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From: Peter Treby <ptreby_at_ozemail.com.au>
subject: [Paddlewise] Paddle leashes
Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2002 21:15:57 +1100
...I would say there are several rational arguments
(noting that nothing is fool proof or necessarily unquestionably better)
1. Whether a paddle leash is tethered to the boat or wrist --after capsize
the first task is to get ahold of the boat.  I don't think either tethering
location has more or less of an advantage here.  In either case if you have
the boat-- you have your paddle.
	Comment: One advantage of tethering the paddle to the boat, and not the
wrist, is that the  paddle acts a little as a sea anchor to slow the boat's
drifting. I haven't enough experience of this to judge whether it is
significant. Last Thursday, practising various rescues, I jumped into the
water and let the boat and paddle drift shorewards in a wind varying between
10 - 15 knots. While I didn't let the boat get too far away, it didn't get
away fast enough to prevent catching it by swimming. Now to try higher
winds, always onshore! Anyone else got experience of chasing drifting boats?

2. If you do loose your boat (bad ,bad) then having your paddle (strapped
to your wrist) might allow you to paddle-swim to catch your boat if it is
only
a short distance away.  With a PFD on paddle swimming is a good way to
go for short distances. Or the paddle can be easily discarded if need be.
	Comment: Tried a bit of paddle swimming the other day, too. Backstroke,with
a feathered paddle, seems easiest, but pretty energetic. I'd rather swim
without the paddle. I intend to try a bit more of this, and try to swim
towing the paddle some way.

3. Doing a wet re-entry/rescue I like not having the paddle tied to the
boat-
it seems to give me more manuvering room to get the paddle float on and
into position for climbing back into the boat.  And I cannot imagine any but
the wildest scenario where a wrist telthered paddle could entangle the
kayaker?
	Comment: So why not use the wrist paddle leash in the surf? Does anyone,
other than Matt Broze's example of a leg wrapped to a boat in surf,
presumably with a boat to paddle tether, have any actual experience of a
tether being a lethal threat in surf? Whatever threat exists here has to be
balanced against a situation say of landing through surf breaking a long way
from shore, and losing the paddle. I want to be in the boat with the paddle
then, and not facing a long swim if the paddle's lost. Easy to answer hang
on to your paddle at all times, but surf power can deal with that. Does
anyone have any examples of problems caused by losing a paddle in surf?

4. When rolling I guess I did not like all the lines (paddle tethered to the
bungies) dangling around  when trying to set up for the roll- I find a
paddle
tethered to my wrist much less cumbersome in this situation and if it
becomes a problem the tether is very easily slipped off the wrist.
	Comment: Agree fully. An untethered, or wrist tethered, paddle is
definitely more free and easy than a boat tethered one.

It certainly would not be a good thing in white water nor surf.
	Comment: Again, just thinking aloud, is the surf entanglement problem
exaggerated? Or is it such a potentially fatal possibility that "never
tether in the surf" is an absolute rule? And if one tethers in wind outside
surf situations, what of breaking waves at sea, or surprise bombies?
Tangle/strangle danger everywhere? FWIW, did the Greenlanders and other
early kayakers ever use tethers?
Peter Treby,
Melbourne, Australia.

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From: Craig MacKinnon <elroca_at_earthlink.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Paddle leashes
Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2002 16:35:08 -0500
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Treby" <ptreby_at_ozemail.com.au>
To: <PaddleWise_at_paddlewise.net>
Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2002 5:15 AM
Subject: [Paddlewise] Paddle leashes
snip
> Easy to answer hang
> on to your paddle at all times, but surf power can deal with that. Does
> anyone have any examples of problems caused by losing a paddle in surf?
snip

I spend a fair amount of time in the surf zone and would never consider
using a paddle tethered to my boat. The key for me is how I hold my paddle
in surf. When I feel wave power beginning to pull at my paddle blade, I
immediately release the paddle with my outboard hand, which quickly alters
the blade orientation and takes away the blade surface that the wave was
pushing against. The key is to hang on to the paddle at all times with my
inboard hand, which is anchored to my torso. There have been times when I
didn't release quickly enough; I felt like my arms were being torn from
their sockets as the paddle was ripped up and over my head into an extreme
high brace, which can  quickly lead to shoulder dislocation and paddle loss.
Fortunately, I released with the outboard hand before any lasting damage was
done.

Craig


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