Lifetime Weber Angler 110

Specs:

  • Length: 11 feet overall
  • Beam: 30"
  • Height: 14" (hull only)
  • Weight: 59.3 pounds
  • Capacity: 300 pounds
  • MSRP: $599, $540 street

Hits:

  • best directional stability
  • solid seat back
  • roomy, even with dog on board
  • easily accessible dry storage
  • useful little wheel in the skeg
  • 4 real handles
  • central rod holder (removeable)

Misses:

  • long and heavy
  • slightly narrow cockpit
  • somewhat cumbersome on the water ( compared to smaller boats )
  • non-standard scupper hole spacing
  • scupper holes under the seat get you wet

I stumbled into kayaking when I got this boat for free. I write product reviews for (the big orange store) and one day they offered a bunch of kayaks. Who even knew they sold kayaks? So I took the biggest one on offer, with all the fishing accessories, just in case I ever wanted to molest some fish. A few weeks later it was drop-shipped on my driveway in a big cardboard box. And I was a kayaker.

When I picked this boat, I knew nothing about kayaks, but I chose well. These Lifetime boats are a great compromise between price and capability, and they are built like tanks. Years of use have done no significant damage at all, just some scratches and a few small parts that needed to be replaced.

The folding seatback is excellent, but the seat cushion is a cruel joke, as with all these boats, it seems. Add some extra padding as I detailed elsewhere. The included paddle is decent, but a little short for me, so I got a better one.

For years I took the dog with me. Fishing with the dog in the boat didn't seem like a good idea, but after he passed on, I tried it, and this boat is an excellent platform. It has the tracking and stability you need to take your hands off the paddle and fiddle with other things.

The main hatch is terrific, see-through with easy latches. I tied a big Tupperware inside the hull for a glove compartment. Even if a little water gets in the hull ( actually, that has never happened ) the Tupperware will keep things dry. I also added a big hatch to the bow so I could store things there. The bow hatch is also useful if something gets loose inside the hull - you can stand the boat on its nose, give it a shake, and get your car keys back lickety-split. Try shaking something to the middle of the boat - good luck with that.

The scuppers are a bit of a design flaw. The spacing is much narrower than what seems to be standard, and I had to modify my scupper-cart to fit, not that big a deal really. Worse is that one set of scuppers is directly below the seat, and in choppy water it gets your butt wet. Standard scupper plugs won't fit, so I made a set from rubber stoppers. I drilled a hole down the center for a cord, which lets them drain slowly, but not splash up.

This boat is heavy and long, and it has only gotten heavier as I rigged it out. I can lug it short distances by myself, and the skeg wheel is very useful on smooth hard surfaces but jams up quickly on gravel or sand. While two people can easily carry it and could probably even get it up on the truck rack without too much difficulty, this boat gets the prime spot in the bed. To move it any more than a few yards by yourself, you're going to need a good kayak cart.

Some other long-term results:

  • After several years, the netting on the stern rotted away from the sun. It also blew off once while I was driving, but I doubled-back and found it and tied it down better. I don't plan to replace it.
  • The plastic buckles on the seat straps have a tendency to break if you lean back too hard against the seat. I left the snap part off and just tied the strap directly to the base of the buckle, and that has worked fine. I did that immediately on the new boat, since I know the buckle is going to break.
  • The plastic latch that holds the seat back in place has a tendency to get lost if it pops itself off. I have found as many as I have lost, in different places, so this is apparently not just a problem for me. I drilled a hole in it and tied it down with a bit of shoelace, so if it does pop off, it won't get away. Lifetime is really good about replacement parts as well.

All in all, this is a great boat. It is also sold under the name 'Stealth'. If this one is a little too pricy or heavy for you, then get an almost-as-nice Tamarack instead.


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Union County
( 40.64849, -74.31513 )

