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Dolphin Wipes Out Standup Paddle Boarder (Video)

Avid paddle boarder Andrew Hill was out catching some surf in Gracetown, Western Australia when he was hit off his board by an unruly dolphin.

The 56-year-old paddle boarder is no stranger to sharing a wave with these intelligent animals. So, when he noticed the pod of dolphins surrounding him, he simply assumed they were herding fish.

“Eight or nine of them decided to catch that wave and surf straight at me, which has happened lots of times in the past to me and generally they just take off to one side left or right,” he told Seven News Perth.

dolphins-line-up-before-one-hits-paddle-boarder

At 1:06 we see one dolphin break rank. It launches itself into the air–away from the group and directly into Hill’s side. “[It was a] Fairly legal hip and shoulder I think. And hats off to him, he collected me really well.”

Hill is thrown into the air and off his board. Luckily, he wasn’t seriously hurt during this event. He told Seven News Perth that he was only left a little winded.

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The incredible video was captured by Lucas Englert, as he prepared to film some surfers catch the wave.

“He was actually very happy because I don’t think he thought that anyone was actually going to believe his story – so now he’s got the proof,” said Englert.

How Cold Is Too Cold? Athlete SUPs On Frozen Ocean (Video)

cold-water-paddling-on-frozen-ocean

We’ve always enjoyed sipping back those gas station “slushies” during a long drive. The crunchy, icy texture and cooling sensation is quite the treat on a midsummer’s day. But fully immersing ourselves in said slushie—albeit flavorless—in the middle of winter? We’ll pass, thanks.

Casper Steinfath is a 27-year-old Danish Standup Paddleboarding athlete who doesn’t let the weather dictate his training schedule. Based on his online videos, it appears this paddler is out on the water whatever the weather—rain or shine. Paddling in partially frozen water is no exception to that rule.

Clad in thick neoprene and wearing an ear-to-ear smile, Steinfath set out to brave the partially frozen coaster waters and get some surf training in.

In the video, we see him charging over huge chunks of icy water in order to keep his momentum. At times, he even pulls big, snowman-sized balls of “slush” out of the water and rests them on his paddleboard. At other times, he dives in the water for a fully submerged dip in the icy waters.

As much as we admire and watch in awe at Steinfath’s extreme cold water paddling excursion, we can’t help but be reminded of the dangers of paddling in such temperatures. If you’re setting out on a winter’s paddle, make sure you are well-equipped with appropriate safety skills, knowledge, and cold water paddling gear.

Astral Athletes Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman Take Top Honors at Whitewater Awards

Astral Athletes Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman Take Top Honors at Whitewater Awards
Astral Athletes Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman Take Top Honors at Whitewater Awards

Asheville, NC – April 29, 2021 – Astral, manufacturer of award-winning PFDs and footwear, is proud to announce that their sponsored athletes, Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman, each took home top honors at the 2021 Whitewater Awards. Spanish kayaker Aniol Serrasolses won Male Rider of the Year, while Nouria Newman of France was named Female Rider of the Year.

Astral Athletes Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman Take Top Honors at Whitewater Awards| Photo courtesy of Aniol Serrasolses
Photo courtesy of Aniol Serrasolses

Newman claimed her fifth consecutive Rider of the Year title, capping an impressive year featuring four first descents, including the infamous Pakidaile, as well as Pucuno Falls in Ecuador (now called Don Wilo’s Falls), becoming the first woman ever to drop a 100-footer. For his part, Serrasolses spent countless hours on the river while locked down in Chile, and even built a cabin home on the Futaleufú. He continued to push the boundaries of downriver freestyle, including a snow kayaking project and the first-ever double kickflip off a waterfall.

Astral Athletes Aniol Serrasolses and Nouria Newman Take Top Honors at Whitewater Awards| Photo courtesy of Aniol Serrasolses
Photo courtesy of Aniol Serrasolses

“Nouria and Aniol–and all the finalists in this year’s awards–are truly incredible artists and athletes,” says Philip Curry, Founder & CEO of Astral. “This award rightly validates their archetypal status in the sport and we congratulate them for it! I know we at Astral are all mesmerized and inspired by their beautiful relationship with water.”

