The following table lists all the dry bags, dry boxes, and mesh sacks that I use for sea kayak camping trips in the Northwest (with a few deletions, this has also been what I've used in Hawaii and Baja, Mexico). To the left of each item I've listed the gear I typically store in each bag or box and where I stow it in most kayaks. Having the right dry bags and boxes makes loading your kayak faster and less frustrating. It will also help you fit your gear into less space, so you can go on longer trips or use a smaller kayak (which often is more efficient at touring speeds, possibly faster for you, and easier to handle in wind) that may fit you better than the size kayak you thought you needed in order to go on camping trips.
With the exception of one small clear bag (and the AquaPac bags), all of the dry bags I use are the coated nylon type with the waterproof coating on the inside. I prefer these coated nylon bags because they slip in and out of kayaks more easily than bags with the rubber coating on the outside or clear plastic dry bags. With slippery dry bags I can pack more gear into a kayak, and the bags last longer because they are less prone to catching on sharp objects. Since the coated nylon bags are opaque, I use a magic marker pen to write the contents (VHF radio, cell phone, kitchen, etc.) of each bag on the outside of the bag. This way I don't miss having my gear in clear (sticky) bags. I've recently started using one clear bag that I store behind my seat or on my lap. I use this bag to store some of the last minute odds and ends which change from trip to trip so it is nice to be able to look through the bag to remember what I put in it this time. The clothes I won't need until camp (wind pants, pile pants, heavy socks, down vest, etc.), I store in a tapered dry bag with a one-way air vent valve at the end. After folding the top down to seal this bag, I kneel on it to push the excess air out the valve. This tapered bag makes good use of the space in the bow, and so it is the first bag I load into the bow which makes it hard to get to, but I know I won't need it until I'm unpacking the whole kayak at camp. Behind this tapered bag I pack a long narrow dry bag (X-Long Small) with a change of clothes in case I get wet (long underwear top and bottom, shorts or wind pants, a pile top). This X-Long dry bag would be hard to pack efficiently due to air getting trapped at the end (no-one makes one this size with a vent valve), but I solve this by pre-stuffing the clothes in a liner sack made of loose weave, breathable fabric. Air escapes out the seams and fabric of this line stuff sack while I compress clothes into it. This liner sack is slightly narrower and about six inches shorter than the dry bag. Once the clothes are in the liner sack they can easily be dropped into the matching dry bag with room left over to roll the top down. Using this liner sack has many benifits. In addition to allowing you to get more clothes into less space, the liner sack helps extend the life of the dry bag because the stress from the clothes in the bag is on the stuff sack, not the seams of the dry bag. It's also easier to load your clothing dry bag through hatches when you use liner stuff sacks to compress the clothes because the dry bag is free to bend rather than acting like an inflated balloon. I have one more bag that I put some clothes in, and this is a small bag that I keep behind my seat or in a day hatch if the kayak has one. This bag is where I keep a warm ski hat, neck gaiter, non-paddling gloves, and a thin pile vest (50 to 100 weight pile). By keeping these items in their own small bag, I know I can get them quickly and easily if I start to get chilled while eating lunch etc.
Conventional dry bags (i.e. with a fold down top) are generally good enough for clothes etc., but they are not 100% dry. So for electronic devices (VHF radios, cell phones, GPS, PDA, cameras, etc.) I use the AquaPac brand bags which have a unique clamping system to seal the bags (always test them for airtight waterproofness before using) which are designed to be completely waterproof (at least to a few meters). The bag they make for small GPS units is also perfect for protecting a packet of three Skyblazer brand rocket flares.
Coated nylon dry bags can be machine washed with mild detergent. Hang to dry.
You are welcome to use this just for your own information, but if you care to help support the Kayak Academy please purchase your dry boxes, dry bags, and mesh sacks from us. To do so, simply print this page (click once on the table before printing), fill it out with your desired quantities of each item and mail or fax it to us (our fax and address information is at the end of this page). If you are interested in ordering other gear from us, see our Kayak Equipment Catalog page.
This article cannot be reproduced without expressed written permission.
