Mr Winters has asked me to comment on the Great Greenland Paddle controversy which I do with some trepidation. You see, this argument has been going on for centuries with little sign of resolution. Native cultures have fought wars over this very topic (not having fiber optic cables they had to debate face to face). Because few had the same language the simplest method of proving one's point was to assault the other person with the paddle. The southern natives used a bashing method because most of the game they hunted was small and agile. A stabbing action just didn't work because the animals were forever dodging out of the way. The Inuit, who hunted large slow moving game, found a stabbing motion to be more efficient so they used a narrow paddle. The hunting method was important if they were to avoid starvation or be forced to eat bipedal ground vegetarians so it was soon interwove with religion. Even today we see the remains of these pagan religions surface in the zeal of Greenland paddle users trying to convert the heretic Euro paddle users while the Euro paddle users have resorted to infiltrating the kayaking education system to promote their wide blade paddles. You can imagine what happened when the two cultures clashed. The Inuit who ventured south to enslave the natives of Colombia and force them to grow cocaine that the Inuit then sold to bikers in Los Angeles were offended by the sacrilege of bashing game. All attempts to convert the bashers failed and eventually the Inuit, disgusted with such savages, retreated to the north and bought all their cocaine from mules. The mules were somewhat indiscriminate in how they packaged the cocaine and occasionally a bag might burst and become mixed with mule effluent. This is how the phrase "This is Good Shit" came into being within the drug culture. It is a shame the Inuit did not send some of their anthropologists south with their drug lords. They surely would have discovered native groups using blow guns. Harnessed to a flatulent Inuit a blow gun would have been a formidable weapon and could have changed the course of history. The Amazonian natives never recognised the potential as they had no British bangers to generate Methane in suitable quantities. The Greenlanders, of course, had more than enough Bangers having brought back thousands of pounds of them thinking they would be the beginning of trade with the barbarian Brits. The attempt failed due to poor packaging. Had the Bangers looked less like something obscene they might have caught on. The Brits got the best end of the deal. They got sea kayaks in trade for the Bangers, formed the BCU and told the world they invented sea kayaking. Of course that meant they also had to invent the paddle. This they entrusted to the British public school system that had been using paddles for pounding knowledge into the minds of nobility. One can criticise the lack of anatomical knowledge on the part of English schoolmasters but remember this was the nobility and it is far from certain that their minds aren't somewhat south of their bellies. Anyone who has eaten British food will know why it isn't in their bellies. Indeed, it is often said (with more than a little justification) that the way to an Englishman's heart is painted with warm pissy tasting beer. Of course, the noble little blighters were squirmy and a wide bladed paddle was necessary if one was to hit them consistently. And so we can see how the Brits unintentionally aided the wide blade cause of the southern natives of the western hemisphere. For those of you interested in such things it is worth studying the wide bladed low aspect ratio paddles used south of the Mason Dixon line. The Tarascan Indians used paddles that were very nearly round as did the natives of Virginia. These round paddles served as large serving spoons for North Carolina smoked bar-be-que. The Inuit, having no Hickory trees, did not have smoked bar-b-que and had to make do with uncooked caribou and seal fat. This, of course explains the Inuit paddle. The Inuit needed lots of area to keep their slippery fat slathered hands from sliding off the paddle. Modern North Americans seeking to duplicate the Inuit experience can use lard or Vaseline. But, you ask with some justification, didn't the southern Indians have slippery hands from eating the pork? Yes, they did but in the true scientific spirit they asked, what would happen if we poured a mixture of hot peppers and vinegar over the bar-b-cue. would that not make out hands less slippery. Well it worked and while licking their fingers they discovered that it made the bar-b-cue taste better. Thus was the first bar-b-cue sauce invented and if you think this little tempest in a tea pot about paddles is blown out of proportion then you should try to tell a North Carolinian that they make better bar-b-cue sauce in Columbia South Carolina. Dr. Peregrine Inverbon, Ph.d., DD, LL.d, Ph.G Transcribed by his humble servant John Winters *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net Website: http://www.gasp-seakayak.net/paddlewise/ ***************************************************************************Received on Wed Jul 22 1998 - 11:38:04 PDT
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