“I am stoked to receive the Rider of the Year award,” says Newman. “For me it shows the very best of whitewater kayaking and I couldn’t be happier to somehow be part of that. Every year it also forces me to look back at what I have done. It allows me to see the progress I have made in the last few years as well as what I want to improve and where I want to take my kayaking in the future.”

Photo courtesy of Eric Boomer & Red Bull
Photo courtesy of Eric Boomer & Red Bull

“It’s been a tough year of isolation down south in Chile but I am happy with the things I’ve been able to achieve,” says Serrasolses. “The snow kayak project and the first double kickflip in a kayak have been a dream of mine for a long time. Receiving the Rider of the Year award for the third time in my life feels like a huge accomplishment. I look forward to keep pushing the limits of what’s possible in a kayak.”

 

Kayaking A Dangerous Flooded “Slide” Into The Ocean (Video)

With mild temperatures year-round and no defined “rainy season”, an unexpected rainstorm can hit New Zealand’s South Island at any time. Eager locals Zack Mutton and Jeremy Norbury are on constant standby—armed with creek boats, paddles, rescue gear and good spirits—for when the storm hits and brings in some big water treats.

Luckily for this duo, the rains did come. And to the river they went. Their morning started with the “slide” on 9 Mile Creek in Greymouth on the South Island. The two paddlers scouted the slide and commented that it was high, “the kicker has gotten much bigger,” said Norbury in the video. As the rain continued to pour down while filming, he commented that it was still “pumping down” but it should be a “good day”.

A seemingly long bushwhack led them to the put-in for the run. The technicality of the run was apparent from the moment that they slid their boats into the fast-flowing, eddy-less river.

Other than the murky brown color, another characteristic of flooded waters is the inability to stop due to a lack of natural eddies. This, along with the unpredictability of potential new hazards brought in from the additional water (such as logs and other debris hung up in the river), can make kayaking in flooded waters a very dangerous affair, even for experienced paddlers.

Once the paddlers reached the natural slide on the river, it was non-stop “go time”. They stayed in the tongue of the flow as they battled to keep the noses of their boats facing downstream and on line. They soon reached the “kicker” towards the end of the slide and were subsequently launched into the air and thrown back down into the turbulent estuary below.

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After some exploratory paddling in and around the area in the days that followed, the kayakers finished their floodwater trip with a session on the water slides at an aquatic center. The latter being a more agreeable adventure, we imagine, for the most of us.

Why The Pandemic Paddling Boom Might Be Here To Stay

Person in sea kayak with trees and misty in background.
The original social distancing activity. | Photo: Brendan Kowtecky

On the second Thursday in March last year, workers hustled to assemble exhibits, rack hundreds of kayaks, canoes and paddleboards, and arrange bales of gear inside the Alliant Energy Center in Madison. In just over 24 hours, the Wisconsin venue would play host to the world’s largest consumer paddling show, Canoecopia. Part exhibition, part tradeshow and part Black Friday for boaters, Canoecopia marks the unofficial opening day of the Midwest paddling season—a time to hunt bargains and stoke dreams. This year, however, the festive mood was tinged with uncertainty.

COVID-19 had gained a foothold in North America, and what had been a distant curiosity in February took on a new sense of manic menace in March. Americans looked on as the disease jumped from China’s Wuhan province to other parts of Asia, then spread to Iran and exploded across Italy, overwhelming hospitals there. We watched on social media as locked-down apartment dwellers serenaded their neighbors with accordion folk tunes.

One of those watching closely was Canoecopia organizer Darren Bush, the owner of Madison’s Rutabaga Paddlesports who, years ago, had worked as a data scientist for the Wisconsin State Department of Health. He’d seen the surging COVID-19 case numbers and knew what they meant. Bush had sunk tens of thousands of dollars into the show, which is also the biggest sales weekend of the year for Rutabaga. He knew canceling Canoecopia at the last minute could well mean the end of his business, but the alternative was unthinkable.

“If we have to liquidate and go bankrupt, then we liquidate and go bankrupt,” Bush told his wife. “But I’m not killing a bunch of people.”

