Canoe Dry Bag
When you’re loading a canoe, your gear is only as safe as the bag that carries it. A canoe dry bag isn’t optional—it’s the one barrier between a soaked sleeping bag and a solid night’s rest. AquaQuest builds bags that have been dragged across portage trails, dropped in rapids, and trusted on long expeditions. From compact 10L sacks for essentials to 100L haulers for full camp systems, every bag is dual-coated, fully waterproof, and sealed with a roll-top you can trust under pressure. This collection pulls together the Rogue line—bags proven tough enough for whitewater, bushcraft, and weeks off-grid.


When you paddle, your bag takes more abuse than your boat. Portage scrapes, gear shuffles, wet landings—this is daily life on a trip. That’s why every Rogue canoe dry bag uses heavy-duty dual-coated fabric, heat-taped seams, and a stadium-shaped base for balance. They’re not “splash-proof.” They’re built to handle flips, storms, and being dragged across rock.
Built for Canoe Travel
SHOP DRY BAG


Every canoeist packs different, so the line runs from 10L to 100L. Small bags swallow maps, electronics, and first-aid. Mid-range sizes (20L–30L) hold clothing and food. The 60L and 100L keep sleeping kits and full basecamp gear dry. Sets (2-pc and 3-pc) make sense when you want redundancy and easy load distribution.
Proven Sizes for Real Loads
SHOP DRY BAG


Weight still matters on portage. Rogue dry bags run from just 5.3 oz to 14.6 oz, so you’re not hauling extra grams just to keep your gear safe.
Every closure is a roll-down system that seals tight, even in whitewater. Lightweight doesn’t mean fragile—these bags have survived multi-week trips where failure wasn’t an option.
Ultralight but Ruthless on Durability
SHOP DRY BAG


Whether you’re soloing a remote northern route or running class IV water with friends, gear failure is unacceptable. A canoe dry bag is more than storage—it’s the line between comfort and survival. Rogue bags float when sealed correctly, and they carry a lifetime warranty because the field is the only real test.
Field Use: Bushcraft to Whitewater
SHOP DRY BAG
FAQ
Yes. When rolled and sealed correctly, the Rogue dry bags trap air and will float, keeping gear recoverable.
Pack smaller bags for quick-grab essentials (10–20L) and larger ones (60–100L) for bulk items. Spreading gear across multiple bags makes portaging easier.
They are designed for short-term submersion in rapids or capsizes. For extended underwater storage, keep them sealed and avoid sharp abrasion.
For small valuables (phone, wallet, keys), 5–10L works well. For clothes and sleeping gear, 20–30L is common. Large expeditions or shared gear may call for 40L+. Always size up if in doubt — it’s easier to carry extra space than to squeeze gear.