Home Blog Page 416

Daily Photo: Fish Eye

Photo: Jason Kuruc
Nahanni

“While exploring the summit area of Sunblood Mountain I found this amazing scree gully which drew my eyes down toward the South Nahanni River. It was flanked with spires of loose rock patches of scree and talus and was criss-crossed with game trails – predominantly Dall sheep. I used a fish-eye setting to attain this funnel effect.” – Jason Kuruc

This photo is was taken by Jason Kuruc and submitted as part of the Canadian Hertiage Rivers Photo Contest. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

Daily Photo: Vancouver Island Creeking

Photo: Jim MacDonald
whitewater

Paddler Jimmy MacDonald of Saskatchewan stompin’ some boofs on Vancouver Island creeks. Photo submitted by Jim MacDonald. 

Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected] 

 

Daily Photo: Fournel Falls

Photo: Robert Kierans
whitewater kayaking
This photo was taken at Fournel Falls, in the French Alps last summer. Submitted by Rapid reader Robert Kierans. 

Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected] 

Daily Photo: Hands Up!

Photo: Rapid reader Madison
whitewater kayaking.

 

A well timed snapshot—it looks like that paddle is suspended mid air! Photo submitted by Rapid reader Madison, location unknown. Leave a note in the comments if you recognize this drop. 

Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected] 

 

Daily Photo: Home Base

Photo: Erin Pehar
Moose River

A shot of home base on Northern Ontario’s Moose River on a canoe trip with Missinaibi Headwaters Outfitters and a class of Grade 7 and 8 students.

This photo is was taken by Erin Pehar and submitted as part of the Canadian Hertiage Rivers Photo Contest. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

Birch Bark Canoe Building

canoe maker video interview

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58055134

Video: Rogue Films

In this beautifully shot short from Rogue Films, canoe maker David Moses Bridges discusses his passion for working with birch bark and keeping traditional building methods alive. 

Daily Photo: Cinder Surfs

Photo: Trevor Killam
Daily Photo: Cinder Surfs

Adventure Kayak reader Trevor Killam shares this shot from a recent November surf session at Clam Harbour, Nova Scotia. “Cinder our Silver Labrador decided to help our friends get back out into the surf,” Trevor says.

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

Gear: Kokatat Aries PFD

Photo: Courtesy Kokatat
PFD

Comfortable and economical, this low-profile PFD offers unrestricted motion thanks to generous arm openings. Fully adjustable, the Aries is especially popular with canoeists who prefer to paddle with a tractor seat due to its high-backed design.

Features:

  • Environmentally friendly GAIA PVC-free foam flotation
  • 500D Cordura outer shell for durability and wear resistance
  • 200D nylon oxford inner shell

 

$99 | www.kokatat.com

 

Basecamp: Support DadCamping

Photo: Scott MacGregor
Basecamp: Support DadCamping

 By now you’ve surely heard of glamping—the upscale version of camping derived from the oxymoron, glamorous camping. What started as tabloid celebrities bringing the luxuries of their everyday lives into the backcountry is now a worldwide tourism industry phenomenon. Think mints on fluffed pillows and paraffin facials inside pre-pitched safari tents, that sort of thing.

I’d like to propose a new word for a much older, more admirable tradition, and one dearer to my heart—dadcamping. Derived from the root words, dad and camping. Clever, huh? Dadcamping can be seen as immature, irresponsible

and dangerous to some women—although daughters seem to enjoy themselves just fine until a certain age, when the bare mention of it causes their eyes to roll back in their heads. “Ahhh, Dad, do we have to play your silly games?”

Dadcamping isn’t limited to just camping with Dad. It’s more a state of mind, or more accurately, a state of mindlessness. Fine examples of dadcamping include: blowing donuts in the ski lodge parking lot; blasting The Gourds’ bluegrass remake of Snoop Dogg’s Gin and Juice; riding no hands through the campground; black diamond runs; turtle,

minnow and frog catching; marshmallows for breakfast; class III whitewater; naked swims at public beaches; rope swings and cliff jumping; and Tyrolean traverses (shown here).

Not only is dadcamping fun, a recent study lead by researches at the Université de Montreal found that fathers, more so than mothers, tend to give their children the leeway to take risks and explore. More freedom, say these very brainy academics, better equips youngsters for the challenges of life that lie ahead. “The less protective the parent, the more exploratory the behaviour of the child,” says Daniel Paquette, a psychology professor at the university.