Canoecopia was off.

Photo left: Two masked individuals tying down canoes on a rack. Photo right: Individual giving thumbs up in front of sign reading "Please social distance."
Needing to socially distance while shopping didn’t stop retailers from selling out of canoes and kayaks almost as quickly as they received shipments. | Photos: The Complete Paddler

When Bush made the announcement to a few dozen industry veterans, they broke into applause. A few hugged Bush—the distancing protocols hadn’t yet become habit—and then immediately set about grappling with existential questions of their own. No one knew quite what to make of the novel coronavirus, but it would bring the paddling business to a screeching halt at the worst possible time.

The early days

In the emptying corridors of Canoecopia, industry stalwarts wondered if their companies could survive the shutdown, and if not, whether the sport they’d built their lives around would ever be the same. Lili Colby, co-owner with her husband, Gordon, of life jacket company MTI Adventurewear, decompressed with a cocktail while changing planes on the way home to Massachusetts. She remembers the bartender “coughing all over me,” and within a week, she and Gordon were both flat on their backs with a debilitating illness. They never learned if it was COVID-19 because no tests were available at the time.

Meanwhile, order cancellations started pouring in.

On March 14, the day after Bush called off Canoecopia, then-President Trump declared a national state of emergency. Wisconsin and many other states announced restrictions on gatherings. Many of the stores where Colby and other paddlesports manufacturers sell their products were ordered closed. Others shut their doors voluntarily or simply forecast a slow season and slashed orders accordingly. One major kayak manufacturer was stuck with $2.5 million worth of boats just sitting in a warehouse. In April, the entire outdoor industry was in freefall; a survey by the Outdoor Recreation Roundtable, a coalition of trade associations, found that nearly 80 percent of member companies had laid off or furloughed workers.

COVID-19 rocked the paddling industry back on its heels. The businesses most integral to the sport—shops and outfitters and small manufacturers—also tend to be the most vulnerable to short-term economic shock. Local retailers don’t just sell boats and paddles and life jackets. They guide new paddlers and attract seasoned ones, dispensing advice and sharing stoke. Without these gathering places, it’s not just the industry that would be in trouble. The culture of paddling was also at stake.

The same week Canoecopia was canceled, my kids’ school closed indefinitely. My first thought was to go paddling. A weeklong canoe trip has been on our spring break agenda for the last couple of years, but with four families and kids in three different school systems, we’d never been able to make the dates work. Suddenly, the conflicting schedules that had kept the trip bouncing around the calendar went away and for about 48 hours, the trip was on.

Photo left: Guide wearing a mask showing a sea urchin to a tour participant on kayaks. Photo right: Guide wearing mask preparing lunch on a rock with lake in background.
With safety protocols like masking in place, many outfitters were able to operate tours but at a reduced capacity. | Photo: Chris Bulowski for Spirit of the West // Mel Wiese for Spirit of the West

Then we began asking ourselves some uncomfortable questions. Is it safe, or responsible, to travel across three states? What if we bring the virus to a community that isn’t prepared for it? How, in God’s name, do you enforce social distancing on a pack of semi-feral kids?

Reluctantly, we canceled. I found myself in the novel position of having six weeks off, and not paddling once. This was fairly common in my circle, where friends stayed off the water either by choice or circumstance. My daughter’s outrigger canoe season was postponed and then canceled. National parks were closed, and river permits revoked. For the first time in 60 years, not a single boater ran the Grand Canyon in April.

In those early days, many of us thought the pandemic would last a matter of weeks, or perhaps a couple of months. When it became clear this coronavirus wasn’t so much an interruption in our schedule as a completely new paradigm, paddlers began to think of paddling not as breaking quarantine but a way to get through it.

The boom begins

Some saw the trend sooner than others. Kelly McDowell, the owner of The Complete Paddler in Toronto, recognized a surge in demand from the very start of the city’s two-month lockdown, which began in March.

“Paddling was going to be one of the only physically distancing activities you could do outside,” he said. “Because it’s so populated here, it was even hard to go for a walk in a park because everybody was walking in the park.”

