First: Thanks for all the information on hull speed. Whenever I meet a kayakker with sensors on his hull and paddle, a laptop on his sprayskirt connected to various parts of his body and breathing through a machine on his deck, I know I am not watching someone who escaped the hospital and took his mechanic lungs with him. I just met someone trying out a new kayak. Just remember that your normal roll might be a problem with all this equipment. Seriously: I got data on my own boat and a lot of improvements on my test ideas. Thanks. Something else: Last winter I managed to teach myself the sweep roll, C-to-C, screw-roll, dry-sigarette-roll, broken-paddle-roll and handroll, all on both sides of the boat, all with a dry and a swamped boat, all with and without a PFD. Sounds solid, doesn't it? So on my first trip at sea, I decided to cool my head with my most solid roll on my most solid side... I managed, but it was a close call. What happened? I lined my paddle on the left side of my boat, rolled, but didn't manage to make the first half, due to the combined flotation of my drytop and PFD in the salt water. No problem, I thought, I will roll on the other side. I brought the paddle to that side (right side), but that gave enough force to push my body under water and to the left side of the boat. Deadlock! In the end, by moving very slow and carefully, I managed to get my body and paddle on the same side of the boat and perform the roll. By then my companions had noticed I had some trouble and were preparing an eskimo-rescue. I felt the bow of one of their boats go through my hair when I finally rolled up. Weeks later I concluded that the only way out of this problem is a sculling roll, that you can start in any position, upside down or laying on any side. By now I added this roll to my repertoire. What surprises me is that very few people around me have mastered the sculling roll and nobody regards it as an important technique. Do they have non-floating PFD's, bricks in their head, just not a clue, or some other solution? *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List - Any opinions or suggestions expressed here are solely those of the writer(s). You must assume the entire responsibility for reliance upon them. All postings copyright the author. Submissions: PaddleWise_at_PaddleWise.net Subscriptions: PaddleWise-request_at_PaddleWise.net Website: http://www.paddlewise.net/ ***************************************************************************Received on Mon Mar 12 2001 - 11:30:30 PST
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