
Magazine Articles
Sea Kayaker
Magazine's Objective Reviews of Pygmy Kayaks:
2005 Readers Choice award
Arctic Tern Review (Excerpted) - December 1999.
Coho Review - October 1998.
GoldenEye Standard Review
- Winter 1996.
Queen Charlotte Standard Review (Excerpted) - Summer 1994.
Feature Articles:
Wavelength
Magazine Outfitters and Guides Warm up to Wood January 2001
Outside Magazine Features
Pygmy's Arctic Tern - October, 1999.
The Seattle Times Features John Lockwood - Pacific Northwest Magazine, August 8, 1999.
WoodenBoat Magazine
Feature "Building the Osprey Triple" Oct.1996 (Excerpted).
Canoe & Kayak Article "To Build a Kayak" (Excerpted) - Oct. 1995.
Sports, Etc. Article "Hip Injury Leads to Pygmy Kayaks" April 1997.
Popular Woodworking Magazine Article "The GoldenEye-Hi" (Excerpted) July 1994.
WoodenBoat Magazine "A Byte at Tradition" John Lockwood computerizes kit design.
Nov. 1987.
Outside
Magazine Features Pygmy's Arctic Tern,
October, 1999
"Building Your Own
Sea Kayak" by Jonathan
Hanson
"The initial sea trials proved we had built not just a well-designed boat, but a
well-designed kayak. The hull of the Arctic Tern has hard chines (corners where the bottom
and sides meet), which result in confidence-inspiring stability. It tracks straight and
turns on command, even without the optional rudder. And it weighs ten pounds less than
fiberglass boats, yet its their equal in strength and internal storage space. In
fact, though Noah would have scoffed at my handmade arkits 11.3 cubits long,
not 300it just might hold enough gear for 40 days and 40 nights, assuming you forget
the livestock"
This is an excerpt from an article that appeared on page
142 of the October 1999 edition of Outside Magazine. Read about this modern-day Noah and
his experience with a Pygmy Kayak. To read it all, click Full text Outside Article.
For more information about this boat, click the Arctic Tern.
Seattle Times Features
Pygmy's Founder, Aug. 8, 1999
"There's Something About Building a Kayak"
by Paula Bock
Seattle Times Staff writer Paula Bock's cover article for the paper's
Sunday Supplement chronicles the author's own experience of building a Pygmy kayak (a
Coho), and gives the extraordinary background of Lockwood and Pygmy Boats Inc. The article
contains a series of great photos by Times Staff photographer Benjamin Benschneider.
Full
text of Pacific Northwest Magazine article.
Sea Kayaker Magazine prints the paddle sport industry's most thorough, technical, and objective reviews of sea kayaks. The editors select highly skilled test paddlers. Their names remain undisclosed to the public or to the manufacturers so as to preserve objectivity. Over the years, Sea Kayaker has reviewed 4 Pygmy kayaks. Here is the latest.
Sea
Kayaker Product review of the Arctic Tern, Dec. 1999 issue:
Arctic Tern Review
by the Editors
Three anonymous paddlers, selected by their editorial
staff, (5'1" woman, 6'1" man, 6'2" man) gave our Arctic Tern a thorough
test in a wide range of conditions, from calm water to 25 knot winds and 4 foot waves.
They were all very impressed with her. Here is a sample of what they had to say:
"I really loved this kayak. the hull design is top notch, it combines
superb rough-water handling , good tracking and turning, and outstanding surfing ability
for a touring kayak. A great choice for beginners interested in learning good technique
and edge control." (KW)
"I really enjoyed my time with this boat, and I was loathe to give it back. It
handles well and one could use it for day paddling, long trips, and even local
racing." (HE)
"The Arctic Tern is a pretty boat with nice handling characteristics. It is a good
general-purpose cruiser that would carry ample gear for camping. For someone coming into
the sport, it would be a great woodworking project and a nice boat that one would not soon
outgrow." (TE)
For more information about this boat, click Arctic Tern.
Sea
Kayaker Product review of the COHO, Oct. 1998 issue:
COHO Review by the Editors
Three anonymous paddlers, selected by their editorial
staff (5'2" woman, 6'2" man, 6'2" man) gave our
COHO a rave review.
