I ordered a Wave Trailblazer 2-Seater Kayak on 12th June 2026, expecting it to arrive within the advertised standard delivery timeframe of 3–5 working days. Eleven days later, however, the order status on the company's website remains unchanged: "Order Confirmed – We're preparing these items for shipping."
At first, I assumed there had simply been a minor delay. But after contacting Wave Global Customer Support, things became even more confusing.
Several days after my initial enquiry, I received a vague response stating that the company was experiencing "fulfilment issues." Wanting to understand the situation, I replied and asked for clarification. The next response claimed the kayak was out of stock. This was surprising, considering the kayak was listed as available when I placed my order and paid for it. After pointing this out, I received yet another explanation: "Your order has been delayed."
At no point was a clear reason given for the delay, nor was any realistic delivery estimate provided. Instead, each communication seemed to contradict the last, leaving me with more questions than answers.
What makes the situation even more concerning is that I'm apparently not the only customer experiencing these problems.
Since sharing my experience online, several other people have contacted me asking whether I had received my kayak. They too had been in touch with Wave and were reportedly given entirely different explanations regarding their orders.
One customer became so frustrated with the lack of progress that he cancelled his order altogether. Another was offered a Navigator kayak as a replacement and agreed to the swap, only for that kayak never to arrive either. Eventually, he requested a refund.
When multiple customers are receiving conflicting information, it raises serious questions about what is actually happening behind the scenes. Is there a stock issue? A logistics problem? A supplier delay? Whatever the cause, customers deserve transparency and honest communication.
Having purchased kayaks from seven different companies over the years, I can honestly say I've never experienced anything quite like this. Delays can happen in any business, and most reasonable customers understand that. Products go out of stock, shipments get held up, and supply chains occasionally fail.
The real issue here is not necessarily the delay itself—it's the poor communication surrounding it.
Had Wave simply provided a straightforward and honest explanation from the beginning, my frustration would have been significantly reduced. Instead, customers appear to be receiving inconsistent information depending on who they speak to, creating uncertainty and damaging confidence in the company.
Good customer service is built on trust. When communication becomes vague, contradictory, or evasive, that trust quickly begins to disappear.
As things stand, I'm still waiting for an update and, more importantly, for the kayak itself.
If and when the Trailblazer eventually arrives, one section of my review video on YouTube is already guaranteed to be interesting: the customer service review.
At this point, the kayak will have to work very hard to make up for the experience that came before it.

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