I took my TI on her maiden voyage today! My impression was very positive; I had a blast. However, I did not realize how much constant attention the boat would require. I apologize for the rambling and unorganized review, but I wanted to get my thoughts out from today's sail why they are still fresh. I launched from Oleta River State Park in northern Miami. It was quite a day for a first sea trial of the boat given the wind was 20+ mph! I was out around 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. See the wind graph below of the location. The wind sensor on the ocean side was a solid 20-30 mph, the one shown below is in a more protected area.

One of my biggest questions when buying this boat was how fast will it go? I was a little disappointed. I will preface this with there was about 420 pounds of body weight in the boat and it was extremely choppy where the strongest wind was. The fastest I saw my gps read was 10 mph. This was actually in a calmer location of the bay with some stronger wind gust. Generally, 9 mph was about all I could manage. In the extremely choppy part of the bay it felt really fast, but I was only getting around 7 mph most of the time. I know the wind was 20+ a lot in these areas. I was able to bury the amas on numerous occasions. I ended up furling to about 2/3 available sail area and I was still coming close to completely submerging the amas at times. However, most of the time at least the front tip was an inch out of the water; the entire amas didn't go under too much. However, when it started getting close I'd usually steer into the wind a little.

I had read that the Adventure Islands were wet, but I had no idea how wet this boat could be. I was in the front seat and I wouldn't have been any wetter had I jumped head first into the ocean. At times it felt like an numerous full buckets of water were being thrown on me a once. But the conditions were pretty extreme with a lot of 2 foot chop and very high winds.
At one time I had furled the sail and was peddling directly into the wind and chop. With pretty aggressive peddling I was only managing about 1.5 mph until I realized my passenger wasn't doing any work. Once we kicked it into gear at the same pace we were managing 3.5 mph. I did very little peddling at the beginning to get into the open water. In calmer conditions we were doing 5-6 mph without much trouble.
I had a blast in this boat, but I did not realize how much work it would be in these conditions. This was my first time sailing so there was a lot for me to think about. I have been kitesurfing for 8 years so I have a pretty good understanding of the wind, but piloting the boat was different.
I did have a chance to take the sail in and out while underway. I set everything up before leaving but then found a few overhanging mangroves in the way so I had to remove and reinstall it. The boat was extremely stable standing up, of course, the amas were out. This procedure was very easily achieved in almost no wind.
The bad:
I came back with a torn up finger from the mainsheet. I could not budge this line once the sail filled with wind. I also lost the short batten in the sail. The other two came loose but I was able to furl the sail and get to dry land before they were also gone. I'm confident I installed these correctly, and after reading the manual when I got home, I know did everything per the instructions. I have now gone beyond what the manual says to try to ensure this doesn't happen again. A small piece of line attached to the clew that keeps the sail from unwrapping when stored went missing. On the way home I stopped and bought a short bungee and tied a very tight bowline. This bungee should work better than the small rope that came with it. The boat came missing a bungee that holds the amas to the side. It was a bit of a pain to launch and paddle out through a narrow area while also trying to hold the amas as it kept wanting to float away from the boat. (Note: Once I noticed the missing part, the dealer promptly contacted Hobie, and Hobie contacted me today to let me know they are shipping the part, and a few other missing items.) Also, days before taking the boat out, one of the front paddle holder bungees popped off. I will be buying larger washers to try prevent this in the future. However, I had no problems with them coming off today; I was careful not to pull on them.
The most frustrating part of the day was the missing batten. However, that did not overshadow an exciting day that left me with a strong itch to get out there again.