Sea kayakers on large lake.
The Outdoor Foundation’s preliminary report for 2020 shows that overall outdoor participation increased by 2.2 percent in America during the pandemic. That translates to millions of new users. | Photo: Destination Ontario

The Complete Paddler is one of the bigger paddling stores in North America but, compared to big-box chains like REI, MEC and Dick’s Sporting Goods, it lacked the cash to ride out an extended sales drought. Still, while many big retailers slashed orders, McDowell doubled down on paddlers. He knew in his gut they wouldn’t stay off the water for long.

Contrast this with Canadian retail heavyweight MEC, McDowell said. “They just canceled their orders and shut the doors, which was the biggest mistake they could have made.” Meanwhile, McDowell took every boat his suppliers could deliver and sold them all—even though no customer was allowed to set foot in his store for two months.

“I would put the product on the front lawn, no matter what it was—a paddle or a boat or a life jacket—and sanitize it and then go back inside and lock the door and wave to them through the glass,” McDowell said. He did this 12 hours a day, seven days a week. Demand was insatiable.

In Madison, Bush ran a similar procedure at Rutabaga.

In the early days of the pandemic, still reeling from the financial repercussions of canceling Canoecopia, the paddling community kept Rutabaga afloat. Like McDowell, he was confident paddlers wouldn’t stay off the water for long; the challenge was keeping the lights on until they could come back. Bush urged clients to buy gift cards to redeem later and they responded by snapping up “mid-five figures” worth of gift cards, said Bush, who also took out a loan from the Small Business Administration to make payroll. Through the depths of the pandemic, he didn’t lay off a single employee.

Photo left: Person wearing mask at outdoor registration booth. Photo right: PFDs hanging on rack and picnic table with bucket water, soap, and towel..
Checking in to pick up a rental canoe or kayak looked different at many outfitters this year. Sanitation stations for hand washing and returned PFDs, paddles and kayaks became part of the routine. | Photos: Michael Connor

When restrictions began to ease in late spring, his business went gangbusters. “Our rentals this year tripled, and we have people coming in to buy boats who have never paddled before, saying ‘My friend tried it and said it’s great and I should buy a boat,’” Bush said. “And they do. One guy backed up here with a Sprinter van and said, ‘I need five kayaks.’”

It was the same everywhere. The boom was like an inventory reset. Gear that had languished for months or years walked out the door in the arms of happy, if somewhat mismatched, new paddlers. None seemed to care if their new life jackets came in colors that had been discontinued (for good reason) three years before. They just wanted to get on the water.

By the time The Complete Paddler was allowed to reopen on May 19, the retailer didn’t have anything left to sell. “We’re a big store, 10,000 square feet,” McDowell said. “And we didn’t have one boat on the racks. We didn’t have one paddle. We didn’t have one PFD.”

Five kayakers paddling on pond with lily pads.
Sales of paddlesports products increased 56 percent in June 2020 versus the prior year, according to market research firm, the NPD Group. This influx of new paddlers led some pundits to call 2020 the year of the ‘yak. | Photo: Destination Ontario

Still, people lined up outside the door, ordering boats and gear sight-unseen.

The reason for the shortage was twofold. First, demand was through the roof, as people who had been cooped up for weeks looked for ways to get outdoors safely. Paddling is at the top of that list. While many faced layoffs and economic uncertainty, it’s also true every American adult received a stimulus check for $1,200—about the price of an entry-level paddling setup.

By June, retailers that had slashed orders in March were buying everything they could get their hands on, but there weren’t enough boats and gear on the continent to satisfy demand.

The paddlesports industry rallies together

Many companies had been forced to halt production during mandatory lockdowns, and the supply chain was in disarray. Essential parts and materials were delayed or unavailable. Before they could resume production, manufacturers had to figure out how to keep their workers safe, and early in the pandemic there was a critical shortage of personal protective equipment.

Several paddlesports manufacturers jumped in to fill the void. Lightning Kayak in Minneapolis shifted production from fishing kayaks to face shields. Eddyline made a similar pivot from sea kayaks, starting with a prototype cobbled together from kayak parts in its suburban Seattle factory. British Columbia-based Mustang Survival put its life jacket and drysuit expertise to use, making reusable hospital gowns, filling a desperate need at hospitals.

