Paddleboard & kayak
The Gulf is not a paddleboard problem worth solving. The bay, the lagoons, and Old River are. Here's where to launch and where it's actually worth your time.
Where the paddling is good
- Big Lagoon State Park (FL): protected water, no chop, easy launch, great for first-timers and kids. Long enough that you can paddle for an hour and not have done a loop.
- Old River (between the bay and Ono Island): protected from the Gulf, light boat traffic on weekday mornings. Watch for the speed boats on weekend afternoons.
- Cotton Bayou (AL): tucked behind the Perdido Beach Boulevard condo wall. Calm, accessible from public ramps.
- The Pensacola Bay system: from Innerarity Point launches you can paddle for hours. Big water — be honest with yourself about your ability.
Where the paddling is not good
- The Gulf side of the Key. Surf is small most days but it's still surf. SUP in the Gulf is a thing experienced boarders do; it's not for "I want to try paddleboarding."
- Perdido Pass. Strong current, big boats, no place for a paddler.
- Anywhere on a south-wind day above 15 mph. Paddling against wind on flat water is misery; paddling against wind on chop is dangerous.
Rentals
Several outfitters in Orange Beach, Gulf Shores, and on Perdido Key Drive will deliver SUPs and kayaks to your condo or to a launch point. Day rates around $40-$70 for a paddleboard, $30-$50 for a single kayak, $50-$80 for a tandem. Multi-day rates discount sharply.
Most of the bigger watersports operators bundle SUP/kayak with a delivery fee and a return time. If you're at a condo on the bay side, the delivery model is the move — paddle from your dock or beach access.
Safety
- Wear a leash.
- PFD on the board (required by Coast Guard — type III counts on a SUP, type I better).
- Watch boat traffic. Most boat operators are watching for other boats, not you. Stay near the edges.
- Sunblock. A lot of it. The reflected light off the water doubles your dose.