)! 👩🏻‍🦰🏀

Life jacket suggestions

My fav PFD is a Kokatat Outfit Tour, my son runs the ladies version the MSfit as do a lot of other guys. I would have gone with the ladies version as well but it was just a little tight with layers under it. Other than fit I quite like how the pockets stand off the vest so they're usable and that there's a knife garage on the shoulder strap. If you run a squeeze release knife it sits perfectly upside down there and the tip never gets in the way. My daughter went for comfort and after a lot of research chose the previously suggested MEC Fulcrum guide. It also has very good pockets as well as a good bright colour. I found it to also have great fit but I'm not a big fan of the side entry. I know you said to leave price out but Kokatat has raised their prices a lot. If mine ever dies I'd consider trying that Fulcrum Guide.
 
I just found this and it helps explain buoyancy values:

By these calculations, at my weight of 155# I need 7.75# of floatation. At 7.5# foam buoyancy for my Mustang Khimera vest, I guess it'll just barely keep me afloat! I had better be careful, or maybe self-inflate for windy or "wavy" conditions as Glenn suggests in his recent post.
 
Especially on flatwater/ big lake paddling i like a flat slim front. So me does not hinder a selfrescue. A number of pfd's have a low thick foam that is a pita to get over the gunnels especially with full pockets.

That's what I've referred to as a "pregnancy" life jacket in post #5 above. I strongly dislike them. I liked the foam strip and foam block canoe-specific life jackets of 40-50 years ago, as I wrote about in this thread:

 
By these calculations, at my weight of 155# I need 7.75# of floatation. At 7.5# foam buoyancy for my Mustang Khimera vest, I guess it'll just barely keep me afloat! I had better be careful, or maybe self-inflate for windy or "wavy" conditions as Glenn suggests in his recent post.

It's easy enough to test, Patrick. Just jump into some warm water and see how well you float. I did that in Blue Spring, Florida, after I got my hybrid vest. The 8 lbs. of foam floated me just fine (as I fearfully watched for gators), and I had no problem blowing the vest to maximum inflation using the mouth tube as I was floating. I probably weighed about 175 lbs. at the time.

I have a picture. I tested the SeaO2 right here on April 14, 2006 at 1:28 pm :

1773863845718.png

37 minutes later I took a picture of this monster:

1773863999643.png
 
There are many good PFDs out there and designs vary from lightweight non-restrictive PFDs to high-flotation models designed for swift water rescue. I own three different models and will vary my choice based on the type of water that I am paddling, be it a lake, moving water or whitewater.

Safety is the main issue, but comfort is important though. I would suggest a trip to the nearest paddling shop and trying on several models. When I picked out my last PFD, I spent over a couple of hours just walking around the stores wearing the PFDs and stretching to test for comfort and movement. I got a few strange looks, but I think almost everyone there understood, especially the paddlers on the staff. The time spent paid off in the end.

Good luck on finding your next PFD.
 
One of the issues with living in the Boonies is that most things can not be tried before ordering. There is one canoe store a three hour drive away, and the stock they have on hand is very limited.
For those of you that have experience with the MEC Fulcrum, have you noticed any quality issues? Seems to be the biggest complaint on line, that the zippers and stitching can be sketchy.
Still leaning toward the Salus Ungava. I wrote to a couple of Canadian companies about the Astral Sturgeon, and they said they were no longer able to get it.
 
It's easy enough to test, Patrick. Just jump into some warm water and see how well you float. I did that in Blue Spring, Florida, after I got my hybrid vest. The 8 lbs. of foam floated me just fine (as I fearfully watched for gators), and I had no problem blowing the vest to maximum inflation using the mouth tube as I was floating. I probably weighed about 175 lbs. at the time.

I have a picture. I tested the SeaO2 right here on April 14, 2006 at 1:28 pm :

View attachment 153615

37 minutes later I took a picture of this monster:

View attachment 153616
to be honest, I think you should be doing it every few years anyway- foam crumbles, fabric rots, and plastic buckles can degrade over time.
I remember at a buddy's cottage a few years ago one of the teens tried the upside down lifejacket float (where you wear it like a diaper when horsing around) with a pfd of unknown age and origin, he put it on and jumped in to have it immediately self destruct; every seam let go, all the straps pulled free, and chunks of brittle, waterlogged foam surrounded him. Granted the fact that both the tag and label were faded to obscurity should have been a hint, but you never know without occasional testing
 
One of the issues with living in the Boonies is that most things can not be tried before ordering. There is one canoe store a three hour drive away, and the stock they have on hand is very limited.
For those of you that have experience with the MEC Fulcrum, have you noticed any quality issues? Seems to be the biggest complaint on line, that the zippers and stitching can be sketchy.
Still leaning toward the Salus Ungava. I wrote to a couple of Canadian companies about the Astral Sturgeon, and they said they were no longer able to get it.
it's not just the boonies unfortunately- I'm less than 45 minutes from Toronto, but have only the choice between Crappy tire and Wally's mart, even MEC is over 1/2 hour away as is Sail , so unless you're interested in a bouyobouy( which I find only one step above the old horse collars) or MEC's house brand, you have to go a fair distance to find any selection. My latest was bought 2 1/2 hours away from home...
 
Back
Top Bottom