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Shearwater Sport
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Shearwater Sport
Sale
Shearwater Sport
Sale
Shearwater Sport
Shearwater Sport Thumbnail
Shearwater Sport Thumbnail
Shearwater Sport Thumbnail
Shearwater Sport Thumbnail

Shearwater Sport

Builder Testimonials

The most versatile all-around sea kayak in our catalog. Easy to build, fits a big range of paddler sizes, stable enough for beginners, but sporty enough for playing in the surf zone.

  • Skill Level Beginner
  • Estimated Build Time 80 Hours

Build this boat if...

  • You're looking for a versatile and comfortable kayak that isn't a beamy tub.
  • You're looking for a sport-oriented kayak for surfing
  • You want a sleek, West Greenland-style kayak without the gawky 17- or 18-foot length
  • You prefer advanced handling qualities in all conditions, including waves
  • #1 Seller

    Thousands of kits shipped

  • Easy to Build

    Your first boatbuilding project!

  • Versatile

    A design that does everything well

  • Quality Materials

    Only the best professional-grade materials

Build Your Kit

Take One of our Boatbuilding Classes

We offer classes for many of the boats we sell. Teaching sites stretch from Maryland to Washington State and from Maine to California. Click here to find out more.

Specifications

Length
14'6"
Beam
25"
Cockpit Size
34" x 17"
Hull Weight
42 lbs.
Paddler Weight
100 - 240 lbs.
Max Payload
300 lbs.
Knee Height
13"
Max. Men's Shoe Size
13

Performance

Stability

4 out of 5
Very Tippy
Very Stable

Speed

3 out of 5
Cruiser
Racer

Cockpit Room

4 out of 5
Close Fit
Huge Cockpit

Payload

4 out of 5
Day Tripper
Freight Hauler

Ease of Construction

5 out of 5
Requires Patience
Very Easy
Paddling through an autumn gale in a Shearwater Sport Kayak
Paddling through an autumn gale in a Shearwater Sport Kayak

Overview

The CLC Shearwater Sport offers the perfect combination of lightweight, sharp handling, effortless cruising speed, and an extra-large cockpit for comfort.  The shorter length means easier construction, storage, and cartopping.  It might be the one kayak that does almost everything well.  Watertight bulkheads and flush-mounted deck hatches are standard, which means that many builders go camping in their Shearwater Sports.

All kayak design is a compromise.  For speed, you want the kayak to be long and narrow.  For comfort, you want beam and a big cockpit.  For maneuverability and compactness, a short kayak is desirable.  Artful compromise is the mark of good design, and we feel that designer Eric Schade's Shearwater Sport is a great combination of kayak virtues.

For years, kayak builders have been asking us for a kayak that slots in between the high-performance Shearwater series and the beamy, comfortable Wood Duck series.  At our in-water demos, the experienced paddlers often made a beeline for the Shearwater 14, because it has the handling and the great looks of the West-Greenland-style kayaks, but its shorter length makes it more maneuverable and easier to use than the long, fast Shearwater 17.  The Shearwater 14, however, is a scaled-down 17, intended only for smaller-statured paddlers weighing less than 150 pounds. That left a lot of paddlers on the shore.

Eric has brought his practiced eye and decades of paddling experience to bear on the problem.  Settling on a length of 14'6", he added just enough beam (25") to support paddlers over 200 lbs.  Refinement of the underbody, the bow, and the stern allowed him to retain the crisp handling that has sold almost 650 Shearwater kayaks.

For paddlers with longer legs who want an easy entry and egress, Eric specified a 34"-long cockpit.  Standard spray skirts still fit, and the Shearwater Sport is outfitted with all of the features expected in a high-performance kayak:  knee braces, hip braces, and a low aft deck for those who want to roll the boat.

The compact Shearwater Sport gives up nothing in cruising speeds to its longer, narrower Shearwater sisters, though it won't be quite as fast in a sprint.  It's still more than fast enough to accelerate onto waves for surfing.  Indeed, many paddlers will build the Shearwater Sport just for surfing, while maintaining longer kayaks for distance work.

The payload is ideal for a paddler of up to a 220-pounds plus their gear.  The reduced windage of the Shearwater family means  that small people can paddle the Shearwater Sport, too, so more than just one person in the family can enjoy this beautiful kayak.

