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Freestyle Move: Split Phonics

Photos: Nick Troutman
Emily Jackson freestyle

This is a fun trick because it combines a balanced cartwheel move—a splitwheel—with one that can give you some really big air—a phonics monkey.

The split phonics surfaced in 2009 when hole combos gained popularity because they scored higher in freestyle competitions than any individual moves. Combos also save time when you’re trying to squeeze in all your moves before your ride times out. At this year’s Worlds, a new combo bonus will make these moves even more attractive to competitors.

These steps outline a left-to-right split, into a right phonics.

1. Facing upstream, initiate a lefty cartwheel with a back sweep of your left paddle blade.

2. After the first end of your cartwheel gets vertical, reverse your rotation by twisting 90 degrees to look over your right shoulder and pulling the stern through with a forward stroke on the left blade. This completes the split.

3. As your bow comes down, plant a cross-bow draw with your left hand to begin a pirouette. Don’t wait too long to reach across for the pirouette or it won’t be considered a combo. Make sure you dig beneath the foam pile to grab the green water—this 
is what will pull you around 360 degrees.

4. Continue the pirouette until you
are facing back upstream. Holding the pirouette all the way around is crucial. If you are falling over on this step, you are probably going too vertical on the pirouette. Your chin and chest should finish facing up and out so that you can jump when you get to the next step.

5. Once facing upstream, lift your paddle out of the water and jump to throw a loop. Make sure you jump upstream, not straight up, or you will not complete the loop. If your loop never feels straight, you may be jumping too soon.

6. Finish your loop on top of the foam pile and facing upstream. Do a fist pump and blow kisses to your fans.

 

This article originally appeared in Rapid, Early Summer 2011. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Callan: Teddy Bear Picnic

Photo: Rob Faubert
Bear

This article originally appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

Mike Kipp saw it first. Thankfully, he’s an early riser. I was second up, and spot- ted Mike motioning me excitedly from the shore of our island campsite. He pointed out the black bear swimming off another nearby island.

At first, it was cool to see the bear—we had seen little wildlife on our trip. Then I realized he was bee-lining it straight for us. Mike was ecstatic. He hurried over to his tent and woke his family, inviting them to come out and share the experience.

I’d rather not.

I’m bear phobic—a condition acquired through incidents involving trivial things like tubes of toothpaste or Thermoses of coffee, just to name a couple. I sprinted to my family’s tent and woke my wife and daughter Kyla, telling them to prep for a hasty retreat. In her morning haze, Kyla was distraught—it was her sixth birthday and she was anticipating a breakfast of chocolate cake and the mountain of presents she knew Mom had been lugging in her pack the entire trip.

By the time everyone shook the morning cobwebs, the bear was close enough to look us in the eye. Mike was enjoying the magic with his family. I was freaking out about impending doom. We came to a com- promise on the urgency of the situation and agreed to scare the bear off when it reached midway between the two islands.

At the halfway mark, with the hair on my neck standing upright, I yelled at the bear to turn tail. I shot off a round of bear bangers. Still, it remained determined to make landfall on our island. Mike fired his starter’s pistol. It sounded more like an air gun than the elephant gun I had hoped for. The bear didn’t even blink.

I had an entire arsenal—air horn, bear spray, flares—but, a canoeist to the core, I instinctively reached for my paddle. I beat the paddle against the granite shore and yelled obscenities that I hope Kyla will for- get before she is seven. The bear retreated.

The bad news was the paddle I used was the one Mike had hand carved for me a few years back. My abuse had split it right down the middle. Mike didn’t say much (Mike never really says much). He just solemnly stated, “I guess I’ll have to make you a new paddle.”

My daughter was none to pleased with my actions either. In an attempt to calm her, my wife told her that I had invited the bear over for cake. With a look of disgust she said, “Dad, I can’t believe you scared the bear away from my birthday party!”

Kevin Callan is inviting Winnie the Pooh to his daughter’s next birthday party.

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Late Summer 2011.

 

Profile: Sky High

Photo: Marina Droogers
Another day at the office; flying canoeists, fishermen and hunters in to the wilderness of Northern Ontario

An open sky over vast wilderness is what Marina Droogers calls her office. Only 26 years old, Droogers flies canoeists, fishermen and hunters—and their seemingly endless piles of over-packed gear—in a 60-year-old airplane to pristine northern lakes, wild rivers and isolated camps. She navigates with the same compass and finger-on-the-map technique used in the 1920s, dropping clients off at lakes she’s never visited before—and she makes it look easy.