Even as the number of new paddlers spiked across North America, the ways for them to integrate with and revitalize the paddling community were fewer.

YakAttack, which makes injection-molded kayak fishing accessories in Farmville, Virginia, designed PPE products, including a replacement shield for positive pressure respirators, a face shield, and an emergency respirator that can accept whatever filter media is available. The company brought them to production within days and provided them at cost to local hospitals and first responders.

“Knowing we had the capability and knowing there was an urgent need out there, we decided it would be a shame to just sit out the shutdown,” said YakAttack owner Luther Cifers.

Helping others in a crisis is second-nature for paddlers. As the saying goes, we’re all between swims, and most of us have been on both ends of the throw rope. Shifting to PPE production was a way for companies to give back to their communities, but it also proved to be a good self-rescue technique. It allowed companies to keep key staff working through the height of the crisis, so production could go full steam when kayak orders bounced back.

And did they ever bounce back.

The boom in full swing

“Instead of the 10 boats they usually ordered, they wanted 20,” said Michael Squarek, sales and marketing manager at Delta Kayak. “We shipped the 20, and they were already sold before they hit the sales floor, which is absolutely unheard of. It’s nuts.”

In late October, Delta was still building and shipping kayaks to sell this season. Virtually every North American manufacturer is doing the same. “I’ve got boats I ordered in July that aren’t here yet, and I’m still taking them because we’re selling boats still,” Bush said at the end of October—this in Wisconsin, a state that would soon be covered in snow and ice. “People say, ‘I’m going to need this for next year,’” Bush said.

Two people performing a kayak over kayak rescue.
Last year saw an influx of new paddlers, but traditional training opportunities were limited by the pandemic. Instructors expect a busy summer in 2021 as new paddlers look to hone skills. | Photo: Michael Connor

In my town of Dana Point, California, the launch spot we call Baby Beach was wall-to-wall seven days a week. Onshore it was nearly impossible to maintain a six-foot perimeter, prompting my wife to issue an executive order to the family: No more paddling during peak hours. Eight to 10 a.m. became our sweet spot—after the one-man outrigger and serious SUP racers finished their morning workouts, and before the daily onslaught of paddlers in every craft imaginable, from Walmart inflatables to rec kayaks and every type of standup board. Judging only by the proportion of backward and upside-down paddles, many in this crowd are brand new to paddling and figuring it out on their own.

While sales and participation soared after reopening, paddling instruction was hard to come by. The Complete Paddler, which normally runs paddling courses throughout the season, didn’t hold a single class all summer long. McDowell said the risks were simply too high, and on top of that, he didn’t have the boats. He sells off his rentals each fall and replaces them in the spring, but this season every boat he could get his hands on went straight home with a customer.

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Jason Self, who runs coastal kayak tours in Trinidad, California, had plenty of boats but was forced to sit out the spring grey whale migration, a two-month bonanza accounting for about 40 percent of his yearly business. “We missed all of that, which was really scary,” Self said. “But one thing that really worked in our favor was a giveaway where if people bought a gift certificate for a future tour, I would match them by donating one to local frontline workers.”

When he realized the out-of-town visitors, who provide the bulk of his clientele, wouldn’t be coming due to travel restrictions, Self shifted his entire marketing budget to local radio. He watched in disbelief as his rental business grew more than 500 percent over 2019 levels. Self says it remains to be seen whether those frontline workers and rental clients will translate into a more vibrant local paddling scene in Trinidad.

That’s a big question mark everywhere, particularly with so many traditional paths into the sport closed due to the virus. Summer camps, a source of canoe tripping skills and inspiration for young people, were shut down last summer. It’s not clear whether they’ll be able to operate normally this season.

Many paddling clubs canceled group outings or shifted to informal channels like online meetup groups. Major gatherings such as Gauley Fest were canceled, and the Green Race, typically a raucous affair with hundreds of spectators crowding the Narrows, was livestreamed. Even as the number of new paddlers spiked across North America, the ways for them to integrate with and revitalize the paddling community were fewer. Despite these hurdles, the enthusiasm is unmistakable, and it bodes well for the sport.

