Nullifier
Expedition Leader
kerry said:I have a Bell Yellowstone and like it for solo tripping although it's stability varies greatly with seat height. I haven't paddled any of their big boats. I have a Sawyer DY Special and it's a lightening fast solo boat but requires a bow thruster to turn.
The DY special was a great boat in its day. The current Yost offering in that class is the Bell Magic which is 4 generations down the road from the DY special. All the boats in that fast solo touring class are harder to turn. However the magics updated differential rocker, improved elliptical center section and less aggressive asymetry make for a better handling canoe then the DY special. The older Sawyer label canoes like yours are direct lineage of the modern bell canoes. You can see it across the board. This is also true of the Curtis canoes that Dave designed.
I assume the Yellowstone you have is the Yellowstone solo? If it is that is really the second generation of the wildfire which is my all time favorite solo canoe. The basic difference between those 2 models is that the rocker in the Wildfire is symetrical and the Yellowstone solo uses the current Differential rocker design. This basically enhanced the tracking characteristics of the canoe making it an easier boat for novice paddlers as well as giving the canoe slightly better cruising performance.
I have paddled my carbon Kevlar Wildfire in every imaginable condition from flat water freestyle competition all the way up to class 4 white water on river like the Ocoee. The Yellowstone is just a slightly newer version.