The Shearwater Sport's construction follows the proven stitch-and-glue process of the rest of the Shearwater family.  A dark sapele deck is standard.

The Shearwater Sport Hybrid substitutes a cedar stripped deck for the standard sapele plywood deck.  Somewhat more challenging to build, the Shearwater Sport Hybrid rewards the kit builder with a unique and beautiful design.  Builders are provided with a mixture of light, medium and dark cedar strips and may create their own strip pattern, or imitate the design in the instruction manual.

Plans for the Shearwater Sport comprise a 33-foot by 3-foot roll of paper with full-sized patterns for every part in the boat.  

Do you fit in this kayak?  Study our kayak fit chart.


Buying Options

Choose Your Boatbuilding Experience

Start your kit-building experience by choosing the option that best suits your experience and itinerary. Don’t have the confidence to build on your own? No worries! Join a boatbuilding class or hire us to build a custom boat for you.

  1. Select Your Configuration

    Build From a Kit:
    Most builders start with the Base Kit. It’s all there.
    Build From Scratch:
    Build from scratch using full-sized plans.
    Build From a Wood Parts Only Kit:
    For those who have their own supply of epoxy, fiberglass, and hardware.
    Order Study Plans or Manuals:
    Like to study up a bit first? Download study plans or a copy of the assembly manual. 

  2. Choose Options and Add-ons

    Additional Components:
    Add rudders, skegs, hatch options, spray skirts, and more.

  3. Get Building!

    Computer-cut kits feature all of the latest tweaks to ease assembly, including pre-drilled holes for stitching-and-gluing, puzzle joints, and precision in the fitting of parts.

Standard Configuration

Sale
$1,498.00 $1,348.00

The Shearwater Sport kit ships with computer-cut and -drilled...

Alternative Configurations

$935.00

The Shearwater Sport "wood parts only" kit includes all of th...

$119.00

For builders who want to start from scratch.  Includes a 33-f...

$25.00

Just the manual, so you can study the process in advance of a...

$2.99

  You can get printable study plans for most of your favori...

Additional Options

$195.00

Many kayaks can benefit from a retractable skeg. There will b...

Shearwater Sport Kayak
Shearwater Sport Kayak

What builders are saying

Presenting the Shearwater Double, an amazing craft that flies thru the air, paddles on land & sea, and can even cut thru dense Maine fog! Thanks for your support!

James D. | HA
Verified Builder

Today I took my Shearwater Sport for her first paddle at Turtle Beach, Siesta Key, Sarasota, FL. It was a windy day so I had some good chop in the bay in which to play. The boat handles and paddles just like a dream...I'm truly happy. I learned enough during this build to know that this will NOT be the last boat I build from CLC...it was so fun, so challenging, and so rewarding to see her come together and make it to the water within a month of taking delivery of the kit. Thank you John and everyone at CLC...your products are wonderful...your support is beyond wonderful!!!

Dan C. | FL
Verified Builder

I, my wife, Carol, and our friends are all thrilled with the performance of the Shearwater Sport Kayaks. They are everything your catalog says they are: quick, responsive, quick to turn, and most important, LOTS of fun to build--A super winter project. The kits are beautifully put together and very complete, and the accuracy of the cut on every part is amazing. Keep up the great work, CLC, and thanks for a great product!

Dave E. | MT
Verified Builder

Thought you would like to know that my new Shearwater Sport has been added to the CLC population on Lake Champlain in New York.  I still have some more trim work to finish it, but I couldn't wait any longer to get launched!  Love how it handles, and my grandkids, ages 6 to 11, paddled it with no problem.  Great design.

Bob F. | MD
Verified Builder

I have built a Shearwater Sport from plans, starting in 2012 and working on it only during winter. Great experience! The manual was crystal clear and the 1:1 drawing made life easy. I can hardly think of anything that is as rewarding as building and paddling your own little boat! The result is a beauty that makes heads turn (OK, I'm not unbiased). However, there is also a lot of beauty in the building.