Why paddling?

The virus has infected more than 30 million people in the United States and Canada and is responsible for more than 550,000 deaths. COVID-19 has broken families, caused economic distress, and brought heartache and loneliness to millions. It feels strange to spin this tale of renewal from something so destructive, but as paddlers, we know and celebrate the healing power of water.

“Being on the water is soothing,” Lili Colby told me when I asked why so many people seemed to flock to the sport during the pandemic. “It’s an escape. It’s a place to have a mental reset, and hopefully, more people have discovered what we paddlers have known for a long time.”

For those of us who have found so much joy in paddling, it’s comforting to know that others will find healing on the water. The question remains whether paddling will be a temporary salve or a lasting one.

When I put this question to paddling friends and industry insiders, most agree the boom will last. While industry folks are understandably guarded with their sales figures, the adjectives flying out of their mouths—wild, crazy, off-the-charts, unprecedented—leave no doubt 2020 was an extraordinary year. As Rapid Media Publisher Scott MacGregor told me, “We just had one of the best seasons ever in paddlesports—and the switch was only on in June.”

Person in sea kayak with trees and misty in background.
The original social distancing activity. | Photo: Brendan Kowtecky

MacGregor, for one, thinks 2021 will be even bigger. Why? “Nobody I’ve talked to in paddlesports or in the medical field believes this summer won’t also have a version of mandated social distancing,” he said. That means a replay of this last season, with one crucial difference. Instead of deciding to try paddling on a whim, these new boaters have had an entire winter to think about what to do and what to buy—where to go, courses to take, and the gear they’ll need. Come summer, travel restrictions are likely to be fewer, instruction more available, and paddling shops stocked and ready.

“This year,” MacGregor says, “is going to be the best year we’ve ever had in paddlesports.”

This article was first published in Paddling Magazine Issue 63. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions here, or browse the digital archives here.


The original social distancing activity. | Photo: Brendan Kowtecky

Jeff Moag is the former editor of Canoe & Kayak and the contributing editor of Paddling Magazine’s trade publication, Paddling Business.

Minnesota Father And Daughter Team Up To Take On World Record

(L-R) MMZero team members Rod Price, Casey Millhone, Kirk Millhone and Bobby Johnson.
(L-R) MMZero team members Rod Price, Casey Millhone, Kirk Millhone and Bobby Johnson.

Minnesota father is teaming up with his daughter to attempt a Guinness World Record for the fastest time to paddle the length of the Mississippi River – and claim back the title he first set in 1980.

Kirk and Casey Millhone, alongside their MMZero teammates and decorated paddlers Rod Price and Bobby Johnson, will aim to canoe the length of the Mississippi River, an estimated 2,350 miles, in less than 18 days to set a new record.

Should they be successful in their attempt, Kirk, aged 62, will be the oldest person to complete the journey and set the Guinness World Record, while Casey, aged 20, will be the youngest female to do so.

Kirk said: “If your daughter says she wants to spend time with you, you think ‘no matter what this is, I’m going to get on board!’

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“This attempt has been two years in the making, with the Covid-19 pandemic cutting last year’s challenge short. Mine and Casey’s relationship has grown so much while preparing, transitioning into an adult friendship rather than simply father and daughter – for me, that’s been fantastic.”

Casey, a sociology student at Colorado College, added: “Paddling is a love that we’ve both always had as individuals, but now it’s a passion we share.

“To become the youngest female to achieve the record would be incredible, but for me this is just the beginning, whether we get the record or not.”

“To become the youngest female to achieve the record would be incredible, but for me this is just the beginning, whether we get the record or not.”

The journey is familiar territory for Kirk; in 1980, he set the world record for canoeing the length of the river, along with his best friend, Steve Eckelkamp, who sadly died in 2017.

Kirk said: “A lot has changed since our attempt in 1980 – technology, for a start, has come on in leaps and bounds.

“Then we were two twenty-something guys just paddling down the river, but now, with all the logistics we need to keep in mind, it feels a lot closer to someone trying to make the first trip to the moon.

