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Why The Loss Of Royalex Is Not The End Of Whitewater Canoeing

WE WILL SURVIVE. | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR
WE WILL SURVIVE. | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR

In WATERWALKER, arguably the most influential paddling film of all time, Bill Mason paddled a cedar canvas canoe. In Deliverance, Burt Reynolds and Ned Beatty paddled the Chattooga River in aluminum Grummans. These two films are credited for creating the boom in popularity of whitewater canoeing in the ‘70s and ‘80s. Funny, neither of these films featured Royalex canoes.

When PolyOne, the international corporation that produced Royalex, announced it was ceasing production of the long-time canoe hull material, you couldn’t meet another paddler without discussing the seemingly dismal future of open boating and wilderness river tripping.

On the cover of Rapid’s sister publication, Canoeroots, we ran the headline, “The End of Canoeing As We Know It.” Who wouldn’t read the full story? And for the record, we didn’t say it was the end of canoeing, just the end of canoeing as we know it.

All winter I’ve been fielding phone calls from enthusiasts, outfitters and paddling schools asking if I’d paddled and wrapped any new canoe hull materials. My optimism about the current opportunity for innovation in the industry has most often been met with, “Yeah, but I’m not buying anything until I know I can wrap it.”

First of all, you can wrap anything. What paddlers really want to know is, after you drag it off the rocks, can you paddle it home?

In an inflight magazine, I recently read an advertisement for Toray Industries, the producer of “a super-charged plastic with embedded carbon fiber.” Toray was boasting about molding their magical material into airplanes and automobiles. In fact, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner’s fuselage and wings are all carbon fiber.

Nowhere in the ad did they talk about what happens when a carbon fiber 787 Dreamliner goes down. Why? Because, commercial airliners don’t go down very often. And, you know what, we don’t wrap canoes very often either. We really don’t.

In 23 years and hundreds and hundreds of river days, I haven’t wrapped one properly outfitted whitewater canoe—not a single one. Granted, livery businesses and outdoor education centers may have a much higher rate of destruction. So will canoes without proper float bags. But the rest of us may as well be enjoying lighter weight, nicer lines and greater performance offered by advanced materials.

WE WILL SURVIVE. | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR
WE WILL SURVIVE. | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR

THE LOSS OF ROYALEX IS NOT THE END OF WHITEWATER CANOEING

No one enthusiastic about mountain biking or road cycling is still riding a 30-year-old bike with a virtually indestructible steel frame. Carbon fiber is the future and it has been in cycling for years. Carbon bikes are stiffer, lighter and can be more methodically shaped.

Andy Convery of Echo Paddles spent his Easter weekend outfitting his first composite Ocoee, which he calls the Echoee (page 9). I’ve dreamed of a super stiff, 30-pound Ocoee for more than 20 years. Nova Craft Canoe is tossing 50-pound composite Prospectors off 10-story buildings and paddling them home. Esquif is working to produce a mate- rial sort of like Royalex, but lighter, stronger and more abrasion resistant. Thank you PolyOne for forcing us to kick our dependence on your out-of-date material.

Nobody was ever drawn to paddling rivers because they were excited about sheets of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene plastic sandwiching a foam core. The loss of Royalex is not the end of whitewater canoeing, just as the end of polyethylene pellets would not be the end of whitewater kayaking.

At the height of the fur trade, there wasn’t one Royalex canoe in the Hudson’s Bay catalog. We’ve been running whitewater since long before Royalex was invented, and we’ll be running whitewater long after the last Royalex canoe is bent in half, limped home and unloaded on Craigslist for $350.

Scott MacGregor is the founder and publisher of Rapid. He’s an avid solo open boater and whitewater canoe tripper. Although voted Mr. Optimistic in high school, when PolyOne announced the end of Royalex he bought spares of his favorite canoes, just in case.


This article on whitewater canoeing was published in the Early Summer 2015 issue of Rapid magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2015 issue of Rapid Magazine. 

Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.

