Hot Takes From Freestyle Pros At The 2023 US Big Wave Event
The 2023 ICF Canoe Freestyle World Championship will be returning to a big-wave venue this year, with high-flying whitewater athletes making their way to the RushSouth Whitewater Park in Georgia in October. Good Wave promises to be one of the most exciting features for a general viewing audience since the 2015 Worlds on Garburator on the Ottawa River.
But before we get to Worlds, U.S. athletes must vie for a spot to represent their flag. The 2023 U.S. Freestyle Team Trials will also give us a sneak peek at the feature and the caliber of performances we can expect to see from international competitors later this year. So far one factor appears evident: some athletes are showcasing their home river advantage.
Here’s what the pros are saying about Good Wave and how they see the action unfolding for U.S. selection March 11-12:
“The wave is very challenging and the water levels affect it a lot. For the men, Steven Wright and Mason Hargrove are looking really good. There’s a huge turnout for the ladies here and they’re all bringing their A-game. Most of my sessions we’ve had more ladies than men, it’s been awesome. For junior women, local girl Makinley Kate is killing it!”
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“The local Hargroves show consistency on the wave and Makinley Kate is one of the strongest ladies on the water, even in the senior class.”
“Good Wave is very fun but I’m finding it pretty difficult to get some of my favorite tricks that I thought always came easy to me like helixes and clean blunts. The challenge has been a great experience and really my goal here was to learn how to surf this wave.”
“Good Wave is a very interesting feature and you honestly never know when the time is right to throw a trick. The bounce flurries and this makes it tricky to line up and throw your move which can easily result in you flushing off.”
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“I think it’s going to be a very competitive competition all around, from the junior men’s to senior women to C1. I’m excited to see it unravel and who will claim those elusive Team USA spots.”
“The wave is a great feature to really challenge every competitor. It doesn’t give up passes or air easily and the set up is quite hard. The venue as a whole is going to be amazing. Columbus, Georgia has really come up in the ranks. I think it’ll be one of the best Worlds events we have had, rivaling the 2009 Worlds in Thun, Switzerland.”
The competition kicks off Saturday, March 11 at 9 a.m. EST. Stay updated by following USA Freestyle Kayaking.
Feature Image: Makinley Kate Hargrove shows the aerial potential of Good Wave. | Photo: by Rob Giersch
California Kayaker Turns Snow-Buried Home Into Seal Launch (Video)
Taking a break from shoveling the roof. There’s my son doing a first descent by kayak from the top of our house. #tahoesouth pic.twitter.com/bbpTUBVSN4
— Susie Kocher (@UCsierraforest) March 7, 2023
California’s Sierras are in the midst of an atmospheric river that has been pummeling the region with snow. In the past two weeks, the region has seen as much as 15 feet in places. And the Central Sierra Snow Lab on Donner Pass has measured more than 600 inches of cumulative snowfall for the 2022-2023 season.
While the exceptional snowpack is great news for spring runoff and reservoirs, paddlers digging their way out are trying to make the best of current circumstances. As South Lake Tahoe resident Susie Kocher shares in this video.
Bill Parks The Founder Of Northwest River Supplies Passes Away

MOSCOW, IDAHO — On March 5, 2023, Bill Parks, the founder and president of Northwest River Supplies (NRS) passed away peacefully of natural causes at St. Luke’s Hospital in Boise, Idaho at the age of 88.

