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Werner Paddles Welcomes Rowan Stuart

Photo: Werner Paddles
Rowan Stuart joins team Werner

 

Junior women’s freestyle champ Rowan Stuart joins up with Werner Paddles this week after scooping up a gold at the IFC World Championships in September.

The 17-year-old North Carolina native is stoked about the new deal and not letting her freestyle success narrow the focus of her kayaking career.

“Right now I’m hoping to get out onto some more creeks, and add more variety to my boating,” she says. Her goal is to do more in the world of racing, and make the most of next summer’s competition scene, as it will be her last season to compete in junior divisions. 

Signing on with Werner adds to an already-impressive list of sponsorships, and Stuart’s excited be joining a new team. “[Werner] is a great match for me,” she says. “The team is sick, and of course the paddles are excellent. I plan on working with them for a long time in the future.”

Read more about Stuart and her accomplishments in the world of whitewater here.

 

 

Kayak Submarine. For Real.

Check out this fantastic human-powered one-man submarine built from a kayak by Olivier Feuillette. Want to try the same with your canoe?

X-1 Surge Mini Waterproof Headphones

Photo: www.x-1.com
Waterproof ear buds

Dubstep is no longer reserved for kayak porn. Take your tunes on the water with these low-profile water-ready earbuds. 

$50 | www.x-1.com

This review appeared in Rapid, Spring 2013. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read the rest here.

 

Tripping Skill: Beat The Bugs

Photo: Courtesy Frank Wolf
Photo: Courtesy Frank Wolf

Adventure filmmaker Frank Wolf has battled more than his fair share of mosquito and blackfly swarms. Beating the bugs is all about location, he says. “Find a breezy point and avoid the still, dead calm spots when setting up a campsite.”

While Wolf has even tried caking himself in mud to keep the swarm at bay, nothing has proved as effective as DEET. “But if you’re working hard and sweating, you’re going to keep sweating it out,” he warns.

Wolf’s secret weapon on buggy portages? Squeezing his face into the armhole of an old t-shirt. “It keeps them out of your ears and off your neck too.” While Wolf opts for a bug shirt at camp, they’re too hot and limit your vision on portages, he advises, and stray branches easily rip the mesh. “Mentally, you can’t let the bugs bother you,” he adds. “Accept their existence and you’ll be much happier.

 

For more expert tips, check out Canoeroots & Family Camping,  Summer/Fall 2013 issue. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

Daily Photo: Olympic Sunset

Photo: Richard Firth
Daily Photo: Olympic Sunset

Adventure Kayak reader Richard Firth was paddling off the west coast of Washington’s San Juan Island this summer when he witnessed this spectacular sunset “looking out  Mosquito Bay towards the Olympic Pennisula.”
 

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

 

 

Daily Photo: Still Waters

Photo: Carol Pope
Daily Photo: Still Waters

Adventure Kayak reader Carl Pope shared this peaceful capture of her Pygmy kayaks equipped for fishing.
 

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

 

 

Daily Photo: Pup Paddling

Photo: David Cummings
Daily Photo: Pup Paddling

Adventure Kayak reader Cari Cummings of Salado, Texas, sent us this adorable image from the Town Lake Paddle for Puppies in Austin. “End of summer here in Central Texas,” she writes. Looks like you two are making the most of it!
 

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

 

 

Video: Moose Fest 2013

Moose Fest 2013

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77444472

Director: Jared Seiler

A fabulous weekend at the Moose River in Old Forge New York ended with the crowning of a New Whitewater King. Demshitz Jared Seiler is the New KING OF NEW YORK!!! Check back for the full edit coming soon on demshitz.com

Daily Photo: Go Fetch

Photo: Flickr user s.schmitz
whitewater rescue

Have you ever taken a whitewater rescue course?

This photo was taken by Flickr user s.schmitz and lisenced through Creative Commons. Want to see your photo here? Send your whitewater shots to [email protected].

 

Historic Canoe Voyage Complete

Photo: Courtesy Paddle Across Canada Tour
PACT Portage

 

Over the summer of 2013 a group of six young paddlers retraced the historic fur trade routes across Canada, paddling a 25-foot canoe more than 5,000 kilometers over 120 days.

The purpose of the Paddle Across Canada Tour (PACT) was to raise money for outdoor education organizations across the country. The route began in the Rocky Mountains in Alberta and was completed on the St Lawrence Seaway in September. The four-man, two-woman team consisted of Marissa Sieck, James Humpston, Marc Soberano, Hollye Ervine, Scott Graham and Peter Vooys.

“We set out to retrace and experience Canadian heritage. Our route was the traditional cross-Canada route taken by fur trading voyageurs,” says Vooys. The group paddled thier 25-foot canot du nord (North canoe) using voyageur-style, long-bladed paddles. “Canada was opened up from its waterways, and many of the long portages and forts of the past have now grown into towns and hydro dams,” he adds.

Portaging from Fort Frances through Quetico Provincial Park and the Boundary Waters to Lake Superior was the most challenging part of the trip, says Vooys. Given the canoe’s extra length, 300-pound weight and four-foot-wide-plus-people width, every portage presented different obstacles. “The portaging from Fort Frances to Lake Superior consisted of everything from in-town portaging, to tight cliffs, windy paths and the Grand Portage endurance. We were beat up and exhausted by the time we hit Lake Superior. At the same time, that portion of the trip is one of my favourites because of how hard and demanding it was,” he says.

The trip was a success, and not only because it raised money and awareness about outdoor education, says Vooys. “Best of all, everyone who started the trip finished the trip—still as good friends.”

Learn more about PACT here: paddleacrosscanadatour.org

Or visit the websites of organizations that benefited from the trip:

Pine Project – www.pineproject.org
Camp Outlook – www.campoutlook.ca