Frozen Assets

Watermelons are not in season. | Photo: Erik Olsen

It happens every year. Half the planet reels drunkenly away from the fire and the land stumbles like an old inebriate into the coldest season. As our 23.4-degree list inches us further away, the temperature plummets and the days grow shorter. The effect is exacerbated nearer the poles, where our cousins in the far north and south must strap on their headlights for several months of unbroken dusk. Winter has arrived.

On the coasts, ocean currents moderate temperature and saltwater stays stubbornly fluid. For the 35 million people residing mid-continent around the Great Lakes, however, a deep freeze is inevitable. In early winter, Arctic air masses charge across the lakes—still relatively balmy with residual summer heat—inhaling drafts of warm, moist air. The resulting storms clobber surrounding communities with spectacular lake-effect snowfalls, knocking out power and paralyzing transportation. Last November, Buffalo, New York, was inundated with a whopping six feetof snow in just 24 hours.

In the rivers, the current thickens and slows. Ice pans rub shoulders like jockeys on a track. Heavy snowflakes swirl from restless skies and ice creeps implacably outwards from the shorelines. A paddler loading his kayak in this weather must first sweep the snowfall from his roof rack. Scrape the ice from his saddles, precariously perch the boat like a luge at the top of its run.

Even as the snow drifts back over her Subaru, however, a petite woman in a white kayak rotates like a yogi in her cockpit, and falls purposefully into the water. For a moment, gravity and momentum win; water swarms over her face. Then the buoyancy of her body and the careful pressure she exerts inside the kayak bring her back to the surface, where she rests, smiling peacefully.

Around her, similar stunts are playing out: scantily clad kayakers scramble around their decks, practicing self-rescues; others set up for rolls or stand in the water, spotting friends. It’s mid-winter and the sky is pitch black a full hour before the afternoon commute, but the water is so crowded with kayakers, it’s almost impossible to turn around.

“Pool sessions have a fun, supportive vibe where you can maintain the momentum of spring, summer and fall,” says Dympna Hayes, who organizes sold-out winter clinics at community pools in snow-socked central Ontario through her company, Learn to Kayak.

Watermelons are not in season. | Photo: Erik Olsen

For a handful of even hardier paddlers, kayaking on the lakes lasts as long as there’s open water. When winter storms kick up the best surf of the year, intrepid Lake Ontario paddlers chase waves in the Western Gap near Hogtown’s Toronto Islands. And from late fall through early spring, Michigan-based paddling photographer Erik Olsen relies on his kayak to document the unique off-season landscapes of the upper Great Lakes.

The jaunty tilt of our planet’s axis has presented Olsen with such rare phenomena as last winter’s 15-foot-high ice caves on Lake Michigan. Another trip rewarded with a sunset paddle amongst icebergs. “I had to tow my boat an eighth of a mile to find open water, but it was well worth it,” he says. “Truly a rare treat of a hard winter.”

Virginia Marshall is the editor of Adventure Kayak magazine.


This article first appeared in the Spring 2015 issue of Adventure Kayak magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.

Base Camp: Higher Learning

Photo: Scott MacGregor
Base Camp: Higher Learning

We live in a small town.

How small is it? The public school has only 128 kids spanning from junior kindergarten to Grade 8. There are only nine kids in my daughter Kate’s Grade 3 class. This means when she graduates, she will have a choice of three boys for prom (there are actually five boys in her class, two of which we’ve already agreed would be poor choices). There are few of the extra clubs, sports and trips you’d find at larger city schools.

Mr. Roberts was the principal of the country public school I attended. He wore a suit and tie every day. He was all business, all the time.

My mom had sent me to school with a note letting my teacher know that my father would be picking me up early. I would be missing my afternoon classes.

“Sit down, Mr. MacGregor, please,” said Roberts pointing to a chair in his office. He looked both ways down the hall and shut his door. I was sure I was going to get it.

When he sat down at his desk, he leaned forward and whispered, “I wish more parents would take their kids to the Sportsmen’s Show.”

The secret was out and I waited for the catch. There wasn’t one.

“You’ll learn more this afternoon at that show than we can teach you in this place all week,” he said.

He told me how important he thought it was for his students to look outside school to experience different things.