“I was a similar age to Casey when we achieved the record, and it completely changed the trajectory of my life. I realised that I could achieve things that I thought may not be possible, and that if you work hard enough you can accomplish anything.

“The challenge transformed my life and now that I’m a father, I hope it can have the same impact for Casey.”

“The challenge transformed my life and now that I’m a father, I hope it can have the same impact for Casey.”

Team members Bobby Johnson and Rod Price are also no strangers to a challenge – both hold a number of prestigious accolades in paddling.

Paddler, writer and speaker Rod has won over 300 races in all types of paddle craft and is the only paddler to complete North America’s five longest distance races. In 2019, he won three gold medals for Team USA at the World Dragon Boat Championships in Thailand.

Meanwhile Bobby, who owns his own car dealership, has set multiple course records in competitions including the Suwannee 230 canoe race and Alabama 650, and won his class in the Everglades Challenge in both 2019 and 2020.

The team will aim to begin their journey on Thursday, April 22nd – which happens to be both Earth Day and Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day in the United States. The route will begin at the Mississippi headwaters in Lake Itasca, Northern Minnesota, and end at mile marker zero in New Orleans.

To beat the current world record, MMZero will need to paddle at an average of 6mph around the clock, with three team members paddling and one sleeping in the boat for three hours at a time.

Kirk said: “It’s a race against exhaustion.

“We need to try to sustain ourselves with enough sleep and enough calories to keep going – it’s going to be extremely tough.”

MMZero will be backed by a dedicated support crew, which includes Kirk’s wife and Casey’s mother, Lisa Millhone. The crew will follow the paddling team on a pontoon boat and in an RV to provide food, charge equipment and do laundry.

Kirk said: “If we break the record, Guinness will likely only put down the names of the four paddlers, but that’s absolutely not true.

“All of the people on the support team are essential for this trip – it’s as much of a logistic challenge as it is an athletic one, and the effort they’ve put in and the support they’ve given us so far has been truly humbling.”

As well as achieving the record, the team also hopes to raise awareness of the plight of the Mississippi River, and encourage supporters to take measures to preserve it.

For more information on the team, and to follow their journey, visit www.mmzero.org

Dane Jackson Throws A Switch Freewheel Over Sahalie Falls (Video)

Dane Jackson Paddles Backwards Off Sahalie Falls
Dane Jackson launches a switch freewheel off Sahalie Falls, Oregon. Photo: River Roots

In the past year, downriver freestyle has been taken to the next level. First, we saw Aniol Serrasolses launch the world’s first double kick-flip on Chile’s Captren River, then we witnessed Dane Jackson throw a plethora of gravity-defying tricks off of Spirit Falls. Now, before we’ve even had a chance to regain our composure, Dane Jackson has just set the bar even higher—again.

In this recent video, Dane Jackson launches a switch-freewheel off the lip of Sahalie Falls in Oregon, USA. The impressive, 90-foot drop was first run back in 1998 by a fresh-faced young ripper, Shannon Carroll. Pro kayaker and filmmaker Rush Sturges commented that at the time of the first descent, Carroll had “raised the bar of what was possible in a whitewater kayak.”

Now—over two decades years later—our definition of “what is possible” has been challenged once more. “Downriver freestyle has always been a big passion of mine and for many years I had dreamed something this big would go down,” Sturges commented in the write up for the video (filmed and produced by River Roots), “It seems we have arrived at the future (for now).”

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It took a whole crew of photographers, videographers, and safety boaters to pull off this dynamic shoot. It seems the hard work paid off. Watch the full video of the impressive trick here.

 

Man Builds Full-Size Newspaper Canoe During Lockdown (Video)

David Parker found himself with a fair amount of free time on his hands during the coronavirus lockdown in Auckland, New Zealand. As a recreational canoeist and a woodwork enthusiast with over 6 years of experience building guitars, he decided that building a canoe would be a suitable way to spend this unprecedented downtime.

