Finally took the TI to the lake I'm most familiar with, only 10 minutes from home. Unfortunately it's over 12 feet low which is pretty severe for our relatively shallow lakes. There is only one Very Steep ramp that's still in the water and I wasn't sure if it would work. Took a regular kayak there the day before to take some measurements and decided I could manage...
With the trailer in the water at the bottom of the ramp the rear crossbar and PVC pipes were about 4" above the water line. No big deal, I was able to slide the TI on the PVC just fine - except for those darn speed drains! They snagged on everything. Pulling it back on I had to rock the TI to get them to clear the edge of the PVC.
On the plus side I had the lake to myself! No "real" boats can get in and no other kayaks around. I thought it was going to be a moderate run - wind was about 12 MPH, just perfect, when I started. I was skating along fairly flat water at around 7 MPH, fun! When I got to the north (downwind) end of the lake things changed. I saw that line approaching - dark water, rough surface, white caps - and it turned into a very wild and wet ride! Had to reef the sail to keep the ama from burying.
Took a while getting back, upwind all the way, but I learned a bit again. Primarily I have a TERRIBLE time keeping a steady course!

Now that I was in a lake I'm intimately familiar with I was able to realize just how badly I kept veering off course - I'd be watching the waves and bow thinking I was holding a more or less steady course then look at the shore and find I was way off. I've been thinking about getting a compass to put on the "dash" beside the sail but haven't found a nice big one yet. (The Elite 5 has a compass screen but won't show depth on it - argh!)
This lake is a lot nicer for several reasons, of course it's really close with no highway driving. It's a big bowl of sorts, so doesn't really matter which way the wind comes from you can work on all points of sail just fine. And it usually isn't overrun with motor boats - just sailboats!

(Though - again - until we get a LOT more rain even the sailboats can't get out. Most were pulled from the water before it dropped too much but quite a few are now standing on their keels - ouch!) I can get the TI in with this remaining boat ramp until the level falls another 6" or so, but we have a week of rain forecast so hopefully the level rises some instead.
This is our "sailing lake", the satellite pic Google currently has is from a time when it was probably 6-8 feet low. The dry areas have really expanded along the south and east shores. My tacks out toward the center were mostly at points where the FF showed the depth coming up to 10-15 feet. This track was 7.5 miles.
