Prelude

The Prelude is a short responsive boat with lots of volume that evolved from Frankie Hubbard’s Ocoee. It was originally molded by Pyranha but is now rotomolded by Esquif in Canada. It has more speed than the Spanish Fly and Taureau and is very dry. It has the performance of the shorter creek boats but … Continued

Vertige Adventure

The first solo model offered by Esquif, the Vertige is lively and responsive. Its carrying capacity makes it a logical choice for solo canoe camping. This confidence-inspiring hull is a good learning platform for novices and provides intermediates with the speed and stability necessary for white water wilderness trips. The ADVENTURE option has a central … Continued

Spanish Fly (Lite and SuperLite)

The Spanish Fly is a Frankie Hubbard design for whitewater freestyle and creek boating. It has a planing hull that makes surfing and flat-spins easy. The short length and extreme rocker allow great boofs and sharp turn on creeks. It is slightly wider than the Taureau with slicier ends for whitewater play. It is rotomolded … Continued

Mallard XL

Paddle, row, or motor to your favorite fishing or hunting spotthis square stern canoe is wide and stable for casting, yet efficient for all day cruising. The T-Formex material, vinyl gunwales and comfortable webbed seats are the perfect blend of performance, durability with lightness. Paddle on lakes, rocky rivers and salt marshes with 100% confidence. … Continued

Excite

The Excite is a larger and more refined version of the Esquif Extasy. With a fairly narrow arched bow section, flat middle, and a dramatic kick rocker in the stern the Excite is designed to be much faster than you would expect a 9’5” boat to be. Lean forward for speed, stay centered for stability, … Continued

Echo

With its beautiful curves and elegant design the Echo will definitely catch your attention. In addition to its unique look, one thing you will surely notice when you paddle it is how easy it is to maneuver. “The Echo is a canoe I can dance with on flat water or take down class II rivers … Continued

Close video panel