Stay cool and safe in the summer heat with Nutcase water helmets. “Whether paddling on a clear open lake or down a rocky river, trust Nutcase to protect your nugget while making a statement with fun designs, patterns and colors.”
All water helmets comply with the CE EN-1385 Water Sport Safety Standard for water sports. All helmets come with removable neoprene ear pads, 360 degree reflectivity and the revolutionary magnetic buckle, allowing you one-handed operation and NO PINCHING!
The following is a press release from Kokatat, July 23, 2014.
ARCATA, CALIFORNIA, (FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE) – For 2015 Kokatat, the global leader in paddlesport apparel, introduces the GORE-TEX® Idol dry suit with SwitchZip technology that separates completely at the waist giving paddlers the versatility of a dry suit and dry top in one garment.
“This gives everyday and expedition paddlers the ultimate in gear flexibility,” said Jeff Turner, Kokatat Sales and Design Manager. “No longer must they choose between a dry suit and dry top for the day, the Idol provides the best of both.”
The SwitchZip technology connects the top to the bottom of the suit with a fully separating waterproof zipper system. With the separation at the waist, the Idol is much easier to put on and take off when compared to traditional dry suits that open along the chest or across the back. The ability to fully separate the top and bottom also eliminates the need for an additional front or rear relief zipper.
The Idol can be used as a dry suit or separated and worn as a dry top. Paddlers will find the system especially helpful for portages or stops along waterways where they can easily take off the top and wear just the pants. Additionally, paddlers on multiday expeditions can select the combination in which they wish to wear the Idol depending on the weather and water conditions of the day.
The SwitchZip’s flexible TiZip® zipper sits below the Idol’s dual adjustable overskirt. When seated the zipper resides inside the boat’s cockpit between the backband and the seat. The below deck placement is designed so the system does not interfere with kayak rigging or PFDs.
The Idol features Kokatat’s exclusive and time proven 3-layer Evolution GORE-TEX® Pro Shell fabric, used in combination with 330 Cordura® GORE-TEX® Pro Shell in areas of high abrasion. The suit also has Latex wrist and neck gaskets, left sleeve pocket, GORE-TEX® socks, and factory sealed seams.
The Idol will be offered in men’s and women’s specific designs and will be available In January 2015 through GIZMO, Kokatat’s online custom dry suit program.
As with all Kokatat suits, the Idol is guaranteed to be completely dry. Each and every suit manufactured in Kokatat’s Arcata, California factory is individually tested to be water tight before it leaves the factory. Further, Kokatat’s lifetime warranty and Arcata service facility ensures users that they will remain completely dry for the life of the suit.
The GORE-TEX® Idol dry suit will be introduced at the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market in Salt Lake City, UT, in early August 2014. It and the rest of the Kokatat 2015 collection will be available nationwide through Kokatat’s network of specialty paddling retailers in January 2015.
About Kokatat Inc.: Kokatat has been manufacturing paddling gear in Arcata, California for more than 40 years. At a time when many technical apparel brands were moving manufacturing offshore, Kokatat continued to invest in infrastructure in the United States. Kokatat founder Steve O’Meara was committed to the development of the finest and driest paddling apparel in the world and recognized the need to control and continually evolve the development of our dry wear. In the early days, Kokatat worked closely with W.L. Gore & Associates, makers of GORE-TEX®, to refine the sewing and sealing techniques required for full immersion suits and tops. Today, our hands-on approach to manufacturing continues to set the standard in paddling apparel. Into the water with Kokatat! Please visit www.kokatat.com and follow Kokatat on Facebook and Twitter “@kokatat”.
“On July 5th, 2014, over 30 whitewater athletes gathered together just outside Washington, DC too race the Great Falls of the Potomac River. The Great Falls Race is one of the most prestigious whitewater races in the nation, where hundreds of spectators watch as the paddlers race over class five rapids in just under a minute! Congratulations to this years winner, Pat Keller in the long boat class and Mike Dawson in the short boat class!”