Today, elementary teachers would say that Roberts understood cognitive theory and subscribed to schema learning. Children use schemas, an organized pattern of thought, to construct an understanding of the world around them. When they experience discrepancies between what they already know and what they discover, everything inside gets juggled and their understanding of the world changes. The more schemas or bits of information or experiences we’ve logged, the better.

Alpine skiing. Catching frogs. Portaging. Baiting hooks. Rock climbing. Playing in the ocean. Fire building. Summer camp. It all adds to their understanding of the world.

When I was home visiting my parents this past Christmas I was digging around in my old bedroom. Tucked in the back corner of my closet I found a plastic bag full of dog-eared canoe brochures and camping catalogs.

My dad is a hunter and fisherman, not a paddler. My mom has never slept in the woods. If not for the wisdom of a progressive school principal and my annual trips to spring tradeshows it’s unlikely I’d have had the interest to take an outdoor education credit in high school. It’s unlikely I’d have had the confidence to transfer from an engineering program to an outdoor recreation degree in university. It’s even more unlikely I’d have created Canoeroots magazine.

We know that direct exposure to nature is essential for healthy childhood development. What we don’t know is which little bits of knowledge or experience will be the building blocks for their futures. And really, who cares? That’s for them to figure out along the way. Our job as parents is to have fun with our kids sharing the things we love.


Screen Shot 2015 03 18 at 10.45.19 AMThis article first appeared in the Spring 2015 issue of Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.

Jon Turk: Uncut

Photo: Henry Georgi
Jon Turk: Uncut
I had a recent opportunity to chat with Jon Turk, and our discussion began with failure—aborted missions, inconclusive findings, and the dangers of perseverance in the face of enormous physical risk. In all his writing, Turk portrays his disappointments and personal tragedies in painful detail, never with swagger but as motivation to keep pushing forward, to plan better and execute for success.—Edward B. Rackley

ER: Is mission completion necessary for success?

JT: We all fail in life. You aim big, you fail bigger. Every failure teaches us something. In wilderness adventure, if you don’t know when to back down from danger, you’ll die. So you always need to be ready to back away—and that isn’t failure. There’s no dishonor in it. On Ellesmere I pushed myself literally to the brink of death. EO Wilson writes that ‘The moral imperative of humanism is the endeavor alone, whether successful or not, provided the effort is honorable and failure memorable.’ So as long as you honor the aim of what you and your companions set out to do, you can’t be blamed for factors either within or beyond your control that determine mission outcome. I know that this is a cliché, but success is ultimately what you learn from a mission and what you enjoyed while doing it.

 

ER: How do you see current trends in social media and corporate sponsorship? While the Internet brings an unprecedented level of money and visibility to wilderness adventure, it brings certain compromises. Short-burst extreme feats or speed records of North Face climbs or Grand Canyon kayak descents seem to circulate daily online. Red Bull executives rejoice, but the older tradition of sustained endurance pursuits inspired by scientific inquiry seems at risk of extinction.

JT: First off, I have nothing but admiration for waterfall jumpers, big wave surfers, and extreme rock climbers. These aren’t fads; they’re serious athletic feats and require serious coordination, bravery, strength, and skill. I’m not coordinated enough to do that stuff. There’s an intensity there that I admire. However, long distance athleticism isn’t at risk of eclipse. There will always be such people.  Long-distance pursuits appeal to me because I love being out there for long periods of time. It’s a different scale of challenge. If this puts me at a disadvantage from a media and sponsorship perspective, that’s life.  I’ve done well enough with a mixture of sponsorship, writing, and public speaking, and so have my friends. There’s always a way around the money-thing.

 

ER: You’ve done one major solo voyage (Cape Horn), the rest were accompanied. What are the pros and cons of solo versus group adventure?

JT: Well, you’re safer with others. Alone there’s no backup. But it’s very exciting to be alone. It raises the stakes; you ratchet up the level of vulnerability. It puts you closer to the edge, and you’re more careful and aware. Solo is great. There’s no particular reason I haven’t done more of it. That said, had I done Ellesmere alone I would have died. I needed Boomer’s strength.  And traveling with others has other advantages. It speeds up many mundane processes; makes them safer. Dragging loaded boats over ice, or setting up and breaking camp. Plus, I like having company.