"The multi-chine kayak has "nice sleek lines, and the beauty of a
wooden boat can never be matched by an all fiberglass boat. This boat will turn heads on
the water, the beach and on the car top" (VS). "The beveled deck is a fantastic
feature which really helps make the stroke more comfortable" (KW). For KW, rolling
was "a snap, provided a secure fit in the cockpit." While practicing reentry
rescues, KW noted that the aft bungies worked well for setting up a paddle float--the
ridge on the aft deck was low enough that it "did not hinder solid bracing on the
paddle float."
KW said, "The good handling for its length combined with its quickness and beauty send it to the top of my ratings for an expedition-style kayak."VS said, "Of all of the boats I have reviewed, the Coho is my hands-down favorite, the combination of light weight and superb handling make this a wonderful boat. It is a good-tracking cruising boat I would recommend to anyone, whether novice or an experienced paddler."
--Sea Kayaker Magazine, October 1998 issue. To read it
all, click Full Text Coho Review.
For more information about this boat, click the Coho.
Sea Kayaker Product review of
the GoldenEye-Std., December 1996 Issue:
GoldenEye Review By the Editors
Three anonymous paddlers, selected by their editorial staff (5'2"
woman, 5'6" woman, 6'1" man) gave our GoldenEye Standard and extremely positive
review. They really put the boat to the test, two of the three reviewers took the boat out
in 3 foot whitecaps and 20 knot winds. This is what they had to say:
The GoldenEye has good stability. "In terms of paddling 'feel,' one of the most comfortable boats I have ever paddled...I felt secure in it immediately" (VS). Of the secondary stability, TB wrote, "the stability holds fairly far out, as you can lean the boat over quite a ways and it will still right itself."....
"The boat is quick and responsive. It accelerated and held speed with little effort" (DA). When unloaded, the GoldenEye gave all of our reviewers a sense of easy, effortless paddling, perhaps because of its light weight. "The day of my test I paddled over ten miles and I felt like I had hardly done any work" (VS).
"The boat held a variety of courses in the wind with little effort. I noticed no excessive weathercocking. In the wind conditions I encountered it just went where I pointed it (DA).
"This is a fine cruising, fishing, and general use boat for a larger and intermediate level paddler. Its comfort and sea handling characteristics are excellent. It is light, simple and does everything well." (DA) "It is so light, so comfortable and handles just beautifully" (VS).
--Sea Kayaker Magazine, Winter 1996 issue.
For entire text, click GoldenEye-Std. Review.
For more information about this boat, click the GoldenEye
Standard.
NOTE: Our GoldenEye-Standard and Osprey-Standard have identical hulls
from the waterline down. Therefore, this review is also applicable to the performance of
the Osprey-Standard. For more information about this boat, click the Osprey Standard.
WoodenBoat Article about building an Osprey
Triple Oct. 1996
"Building the
Osprey Triple" (The Editors):
"Light, fast, stable, and able....In our last issue, John Lockwood and Freida Fenn
described building the multi-chined hull for the 20' triple-cockpit Osprey kayak....The
Osprey Triple combines simple construction with elegant lines and impressive capability.
This boat will serve well for afternoon picnics and for deep wilderness expeditions....We
hope you have fun building the Osprey."
--"Building the Osprey Triple", by Freida Fenn & John Lockwood. Read the
2-part construction article with 32 photos: Part I, Issue #132, July/August 1996 and Part
II, Issue #132, October 1996.
For photos from this article showing the construction process, See Stitch-n-Glue.
For more information about this boat, click the Osprey Triple.
Canoe and Kayak,
Article on building a GoldenEye-Std., Oct. 1995
"To Build a Kayak"
by Tsunami
Ranger, Michael Powers
"John [Lockwood] discovered that a laminate of 4mm marine mahogany plywood sealed
between layers of epoxy saturated fiberglass provided a better weight-to-strength ratio
than any single material. 'The secret is that wooden core...,' he confides. 'Both Kevlar
and glass fibers have great tensile strength, but are brittle and therefore do poorly
under compression. Wood is an extremely complex composite material, possessing exceptional
compression strength. When you sandwich glass and wood together, you get a stronger,
stiffer boat that is 25 percent lighter than straight fiberglass, and 40 percent lighter
than a plastic boat.'
