Thursday, 18 June 2026
We've all been there. A guest asks for a kayak to explore a shallow cove or a quiet beach, and the crew has to drag out a heavy, rigid plastic boat, or spend twenty minutes pumping up a flimsy toy that handles like a pig. The Jobe Tasman inflatable tandem kayak solves this problem.
Because it is built with a drop-stitched high-pressure hull (just like a SUP Paddleboard) and has a reinforced tarpaulin bottom, it inflates to a completely rigid, rock-solid platform that handles real coastal chop without bending or dragging. It tracks true and straight and gives the paddler complete confidence in open water.
For yacht managers looking at the longevity of inventory, it means a piece of guest kit that can take a beating on rocky shorelines or gravel beaches without popping a seam. For the crew, the entire setup is ready in no time and packs down cleanly into a single nylon transport bag with comfortable handles, meaning it will actually fit inside any laz.
It comes as a full package with two adjustable seats, two four-piece fiberglass paddles that store flat, and a high-pressure pump, meaning you do not have to source extra hardware or compatible gear to get it on the water.
If you want a tandem setup that behaves like a solid kayak but stows away out of sight when you're underway, the Tasman really is the logical choice.
Because it is built with a drop-stitched high-pressure hull (just like a SUP Paddleboard) and has a reinforced tarpaulin bottom, it inflates to a completely rigid, rock-solid platform that handles real coastal chop without bending or dragging. It tracks true and straight and gives the paddler complete confidence in open water.
For yacht managers looking at the longevity of inventory, it means a piece of guest kit that can take a beating on rocky shorelines or gravel beaches without popping a seam. For the crew, the entire setup is ready in no time and packs down cleanly into a single nylon transport bag with comfortable handles, meaning it will actually fit inside any laz.
It comes as a full package with two adjustable seats, two four-piece fiberglass paddles that store flat, and a high-pressure pump, meaning you do not have to source extra hardware or compatible gear to get it on the water.
If you want a tandem setup that behaves like a solid kayak but stows away out of sight when you're underway, the Tasman really is the logical choice.
