Do you want to improve your canoe technique? With
that thought, here are some pointers...
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For River Rapid Canoe Running -
"Kneeling Position" - drop to your knees, and brace them in
the boat corners. Use your toes, and your legs as you pull the
side of the canoe, and control the canoe with your lower body this
way. It also drops your center of gravity too, so helps with
your balance. This can also cause a an uncomfortable feeling.
You can use this position when you feel it will help, or pad your boat
for a more comfortable feel while on your knees. (This is for
those that can still do this, of course).
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J Stroke - (from the back of the canoe)
This is a canoe paddling technique that will allow you to keep the
paddle on one side of the boat, and steering the boat with the way you
finish your stroke. Start by reaching forward and pulling
water. From there, about half way through your paddling stroke,
twist the paddle and finish the stroke by pushing away from the stern
or rear of the canoe. When you paddle from the right hand, you
will pull the boat to the left. by pushing away from the stern
of the boat, it will correct the boat direction and keep it going
straight. The stroke looks like a J, thus called a j
stroke. Play with the push out pressure, and you will see that
you can pick your direction with the final effort in your canoe
paddling stroke.
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Reverse J Stroke - This works the same
as above, but you will be wanting to exaggerate your turn instead of canceling
your turn in the Standard J. Through the stroke, do
the same as above, but start by pulling water with your paddle stroke
leaving a little room between paddle and boat. As you go through
your paddle stroke, twist the paddle and pull water under the stern as
you complete the stroke. This will make a turn to the opposite
side that you are paddling from, example right handed stroke on the
right side of the boat, and desiring to turn left. The reverse J
is typically used for light steering, as the sweep stroke would be
used for more aggressive turning efforts.
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Pry Stroke - This is what it is, a
prying action against the side of the canoe. Play around in flat
water, and while sitting solo in the most center seat of the boat,
typically the front seat, plant the paddle in the water against the
side of the boat and angle the blade to run with the boat. (parallel).
Then pry away from the side of the boat. You can push the boat
effectively, making harder turns. In flat water, it helps to
hold the canoe "on edge". This works best with some rocker
in your boat and no keel ridge style canoe, you can really spin
her!
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Sweep stroke - Just as it sounds, it is
a sweeping action of the paddle for hard direction turning or spinning
the canoe. Plant the paddle near the bow, and with a body
action, sweep the paddle stroke through the water, with a wide radius,
keeping the full blade in the water, and sweep the water around wide
and then to the stern. Pull the paddle early enough as it will
push under the boat and look clumsy. We wouldn't want
that! A tip for successful movement of the boat, imagine in your
mind first, that you are moving the boat to the paddle. Spin the
boat to the paddle, not just pull water. Then as you execute
your paddle strokes, allow the body to help "twist, jump, or
swiftly slide the canoe" to the direction you want it.
Sweep strokes can be used very effectively in most cases, running
rivers, turning your boat with forward thrust, as well as holding your
canoe on edge and sweeping the canoe around rapidly in a stillwater
move.
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Holding your canoe on edge - This is an
exercise that helps you know where your secondary stability is.
While sitting in the front seat backwards (reversing your boat to do
this), drop to your knees, then brace your knees and feet, thighs,
everything you got as you spread your legs against the sides of the
canoe. Toes against the corner of the canoe, and heels towards
each other. This position drops your center of gravity,
improving your balance, as well as bracing and holding the canoe with
your lower body. You will be on the front edge of the
seat. Great position for river running! For holding the
boat on edge, lean the canoe to one side carefully not tipping over,
and find that secondary stability that the canoe will show. You
will feel it, a stopping point when the boat is leaned. Use your
position in the canoe, sliding to that side, and standing on that hip
and knee, keeping head over the center of your balance line.
"Stand on your hip." Find that spot where your canoe
gets stable again! That is your secondary stability. Now
try sweep strokes, pry strokes. On hard edge, your canoe takes
on a different shape, again depending on your style of canoe for
success. When leaned, the sides make it round and gets the ends
up out of the water a little. The boat will turn too when
paddling, as it will ride one side of the boat with more drag.
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Rapid slide - Maneuvering a "rapid bend"
on a river is easy once you figure out how to do that power slide around the
rapid bend. Pick your boat angle first. You will see that
you are sideways to the current, but as you start to paddle forward,
you will head that direction to that side of the current. As the
current of the river pushes you towards the outside of the bend, accelerate
through the rapid bend and slide around that corner you are going
through. If your angle is too tight, you will spin out in the
inside of the bend. If your angle is not tight enough, you will
"hit the outside" of the bend. If you let off the
paddle pressure or "gas", you will hit the outside of the
bend also, so pick your angle, accelerate with your paddle strokes as
you slide around the bend, holding that right angle to get you
properly around that river rapid bend. Again do not let off the
power as you slide around the river corner. If you make it safely
around that rapid bend but spin out at the end, make sure you
straighten out your angle soon enough to follow that wave train right
on out of the river rapid bend. You are safe where you spin out,
so you did 99 percent of the maneuver correctly, but gets frustrating
having to back the boat out to restart back down the river. If
you straighten the boat out early enough through this exercise, you
will follow that wave train out of the river rapid bend. You'll
head right on down the river like a real pro.
