Above: the Adirondack has enough
stability for fishing, photography, and other pursuits, yet its steadiness
doesn't extract a toll in paddling performance or rough-water capability.
A tandem canoe that has superb
performance and buoyancy for its size.
| Adirondack availability: | Weight* | |
| Kevlar® | Ultra-light | 37 lb. |
| Flex-core | 49 lb. | |
| Tuf-weave® | Flex-core | 58 lb. |
| Royalex® | 62 lb. | |
| *Weights published are for canoes with all standard equipment. | ||
|
Designed for the smaller rivers and
lakes of the Northeast, the Adirondack is ideal for that region, and it
has attractions that make it popular everywhere. Meant for day outings and for trips of a night or two, this model only has
medium volume, but it paddles very efficiently with a light-to-moderate load. Canoe
& Kayak Magazine tested it and said, "This is one smooth-paddling
canoe, and it has excellent final stability. It's a bit less initially stable,
but that is what gains the efficient paddling and glide." The Adirondack travels more easily than our Fisherman, Heron,
Aurora, or Rogue but less so than our other tandems. Among 16' hulls
from all builders, however, the Adirondack is sleeker and has less
rocker. These aspects make it a straight-tracking, easy-paddling canoe. A
16'-long hull, if very well designed, can be at the threshold of having good
speed and glide in the absolute sense (rather than just compared to other 16'
models), and this is definitely a performance-oriented canoe among medium-short
designs. Of the hull-material choices for the Adirondack, our Tuf-weave
Flex-core model has fine performance at an appealing price. The Kevlar version
is ideal to portage into remote lakes, or for people who struggle carrying a
heavier canoe. And for really shallow, rocky streams, our Royalex Adirondack
is best. It combines the durability of Royalex with paddling ease not found in
any aluminum hull, and rarely in a plastic one.