The Motivation

Parker quickly grew tired of seeing coronavirus stories in the local newspapers, so much so that he was driven to actually “hide” them. And, as is the case with many old newspapers after (or, if) their primary purpose has been served, they usually live a second life in some form of art or craft. In this case, they became the body of a canoe.

Newspaper Canoe

Note that this was not the first canoe build that Parker had on the go (he also had a cedar strip 15-foot prospector canoe-build in the works). Yet conveniently, this additional cedar canoe project ended up serving as the mold for its experimental younger sibling: the newspaper canoe.

The Method

Using the cedar strip canoe as a mold, Parker began the process by using 12 layers of paper (paper mache) to form the inside of the canoe. As well as newspaper, he thought it would be funny to use a copy of a popular canoe-building instructional book, “Canoecraft”, to have as the top layer on visible display.

Next, he put a layer of 6oz fiberglass both the inside and outside, making it completely waterproof and durable enough to be used for its intended purpose.

Newspaper Canoe

Parker commented that even after the application of the fiberglass, “it was a bit floppy”, but once the wood trim had been added to the hull, there was a lot more strength and rigidity. He then added a thin cap of wood to the gunwales to prevent water from getting into the paper layers.

Watch the video above to see the full start-to-finish process.

Kayakers Witness Huge Avalanche Above Glacier Lake (Video)

When Kiran Shrestha and his friends set out for a serene paddle around Kapuche Glacier Lake in the Annapurna region of central Nepal, it’s safe to say that they didn’t anticipate the hair-raising events that would soon unfold.

After paddling out to a prime position on the lake, Shrestha pulled out his camera to film some selfie-style footage of himself kayaking in its crystal-clear, sapphire waters. In the first few frames, we do witness that serenity that Shrestha was striving to capture. But what followed was, uh, less than calming.

After some selfie moments on the lake, we watch him running up and down the foot of the glacier—which, in itself, was a little concerning. After sussing out the area, he returns to his camp by the lake (on flat ground) and that’s when we see… it.

A colossal white cloud appears at the top of a rocky outcrop. As the cloud quickly grows in size and shape, it becomes evident that we are witnessing a giant avalanche starting from the top of the glacier.

The thundering debris rips down the canyon in a path that uncannily retraces Shrestha’s footsteps from earlier that day. Luckily for Shrestha and his friends, they were now positioned at the opposite side of the lake, back at their camp.

His friends begin hooting and hollering in excitement as the wind picks up and mercilessly launches their tents and belongings into the air as it passes through. The group remained unharmed, as the dangerous debris seemed to halt further up the slope, not quite reaching the lake.

[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: See all recreational kayaks ]

The Kapuche Glacier Lake, only recently opened to the public in the last 3 years, is located about 90 miles northwest of Kathmandu and is located over 8,350 feet above sea level. It is known as the lowest-altitude glacier lake in the world. The area is prone to small-scale, frequent avalanches.

Although no one was hurt during this incident, it still serves as a solid reminder to always do your research when embarking on backcountry trips. Look at weather patterns, recent incidents in the area, and remember that even if you’re not traversing on snow, you could still be traveling past, or recreating within, its runoff path.

Kayaker Saves Seal From Fishing Net Entanglement (Video)

Kayaker rescues seal from fishing net

Sea kayaker and conservationist, Naude Dreyer, is no stranger to dealing with wild, uncooperative seals and sea lions. Through the work of the Ocean Conservation Namibia (OCN) non-profit organization, he and his team have rescued hundreds—if not thousands—of seals from human-caused ocean debris.

After viewing so many successful seal and sea lion rescues, one could assume that the art of capturing these semiaquatic creatures (in order to free them from their respective ailments) would be second nature to Dreyer. But even with a skill set as close to “expert” as it gets (on dry land), when you add in a kayak and ocean current, well, that’s a whole other beast.

“It’s seldom that we can actually get close enough to the entangled animals in the water to grab them,” said Dreyer. He explained that this was actually the fifth attempt to save this one Cape Fur Seal (eared seal). The seal “gave up a good fight,” Dryer explained, but in the end, the intervention was a success.

[ Paddling Trip Guide: plan your next kayaking adventure ]

Watch the full video of the rescue below.

sea kay

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