 

ER: Will you be writing about the Ellesmere circumnavigation? You’ve suggested in other interviews that you’re working on something.

JT: I’ll write about Ellesmere, yes. But it’d be boring to just recite details from the trip. I’m more interested in what grand journeys like Ellesmere, and the massive migrations undertaken by our ancestors—what do these teach us? What wisdom do they impart, and why have humans undertaken such journeys throughout history?

My Jomon book is about Paleolithic long-distance journeying and epic migration. Raven’s Gift is about shamanic healing.  But some readers get hung up on whether or not the magic and healing I undergo are believable. So this time I want to rephrase my thinking on traditional wisdom, and try to reach its core.  My new book is about ‘a Journey into Deep Wilderness’.

 

ER: Yes, there’s a refrain in your writing that hunter-gatherers have something to teach modern adventurers, and modern society generally. Is it their belief systems and cosmology, or their survival skills that are relevant to us today? Other endurance kayakers appropriate traditional practices by building their boats in the old ways, living off the land, and thus claim a kind of authenticity. That doesn’t seem to interest you.

JT: First of all, yes, I believe that the perseverance and skill of our ancestors has a lot to teach us in this internet-crazed, oil-soaked world.  It’s the “journey into Deep Wilderness” theme.  To answer the second part of your question, I have no criticism of revivalists. I am just not one of them.  Traditional people used the best materials they could find. So do I, but mine happen to be from modern industrial materials. I’m just not the kind of guy to make a walrus skin kayak, although it is wonderful to bring those skills back. Obviously we can’t all start making walrus skin kayaks; the walrus would disappear. I’m comfortable with my high tech gear.

 

ER: Your interest is more in interacting directly with indigenous communities where you find them, and expanding on the insights that result from those encounters.

JT: Yes. I guess my message, or main thing I’ve learned from living with traditional peoples, is to approach the world in a softer way: to live with less, in order for human existence to be sustainable on the planet. So while I’ve never adopted their survival methods, navigation methods, or kayak construction techniques, I’ve tried to learn their forms of wisdom, of how they understand their place within their landscape.

 

ER: What are some examples of this wisdom, relevant to our modern condition?

JT: We have to reduce our impact on the world, reduce our carbon footprint. This means learning to spend less, acquire less, and consume less. I’m not saying we need to forgo modern technology; that would be a stupid thing to say.  Modern technology improves our lives immensely. But if we listen to ancient wisdoms, perhaps we would not gorge on all that is available to us, to the point where we destroy our environment. In this society, we take and use way more than we need; the consequences are obvious.

 

ER: Why is that their wisdom and not just your philosophy; your view on how we ought to live?

JT: Good point. Aboriginal people lived in such a way that they must constantly communicate with nature. They needed to do that to survive.  Our way of life removes us from nature. But if we lived closer to nature’s rhythms, I honestly believe that we would live simpler, more meaningful lives.  We wouldn’t need to drive to the mall and buy a bunch of junk to have a good day.

 

ER: I agree that our consumerism and individualism take a toll on community and the commons. But we’ve chosen this retreat from nature, preferring near-total domesticity. Look at us—we seek permanent shelter from the elements with our dwellings, vehicles and clothing. My sense is that this insulation from nature and each other contributes to our alienation from nature and the dissolution of community. I don’t see how we can keep living this sheltered, buffered mode of existence and expect to understand nature or to restore any genuine, active community life. Think of Into the Wild (Jon Krakauer)—a young American enters the Alaskan wilderness unprepared and alone, and starves out of ignorance—and how well it captures our current state of alienation from wilderness and each other.

JT: You’re right— we can’t learn nature or traditional wisdom out of a book. But can the knowledge of traditional people correct the world’s failings? Well, it can help.  If you ask, can my vision and my writings solve the world’s problems, of course I laugh.  When Mother Theresa was asked if she thought was ending poverty in Mumbai, she answered something like: “That’s not the question I ask myself. Can I try to do something about it? Yes, I can.” So this next book I am writing is about how people reclaim control over immediate threats and risks, whether they’re hunter-gatherers in the Amazon, or citizens of the South Bronx.

