Re: [Paddlewise] Chicken Kayak Surf Safety

From: Richard Culpeper <culpeper_at_loon.norlink.net>
Date: Sun, 20 Sep 1998 20:42:22 -0400
Gerald Foodman wrote:
--snip--

> What is the danger of spine or neck or back injury when getting knocked over
> in shallow water?  I have been there many times with no hint of injury, but
> am I pushing the odds?  Does anyone know of cases of such injury?

Jerry:

I have landed on my back once while in a rapid (Kipawa's Hollywood's Boneyard at

about 200 cms).  A wave tossed me in the air, and I flipped over.  I tucked
forward and landed upside down in the trough.  The total height of my fall was
about four feet.  I did not break anything, but my lats were severely bruised.
I felt very lucky to not have broken my back, and believe that the thick padding

of my PFD was the only thing which saved me.

My friend Jake Scott broke his neck when he drifted over a four foot ledge
upside down (Temagami's S-Bend in moderately low water).  He hit bottom in the
hole.  He was neither tucked nor layed back, so he took the hit on his noggin.
Miraculously, he did not suffer any nerve damage.  He was so moved by the
experience that after he recovered he went back to school to take up a career as

a rescue technician.

Consequently, I am absolutely terrified of landing on my head.

What I fear most when surfing at the beach is pitonning (the nose digging into
the ground while the wave pushes the boat vertical), for when this happens it is

possible to come arcing down from several feet high -- about four feet in my
wild water boat and twice that in my sea kayak.

I try to avoid pitonning by leaning back when my bow goes too far under, and in
severe cases I try to quickly move from a front surf to a side surf to avoid
digging in.

If this fails and a piton is inevitable, I lean the boat just prior to digging
in, so that although I still dig in and go vertical, I land on my hull or my
side rather than my noggin.  If I am too slow, I sweep while going vertical,
which makes the boat pirouette (it goes up on end and then spins on its
longitudinal axis), and again prevents me from landing on my head.  If even this

fails, then I extend my paddle so that it hits first.  I realize that this puts
me at serious risk of a dislocation, but I would prefer just about anything to
landing on my head.

If you want to learn how to pirouette your pitonning boat but don't want to get
into white water, where pirouettes are basic hole playing and surfing moves, tag

up with your local wild water crowd in the winter and practice off a three metre

diving platform -- though don't use a sea kayak, for they are too long and will
hit the platform on the rebound.

Hmmm....  I wonder....  If one put some Official Canadian Ballast Rocks (TM) in
one's stern hatch toward the sprit, would this prevent pitonning?  8^)

Richard Culpeper
www.geocities.com/~culpeper



***************************************************************************
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 Sun Sep 20 1998 - 17:57:25 PDT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Thu Aug 21 2025 - 16:29:59 PDT