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Backpacker’s Pantry Outback Oven

Photo: Backpacker's Pantry
Backpacker's Pantry Outback Oven

This gear review was originally appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

When you’re cooking with gas, you need a 10” Outback Oven. The kit includes a non-stick baking pan, lid, insulating hood and a heat dissipater designed to prevent the most common error of Outback Oven baking: the burnt bottom. To avoid this fate, keep an eye on the lid knob that doubles as a thermometer and be patient coaxing your stove to simmer. Best for stoves with separate fuel tanks. Tends to teeter precariously, so take care not to upset your leaning tower of pizza.

$84 | www.backpackerspantry.com 

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Spring 2009.

 

Tumblehome: The Original Canoe Stunts

Photo: Courtesy Roots Canada
Roots Canada Photo

This article originally appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

Since the passing in March, 2011 of canoe guru Captain Kirk Wipper, I’ve been thinking about one of the first amazing things I ever saw him do in a canoe—a headstand on the center thwart of a 16-foot, wood-canvas Peterborough Canadian.

Back when most rivers flowed the other way because the ice age had yet to come, proficiency in a canoe included a variety of novelty moves that any novice hungered to learn from the masters. Take Omer Stringer, a contemporary of Wipper’s, and his mesmerizing effect on young paddlers. Stringer mastered all the functional canoeing and portaging skills as a guide and general factotum in Algonquin Park. But in the 1960s he crisscrossed the province demonstrating canoe stunts—a kind of canoeing that is all but gone today, lost in the rush of getting certified and carded up.

I vividly remember Omer standing on the dock at Camp Kandalore, describing head- stands and shakeouts and all the cool stuff you could do in a canoe. As he was talking, his canoe, which floated behind him untethered, drifted gently away from the dock. Kids in the audience got agitated, pointing and calling out to Omer: “your canoe is floating away!”

Totally unconcerned, he kept talking. Then, with the power of a gymnast and the timing of a circus showman, he did a standing broad jump from the dock into the moving canoe, clearing a couple yards or more without missing a beat in his discourse. Howls of approval pealed out from the audience.

There were other tricks as well. Canoe over canoe is a rescue technique, of course. But the term also referred to a stunt per- formed regularly during free canoeing at camps throughout the ‘40s, ‘50s and ‘60s.

The stuntman or woman sat behind the stern seat and paddled like crazy toward a willing participant in another canoe. Lining up for a T-bone collision, the stunt involved ramping the moving canoe as far as possible over the mid-ships of the stationary canoe. Next, in one fluid motion, the paddler stood and ran up the moving boat until it balanced over the stationary canoe, and then see- sawed down on the other side. At this point, the paddler settled in and continued on his or her merry way. Canoe over canoe.

The spectacular headstand was some- thing that many Kandalore campers felt compelled to learn if ever they were to paddle like a master. Training for the headstand included the monkey walk—turning 360 degrees in a canoe with hands and feet on the gunwales—and progressed to the flip— spinning the canoe on its longitudinal axis, above the water, without sinking it.

Adding a second person opened doors to gunwale bobbing, jousting and the double headstand.

Since Kirk and Omer were doing their stunts, and encouraging others to do the same, canoeing has evolved. The glamor of these tricks has faded, lost to historic irrelevance. Maybe today’s leaders should sit down and delineate a curriculum for Flat- water Stunting levels I, II and III certification. A flashy badge could be awarded to those who achieve Master Stuntman status.

Why would you want to do a headstand in a canoe on flatwater? It’s a bit like practicing Zen. A path to enlightenment known only to the great canoe masters of old and those willing to wade in and give it a whirl.

James Raffan mastered the monkey walk in graduate school and is still working on his headstand.

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

 

Daily Photo: Soul Surfer

Photo: Justine Curgenven
Daily Photo: Soul Surfer

Shooting for the recently released sea kayaking DVD, This is the Sea 5, filmmaker Justine Curgenven mounted a GoPro camera on the bow of Oregon paddler Paul Kuthe’s boat and sent him out into the fray. To see the action in real-time HD, you can download all eight minutes here. Or pick up a copy of TITS 5 at your local paddling shop or online at Cackletv.com.

 

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

 

 

Daily Photo: Rescue Refresher

Photo: James Roberts
Daily Photo: Rescue Refresher

Have your doubts that sea kayak rescues can be fun? Witness this image sent to us from James Roberts at Ontario Sea Kayak Centre near Georgian Bay. If you’re finding the idea of practicing rescues daunting, “take yourself out on a warm day in inviting waters and think of the kayak like an overgrown pool toy,” advises Roberts.

 

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

 

 

Rolling With Kids

Jean-Francois Marleau / SKILSca

“I hope your readers will find this inspiring,” writes JF Marleau, a senior instructor and guide trainer at SKILS kayak school in Victoria, British Columbia. Marleau shared this video of his 11-year-old stepdaughter, Sammy, norsaq-, angel- and hand-rolling a sea kayak at her local pool. “Enjoy this activity with the whole family!” JF enthuses, “it’s fun and rewarding.”