 

ER: What do those two places represent to you; what’s so fitting about that contrast?

JT: Our individual impact on the way the world is evolving may be infinitesimally small, but we are still responsible for how we act, because collectively we have steered the world into a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene.  The people I visited in the Amazon were first contacted in 1964; today their refrain is ‘the powers shaping our lives are so powerful that we have no control over our destiny.’ Destitute Americans in the South Bronx say the same thing. I want readers to see what people share in these two ‘jungles’, to see that sanity at the personal level is still within our control. So any ‘return to nature’ or ‘traditional wisdom’ is, at one level, only metaphorical. What’s important is a thinking humanity whose choices are independent of the power elite.

 

ER: Another unique dimension of your writing and exploration is that you pursue historical questions about human development from a scientific perspective. I’m thinking of the marine migration theory you pursue in the Jomon book and the scientific validity of shamanic healing in The Raven’s Gift. Couching these interests within a grand kayak adventure, they become gripping narratives. But how have scientists and anthropologists reacted to your accounts of magic medicine and theories of how our ancestors first reached North America?

JT: Yes, a few people have gotten hung up on the ideas I developed in the two previous books— early marine migration and shamanic magic in medicine. These are very different things. On the migration thing, anthropologists were critical of my proposal that migration was sometimes conducted out of a “spirit of adventure” rather than out of pragmatic interests.  Actually, in retrospect, I think it is one of those arguments that you can get worked up about, but when you look at it closely, barriers and definitions break down.  The bottom line is that humans migrated out of Africa and settled in every habitable environment on Earth, while chimpanzees, to say nothing of hippopotamuses stayed back home in Africa.  That is an amazing story and part of our heritage.  I believe that we are a romantic species, even when we are being pragmantic; even if that sounds contradictory.

The second issue, about shamanic healing, is another question that remains unanswerable.  I think the important issue is that things do happen in this world, within and beyond human consciousness, which defy scientific logic.  Let’s not argue about it; let’s bask in the wonder.

 

ER: In the Jomon book you relate that while we know from artifacts that a migration path connects Hokkaido to the Kamchatka Peninsula and across the Bering Sea to Alaska, we don’t know why they chose this direction or what motivated them. It could have been catastrophe, cosmology, etc. Elsewhere you’ve stated that what today we call ‘outdoor adventure’ has gone by other names throughout history. At its core, I think this impulse is a reaction to the tedium of the familiar, or a wish to improve one’s lot by risking the unknown. Bruce Chatwin in Songlines uses the Latin shorthand: Solvitur ambulando (‘It is solved by walking’). And still we see human migration all around us today, usually some combination of ‘seeking’ (wealth, opportunity) and ‘fleeing’ (poverty, misrule). So instead of emphasizing what’s been lost or corrupted as we lose touch with nature, why not focus on our constants with traditional or pre-modern peoples—our shared need for forward movement, innovation, motion versus stasis?

JT: We know that early Polynesian islanders felled huge tropical hardwoods with stone tools, fashioned them into 60-foot double-hulled catamarans and sailed 2000 miles across the ocean to find a spot of land, Hawaii. They returned to Polynesia and initiated a trade route between the two places. Hawaiian obsidian is found throughout Polynesia. If we look directly at this ancestral past, certain strengths emerge that we share. We are them and they are us.

Mind you, there’s nothing to romanticize there—life was difficult in the Stone Age, full of violence and privation; people died young. I only say we have to learn from aboriginal knowledge because we’ve stepped away from this mode of knowledge: the self-reliance to learn from direct encounter with nature and with others. In traditional Inuit society parents never tell their kids what to do. They let them model the behaviors of other children or adults and learn by themselves. Let your relationship with the world and your environment be your primary teacher.

 

Jon Turk is the author of Cold Oceans, In the Wake of the Jomon, The Raven’s Gift, several environmental textbooks and numerous articles. When not out on adventure, he divides his time between Fernie, British Columbia and Darby, Montana.

 

 

Turk featureThis article first appeared in the Early Summer 2015 issue of Adventure Kayak magazine.