NRS released the following statement:
“It is with heavy hearts filled with fond memories, laughter, love and respect that we inform you all of the passing of Bill Parks. Bill was known as a businessman, river runner, and educator, but he was foremost a humanitarian. He leaves behind a 50-year legacy of serving customers and community, people and the planet, steadfast in his belief that business can be a force for good in the world.
“When first starting NRS, his business philosophy was considered unorthodox by many of his peers. While the prevailing theory of the time held that a business’s only responsibility was to produce profit for its shareholders, Bill believed that a company could aspire to have a positive impact on the lives of its customers and employees, and to be a force for good in the world. He wanted to start his own company, in part, to simply prove his ideas could work.
“It’s about the people at NRS now.” Bill Parks, Founder of Northwest River Supplies (1934 — 2023)
“In the spring of 1969, Bill found his way aboard a rafting trip through the Grand Canyon, an experience that would change his life—and the outdoor industry—forever. Bill became hooked on river running, bought a Montgomery Ward raft for $69, and talked his way onto any river trip he could find. He saw potential for the sport to grow, and potential for a company to supply that sport with quality gear and a commitment to service. In 1972, Bill took $2,000 of his personal savings, stocked an inventory of gear in his garage and started Northwest River Supplies, Inc.
“After founding NRS, Bill moved to Moscow, Idaho to join the faculty at the University of Idaho in the College of Business and Economics. He continued to build NRS while teaching full time, often hiring his students to assist customers, help out in the warehouse and fulfill orders.
“NRS grew to become a multi-million-dollar international company, and in 2013 Bill began taking steps to plan for a future without him. While he had received numerous offers from investors over the years, Bill decided to invest in what he believed in: the people. Bill helped finance a deal to transfer all NRS stock to the company’s workers, and in early 2014 NRS became 100% employee owned.
“Even in his final days, he was discussing business with NRS managers. His wife and best friend, Donna Holmes Parks was by his side until the end.
“Bill took pleasure in celebrating the NRS 50th Anniversary last year and reflecting on the company’s progress, saying, “I’m proud to say that NRS is truly led by its people. Sometimes you guys tell me that I’m important to the company, and I pretend to believe it. But it’s about the people at NRS now.’”
Learn more about Bill Parks: https://www.nrs.com/about/bill-parks/
About NRS
100% employee-owned, NRS is the world’s leading supplier of equipment and apparel for water recreation, safety and rescue. Founded in 1972 with a vision to create a better kind of company, NRS is dedicated to promoting the health and well-being of its customers, employees and community. For more information on NRS, visit www.nrs.com, email the company at service@nrs.com or call 877.677.4327.
Two Whitewater Greats Join Forces For Latest Project (Video)
Did Dane Jackson have his most successful year yet in 2022? He makes an argument for it in his recently released highlight reel. Jackson ups the creative ante for the project by teaming up with fellow whitewater paddler and musician Rush Sturges.
Sturges’ newest track, “Live or Die,” provides the score to Jackson’s visual paddling display. “Live or Die” is also available on Spotify for those looking to add to their shuttle drive playlist.
2023 Paddling Film Festival Winners Announced At Premiere
The 18th Annual Paddling Film Festival World Tour premiered on February 23—the first in-person premiere since 2020. The event was hosted by The Complete Paddler at The Royal Theatre in Toronto. The show treated the audience of 221 to the first screening of the year’s award-winning films.
All proceeds—totalling $1,694—went to Project Canoe, an organization that provides educational and therapeutic outdoor programming to at-risk youth, mainly through a summer wilderness canoe trip program.

Rapid Media founder, Scott MacGregor, emceed the event and announced this year’s winners.
2023 Paddling Film Festival Winners

Best Environmental Paddling Film
Bad River
Category sponsor: Thompson Rivers University – Adventure Studies Program
Director: Beau Miles
Producers: Beau Miles, Mitch Drummond
In a little red kayak, Beau Miles descends the 23-kilometer-long Cooks River in Sydney, Australia. This is a journey of ill health, sadness and hope. Miles tests the local saying about the river: “If you fall in, you’ll dissolve.”

Best Adventure Travel Film
A Baffin Vacation
Category sponsor: Kokatat
Directors: Sarah McNair-Landry, Erik Boomer
Producers: Rush Sturges, Erik Boomer, Sarah McNair-Landry
Erik Boomer and Sarah McNair-Landry set off on a bold multisport 45-day expedition — traveling through the remote landscape of Baffin Island in search of stunning cliffs to climb and unexplored rivers to whitewater kayak.

