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First day on the water: Highlander AirTrek checklist

Inflate to 10–12 psi with a real gauge, install the Traverse Drive or fin drive, set the perch, and ease into your first paddle. Pack-down is rolled, not folded, and never store wet at pressure.

Inflatable fishing kayaks have a different first-day flow than rigid ones. There's no roof rack to wrestle — but there's an inflation step, a drive install, and a pack-down at the end of the day. Here's the new-owner checklist for the Highlander 100, 120, and 140T AirTrek.

The night before

1. Pull everything out of the bag

Lay it all out somewhere clean and dry:

  • The hull (rolled in the bag)
  • The pump and hoses
  • The seat / perch
  • The drive (Traverse Pedal Drive or kick-up fin drive)
  • The Highlander Fin Drive Mount Kit (if you went the fin drive route)
  • The rudder kit (if you ordered one)
  • Quad Rails or accessories
  • Pressure gauge — if you don't have a separate digital gauge, buy one before the first paddle. The cheap pump-mounted gauges read low by 1–2 psi, which means you'll either underinflate (boat feels squishy) or overinflate (potential damage).

2. Skim the inflation steps

Don't memorize them — just know that the boat inflates in one chamber (single-chamber AirTrek construction) to 10–12 psi. The gauge tells you when you're there.

At the launch

1. Lay the boat out flat

Open the rolled hull on flat ground — a clean tarp, dock, sand, grass. Avoid sharp gravel and concrete with embedded rocks.

2. Inflate to 10–12 psi

  • Connect the pump to the inflation valve
  • Pump until the gauge reads 10 psi
  • Continue topping off to 12 psi
  • Trust a real digital gauge. Don't trust the pump's built-in dial if it's a basic pump — they're often inaccurate by 1–2 psi.

Typical inflation time with a decent dual-action pump: 6–10 minutes. You're working harder at the very top of the pressure range — that's normal, and that's why you want a good pump.

3. Visual check at pressure

Walk around the boat. The deck should feel firm — like a real floor, not a bounce house. The sides should be uniformly hard. If there's a soft spot anywhere, top off a bit more or check for a slow leak before launching.

4. Install the drive

If you're running the Traverse Pedal Drive:

  • Drop the drive into the molded socket on the Highlander
  • Confirm it seats fully
  • Lock the drive's retention mechanism
  • The drive bolts in the same way it does on a rigid Cajo

If you're running a fin drive (Hobie MD 180, Pelican, Vibe Hero 2.0-era, Lightning Kayaks):

  • Install the Highlander Fin Drive Mount Kit first (this is the inflatable-specific kit, different from the rigid Fin Drive Adapter)
  • Mount the kit per the included instructions
  • Drop the fin drive into the kit's socket
  • Lock per the drive's own retention

Hobie 360 isn't compatible. Hobie's ePDL+ is unconfirmed (we haven't tested it yet).

5. Set the seat / perch

The Highlander runs the Horizon Elevated Seat Perch — not the Horizon Pro Seat (Pro is rigid-line; on an inflatable, the Pro footprint doesn't seat well).

  • Place the perch on the deck in the seat zone
  • Use the included straps / D-rings to secure it
  • Set the seat back angle to a middle position for the first paddle

6. Install the rudder (if your kit includes one)

The rudder comes as a separate kit on Highlander inflatables (rigid models include it standard). If you ordered the rudder kit:

  • Install the bracket per the included instructions
  • Clip the steering cables and pull-up cord
  • Test the deploy and the foot pedals before launch

7. Load gear before launching

Tackle, drybags, rods, electronics. Loading from dry ground is easier than from the water.

On the water

1. First paddle

Get in the boat with the drive stowed, paddle out into open water. Get a feel for the hull at pressure — drop-stitch construction makes the boat feel surprisingly stiff, but it's still an inflatable. Hull balance is different from a rigid.

2. Deploy the drive

Once you're in open water and balanced:

  • Drop the prop or fins into the deployed position
  • Start pedaling gently — a slow ramp-up for the first 30 seconds
  • The Traverse Drive indexer should set; the fin drive should engage smoothly
  • Build cadence

If the Traverse prop sits at 45° when the indexer engages instead of vertical, that's a defect — stop, take a photo, file the claims form. See Troubleshooting your Traverse Pedal Drive.

3. Try the rudder

If you installed a rudder, deploy it via the pull-up cord and test foot steering left and right.

4. Standing on the AirTrek

Yes, you can stand on the Highlander. The drop-stitch deck is stiffer than people expect — but it's not the same as a rigid HDPE deck. For your first stand:

  • Pedal to a stop
  • Hands on the gear tracks
  • Stand up gradually, weight centered
  • Don't lock your knees — keep a slight bend, ride the small flex
  • Sit back down before you get tired

The Highlander 100's smaller footprint feels less stable standing than the 120 or 140T. Build confidence over a few outings before you commit to fishing standing all day.

5. Watch for pressure changes

A hot day can raise internal pressure as the air heats up. If you launched at 12 psi cold and now it's 90°F and full sun, the boat may be over-pressure. Crack the valve briefly to let pressure off if it feels overinflated.

At the end of the day

1. Rinse if you were in salt

Hose down the hull, the drive, the rudder, the perch — anything that touched salt. Salt sitting in moving parts is what kills drives.

2. Pack-down

  • Deflate — open the valves, let the air out
  • Once mostly flat, fold along natural seams or roll from one end to the other
  • Don't fold creases at pressure — let pressure drop first
  • Pack the seat, drive, accessories separately
  • Store the bag dry — don't bag a wet hull

3. Storage

  • Dry, rolled (not creased)
  • Out of direct sunlight long-term
  • Storage pressure of ~5 psi is fine if you're storing inflated short-term
  • Don't store at full 12 psi long-term — that's a stressor on the seams

See Maintaining your Cajo — wash, store, off-season for the long-term storage version.

Rider height note

The Highlander has a minimum rider height for comfortable pedaling — the Slide Lock pedal range and the seat geometry don't accommodate riders shorter than the rigid-line lineup's range starts at. See Minimum height for Highlander AirTrek pedal for the current spec.

What to do if something feels off

File the claims form at caminojourney.com/pages/claims-form. Inflation issues, drive issues, missing parts — all run through the same path. We replace at $0 for any known-issue pattern.

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