On any given day, a ride in this bush pilot’s red, five-seater Beaver aircraft, a plane renowned for being the workhorse of the North, can be a thrilling passage through calm skies or a whiteknuckle ride through turbulence and low cloud that leaves the common man trembling.

Working for Mattice Lake Outfitters near Armstrong, Ontario, a three-hour drive north of Thunder Bay, she flies from May to November and clocked 420 hours in the air last season. The work is intensely physical and the loads she carries are rarely of the walk-on, walk-off variety. “Physically, I can’t last at this forever,” she says.

From bloody, squirmy moose quarters that tip the scales at 100 pounds, to fuel drums and propane cylinders, outboard motors and strapping canoes to floats, everything involves lifting. “The reaction I get from many clients tells me they don’t think I should be here—‘So, where’s the pilot?’ they ask me after I’ve pumped out the floats, refueled the plane and loaded…

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

Therm-a-Rest Mesh Cot

Photo: www.cascadedesigns.com
Therm-a Rest Luxurylite Mesh Cot

Enjoy extreme backcountry comfort in a 26-inch-wide bed that packs down to approximately the same size as a regular sleeping pad. Breathable mesh allows excellent ventilation in hot weather while the stretch-free fabric and anodized aluminum poles stand up to heavy use. The Luxurylite Cot is a great choice for anyone who wants extra space and comfort in a lightweight, easy-to-carry package.

$240 I www.cascadedesigns.com/therm-a-rest

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

Select Paddles W1 Ultra Review

select-paddles.com
Select Paddles kayak paddle

Another unique import designed to do something clever, the W1 Ultra is an adjustable shaft kayak paddle from French manufacturer Select Paddles. The build quality of the full carbon/Kevlar lay-up, including versatile river running/freestyle blades, is top-notch, but the changeable shaft length—a first for whitewater kayak paddles—is what really grabbed our attention.

The W1 bent shaft adjusts up to five centimetres, while a straight shaft gives you 10 centimetres to play with. Both also feature limitless feather adjustment. The offset placement of the ferrule lock reduces the likelihood of a break mid-shaft but creates a slight off-balance in paddle swing. The ferrule itself uses an Allen key lock—slip-proof, but we don’t recommend working the tiny metal key with numb fingers anywhere near moving water.

All Select Paddles are also available with a standard one-piece shaft. Available from Kayak Import, www.kayakimport.ca.

www.select-kayaks.com | $399

This article originally appeared in Rapid magazine, Early Summer 2010. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Discovery Islands Kayak Trip

Photo: Virginia Marshall
Discovery Islands Kayak Trip

This kayak trip destination is excerpted from the “Killer Trips” feature in Adventure Kayak magazine. 

 

Okisollo Channel, British Columbia

Choking the passage between Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia, the Discovery Islands constrict tidal flows; at times producing “some of the most fearsome tidal rapids in the world” according to surf kayak world champion Sean Morley. Off the northeast corner of Quadra Island, Upper Okisollo Rapid’s green wave is a premiere destination for hardcore kayak surfers when the flood current is less than eight knots, but on the largest tides 13-knot currents create a 10-foot crashing wave and menacing eddies that are unmanageable for even the strongest paddlers. Just south of Okisollo, the giant whirlpools that form in the narrow entrance to Hole in the Wall can reach hundreds of meters across. www.discovery-islands-lodge.com

 

This article is a sneak preview from the Early Summer 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Weekly Kayak News, May 23, 2013

Photo: Courtesy Ontario Sea Kayak Centre
Weekly Kayak News, May 23, 2013

Georgian Bay Paddlepalooza Only One Week Away

The first annual Paddlepalooza Kayak Festival splashes down into Georgian Bay near Parry Sound, Ontario, May 31–June 2, 2013. Featuring top coaches, superb scenery, great camping and an awesome Saturday night party with live music, the event will include on-water clinics in strokes, rescues, rolling and more, plus dry land lessons on risk management, cooking, campcraft and navigation. “This weekend is a spring tune-up with more advanced clinics for novice and intermediate paddlers,” says Dympna Hayes, co-owner of event host, Ontario Sea Kayak Centre. Read a full story about the event in the May issue of Paddling This Month, and sign up and learn more at http://www.ontarioseakayakcentre.com/paddlepalooza-kayak-festival.html

 

 