The SolarMonkey Adventurer is lightweight, paperback-sized and dead easy to use. It charges even in low light conditions and features an internal battery that allows for charging devices even when the sun is down. Our tester model charged an editor’s iPhone from almost zero to 100 percent in about an hour and a half. Supports five-volt devices such as phones, handheld GPS units and some action cameras.
Product Specs:
Milliamps Hour (mAh): 2500
Dimensions (L*H*W cm): 170 x 96 x 22.75 (fo
Battery Type: Lithium-ion Polymer
Voltage: USB 5V
Short-circuit protection Overload protection Low voltage protection Thermal insulation battery protection: giving an operating temperature range of -10 to 90 degrees C
Get the full article in the digital edition of Canoeroots and Family Camping, Early Summer 2014, on our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.
A new whitewater view has been all over the Internet since the 2014 paddling season got underway.
Thanks to more and more paddler-photographers experimenting with drone technology, high-flying bird’s-eye-view images are delivering all-new ways of seeing the river.
“Anything that offers a new perspective will have an audience,” says Patrick Camblin, Whitewater Grand Prix organizer and Rapid magazine contributor, who’s convinced this is the future of whitewater photography.
Camblin himself is a bit of a pioneer in this realm. In 2010, before any of us had seen the aerial river shots we’re getting used to now, Camblin drained $12,000 from his bank account for a state-of-the-art octocoptor—an eight-rotor mini-helicopter that looks like a flying robotic octopus with a camera mount.
Then came the tragic technical difficulties.
A few uncontrolled takeoffs and crashes later, the drone needed some repairs. But, Camblin says, since then the technology has improved significantly.
It’s also gotten a lot cheaper. Rapid photographer Steve Rogers just got his hands on a drone this summer.
“The skill of flying is a huge barrier,” says Rogers, which is why he opted for a cheap model with four rotors instead of eight—you can get low-end versions for around $300—so there’s less to loose if he clips a tree or canyon wall while practicing.
“You’ve got to think about flying as a separate skill all together,” Rogers says, “then you can try to think about what you’re doing with the camera at the same time.”
Rogers says a lot of people are mounting cheap cameras to drones so far, and flying them with their fingers crossed for good images, but the inspiration behind his investment is to continue taking high-quality whitewater images without dangling from ropes over canyons.
“I’m actually physically in a position of danger while I’m taking photos,” says Rogers, who climbed a cliff wall to snap Rapid’s Spring 2014 cover photo. “It’d be nice to put the drone in that position instead.”
While the technology’s improved a lot over the years, “it’s still not plug and play,” says Rogers. He had to do lots of research into all the pieces he needed to buy and assemble to get his drone up and running. He predicts it’ll be a long time before he’s mastered the art of flight but is hopeful the new technology will make his business safer and more efficient.
“A birds’ eye view lets you take the whole landscape in at once,” says Camblin, explaining why he thinks aerial images are compelling enough to be worth the investment and effort. “You may never have seen that view of the river, no matter how much whitewater you’ve been on.”
Camblin adds that as the technology continues to improve, photographers will be able to give viewers a better picture than ever before of the wild rivers whitewater paddlers get to explore.
“They’re a lot more user friendly now,” says Camblin, but there’s some danger involved in using them—a rotor could take off a finger for example—and it takes some serious practice to keep them oriented, especially before flying them over water.
As Rogers put it, “I’ll either be sending you amazing new images by the end of the summer, or my camera will be at the bottom of the river.”
This whitewater news article was originally published in the July issue of Paddling Magazine.
Google Street View is changing the way we look at the world and making wild places more accessible. Parks Canada has been working with Google Canada to bring photos of great paddling destinations to our computers. “We are happy to let you know that Parks Canada is continuing its work with Google Canada on the Google Street View project featuring Canada’s most treasured places for worldwide visitors to explore,” said Parks Canada.
Google on the Coastal Hiking Trail.
“Over the past few weeks, the Google Team was at Pukaskwa National Park, Sault Ste. Marie Canal and Fort St. Joseph National Historic Sites, and Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area, doing image collection at the sites.”
Google in Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area.