Best Kayaking Film
Iceland’s Most Remote Peninsula: Hornstrandir By Kayak
Category sponsor: TRAK Kayaks
Director & Producer: Eike Köhler
Due to its proximity to the Arctic Circle, Hornstrandir is damn fresh even in summer, and this northern coast is hardly protected. In paddling Iceland’s most remote peninsula, this group of kayakers learns how to fail beautifully.

Best Whitewater Film
Stakeout
Category sponsor: Ottawa Valley Tourist Association
Director & Producer: Dane Jackson
For decades, Eastern Canada has brought people from all over the world to paddle its huge variety of whitewater. There is one aspect in particular that continues to bring the world’s best paddlers—big waves. As the rivers rise with the spring melt, each of these unique waves takes form. Every year, a small group of whitewater athletes dedicates their time to the chase. Those who started this tradition gave it a name: Stakeout.

Best Documentary Film
WILD WATERS
Category sponsor: The Canadian Canoe Museum
Director: David Arnaud
Producer: Red Bull Media House
Adventurer, competitor, daughter, friend, pioneer, hero and badass human are all words used to describe French kayaker, Nouria Newman. In Wild Waters, we watch Nouria grow from a young Olympic hopeful to one of the greatest kayakers of all time, and follow her as she prepares to become the first female to run a 100-foot waterfall. Running the world’s hardest whitewater isn’t Nouria’s biggest challenge, though. Realizing the expectations placed upon her as an athlete and as a woman weigh heavily as she pushes back to make her own path.

Best Canoeing Film
Grey Beard: The Man, The Myth, the Mississippi
Category sponsor: Nova Craft Canoe
Director: Zak Rivers
Producers: Zak Rivers, Alex Maier, Kyle Johnson, Amy Robin
Dale “Grey Beard” Sanders challenges himself to set another world record, trying to reclaim his title as the oldest person to paddle the full source to sea on the Mississippi River. At 87 years old, it takes perseverance and an attitude that says, “One of these days I’ll get old.”

Best SUP Film
Circumnavigate
Director & Producer: Will Reddaway
Tragedies in former lifeguard Brendon Prince’s past forced a change in his life to pursue water safety education. In the pursuit of raising awareness for this cause, he must put his own life at risk, pushing his limits and attempting something no one has accomplished before.
Circumnavigate follows the South Devon-based father of three as he attempts to become the first person to standup paddleboard around mainland Britain in hopes of breaking five world records—a challenge many have tried, but none have achieved.

Best Rafting Film
Georgie
Category sponsor: AIRE
Directors & Producers: Dale Wright, Isaac Wright
Georgie, a forgotten raft rediscovered at a yard sale, narrates her story of running rivers. From her wild days with legendary Georgie White in the Grand Canyon to leisurely weekend floats, Georgie’s wisdom rings true to every generation of river traveler.

Best Short Film
On, In & Under The Sava
Category sponsor: Paddle Responsibly
Directors: Rožle Bregar, Carmen Kuntz
Producers: Balkan River Defence, Leeway Collective
Armed with a raft, snorkels and flippers, four friends drift down Slovenia’s Sava River. Their one mission: find the elusive finned monsters that dwell in the deep, in order to help protect the Sava from the construction of dams.

Best Kayak Fishing Film
On The Edge
Director & Producer: Katie Falkenberg
Five women set out on an eight-day, 65-mile pack rafting journey deep in the wilderness of Montana. A trip inspired by self-growth, adventure and world-class westslope cutthroat trout fishing quickly evolves into a deeper exploration of how we are on the edge of a new climate era. The group begins to question what the future of conservation and ethical wilderness recreation will look like in a rapidly changing climate.
Want to join in the fun and get the big screen experience? Find a World Tour event near you at paddlingfilmfestival.com/world-tour.
The Virtual Paddling Film Festival will be released in March allowing you to rent and watch the award-winning films plus 14 others in the comfort of your home. Check back here for the release of the 2023 virtual program.

















This article was first published in the Fall 2022 issue of Paddling Magazine. 
















