canoe livery

{{Short description|Business that rents canoes or kayaks}}

Image:Canoe rental Lake Louise Flickr 117383997 4ad08ae6d6 o.jpg, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada. Note the numbers for tracking]]

A canoe livery or canoe rental is a business engaged in the boat livery (or rental) of canoes or kayaks. It is typically found on or near streams, rivers, or lakes that provide good recreational opportunities."A typical livery business will be on a small river with just enough current that the canoes will move along without having to paddle a lot"{{cite web|url=http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles/spetla46.html|title=A canoe livery--an honest, clean business|work=Backwoods Home|author=Harry Spetla|access-date=December 24, 2006}}Spetla 1998 A related but dissimilar business is a boat rental business, which is often distinguished by renting powered or sail craft and by not having a provision for return from a remote location. Such liveries can be found worldwide, wherever there are sufficient tourists or locals to support the activities.

Image:Canoe Livery Thornapple River Dscn0195crop.jpg

File:Canoe carrier Dordogne.jpg

Business operations

=Services=

Rental of the watercraft and associated equipment paddles, life preservers and the like, is the basic service provided. Some optional extras offered may include liability insurance, transport of the craft back to the livery at the end of the journey, provision of a guide, or organised group outings. Some liveries rent other unpowered boats like rowboats, paddleboats (pedalos) or inflatable boats. Others also rent paddleboards and tubes. Liveries may also provide watercraft classes or training. The livery may provide camping facilities to support multi-day trips. The livery often will sell ancillary supplies (sunscreen, sunglasses, clothing, water bottles, maps and books) as an adjunct to the business. Foam blocks or chocks, and rope may be sold or provided to enable car-top transport.Spetla 1998

=Equipment=

In addition to the craft themselves, the livery will often have one or more vehicles or trailers fitted out with special racks to enable transport of many craft efficiently. These vehicles can be quite large, holding as many as 20 craft or more. This is because usually the customers travel downstream from the livery and at the end of the journey, some provision for return must be made. Small liveries may have as few as four boats in their fleet, while large ones may have over one thousand.

=Location=

Typically, the actual rivers or lakes used are not the property of the livery (most such are held in common in most jurisdictions). In some cases, the put in, and take out, locations, may be owned by the livery, but it is common that these are owned by a park or recreation authority and the livery operates there, with or without permits, a term known as "granting a concession".

=Liability=

Canoeing and kayaking are sports that inherently have some risk. Typically, this risk is offloaded to the customer by having them execute a waiver. However some operators offer coverage to renters. In addition, there may be lawsuits filed against operators, despite any waivers. Specialised insurance does exist for this risk.{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1145/is_5_40/ai_n13810190|title=Whitewater woes: paddling through the river rental business can be challenging for any agency|work= FindArticles > Publications > Free > News & Society > Parks & Recreation > May, 2005 Note: Article accessed via FindArticles.com|access-date=December 24, 2006 | first=Robert B. | last=Kauffman | year=2005}} The liability issue may impact the park or recreation agency that has granted a concession to the livery.

Economic impact

Precise figures for the number of these businesses may be difficult to come by. The United States Economic CensusUS Economic Census - {{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/econ/census02/data/industry/E532292.HTM|author=United States Census Bureau|author-link=United States Census Bureau|access-date=December 24, 2006|title=recreational goods data, 2002|work=United States Economic Census, 2002|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080321013652/http://www.census.gov/econ/census02/data/industry/E532292.HTM|archive-date=March 21, 2008|url-status=dead}} tracks down to the Recreational Goods Rental level only,(category 532292 )which the Economic census thus defines: This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in renting recreational goods, such as bicycles, canoes, motorcycles, skis, sailboats, beach chairs, and beach umbrellas. - US Economic Census category definition [https://www.census.gov/econ/census02/naics/sector53/532292.htm page] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130605020623/http://www.census.gov/econ/census02/naics/sector53/532292.htm |date=2013-06-05 }} and canoe livery is a subclass of this category. As of 2002, the category had 1,757 establishments employing at least one employee, with revenue of US$521,783,000 and a payroll of US$126,376,000 covering 7,416 people.US Economic Census At least 344 such businesses exist in the US,based on listings in the {{cite web|url=http://www.dmoz.org/Sports/Water_Sports/Canoeing_and_Kayaking/Regional/North_America/United_States/

|title=Sports: Water Sports: Canoeing and Kayaking: Regional: North America: United States page|work=DMOZ business directory|access-date=December 24, 2006|author=Open Directory Project|author-link=Open Directory Project}} and there possibly may be many more.

See also

References

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