The haunting tremolo of a loon calling for her mate breaks the silence of the morning mist over Lower St. Regis Lake. As the sun burns through the clouds, long, narrow canoes begin to appear through the mist, gliding on the still waters. Paddles silently slice through the water, and as the images become clearer, one can make out the beautiful craftsmanship of the wooden canoes.
Thus begins the morning this past weekend at the annual gathering of wooden canoe enthusiasts attending the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association Assembly at Paul Smith’s College in the scenic New York Adirondacks.
This year, 350 people attended from all over the United States and Canada, and they brought with them almost as many beautiful boats. Displayed on the Great Lawn of the college overlooking Lower St. Regis Lake were a wide variety of classic boats, including wood-canvas canoes, birch bark, sailing canoes, stripper canoes and kayaks. Some were newly constructed, and some were careful restorations of boats originally build more than 100 years ago.
This year the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association celebrated its 35th Annual Assembly, with a focus on the builders of tomorrow’s classic boats. For four days, canoe enthusiasts learned boat-building and restoration techniques, became inspired during evening presentations and panel discussions, and shared their own special canoe building and paddling experiences.
As a family event, the assembly offered a wide variety of classes and activities for everyone, including a robust schedule of activities and crafts for kids. This year’s sessions included a guided tour of historic White Pine Camp, numerous paddling excursions on the pristine Adirondack Lakes, a bird walk, paddling skill workshops, seat caning, and a construction tent with ongoing demonstrations of canoe-building techniques. Evening programs focused on the skills, the vision and the stories of a variety of talented boat-builders, followed by songs and stories told around the lakeside campfire.
A highlight of the event occurred as 70 beautiful boats lined up in the lake and proceeded to parade past onlookers as the announcer described a bit of history of each boat during the annual Paddle-By. Paddles were raised to the applause of the audience.
As the Assembly wrapped up, last-minute photos and hugs were shared as friends, old and new, packed up their canoes and belongings before their trip home. They left with new skills that will help to carry on the tradition of wooden canoe building and paddling. They took with them memories of new outdoor experiences, learning and laughter, as the calls of the loons sent them off with a final tremolo beckoning them to return next year.
Sperry’s super lightweight H20 Escapes are foot hugging and fast drying. The upper is so thin it would feel like you were sock footed if it weren’t for the slim but rugged base that uses Sperry’s trademarked anti-slip outsole. Ten drain holes on each shoe shed water quickly and the perforated foot beds pop out for even faster drying.
Falling in the middle of the price range for our lineup, and the middle of Accent’s offerings, the Premier Rogue has a solid fiberglass shaft and compression molded blades that pack a serious punch. This lightweight paddle has an ultra deep blade design that makes taking powerful strokes a breeze and we love that they’re bright orange for extra visibility when we’re on the water. The tips of the blade are extra thick to withstand the abuse of creeking and river running.
Click here to find a river running blade for every budget in the free online edition of Rapid, Early Summer 2014 or download our free app for Apple or Android.
You don’t need be a class V hero to bucket list this Himalayan heaven—explore the continuous class IV canyons of Nepal’s Dolpa District.
“Where in God’s name is the river?”
“I’m pretty sure it’s just over there,” Ric spit, pointing aimlessly down the valley in response to Steve’s question. Their exchange was flavoured with a hint of the tension we were all feeling.
“Just get organized. Simon and I’ll go and find some porters,” I tried to assure the boys.
We mimed the profession to an elderly village woman, asking where we could hire someone to carry our gear. Quickly understanding us, she pointed to the hills. November is harvest season in the Dolpa region of Nepal, we learned. Any would-be porters were busy gathering food for their families for the upcoming winter, but the thought of shouldering our beastly boats, laden with camping gear and food for seven days, kept us searching.
It all started when we veered off plan the day before. Steve Arns, Simon Rutherford, Ric Moxon, Brian Fletcher and I had just arrived at Birendranagar, a small town in mid-western Nepal. From there we hoped to fly to Juphal, a remote village deep in the Himalaya with a dirt landing strip and access point to the Thule Behri River.