'On a brisk winter morning a few weeks later. [After building his own GE-std] I walk down to the sea with a new untested craft balanced lightly upon my shoulder. I slipped easily into the spacious cockpit, which I had carefully outfitted with closed-cell foam for performance paddling and a bomb-proof roll. The beautiful wood grain that ran full length to the bow now pointed straight into the sea was a visual feast for my eyes. I felt totally connected to this craft on which I had labored so lovingly. A few pulls on the paddle propelled me swiftly into the surf zone, where the GoldenEye leapt up to meet the oncoming seas with unbridled enthusiasm. Soon I was charging down the waves, surfing easily. After a few exhilarating rides, I turned and headed for open water, the ultimate test of any true sea kayak. Once again, the Greenland Eskimo spirit that Lockwood had bred into his boats became apparent, as the GoldenEye leapt and danced among the big whitecapped seas like an adolescent dolphin.
Ah, to build a kayak, then feel it come alive beneath you in the boundless sea...truly one of life's great and memorable adventures."
--"To Build a Kayak" by Michael Powers, Tsunami Ranger,
Canoe and Kayak Magazine, October 1995 issue.
For more information about this boat, click the GoldenEye
Standard.
Sports Etc. Magazine
on John Lockwood and Pygmy Boats. April
1997
"Hip
Injury Leads to Pygmy Kayaks" By Michael Kundu.
Here's an Excerpt:
Businesses have been started during times of crisis. Pygmy Kayaks of Port Townsend is one
of those. A devastating hip injury in 1967 to John Lockwood, Pygmy's founder, led to a
search for his passionate love affair of "deep wilderness" and eventually to the
founding of the boat building [business].....
Pivoting an Osprey-Standard on the flat surface of a bay outside his Port Townsend showroom on a sunny afternoon in early March, Lockwood is contemplative about paddling...
"Sure, [a kayak] needs to appeal to one's aesthetic tastes, but you
also need to be confident about its dependability, its seaworthiness and stability. When
you're out there, three weeks away from help, going it solo and at the mercy of the sea,
you need to know your kayak will work from a technical perspective."
--For full text, click
Sports Etc.
Popular Woodworking Magazine
Article on the GoldenEye HI
July 1994, Issue #79
"The GoldenEye HI" By Allen Shain. Excerpted from the article:
"The kit is well thought out and provides everything necessary to finish the
kayak....The final outcome is a beautiful, strong boat. The GoldenEye tracks straight and
handles a solid chine turn. It's difficult to say which I enjoy more: building or
paddling."
--"The GoldenEye HI" by Allen Shain, July 1994, Issue #79 of Popular
Woodworking Magazine.
For more information about this boat, click the GoldenEye-HI.
Sea Kayaker Product
review of the Queen Charlotte-Std., Summer 1994
Excerpts from another Objective Review by 3 anonymous paddlers, chosen by the Editors of
Sea Kayaker:
"The Queen Charlotte has a quick and sure response to leaned turns. It
accelerates well and easily holds a cruising speed....RS and SK enjoyed surfing the Queen
Charlotte. "The hull felt strong and rigid when falling off the crest of bigger waves
and didn't flex (SK) 'Fun to carve, turns off the sharp edges, and the boat tracked well
with the flat bottom planing and tending not to broach'. RS's comments summed up the
general feeling among our paddlers: 'Light-weight and beautiful, the Queen Charlotte is a
fun maneuverable playboat for surf, but with adequate speed for touring...beginning
paddlers should find it quite comfortable, while more advanced paddlers should enjoy the
performance getting up on edge."
--Sea Kayaker Magazine, the Editors & assistants, Summer 1994 issue.
For more information about this boat, click the Queen
Charlotte Standard.
WoodenBoat Magazine
on Johns computerization of kit design. Nov./Dec. 1987