car toppable or inflatable dog-friendly small watercraft advice sought

Zak

Legend
Forum Supporter
Hi Friends,

I have a 14-foot kevlar dory that I haul on a trailer. It is almost an ideal fishing craft for me--super stable, can lauch and use it without waders, with lots of room for gear, a cooler, and my 65-pound dog.

I started trailering it when lifting the 75-pound boat above my head to car top it started to get a little iffy (especialy the part where I balance it on head to shift my hands).

The one drawback is the cost to bring it across on the ferry. Total length of the car and trailered boat is 32 feet, which means I pay $47 each way for a fishing trip to Whidby.

I am trying to figure out an option that would let me stay dry (no waders needed), have my dog and small cooler and gear bag with me, and fit inside (inflatable or foldable) or on top of my car (less than 50lbs).

I am considering a pack/solo canoe.

What other options should I be considering? Maybe an Oru foldable open boat? I'd appreciate any ideas about a watercraft that checks all my boxes.

I am told that putting a 65-lb dog behind the seat of a watermaster grizzly would not be a great idea.

Thanks!
 
Last edited:
Hi Friends,

I have a 14-foot kevlar dory that I haul on a trailer. It is almost an ideal fishing craft for me--super stable, can lauch and use it without waders, with lots of room for gear, a cooler, and my 65-pound dog.

I started trailering it when lifting the 75-pound boat above my head to car top it started to get a little iffy (especialy the part where I balance it on head to shift my hands).

The one drawback is the cost to bring it across on the ferry. Total length of the car and traled boat is 32 feet, which means I pay $47 each way for a fishing trip to Whidby.

I am trying to figure out an option that would let me stay dry (no waders needed), have my dog and small cooler and gear bag with me, and fit inside (inflatable or foldable) or on top of my car (less than 50lbs).

I am considering a pack/solo canoe.

What other options should I be considering? Maybe an Oro foldable open boat? I'd appreciate any ideas about a watercraft that checks all my boxes.

I am told that putting a 65-lb dog behind the seat of a watermaster grizzly would not be a great idea.

Thanks!
I was going to suggest a canoe. That's what I use when I want to ferry across with a "roomy," dry watercraft but don't want to trailer because it is sort of expensive. Maybe don't get too short of one, though. You want room for the dog and your stuff, and short canoes are slower and don't track as well on stillwater. They do turn more easily, but that can actually be annoying in the wrong situation (lake fishing).
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zak
I don’t think that “dog friendly” and “inflatable” are two things that you get at the same time.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Zak
I don’t think that “dog friendly” and “inflatable” are two things that you get at the same time.
I have seen some good sized dogs looking pretty content on the back platform of a framed pontoon boat. For a 75 lb dog, I think it would need to be a good sized pontoon/platform and a well trained dog but I do think it could work.
 
I have seen some good sized dogs looking pretty content on the back platform of a framed pontoon boat. For a 75 lb dog, I think it would need to be a good sized pontoon/platform and a well trained dog but I do think it could work.
I was thinking more of the potential for dogs to puncture anything inflatable. I saw a dog poke a nice sized hole in a whitewater raft one time. Thankfully, it was at the launch, before they got on the river.
 
I've seen some youtube videos where Portabote users do some wild and crazy things. Sounds like they'd be ideal for your needs, with the weight being a possible exception.

 
  • Like
Reactions: Zak
I was thinking more of the potential for dogs to puncture anything inflatable. I saw a dog poke a nice sized hole in a whitewater raft one time. Thankfully, it was at the launch, before they got on the river.
Yeah I figured that kind of thing is what you were thinking of which is why I mentioned the pontoon platform idea. There’s really no dog/inflatable contact with that configuration.

Impressive though—was this from dog claws? Big dog and long claws I guess? Or shitty inflatable?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zak
75lb Kevlar dory sounds interesting. Any more info.

Are you using this in sound or a lake?
This is the boat I have:



I am using it in lakes. It has very little freeboard on the sides, but I suppose I could take it onto the Sound when the Sound is like glass.
 
Last edited:
I've seen some youtube videos where Portabote users do some wild and crazy things. Sounds like they'd be ideal for your needs, with the weight being a possible exception.

Yeah, at a 100lbs they are heavier than my boat. Might be easier to hoist a flat package onto the car roof, though!
 
This is the boat I have:



I am using in in lakes. It has very little freeboard on the sides, but I suppose I could take it onto the Sound when the Sound is like glass.
I’ve drooled over those since I first saw them
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zak
I know where you can find a 65lb canoe that’s designed to be balanced with one person, and easily holds 40lbs of corgi and 60lbs of Ollie.

Plus you could throw 1500lbs of other gear and people in if the mood struck.

View attachment 170719
I think we should take a trip to Alone Lake so I can practice cartopping your gorgeous canoe and get some wooden canoe care and feeding tips from you.
 
The ferries will make you feel like you should have some equity in them after paying the fares.
Would something like a 10’ raft that you could deflate and put in the back of your rig with a simple frame strapped to your roof rack possibly work?
SF
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zak
The ferries will make you feel like you should have some equity in them after paying the fares.
Would something like a 10’ raft that you could deflate and put in the back of your rig with a simple frame strapped to your roof rack possibly work?
SF
That could possibly work! Or, I can suck it up, start lifting weights, and go back to cartopping my dory when I want to take it to Whidbey.
 
Back
Top