I want to tell you about the part of kayaking that nobody photographs. Not the glassy early-morning water, not the seal you spotted off the headland, not the moment you pulled into a hidden cove that felt like it belonged to you alone. The part nobody photographs is the forty-metre drag from the car park to the waterline, hauling a seventeen-kilogram sea kayak across soft sand while your back makes its feelings very clearly known.
My name is Pete. I'm 52, I live in Pembrokeshire, and I've been kayaking for about eight years. I paddle solo most of the time — early mornings before work, weekend trips along the coast, the occasional overnight. I love it completely. I had, for several years, a complicated relationship with the bit before and after the actual paddling.
The Problem
A sea kayak is not a light object. Mine is a composite touring kayak and it weighs enough that dragging it any significant distance on soft sand is a genuine physical effort — the kind that leaves you slightly depleted before you've even got on the water. I'd tried various solutions: a basic trolley with pneumatic tyres that sank into soft sand and required more effort than just carrying the boat, a friend's cart that worked on hard surfaces but was useless on the beach I launch from most often. Nothing had properly solved it.
I'd heard about the C-Tug Sandtrakz wheels from another paddler at my local club — specifically the Sandtrakz variant, which uses a wide, tank-track-inspired wheel design to distribute weight across soft surfaces rather than sinking into them. I found the C-Tug Sandtrakz Kayak Cart on ALTOE and ordered it the same evening.
Why the Sandtrakz Specifically
The standard C-Tug cart is well-regarded, but the Sandtrakz variant is the one designed for beach launching — the wide wheels are the key difference. On soft sand, a narrow wheel concentrates all the weight of the kayak onto a small contact area and sinks. The Sandtrakz wheels spread that weight across a much larger surface, which means they roll rather than dig. It's the same principle as why a tank can cross terrain that would swallow a car.
The puncture-free construction was also important to me. I've had pneumatic tyres go flat at inconvenient moments before — there's nothing quite like discovering a flat tyre when you're trying to retrieve your kayak from the beach at the end of a long day. Puncture-free means one less thing to think about, which when you're paddling solo in remote locations is genuinely valuable.
The First Launch
I used it for the first time on a Saturday morning at my usual launch spot — a beach with a long stretch of soft sand between the car park and the waterline. I strapped the kayak to the cart, picked up the handle, and pulled.
It rolled. Properly rolled, across soft sand, without sinking, without requiring me to lean into it with my full body weight. I walked to the waterline at a normal pace, arrived without being out of breath, and launched feeling fresh rather than already tired. It sounds like a small thing. It is not a small thing.
The Practical Details
The cart dismantles in under twenty seconds — I timed it, because I was curious. The components fit inside my kayak's rear hatch, which means I don't have to leave it on the beach or strap it to the deck while I'm paddling. The reinforced composite construction is completely rust-proof, which matters when you're using it in saltwater environments regularly. I've rinsed it with fresh water after each use and it looks exactly as it did when I bought it.
The lightweight construction is also worth mentioning. A heavy cart defeats part of the purpose — you're adding weight to your kit in order to move weight more easily, and the balance needs to be right. The C-Tug is light enough that it adds negligible weight to my overall kit while making a significant difference to how I move the kayak.
What Changed
I paddle more. That's the simplest way to put it. The friction that used to make me think twice about a solo session — the knowledge that I'd be dragging the boat across the beach alone, that I'd arrive at the water already tired — is gone. I've done three more sessions this month than I would have done before, simply because the launch and retrieval no longer feel like a deterrent.
My back is also considerably happier, which at 52 is not a trivial consideration.
If you paddle solo and you've been managing the beach drag without a proper cart, or with a cart that doesn't work on soft sand, this is the upgrade that will make the most immediate difference to your experience on the water. Not a new paddle, not a new drysuit — this.
You can find the C-Tug Sandtrakz Kayak Cart on ALTOE. Browse the Kayak Accessories collection for more options, explore the Boating & Rafting and Boating & Water Sports ranges, or take a look at the full Outdoor Recreation and Sporting Goods collections. The Latest Products collection always has something new worth discovering.
Get on the water more. This is how.
— Pete Callahan, Pembrokeshire
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