;Pre-1900 • There is controversial evidence to suggest early trans-Atlantic kayak journeys from Labrador or Greenland to Scotland by Inuit paddlers. At the end of the 17th century there were at least three separate kayaks preserved in Scotland. One kayak, with associated equipment, is preserved in Aberdeen's
Marischal Museum. It was found, with dying occupant, on a nearby shore. Some suggest the occupants were escaped Inuit from European ships, Inuit storm-driven from Greenland, or from a European source. Many suggest Inuit and their kayaks to be the origin of the Celtic
Finn-men, or
Selkie, legends. • Modern sea kayaking traces its origins back to
John MacGregor (sportsman), credited with the development of the first sailing canoes and with popularizing canoeing as a sport in Europe and the United States. The boat he designed (named the Rob Roy) was inspired by the Northern American kayaks. From 1866 to 1869, MacGregor chronicled the first modern sea kayaking expeditions within three publications:
A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe (1866);
The Rob Roy on the Baltic (1867); and
The Rob Roy on the Jordan (1869). • From 1874-1875, American explorer and writer Nathaniel Holmes Bishop paddled 2500 Miles from Quebec to the Gulf of Mexico in a self-designed canoe very similar to MacGregor's Rob Roy and the North American kayak. This journey was chronicled in his book
Voyage of the Paper Canoe (1878). ;1920s •
Franz Romer crossed the Atlantic Ocean solo in a fabric skin-covered kayak in 1928. His crossing from the
Canary Islands to
Puerto Rico took 58 days at sea but he was lost in a hurricane trying to get to New York journey (1932-1939) from Germany to Australia ;1930s •
Oskar Speck was a German canoeist who kayaked from Germany to Australia between 1932 and 1939. Speck paddled approximately 30,000 miles over seven years and four months. •
Alastair Dunnett and James Adam kayaked from Glasgow to Skye Scotland in 1934. Their journey is chronicled in the book
Quest by Canoe: Glasgow to Skye (1950), republished in 1969 as ''It's Too Late in the Year
, and again in 1995 as The Canoe Boys: From the Clyde Past the Cuillins''. ;1950s •
J. Lewis Henderson kayaked the Scottish coastline as documented in his book
Kayak to Cape Wrath (1951). •
Hannes Lindemann sailed an Aerius II kayak across the Atlantic from the
Canary Islands to the Caribbean in 1956. Documented in the book
Alone at Sea. ;1960s • Anne and Hamish Gow made the first kayak crossing from
North Uist to
St Kilda, Scotland in 1965. The Gows took film footage of the trip which was screened at the
Edinburgh Mountain Film Festival in 2011. • John Dowd kayaked from the
South China Sea to Indonesia in 1969. ;1970s •
Derek Hutchinson was the first to cross the
North Sea in 1976. After several near-death failures he finally managed it in 31 hours. The kayak used in the crossing is today located in the
National Maritime Museum Cornwall. •
Nigel Foster and Geoff Hunter were the first to circumnavigate
Iceland in 1977. Foster recounts this journey in his book
Iceland by Kayak (2023) •
Frank Goodman was the first to circumnavigate
Cape Horn in 1977. •
Paul Caffyn was the first person to circumnavigate the
South Island of New Zealand in the summer of 1977/78. He describes it in his book
Obscured by Waves. •
Paul Caffyn was the first person to circumnavigate the
North Island of New Zealand in the summer of 1978/79. He describes it in his book
Cresting the Restless Waves. • Derek Hairon, Franco Ferrero and John Bouteloup were the first to circumnavigate
Ireland in 1978 • Earle Bloomfield and John Brewster were the first to circumnavigate
Tasmania in 1979. ;1980s •
Paul Caffyn and Nigel Dennis were the first sea kayakers to circumnavigate Great Britain in 1980, a distance of in 85 days. • Jim Breen, Gus Mathieson, Bill Turnbull and Peter Wilson completed the first circumnavigation of the
Vesteralen and
Lofoten Islands in Arctic Norway in 1980 including the dual crossing of the Maelstrom (
Moskenstraumen) the largest whirlpool area in the world. The Scottish Maritime Museum in Irvine retains a kayak and range of equipment used. •
Nigel Foster paddled solo crossing
Hudson Strait from Baffin Island to northern Labrador in 1981. Foster's book
On Polar Tides (2016) recounts both his 1981 voyage and his 2004 return to the northern Labrador coast. •
Paul Caffyn was the first person to circumnavigate Australia in 1981/82 covering a distance of . He describes it in his book
The Dreamtime Voyage (1994). •
Laurie Ford paddled solo (sail assisted) across
Bass Strait in 1982. • David Taylor and James Moore were the first to circumnavigate
The Faroe Islands in 1985. • Brian Wilson rounded Scotland's main coastline (including the inner and outer
Hebrides) on a solo trip lasting over 4 months in 1985. Described in his book
Blazing Paddles (1989). • Earle Bloomfield, Larry Gray, Rob Casamento, and Graeme Joy paddled northwards across