Half of the study tells us what we dadcampers already know—fathers are more likely to give children space to take risks. More importantly, the study identifies a clear link between our arm’s-length, more adventurous style of parenting and the intrepidness of the kids.

Those who question the value of dadcamping (more commonly known as the activation theory of parenting) are those from the attachment theory camp, a massive group of concerned citizens made up of mostly mothers and mother-in-laws.

Until this new research is more widely accepted, dadcampers must continue to guard certain secrets, which are reserved for its members (dads and kids) only. The Dadcamper Code lays out the one and only object of the fraternity as follows: You take your pointer finger and put it to your lips like you’re going to shush someone in church and repeat these three words, “Don’t tell Mommy.”

 

This article first appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping, Early Summer 2010 issue.  For more expert tips, download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here. 

Nova Craft Moisie Canoe Review

Photo: Scott MacGregor
Nova Craft Moisie

This review of Nova Craft Canoe’s Moisie was originally published in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

Nova Craft has reinvented a boat with an enviable reputation among river trippers. The long-defunct Blue Hole Canoe Company of Sunbright, Tennessee, first released this canoe in the early ‘80s as the Cumberland. Steve Scarborough, creator of the celebrated Mad River Canoe Caption, was responsible for its original design. Evergreen Canoes then reproduced it as the Starburst in the 1990s.

The now legendary, highly rockered hull design has never been bettered as a river running tripping canoe. However, since Evergreen stopped making boats several years ago, a re-sale market hardly exists—why would anyone sell a boat this good? So, a hungry frustrated market for this boat built quickly as time passed.

Enter Nova Craft Canoe of London, Ontario. They created a new mold carefully taken from the dimensions of the Cumberland and Starburst, and in response to paddler demand, began pressing Royalex. The new hull was christened the Moisie in honor of the iconic Quebec white-knuckle river. At first glance, the Moisie is a dead ringer of the Starburst. It is the same 16-foot four-inch hull with aggressive rocker and a very round bottom. It isn’t until you get out the tape measure that you realize the subtle improvements Nova Craft has made.

With each iteration, this boat has become deeper. The Moisie is half an inch deeper than the Starburst, making a dry boat even dryer.

“Hollow vinyl gunwales are prone to collapsing at the points where the seat and yoke bolts pass through,” says Roch Prevost of Nova Craft, “so we inserted a tough vinyl bushing into an oversized hole at these locations to take the pressure, and bingo, we have a simple solution to grossly sunken bolt washers.”

The Starburst hull was prone to a splitting of the interior vinyl just forward of the stern paddler’s knees—most likely from flexing of the floor when running the boat empty. A new Moisie has a hull completely lacking in flex because of the heavier expedition-grade material Nova Craft is calling Royalex Plus. It also comes in stan- dard industry Royalex. The seats are set in an optimum tripping position, maximizing the load carrying space with room for far more than two 60-liter barrels between the bow seat and the yoke and two more to fit snugly between the yoke and the stern thwart.

Any real-world comparison of this hull with other boats highlights its exceptional dryness and maneuverability. It should be mentioned here that the Moisie is a boat that begs for whitewater outfitting—thigh straps, contoured kneepads, flotation bag cages and forward-tilted seats bring it to life. Our demo boat came without outfitting so we set shaped kneepads loosely in the bottom and set out to do some turns.

The Moisie sweetly initiates, turns and carves like a playboat. It feels even better carrying a load as the extra weight sits the boat lower in the water, adding stability. It is so responsive to input from both bow and stern thanks to its heavy rocker and dramatically rounded bottom that new paddlers may find it requires a lot of minding to keep it straight. But advanced paddlers will be left smiling and wondering if they should finally send their scarred and treasured veteran Starbursts out into the resale market.

If you are going to travel a river straight through and just enjoy the scenery, there are many other boats that will float you. But this is the boat for playful three-week river adventures far from the maddening world.

Nova Craft Canoe Moisie specs

  • Length: 16’6”
  • Width at gunwales: 34”
  • Depth at bow: 26”
  • Depth at center: 15”
  • Depth at stern: 26”
  • Weight: Royalex plus, vinyl trim, 77 lbs | Royalex, aluminum trim, 67 lbs
  • MSRP: $1,899 CAD
  • www.novacraft.com

This article originally appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Spring 2013. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.