  1. Ambrose Brook - Bound Brook ( 40.56764, -74.51489 )
  2. Ambrose Brook - Possumtown ( 40.55555, -74.48630 )
  3. Arthur Kill - Buckingham Ave ( 40.51462, -74.25871 )
  4. Arthur Kill - Carteret Waterfront ( 40.57186, -74.21301 )
  5. Arthur Kill - Ferry St ( 40.54576, -74.25424 )
  6. Branch Brook Park ( 40.75077, -74.18305 )
  7. D-R Canal - New Brunswick ( 40.50806, -74.46376 )
  8. D-R Canal - Somerset (N) ( 40.54077, -74.51404 )
  9. D-R Canal - Somerset (S) ( 40.52390, -74.49248 )
  10. D-R Canal - South Bound Brook ( 40.55880, -74.53118 )
  11. Delaware River ( 40.17371, -74.84843 )
  12. Echo Lake - Mountainside ( 40.67351, -74.34560 )
  13. Green Brook - Billian Legion Park ( 40.56222, -74.52483 )
  14. Hackensack River - Secaucaus (S) ( 40.76390, -74.08685 )
  15. Lake Surprise - Summit ( 40.69370, -74.37097 )
  16. Liberty State Park - Jersey City ( 40.69768, -74.06520 )
  17. New Market Pond - Piscataway ( 40.57675, -74.45490 )
  18. Newark Bay - Bayonne ( 40.66284, -74.13305 )
  19. Newark Bay - Rutkowski Park ( 40.68882, -74.11216 )
  20. Orange Reservoir - Rahway River ( 40.75964, -74.28903 )
  21. Passaic River - Basking Ridge ( 40.69503, -74.51600 )
  22. Passaic River - Chatham ( 40.73795, -74.37159 )
  23. Passaic River - Chatham ( 40.72583, -74.38948 )
  24. Passaic River - Dead River ( 40.65005, -74.52464 )
  25. Passaic River - East Hanover (N) ( 40.82749, -74.33529 )
  26. Passaic River - East Hanover (S) ( 40.82581, -74.33332 )
  27. Passaic River - Kearny ( 40.76313, -74.15933 )
  28. Passaic River - Livingston ( 40.77879, -74.36862 )
  29. Passaic River - Newark ( 40.73326, -74.15206 )
  30. Passaic River - Nutley ( 40.81175, -74.13909 )
  31. Passaic River - Riverside County Park (S) ( 40.80182, -74.13801 )
  32. Passaic River - Warren ( 40.67078, -74.46441 )
  33. Rahway River - Clark ( 40.62884, -74.29746 )
  34. Rahway River - Cranford (N) ( 40.66036, -74.30627 )
  35. Rahway River - Cranford (S) ( 40.65097, -74.30133 )
  36. Rahway River - Cranford (W) ( 40.65900, -74.30997 )
  37. Rahway River - Jackson's Pond ( 40.62805, -74.28492 )
  38. Rahway River - Lenape Park ( 40.67407, -74.31426 )
  39. Rahway River - Mohawk Park ( 40.64041, -74.29408 )
  40. Rahway River - Nomahegan Lake ( 40.66832, -74.31741 )
  41. Rahway River - Park ( 40.62040, -74.28944 )
  42. Rahway River - Rahway ( 40.59952, -74.26856 )
  43. Rahway River - South Branch (E) ( 40.60010, -74.27397 )
  44. Rahway River - South Branch (W) ( 40.57998, -74.30463 )
  45. Rahway River - South Mountain ( 40.73112, -74.30704 )
  46. Rahway River - Springfield ( 40.70824, -74.30186 )
  47. Raritan Bay - Cliffwood (E) ( 40.45089, -74.22033 )
  48. Raritan Bay - Cliffwood (W) ( 40.45216, -74.22269 )
  49. Raritan Bay - Cliffwood (Whale Creek) ( 40.45090, -74.22274 )
  50. Raritan Bay - Laurence Harbor (E) ( 40.45877, -74.24622 )
  51. Raritan Bay - Laurence Harbor (W) ( 40.46223, -74.25482 )
  52. Raritan Bay - South Amboy (N) ( 40.48343, -74.27059 )
  53. Raritan Bay - South Amboy (S) ( 40.47946, -74.26831 )
  54. Raritan Bay - South Amboy Ramp ( 40.48401, -74.27416 )
  55. Raritan River - Bound Brook ( 40.55995, -74.52758 )
  56. Raritan River - Edison ( 40.48791, -74.38382 )
  57. Raritan River - Highland Park ( 40.48864, -74.42226 )
  58. Raritan River - New Brunswick ( 40.48760, -74.43280 )
  59. Raritan River - Perth Amboy ( 40.50057, -74.27712 )
  60. Raritan River - Piscataway (N) ( 40.54085, -74.51236 )
  61. Raritan River - Piscataway (S) ( 40.50935, -74.46641 )
  62. Raritan River - Sayreville ( 40.47450, -74.35606 )
  63. Robinson's Branch - Rahway River ( 40.61839, -74.30495 )
  64. South River - Sayreville ( 40.45397, -74.37222 )
  65. South River - South River ( 40.45838, -74.38361 )
  66. Speedwell Lake - Morristown ( 40.81265, -74.48090 )
  67. Watchung Lake - North Plainfield ( 40.63723, -74.45384 )
  68. Weequahic Lake - Newark ( 40.70570, -74.19775 )
  69. Weston's Mill Pond - East Brunswick ( 40.46677, -74.42603 )
  70. Whippany River - Whippany ( 40.81921, -74.44021 )
  71. Woodbridge Creek (N) ( 40.58555, -74.26267 )
  72. Woodbridge Creek (S) ( 40.56256, -74.26890 )

All of present-day Union County was part of the Elizabethtown Tract, which was purchased in 1664, by English colonists from the Lenape Native Americans that lived in the area of present-day Elizabeth, New Jersey. Union County was formed on March 19, 1857, from portions of Essex County; it was the last of New Jersey's 21 counties to be established. With a population density of 4,955 inhabitants per square mile in 2000, Union County was the 15th-most densely populated county in the United States.

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