What if I put a hole in it?

I get this question constantly,
so I thought I'd answer it here to save myself some breath in
person. The chances of you putting a hole in your skin on frame
kayak while paddling are probably equivalent to your chances of getting
attacked by a shark. I'm not saying it can't happen, but in
all the years I've been paddling, and all the hundreds of kayaks I've
sent out of the shop, I've only heard of one hole ever being
punched in one of my boats, and that was by my buddy Rich repeatedly
crash landing onto lava shelfs and coral reefs, which is inadvisable in
any kayak. Glass boats seem to get damaged with greater
frequency.
Still, the issue seems to weigh
heavily on peoples minds, so I thought I'd take a moment to show what
I'd do in the unlikely event. As you can see above,
damaging the kayak is the hard part. I cut a hole below the
waterline toward the bow of my own
personal kayak with a sharp fillet knife.

Next, I sand the surrounding
area just until the weave starts to appear. This is extremely
important, the Spirit Line 2 part polyurethane is both mechanically and
chemically slick, meaning that without some serious mechanical grip,
nothing will adhere to it. The far right edge of the hole
is oversanded, the middle lower edge is about perfect.

Next, using the big curved
needle from one of those ubiquitous drugstore needle kits, and an
armspan of UNWAXED dental floss doubled over, I stitch up the
hole. The stitches are 1/8 inch from the edge of the seam, 1/8
inch apart. The pattern goes over one side, then dives
under the other side, and up and over that side, then diving under at
the seam, ect. Tie off however you feel is safe.

Next I coat the sanded area with
aquaseal. If you warm up the aquaseal in your pocket it will be
slightly more fluid and penetrate better. Then, using a
stick, I reach inside the kayak and goop the inside of the seam
with aquaseal. If I were really paranoid, I might consider
sanding the inside and gluing a small patch of the original skin
material over it.
This is the first repair I've
ever done on a skinboat skin, and I imagine that it's not as strong as
the original fabric, but I trust it. I have also covered a small
hole (made accidentally with a chisel), with duct tape, which only took
30 seconds to do, and is still on the boat after 4 years. I make
no claims that this is a good repair, and accept no liability if it
doesn't work for you. Skinboat holes are so rare that noone has
much experience repairing them. As with any kayak, you should
always have float bags and immersion protection.
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