Ruud F. | NET
Verified Builder

In July, my friend Pete came with me to the WoodenBoat School in Maine to build a Shearwater Sport kayak. It's amazing what can get done in a week under the expert guidance of Eric Schade.  I came home with a kayak ready for finishing.  Of course, "ready for finishing" means I was about halfway there. Anyway, I persevered, and finally finished it in time for Labor Day weekend. Pete helped me put it in the water. We had a great time in Maine, and the Shearwater Sport is really fun to paddle.

Wayne B. | VT
Verified Builder

Videos

Building a Shearwater Sport in Time Lapse

First Launch of the Taylor's Shearwater Sport Kayaks

CLC Shearwater Sport Build Time Lapse

Shearwater Sport Surfing in Long Island Sound - October 2012

Shearwater Sport in the Surf

Frequently Asked Questions

Has anyone built both the Chesapeake and the Shearwater and how would you compare the build time and complexity of the two?

We've built a handful of Shearwaters and scores of Chesapeakes. I think the elapsed building time of the two boats is about the same. We kept an eye on the hours when we built the second Shearwater 17 and it was about 80 hours total. That was moving fast, and often with two people working on it at once.

There are no scarfs to glue and no sheerclamps to plane on the standard Shearwater, and that reduces time compared to the Chesapeake. You gain all of that back in putting the Shearwater's deck on. Actually, you have the deck on and off about four times in the process of assembling it. None of the processes are any more difficult than the Chesapeake, just different.

On a Shearwater, does it matter what order I lay the three layers of glass on the hull?

Yes, it matters.  The first layer is the all-encompassing layer; the second is just on the bottom panels, and third come the bow and stern reinforcement.

There are two problems with doing that in reverse order: First, you might get an air bubble at the edge of the layers that end short. Second, if the smaller patches shift beneath the all-over sheet, you'll have the devil of a time getting them back in place.

You want to apply all the layers DRY, and then wet them out with epoxy together at the same time.

Are there any significant differences between building the Shearwaters and the Chesapeakes?

The sequence for the standard Shearwater is thus: Wire the hull up like any other CLC boat, install fillets, etc. Wire together the deck (with a few temporary forms providing the deck camber), apply "tack welds" to the deck, and wire it onto the hull. Take the deck back off to finish the fillets and fiberglass on the deck. Like most of the hull, the deck is fiberglassed on both sides; there are about four layers of 'glass right behind the cockpit. At a last you wire the deck on for good and apply fillets to the hull-to-deck joint.

The Shearwater Hybrid process is different: there are temporary forms upon which the stripped deck is assembled, and the hull has the usual CLC sheerclamps to which the strip deck is ultimately fastened once the forms are removed. Definitely takes more time to build, but a fraction of the time of an all-strip hull.

How do I order this kit?

Click on the Buying Options tab the top left of this page and follow the directions.

If I buy one of your boat kits, what else will I need?

Chesapeake Light Craft kits contain all the parts and materials you need to build the boat. The kit includes pre-cut parts, hardware, epoxy, fiberglass, plans and instructions. Our standard kayak kits also have the seats, hatches, bulkheads, footbraces, and the deck-rigging. About the only thing kits don't include is the final finish: paint or varnish. Your boat's color scheme is entirely up to you.

You'll need a few ordinary tools, like a cordless drill, a decent 5-inch sander, and for most boats a wood plane. You'll need disposables such as sandpaper and paint brushes and mixing cups.

You need a workspace a couple of feet bigger all the way around than the boat you want to build, and you'll need to be able to maintain temperatures between about 55 degrees F and 95 degrees F during steps when epoxy is being applied or curing. Since a lot of boatbuilding gets done during winter, we've written up some tips on how to heat a cold space cheaply, easily, and safely.

How much does this boat weigh and how much can it carry?

The weight and payload of this boat, along with other statistics such length and beam, can be found under Specs in the Specifications section, which is just below the lead image seen at the top of this page.

Can you send me the plans digitally?

Sorry, but until digital rights management technology for marine architectural work catches up to that used for books and music, we are unable to transmit digital plans. Currently, only study plans and manuals can be sent digitally.

Classes

Take One of our Boatbuilding Classes

We offer classes for many of the boats we sell. Teaching sites stretch from Maryland to Washington State and from Maine to California. Click here to find out more.

View Classes

Need Help Building it?

We’re here to help with any questions you might have during the build process.

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410.267.0137

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