Bass Strait in 1986. (Note that the northward crossing is more difficult than the southward.) • Bill Taylor, Richard Elliott, and Mick Wibrew accomplished between April and September 1986 the first circumnavigation by kayak of both Britain and Ireland. Their journey is chronicled in the book
Commitment and Open Crossings (1992) by Bill Taylor. •
Ed Gillet paddled for 63 days from San Diego, California, to Maui, Hawaii, on a 2,200 mile route in 1987. Gillet's story is told in the book
The Pacific Alone (2018) by Dave Shively. •
Howard Rice accomplished a solo circumnavigation around
Cape Horn in 1989. ;1990s •
Rebecca Ridgway was the first woman to circumnavigate
Cape Horn in 1992. Her journey is chronicled in her book
Something Amazing: Cape Wrath to Cape Horn by Way of Peru (1993). • Michael Herman kayaked from
Thunder Bay (Ontario) to Toronto Canada in 1994, described in his book
No Roads to Follow: Kayaking the Great Lakes Solo (2011). • Adventurer
Chris Duff circumnavigated Ireland in 1996. Duff's journey was chronicled in his book
On Celtic Tides (1999). ;2000s • Jon Turk and his team were the first to cross the
Bering Strait as they paddled from Japan to Alaska in 2000. Turk writes about the expedition in his book
In the Wake of the Jomon (2005). • Ken Campbell circumnavigated
Newfoundland in Canada in 2000. His book
Around the Rock (2004) describes the journey. •
Chris Duff circumnavigated New Zealand's
South Island in 2000. Detailed in his book
Southern Exposure (2003). •
Peter Bray crossed the Atlantic Ocean solo from Canada to Ireland in 2001. Deatiled in his book
Kayak Across the Atlantic (2015). • Trys Morris, Gemma Rawlings and Justine Curgenven successfully circumnavigated
Tasmania in 2004. This journey is featured in the documentary film
This Is The Sea 2 (2006). •
Fiona Whitehead circumnavigated Great Britain and Ireland in 2004 in 93 paddling days, 140 days in total. • In May 2004,
Mark Western completed the first solo circumnavigation of
Taiwan in 34 days. • Harry Whelan, Barry Shaw and Phil Clegg are considered to have been the fastest around Great Britain in 2005, completing the circumnavigation in 80 days. • In November 2005 the first kayak circumnavigation of
South Georgia in the Southern Atlantic was completed by The Adventure Philosophy team of Graham Charles, Marcus Waters and Mark Jones in 18 days, a distance of 600 km. •
Eric Stiller and Tony Brown unsuccessfully attempted circumnavigation of
Australia. The trip ended in failure roughly a third of the way through. Described in the book
Keep Australia on your left (2002). •
Rotem Ron completed the first solo kayak circumnavigation of Iceland in 2006. The following year in 2007,
Freya Hoffmeister and Greg Stamer also circumnavigated Iceland achieving the fastest time. • In 2008, Justin Jones and James Castrission (
Cas and Jonesy) kayaked 3318 km across the
Tasman Sea from Australia to New Zealand, becoming the first people to cross the Tasman Sea from Australia to New Zealand in a kayak. The journey took a total of 60 days, 20 hours and 50 minutes for crossing. •
Freya Hoffmeister achieves the fastest circumnavigation of
South Island New Zealand in 2008. • American kayaker
Marcus Demuth completed the first solo circumnavigation of the
Falkland Islands on January 26, 2009. The trip took 22 Days, with 4 days off (Jan 5th to Jan 26th, 2009). Distance covered: 639 miles. • In July 2009, Patrick Winterton and Mick Berwick completed the first unsupported kayak crossing from Scotland to the
Faroe Islands. •
Freya Hoffmeister successfully circumnavigated Australia in 2009. Her journey is chronicled in the book "Fearless: One Woman, One Kayak, One Continent" by Joe Glickman (2012) ;2010s • Polish kayaker
Aleksander Doba made three Atlantic solo crossings: 2010-2011 from Africa to Brazil; 2014 from Portugal to Florida; and 2017 from New Jersey to France. • In 2011 Jon Turk and Erik Boomer successfully circumnavigated
Ellesmere Island (Canada) • From 2011-2015
Freya Hoffmeister completed her second continent circumnavigation of South America. This accomplishment in detailed in her book
Cape Horn is Not a Gift (2023). • In 2012 Joe Leach set the record for fastest solo circumnavigation of Great Britain in 67 days. (2012) • In 2014 Justine Curgenven and Sarah Outen completed a 1500 mile journey along the
Aleutian Islands (Alaska). The documentary film
Kayaking the Aleutians (2015) captures this accomplishment. • Russell Henry and Graham Henry kayaked from Brazil to Florida in 2014 • In 2015 Jaime Sharp, Tara Mulvany, and Per Gustav Porsanger circumnavigate the
Svalbard Archipelago (Norway) •
Freya Hoffmeister circumnavigates Ireland in 2016. And from 2017-2025 she successfully circumnavigates her third continent of North America. This journey is chronicled in ''My Third Continent: The North 'Island''' (5 Volumes) • Scott Donaldson completes the first solo kayak crossing of the
Tasman Sea in 2018. This journey is detailed in
Relentless: The First Person to Solo Kayak the Tasman (2019) == See also ==