 

Daily Photo: Northern Forest

Photo: Chris Gill
Daily Photo: Northern Forest
A misty morning on the Northern Forest Canoe Trail. On its 740-mile course, the Northern Forest Canoe Trail (NFCT) links the waterways of New York, Vermont, Québec, New Hampshire and Maine.
 
This photo was taken by Chris Gill. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Editorial: Whitewater Parks

Photo: Scott MacGregor
Uncertain outcome

Consider the evolution of climbing. Once upon a time there was only mountaineering. Then along came rock climbing. Now there’s indoor sport climbing. It reminds me of the Darwinian t-shirts we wore in college with the six stages of evolution from prehistoric ape to Homo sapiens. All still involve ropes (usually) and going uphill. Are they really the same sport? i doubt if climbing gyms feed Mount McKinley.

It was difficult for equitable journalist Conor Mihell to find anyone to go on record saying that whitewater parks are bad for the sport. No one in the industry is going to speak up and give municipal officials any reason to stop urban paddling developments. No one is going to bash a nationwide trend that’s reverting old dams into rivers, opening green spaces and putting butts in boats.

So are whitewater parks good for the sport?

If you only paddle in whitewater parks you’ve never considered death as an option. And why would you? If your boat gets pinned in a park, a lifeguard blows his whistle and an engineer inflates a baffle or dewaters the course. A mild annoyance to the guy downstream setting up for a pistol flip, but he’s come to expect it and he too doesn’t know any different.

Maybe I shouldn’t care, I’m past pushing myself to the edge. With a young family, death is not an option for me either. There is too much about paddling (and life) I want to share with my kids. Like, for example, adventure.

Whitewater parks offer leisure, a freedom academics say is intrinsically motivating in and of its own merits. For true adventure, however, the outcome must be uncertain. Information to complete a task (like getting to the bottom of the river) must be missing, vague or unknown. Think about changing water levels, leadership, morale, weather, unknown access and times when your own skill and confidence (or the group’s) may be challenged.

For real adventure you need real rivers. Riding a conveyor belt to the top of the rapids or locking your keys in your truck at the clubhouse is not adventure.

Whitewater parks are neither good nor bad for our sport, they are simply creating a new leisure-based paddlesport—a name for those who paddle only in parks will evolve over time.

I’ve paddled at parks and had a great time. However the soul of whitewater, like that of mountaineering and backcountry skiing, lives inside those of us who paddle where we are not quite sure how the day will end.

 

Scott MacGregor is the founder and publisher of Rapid and host of Rapid Media TV.

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

Daily Photo: Misty Morning

Photo: Terri Rilling
Daily Photo: Misty Morning
A misty, grey day makes for a scenic photoshoot for photographer, Terri Rilling. 
 
This photo was taken by Terri Rilling (https://www.facebook.com/terririllingphotography). Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Daily Photo: Swing into Summer

Photo: Vince Paquot
Daily Photo: Swing into Summer

Every adventurous waterman and waterwoman has known a local rope swing; kept its location top secret, to be shared only with close friends. This is Adventure Kayak editor Virginia Marshall’s secret swing… and she’s not telling where!

 

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

 

 

Weekly Kayak News, April 18, 2013

Photo: Courtesy Illinois Department of Natural Resources
Weekly Kayak News, April 18, 2013

Charleston Paddlesports Festival

Pick up a copy of Adventure Kayak and chat with publisher Scott MacGregor and cameraman/film festival coordinator Dan Caldwell at the East Coast Paddlesports and Outdoor Festival this weekend. Scott and Dan will be filming the festival action, talking to participants and coordinators, and screening the 2013 Reel Paddling Film Festival World Tour. Friday through Sunday, take part in a huge variety of on- and off-water sessions, from rigging your kayak for fishing, to hand rolling and other tricks with Greenland-style guru, Dubside. Check out the schedule here, and make your way to South Carolina this weekend.

 SunriseSunset

 

 

Backroads Banderdinker Returns to Wisconsin

Hayward, Wisconsin, will hold the annual Backroads Banderdinker festival for charity June 8, 2013, on Nelson Lake. Featuring a five-mile loop around Big Island, the event is appropriate for paddlers of all ages and skill levels. The grassroots festival will raise funds for the local Boy Scouts troop, amateur sports leagues and the area Lion’s Club, as well as help promote the Hayward region’s 125 miles of rivers and 200 lakes. Registration for the festival is now available online

 

 

Asian Carp Reach Great Lakes

At least some Asian carp probably have found their way into the Great Lakes, but there’s still time to stop the invaders from becoming established and unraveling food chains, according to a scientific report released earlier this month.

“I would say there’s at least some evidence for Asian carp being present in southern Lake Michigan,” Christopher Jerde of the University of Notre Dame, the lead author, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “”The question is how many. We can be cautiously optimistic … that we’re not at the point where they’ll start reproducing, spreading further and doing serious damage.”

The paper summarizes findings by Jerde and other scientists from Notre Dame, The Nature Conservancy and Central Michigan University during two years of searching the Great Lakes basin for Asian carp. The fish have migrated northward in the Mississippi River and many tributaries since escaping from Deep South ponds in the 1970s. Scientists fear they will out-compete prized sport and commercial species. Via Yahoo! News.