A Better SPOT

SPOT, makers of the ubiquitous orange satellite messenger, and parent company Globalstar announced this month the release of the new SPOT Global Phone, a portable, easy-to-use and data-enabled satellite phone. Designed for outdoor enthusiasts who want to remain connected when travelling in areas beyond the reach of cellular coverage, the SPOT Global Phone provides affordable and reliable satellite connectivity with crystal clear voice quality. Earlier this year, Globalstar deployed a second generation satellite constellation, bringing significant network connectivity improvements including reliability and superior voice clarity. The SPOT Global Phone is the first satellite phone to be offered in major retail outlets including London Drugs and Mountain Equipment Co-op. The phone retails at $499 CDN plus a required subscription service starting at $24.99 monthly or 25 cents per minute. For more information, visit FindMeSPOT.com

 

spotglobalphone.jpg
 

 

California’s First 100-Mile Paddle Race—Saturday, May 25

California¹s first ultra-marathon paddle race, the California 100, will churn down the Sacramento River on May 25, from Redding to Chico. Expected to compete will be nearly 100 people on over 50 kayaks, surf skis and outrigger canoes. Race organizers predict the boats will cover the 100-mile distance in eight to 20 hours of hard paddling. “Cal 100 benefits Rivers for Change, a non-profit that promotes conservation through source to sea educational river adventures,” says Race Director Haven Livingston. California 100 will include paddlers at all levels. The race is described by Rivers for Change as offering, “adventure, competition and relay divisions, with many paddlers of intermediate ability out for the fun of it.” The entry fee is $200. Learn more at www.riversforchange.org/california-100.

 

 

 

 

Daily Photo: French Connection

Photo: Catherine Tortet
Daily Photo: French Connection

Adventure Kayak reader Catherine Tortet sent this photo all the way from France: “Descent of the Loire River, a UNESCO world heritage site.” In North America, castles like that only exist in fairy tales.

 

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

 

 

Daily Photo: Family Paddle

Photo: Daniel Aufgang
Daily Photo: Family Paddle
Where will your first family canoe trip of the year take you? Or have you already gone out for it? Let us know! 
 
This photo was sent in by Daniel Aufgang and taken in Algonquin Park. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

9 Best Paddling Apps

Photo: Ryan Creary
Paddling apps

1. River Guide

$4.99

This jam-packed app provides access to thousands of real-time streamflow gauges throughout the U.S., reporting flow rates and relative levels. RiverGuide can save a list of favorite rivers for quick access, provide flow forecasts and find nearby runs using your device’s GPS signal.

 

2. Trip Journal

$2.99

One of the most sophisticated apps we’ve seen, Trip Journal includes Google Earth-integrated features like GPS route tracking, photo and video geo-tagging, trip sharing and synchronization with social media outlets like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr.

 

3. Paddling Magazine

FREE

Alright, time for a little shameless self-promotion. The Paddling Magazine app gives you access to current and 32 full back issues filled with techniques, stories, tips and more. Access Paddling’s special digital extras including bonus video and photo galleries. You can download the app by searching Paddling Magazine.

 

4. Mountain Buzz Whitewater Community

FREE

MountainBuzz.com is a community for western U.S. whitewater paddlers. This app allows users to access online forums and post questions, upload photos, access river beta and connect with other paddlers, all from the riverside.

 

5. ResQr First Air & CPR Coach

$3.99

This app provides clear, step-by-step instructions for hundreds of first aid scenarios. It asks straightforward yes or no questions to provide real-time coaching through situations and provides audible proper CPR pacing and instructions. ResQr can also use your connection to locate the nearest emergency room and other services.

 

6. Trimable Outdoors

$9.99

Trimble’s app turns your smart
phone into a full-featured GPS
 device, assisting in recording routes and navigating. Accompanying web software allows you to plan, post, track and share your trips as well as view and discuss others’ online and post trip updates to Facebook.

 

7. GoSkyWatch

$3.99

Okay, this one’s more fun at the campsite after a day’s run. Hold your device up to the night sky and GoSkyWatch will tell you what constellations, planets and other objects you’re looking at. You can view the app in red light mode to save your night vision and search the extensive database for individual stars.

 

8. Canoe Slalom

$0.99

If you’re stuck in the back seat on a long shuttle, pass the time with this awesome game featuring 20 original slalom courses. Use your thumbs to control your paddle, navigating your kayak through gates and around rocks in the fastest time possible.

 

9. Juice Defender

$4.99

This app extends battery life by intelligently managing the battery-draining components of your device. Five preset modes let you balance functionality with power conservation and scheduling lets you preserve power in nighttime/peak time settings.

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