1. kayak - Noun
2. kayak - Verb
A light canoe, made of skins stretched over a frame, and usually capable of carrying but one person, who sits amidships and uses a double-bladed paddle. It is peculiar to the Eskimos and other Arctic tribes.
Source: Webster's dictionaryWriting is always a restorative process. It's like paddling a kayak. When you're writing, you can't do anything else. You're in the space you're in. So, in that way, it's enormously centering and restorative. Tabitha King
we kayaked down the river Source: Internet
A Bull Sluice Lake kayak launch and Morgan Falls boat ramp would be two of the 43 water access points along the RiverLands trail. Source: Internet
A narrower kayak makes a somewhat shorter paddle appropriate and a shorter paddle puts less strain on the shoulder joints. Source: Internet
A variety of tools and weapons used by a hunter in a kayak show how kayaks were an integral part of Inuit hunters’ equipment, while historic photographs and motion picture film highlight the skills required to use these skin-on-frame boats. Source: Internet
Ashia Paez and Tristan Castillo, both of New York, kayak on the Colorado River in Black Canyon at the base of the Hoover Dam with Desert Adventures of Boulder City in Lake Mead National Recreation Area Thursday, July 30, 2020. Source: Internet