Werner Cyprus Carbon 2-Piece Paddle - Bent Shaft for Sale, Reviews, Deals and Guides

8.0
out of 10
2 Positive, 1 Mixed & 0 Negative
from 3 Reviews
Retail Price:
$490.00
Used Value:
$294.00
Sale Value:
$441.00

If your paddling style is about high-angle, fast-paced strokes and quick bracing maneuvers, check out the Werner Cyprus 2-Piece Bent Shaft Paddle. Werner made the blades with a carbon weave and foam for a lightweight, buoyant feel on the water.

Specifications

Brand:
Blade Length:
18in
Blade Material:
carbon weave with foam
Blade Width:
7in
Claimed Weight:
1lb 9.5oz
Feather Angle:
Smart View adjustable
Manufacturer Warranty:
1 year
Paddling Style:
high angle
Recommended Use:
touring
Shaft Material:
carbon
Shaft Shape:
bent
Two-Piece:
yes, collapsible

Full Reviews

10
As a professional sea kayaking instructor for the past 20 years, I've tried tons of different paddles. Hands down my favorite is the Cyprus. Over the past six years or so, it's been my go-to paddle for all but the roughest surf and rock garden conditions (when I instead grab my burly, Werner Stikine). As someone who puts in literally hundreds of thousands of strokes each year, a premium paddle is well worth its weight in ibuprophen! I find the light weight of the Cyprus is easy on my aging joints, while the high-performance blade shape--with its foam-core "flotation"--is excellent for everything from touring to surfing to smoothly linking strokes to rolling. For me and the majority of my students, the "mid-size" high-angle blade style is a perfect compromise of power and versatility. While larger blades do provide a bit more support for bracing and rolling, they also take more muscle for simply paddling; thinner "touring" blades are easy on the arms for churning out the miles, but lack power and performance for maneuvering and bracing. The mid-size Cyprus nails the Goldilocks Zone of "Just Right" for just about everything I do. Care and Durability: I don't baby my gear (tools, not jewels) but do take modest precautions or switch to a beefier blade when paddling around rocks or when the surf starts to reach double overhead (to a seated kayaker ;-) I've gotten years of mostly trouble-free use from my Cyprus. It is important to regularly rinse the adjustable ferrule in fresh water and lubricate it to keep the button from getting sticky, especially if you paddle primarily in salt water as I do. If the button gets gritty, I shove the nozzle of a garden hose into the end and blast the grit out, then let it dry and spritz a little 303 into the mechanism a couple times a year. This seems to keep it happy.
Roger Schumann, backcountry.com
August 9, 2016
4
The paddle is very light, low swing weight, feels nice in your hands. Super efficient. It paddles like a dream, the blades have a smooth shape that cuts through the water if your skilled with linking strokes. The downside?...the price and the fact that you will feel really bad when you hit a sharp rock on the bottom and put a chip in your really expensive fancy paddle. If your the type of person that pushes off shore with your paddle, or that may bounce your paddle off a rocky bottom, then this paddle is not for you.
Betty G., backcountry.com
September 22, 2014
10
I bought the Cyprus after having my Camano snap in two during a surf session. I'd used a friend's Cyprus on a 22 mile trip in the Everglades and was impressed by how much easier it was to use. I wasn't sure about the bent shaft, but its very comfortable to use and I feel less stress on my wrists. I'd buy another as a backup.
Bill Weinkle, backcountry.com
April 17, 2013