chrisj wrote:
On top of all that, you inevitably have to contend with fielding questions from the crowd of assembled onlookers and admirers who gather when you are setting the boat up. The men all want to know how fast it goes and the women all want to know what colors it comes in. Don't worry about standing out at the boat ramp. There will be days when you will wish you could just hide and get the boat out onto the water.
I try to find little beaches to launch from, to avoid the crowds, the queues for the ramp and the parking hassles.

The toils and tribulations of owning a cool Hobie sailing kayak!
I know what you mean with setup getting long at times. I've got all my normal gear (tools, spares, emergency gear, etc) now in one nice (and heavy!) bag with my leashes, and water attached to it, so less than two minutes for normal gear...
But, when I fish, easily add another 15 min. for fishing tramp, pole holders and leashing and rigging everything. And I'm much faster than my fishing partner so usually it's almost an hour, at O-dumb-30 in the morning, in the dark, before we finally launch. At times we setup the night before on the TI's trailer which is much better, even if we launch an hours troll away at the boat ramp. At least it's an hour more on the water fishing while we get there.
The tough life of a Hobie AI or TI sailor

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Hobie Island Sailing since 2006