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Rudder steer your canoe - I once
paddled with a Cajun in a pirogue, a very flat and low profile canoe
with what appeared to me knowing how boat geometry effects the way the
boat handles, to have no tracking whatsoever. The
technique that was used that I have used ever since is the paddle
never left the water. After the last paddle stroke of a set, he
would grip the gunwale, (pronounced gunnel) or the side of the boat
with the paddle shaft braced to that point. Then as he steered
the boat with a push or pull of the handle against the side of the
boat, the flat and short pirogue would steer with any flex and
twist. This technique will stop that boat from wandering a lot,
especially if you have a canoe with rocker or curve from front to
back.
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Draw stroke - reach way out to the side
and with paddle parallel to the canoe, pull water towards the
boat. will pull the boat towards
the direction you are pulling water from. If done from the
front and back of the boat in a tandem or two person situation, you
will pull water directly towards the boat with the paddle, and as each
person does this you can pull yourself to shore in a sideways slide
fashion.
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Sculling - As you start the draw
stroke, make the paddle a more horizontal. We are not going to
pull the boat this time. This time lay the paddle on the top of
the water and let the tip sink. Now start twisting back and
forth in a figure 8, even motions of angles, and try to "catch
water" with each twist. There is a technique that when you
find this feeling, you can skull and pull your boat sideways very
easily. This is a stillwater maneuver.
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Bracing - It is common to brace
yourself against the paddle and use that as a crutch. When you
get the feel of your paddle and know the pressures that are applied,
you can feel the benefits of leaning against this as you balance
yourself. A near fall can be stopped by applying downward
pressure as the paddle hits the water surface in a flat way.
With a strong bracing technique, a solo paddler with have much greater
ability with the stability. It is not hard, just lay your paddle
flat out on the water and you can lean on it to catch yourself!
Recover quick, but you do have some time. This is a real common
technique used in kayaks because of the low body position and long
paddle.
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Learn to ferry your boat. Park
your boat on a shore where the current is easy, with the front of the
boat pointing upstream. Then as you angle your boat, pretend
your boat is like a wind sail, and the river water is now wind.
Angle the boat slightly, and with lower side paddle strokes, control
your angle carefully as you cross that stream in that current.
If it wants to push you out and down stream you have too much angle,
straighten your angle to the water, then gently correct your angle to
get across that stream with the speed and control you desire.
Faster water requires slight angles, and slower water requires greater
angles to the current. Do this in easy and slow rapids first,
and get the hang of it. This exercise will teach you about the
dynamics of the water more than any other paddling exercise we
know. Then when you are sitting by the current at the beach and
your boat keeps wanting to get pushed, remember your angle and you can
now see what the boat is wanting to do just because of your angle to
the water.
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Hooking eddys on the river. When
you come down through a rapid you will see on the inside of the stream
a water line, where the fast water meets the slow water in the
eddy. These pools on the inside of rapid bends are called eddy
lines, or eddy pools. When you point and cross that eddy line,
lean into your curve like you are on a bicycle, ready to do a
corner. Lean with your hips, keeping your head over the the
center of the boat as much as possible. Also keep your focus up,
so you are balancing your head and shoulders to the horizon as you
cross the line. Throw your hips into the outside of that curve
you are about to do, as when you cross that eddy line, it will want to
throw you out. Swing through that eddy line with a little hip
action, and lean in towards the inside of your curve. This takes
practice, and you run the risk of a spill. Do this where it is
safe to practice, on an easy eddy, so you can get the feel for the
technique. The same goes for reentering the current from the
eddy. Again you are crossing the eddy line, and you will want to
lean into the curves slightly. Play around in eddys, as that
again will give you the feel for the dynamics of the river, and
hopefully give you more skills as this is practiced in easy places, so
you have more control in the tougher situations, and are not caught by
surprise as the currents want to push you around.
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For the case of this short canoe
paddling technique piece, the last thing to really remember is,
"do not lean upstream! I have seen many times cases on the
river whereby a pair of paddlers in a canoe will come up to an obstacle
sideways, and they will lean upstream to avoid hitting the obstacle
with their bodies. This is not where the threat is. The
threat is behind them, the water coming at them! It is indeed
counter intuitive. If you come upon a large rock sideways for
example, remember to lean towards the rock and away from the water
coming at you, from behind you. Drop to the knees locking
yourself in the boat and lowering your center of gravity. When
you come upon the large rock and hit it, grab the rock, and push your
way around the rock either forward or backward, and let the water
carry you around that rock. You also would want to lift the high
side of the canoe a little, the side where the water is coming at you,
and the boat will surf or attempt to surf that water, as you slide it
around the rock. Keep your head up, keep your center of balance,
as you do this maneuver. This is not a recommended situation,
but can get you out of a bad one. Avoid all root wads!
Scout the river first if you are unsure. This means get out of
the boat at the top of the chute or channel, and walk it to see it.
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Remember, rocker for rivers, no rocker
for lakes. This is a boat selection tip when you want to buy
your boat. Rocker is the curve from front to back, bow to
stern. If the boat has rocker, it will wander more, but read
through this again and you will see the control technique for your
canoe that you will want to use. If the boat has no rocker, then
the current will push your boat ends around more, and make it more
difficult to ferry, more difficult to go through eddy lines, more
difficult to do rapid slides, as a rockered boat will respond better
with these techniques employed.
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Get good, is safe - The better you can
get at handling your boat, the safer you are! Easy first, then
get good at that. Then go to the next level if you choose
to. Improving your canoeing technique can be fun too!
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Learn what a throw bag is, learn
how to use them, practice the use of them, and wear your life jacket
or PFD every time! You might have confidence and think you do
not need one, then need to help your paddling partner. Most of
all, be careful out there! We need each and every one of you!
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