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| Item Description and What To Put In It and Where To Stow It |
Size |
Recom- mended Number | Quantity Ordered |
Unit Price |
Amount |
| Otter Box Clear Dry Boxes: | |||||
| car-alarm key, band-aids, medications (in day hatch or behind seat) | Small | 1 | |
8.00 | |
| Plyer multi-tool, Swiss Army knife (in day hatch or behind seat) | Medium | 1 | |
12.00 | |
| survival gear, emergency fish tackle, spare parts (in day hatch etc.) | Large | 1 | |
16.00 | |
| AquaPac Airtight/Waterproof Bags | |||||
| VHF Radio Bag (specify left or right antena) | Large or Small |
1 | |
25.00 | |
| Cell Phone Bag S or L | |
1 | |
25.00 | |
| GPS/flare Bag S or L | |
1 or 2 | |
25.00 | |
| PDA bag (Palm etc.) | |
1 | |
25.00 | |
| Wallet/passport/permit Belt Pack Bag | |
1 | |
20.00 | |
| Beeper/pager Bag, electric/car alarm key | |
0 | |
15.00 | |
| Seattle Sports "Opti-Dry", Clear Vinyl Dry Bag: | |||||
| lunch or misc. items (in day hatch or behind seat or on rear deck) | Small | 1 | |
12.00 | |
| Seattle Sports "Stratus" and "Cyclone" (tapered) Urethane Coated Nylon Dry Bags (XS and X-Long-Narrow are custom made for Kayak Academy): |
|||||
| wallet, keys, permits | Belt pack/ fanny pack |
1 | |
17.00 | |
| kitchen kit (in aft-most part of stern) emergency/survival gear (in rear pocket of PFD) toilet paper (in day hatch or behind seat) SealSkinz waterproof/breathable socks for camp (store separate in their own dry bag) |
X-Small (fits anywhere) |
4 | |
15.00 | |
| VHF radio in its talk-through radio dry bag (on rear deck) pile or wool hat, camp gloves, pile vest, pile neck gaiter (day hatch or behind seat) 1st Aid kit (some commercial kits for kayakers come in a dry bag) toiletry kit, toothbrush, toothpaste, soap, skin lotion, alarm clock (in stern) small tarp i.e. Moss Parawing - other tarps will need a larger bag (in front or rear hatch) GoreTEX bivy-bag (tents will need medium bag), toilet paper |
Small (fit front hatches) |
4-6 | |
19.00 | |
| extra clothes for night - heavy layers of pile (first bag in bow) | Med. Tapered (fit front hatches) |
1 | |
37.00 | |
| spare set of clothes for day (last bag in bow), most tarps (i.e. Kelty Noah), except as noted for XS bag (bow or in front of foot pedals) food bag - one of two, see Medium dry bags below (in bow) |
X-Long- Narrow (fit front hatches) |
2-3 | |
20.00 | |
| tent, but not the poles or stakes - they make holes (stern) sleeping bag - may need custom stuff sack to fit it in this size bag (stern or behind seat) food bag - for large items, note cans and jars don’t belong in dry bags (in stern) |
Medium (fit rear hatches) |
3 | |
24.00 | |
| only used at camp - to store wet suit or dry suit at night | Large (too big to fit through most kayak hatches) |
1 | |
28.00 | |
See next page on printed copy
| Item Description and What To Put In It and Where To Stow It |
Size |
Recom- mended Number | Quantity Ordered |
Unit Price |
Amount |
| Custom Liner Sacks (sized to fit inside corresponding sized dry bags): |
|||||
| for clothes - without these liner sacks this size dry bag won’t work for clothes |
X-Long- Narrow |
1 | |
8.00 | |
| if sack that came w/ your sleeping bag is too wide you’ll need this to fit Med. Dry bag |
Medium | 0-1 | |
8.00 | |
| Mesh sacks (sizes are unrelated to those for dry bags): |
|||||
| sunblock, bug juice, skin care, antiseptic | Small 6"x11" |
1 | |
6.00 | |
| cleaning kit for dishes, Biosuds, scrubbing pad, food scraper, strainer, sponge |
Medium 10"x17" |
1 | |
8.00 | |
| to carry everything in from kayak to camp, to hang food at night | XXL duffle bag |
0-1 | |
40.00 | |
| to carry everything in from kayak to camp, to hang food at night | Rucksack, by Chota |
1 | |
36.00 | |
Sub-total: .......................................... ________
*Sales tax (multiply ST X 0.088): ... ________
**S & H: ........................................... ________
Total: ................................................ ________
**Shipping & Handling, except for kayaks is only $15 in the lower 48 states all others call or E-mail us for the Shipping & Handling before placing your order. International orders unavailable Via Kayak Academy at this time, we deliver to Continental United States, Alaska and APO/FPO addresses ONLY. The only shipping option for APO/FPO addresses and Alaska is via U.S Mail.
*Residents of OR, AK, MT, DE, NH, & Alberta need not pay sales tax. All others must pay the 8.8% sales tax unless the order is shipped out of Washington. If you meet these requirements, we need your address if different from the ship to address & your Driver's License No.:___________________________________________________
Phone: (____) __________________
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Buyer's City ______________________, State____ Postal Code___________
If you want your order shipped to a person or address other than the above:
Ship to person's Name: _______________________________________________
Ship to Street Address (not a Post Office box): _______________________________________
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© George Gronseth 2003, all rights reserved.