 

Skill: Remove a Tick

Skill: Remove a Tick
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Just thinking about ticks makes our skin crawl. Learn the safe way to remove these creepy crawlies. University of Manitoba tick expert, Kateryn Rochon, explains the proper way to remove a tick to prevent transmission of viruses. 

Fjallraven Keb Fleece Jacket

Photo: Dawn Mossop
Fjallraven Keb Fleece Jacket

For an ultimate layering item, choose Fjallraven’s stylish Keb Fleece Jacket W. A roomy fit and stretchy fabric means I can throw it over a puffy jacket and feel warm but not bulky. The wool blend fabric adds insulation and reinforced shoulders boost water and wind resistance.

$200 | www.fjallraven.us

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This gear review first appeared in the Spring 2015 issue of Rapid magazine.

 

Video: Unpin a Canoe with Walter Felton and the ACA

Video: Unpin a Canoe with Walter Felton and the ACA
[iframe src=”https://player.vimeo.com/video/88618491″ width=”500″ height=”281″ frameborder=”0″ webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen ]

Unpinning a Canoe or Kayak with Walter Felton and the ACA from Unit4media on Vimeo.

This video features ACA Swiftwater Rescue techniques for unpinning a canoe or kayak with Walter Felton. This symposium was held in 2013 on the Tuckasegee River in North Carolina.

americancanoe.org
unit4media.com/whitewater-media

Video: Master the Sea Kayak Scramble Self-Rescue

James Roberts and Dympna Hayes of Ontario Sea Kayak Centre demonstrate the essentials for a quick and effective scramble—aka Cowboy or Cowgirl—sea kayak re-entry. If you’ve exited your kayak, the scramble self rescue will get you back in your boat in almost any conditions, no extra tools required.

Stay tuned for more great paddling skill videos, including canoeing, kayaking and whitewater techniques, brought to you in partnership with Rapid Media and Ontario Tourism. 

Story Beneath the Shot: Illusion of Control

Story Beneath the Shot: Illusion of Control | Photo: Rowan Gloag

Longtime disciples of the capricious currents at Skookumchuck Rapids, rough water paddlers Rowan Gloag and Costain Leonard knew exactly where—and when—to look for the perfect foam pile.

“We’re interested in finding out how much control we can have in the foam, in a sea kayak,” explains Gloag, a mission that prompted a late summer visit to Skook in British Columbia’s Sechelt Inlet.

When the difference between high and low tide in the constricted passage at Skookumchuck Narrows is less than a meter, the modest current forms the sort of friendly green wave that is the stuff of surf kayakers’ wet dreams. But when the celestial bodies align and a large spring tide widens that gap to two meters or more, the flood of water can reach 16.5 knots—one of the fastest tidal currents in the world—and a menacing foam pile takes shape.

Story Beneath the Shot: Illusion of Control | Photo: Rowan Gloag

Charging into the recirculating maw of aerated water, Gloag says, develops skills necessary for playing safely in punishing ocean shore breaks. The length and shape of a sea kayak makes breaking free of all that foaming water a sticky proposition. Still, he says, “There are times during the chaos when we can gain control.”

Gloag took a timeout from Skook’s 10.9-knot current that day to shoot his hapless companion’s efforts to tame the hole. “In this picture, Costain has buried his bow in an attempt to launch himself free,” he recalls. “As you can see, it didn’t work, but you gotta try.”


This article first appeared in the Spring 2015 issue of Adventure Kayak magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.

Video: How to Build a Sea Kayak Contact Tow Line

A contact tow line is an easy to use, practical, multi-use line that can help make your sea kayak rescues faster and less complicated. Though its design is simple and easy to make, there are few shops that sell them.

In this short video, Leon Sommé of Body Boat Blade shows you how to build your own versatile contact tow line and how to effectively use one in the event that it is required. We believe you will come to love and appreciate how useful this piece of kit is and will find yourself wondering how you ever paddled without one.

Watch it, then build it!

Stay tuned for more skills videos with Body Boat Blade International in this series, presented by Adventure Kayak, and watch more techniques on our YouTube channel