“Juphal not possible,” a smiley Nepali fellow had informed us at the airport. My stomach instantly dropped. We’d traveled halfway around the world to get to the Thule.
After arguing back and forth, the man offered another option: “We can fly to Masinechaur.”
There weren’t any maps in this airport, but Masinechaur, the locals assured us, was no more than a four-hour walk from Juphal. Since it was river right, and Juphal on river left, I figured it couldn’t be more than two hours from the river. The new put-in would start us a day or two downstream of the easier section of the Thule, whitewater we’d planned to warm up on, but lacking alternatives and confident we’d find porters to help us make the trek down to the river, we stuffed our boats into a seven-seat Cessna Caravan and got ready for the flight.
A pilot’s son, I immediately noticed the plane’s non-retractable landing gear. “Makes it stronger for high-impact landings,” I explained to the boys. Before anyone could change their mind, the pilot pushed down the throttle and we took off.
Twenty minutes later we were flying through the mountains—in the Himalaya you fly through, not over, the peaks—and got our first views of the river. After 45 minutes the landing strip came in sight and I held my breath. The airstrip looked like nothing more than a short steep gravel path cut into the side of the mountain, and at over 10,000 feet planes have to land fast. In an explosion of dust, our boating gear lurched forward as the plane screeched to a halt just in front of a stone wall. “I hope the river won’t be this exciting,” Simon joked nervously.
The Thule Behri is to the ambitious weekend warrior what the Stikine is to the hardcore class V+ boater. From mid-November to late April, when the Thule’s waters flow at a moderate level, the river is continuous class IV to IV+ whitewater that cascades through the land of Dolpa, a remote western region of Nepal that was closed to foreigners until the early ‘90s.
It wasn’t until 1995 that an international team, including Charlie Munsey, Doug Ammons and Scott Lindgren, realized the Thule’s first descent, ticking off one of the last major un-run rivers in the Himalayas. Surrounded by some of the world’s largest mountains, the Thule Behri has its source in the deep blue waters of Phoksundo Lake. The lake is sacred and home to a historic monastery of the mysterious Bonpo, followers of Tibet’s ancient spiritual tradition, a religion that predates Buddhism.
The Dolpa region has steep terrain and a ruthless climate. The winter is brutally cold, the summer monsoon unleashes floods and the rest of the year a cold arid wind blows powerfully from Tibet. Life in Dolpa is not easy. There’s no doubt the cruel conditions influence the high spirituality of the region.
Polished bedrock canyons border the Thule for dozens of miles at a time and some of the world’s highest peaks drain into the valley. This river is not just hero territory. Its continuous class IV is surprisingly attainable for experienced boaters and lasts for days on end—it is no stretch to say that paddling the Thule could be the highlight in any enthusiast boater’s paddling career.
Eluded by any potential porters, we had no choice but to shoulder our boats and start moving. The path was steep, rocky and exposed, the gear heavier than we feared. However, the stunning scenery did much to alleviate the suffering on our search for the river. The Dhaulagiri Himal range—including its namesake 26,795-foot peak, Mount Dhaulagiri—towered above the river in a manner only seen in the Himalaya. “We wouldn’t have seen this if we had landed in Juphal,” I remarked. After six hours of trudging under the weight of our boats, we arrived at the river just as night fell.
We spent a cold night just upstream of a Buddhist monastery at Tibrikot. It was a fitting place to put in the Thule’s emerald water as when we awoke, we could all sense the spirituality of the place—a feeling we couldn’t quite pin down, but something special was in the air.
After just moments on the water we were into the entrance rapids of the Golden Canyon, a 10-mile-long section with walls rising thousands of feet on either side. “Man, this is spicy,” Ric puffed as he pulled into a small eddy. Starting below our planned put-in launched us into the first rapids below Tibrikot, some of the trip’s most challenging continuous flow. “Not much of a warm up, eh?” Brian said as he peeled out to continue the eddy-hopping madness. Brian seems to get more comfortable the harder the whitewater gets but if the rapids had been any steeper, we would have had to scout everything in this first section.
A couple miles downstream the water began to calm as the canyon walls grew tighter. For the rest of the day we eddy-hopped our way down playful class IV, leapfrogging one another so that everyone could get a chance to lead through the boulder maze, and hooting and hollering if anyone chose a less than graceful line. “Check out the wild patterns in these boulders,” Simon managed to yell at me over the river’s roar. A yearly monsoon carves and polishes the canyon’s boulders into colorful sculptures—paddling through these rock gardens is a highlight of the Thule.
As the warm afternoon light lit up the Golden Canyon in all its glory, we pulled over and made camp among ancient ponderosa pines. Astounded by the scenery and awestruck by the river, we concluded by a crackling fire that the Thule had some of the best whitewater we’d ever paddled.
This was my second trip on the Thule; after a run in 2008 I dreamt of coming back. As the veteran of the river, I organized a lot of the logistics, but once there I wasn’t much of a guide. The sheer quantity of whitewater was too much to remember and we treated this as our first time down the river.
The fourth day brought us to the Awalgurta Gorge, the hardest part of the river by far. Already in the entrance rapids, we were surprised by how pushy the water had become. The river had grown markedly in volume. Knowing that two miles of dangerous class V+ lay downstream we evaluated our options. “I’m out,” I said.
In 2008, my friend Danny had a terrible swim out of a sticky hole right above some horrible sieves. He had to swim back into the hole time and again to avoid getting flushed downstream and into the sieves till the team could get a rope to him. The memory was still vivid.
Waking at dawn the next morning, we cooked breakfast and packed up camp with unusual efficiency. With ever more tributaries joining, the Thule becomes big water. We were ready. After several days of continuous boating we felt strong, further aided by the lighter boats as the trip neared its end.
Just before lunch we came upon a horizon line big enough that it was at the edge of what we could safely read and run. Brian saw a line center right, boofing a ledge over a giant hole. Ric and I followed him while Simon and Steve eddied out on river left to have a better look. At the bottom, Ric and I were high fiving each other when we heard frantic whistle blasting. “GO! GO! GO! GO!” Brian yelled. We rushed to shore and ran upstream as fast as our legs and lungs allowed us. My mind was racing. Are my friends okay? What happened? What can we do?
Simon, still in his boat, was getting sucked under a huge boulder. The eddy he had caught was a deadly siphon. Simon had pulled into the eddy, looking towards the middle of the river to scout the rapid. When he noticed the pull on his boat it was already too late—he was getting pulled under the boulders. In the last moment he managed to turn his boat around so he went bow first into the trap. Going in backwards would have likely been the end. As he was getting sucked into the siphon, easily big enough to swallow him and his boat, he jammed his arm in a crack in a last effort to keep himself from disappearing into the void. This stabilized him long enough for Steve to grab him and buy time for the rest of us to figure out the safest way to get him back to shore.
Himalayan rivers pose a higher than normal risk for this kind of accident. Shaped by the huge monsoon floods and the soft rock of the mountain range, the riverbeds are often comprised of massive boulders that seem delicately stacked on top of each other, especially where the river gets steeper. During paddling season when the water is much lower, the water flows through the boulder maze, rather than over it, creating many siphons—it’s the reason class IV in Nepal is so excellent, but the class V is unusually dangerous.
We always try and learn from such events, but what was there to take from this one? “I’m not gonna stop catching eddies,” Simon remarked somberly as we drifted along. He had made this move to be cautious and have a closer look at the rapid, but it had proven a near-deadly trap and a scary reminder that paddling, especially on expeditions, is a team sport.
Simon was determined to get back in his boat as quickly as possible. Less than an hour after the incident, we were traveling downstream. After another 25 miles of playful big water, class III+ and IV, we finished the Thule’s whitewater just as the sun set over the forest of Nepal’s foothills—we had paddled from the high and arid Himalaya right down into the jungle.
Sixty miles of flatwater and mellow whitewater took us toward the road bridge that would mark the end of our trip. After uncountable hours of slogging along, Steve asked, “Where in God’s name is the take-out?”
This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2014 issue of Rapid Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.