>So, how was your year? I had a great paddling season this year. I started with quite a few winter outings (goal has been at least 1x/month, and February will be 4 years), and a quiet spring, followed by lots and lots of whitewater. Bought a big Maravia raft, which meant even more whitewater--including non-paddling friends and family. Rafting doesn't quite give you the intimate thrill of smaller canoes and kayaks, but having your wife, your parents, or her parents joining you on the water you love is also priceless. New respect and understanding for rafters. Participated in a multi-stage team relay race. The team already had a kayaker, so I was signed on as a canoeist. During the first 30 seconds of the race, I swam exactly 3 times more than I have swum from a kayak in the past 3 years. Lots of new respect for marathon canoeists. Whitewater this season was phenomenal. We had a very slow, quiet spring runoff that stretched through June, instead of peaking and dropping quickly at the end of May. Got two new (to me) whitewater kayaks, a Wavesport X and a Wavesport Big EZ. And fit my 6'-6", 185 lb, size 14 feet frame into them. Anyone who says a sea kayak is "too small" is lying. Learned to bow stall and cartwheel. Saw a griz one day on the North Fork of the Flathead, just missed seeing a black bear do a mystery move in a hole on the Middle Fork (of the Flathead), but my paddling companions saw it happen--followed by a frantic climb straight up a near-vertical 5.8 cliff. Many happy days on the Middle Fork in my kayak, and many happy days in the raft--some days saw a morning kayak run and an afternoon raft run. I twisted my back using bad technique doing flatwater cartwheels in the Big, and missed an incredible late season "monsoon" that brought the Middle Fork up to mid-June levels. Lots of respect for freestyle kayakers now. Taught some of the best classes of my life this year. Did a demo at the New Zealand KASK Symposium in March--intrigued a lot of Kiwis that a "skinny stick" actually works! Followed by a great time under a rescue helicopter--an exhiliarating rescue demo with 30 minutes of downdraught and stinging sea spray in my eyes. SSTIKS 2004 in Tacoma in June, I had an incredible "Intermediate Greenland Rolling" class with 7 students all in the same point on their learning curves who progressed from a single roll to almost mastering 4-6 new rolls, chest sculling, plus balance braces. It's a thrill to learn a new roll, it's a bigger thrill to teach one. Early October saw me at the Delmarva Paddlers Retreat, where I had two very enthusiastic sections of Intermediate Greenland Strokes. We had a lot of fun with chest sculling, side sculling, some balance braces, hanging draws, bow draws, bow rudders, and the like. And then a Sunday morning class teaching 20 people how to make their own neoprene gloves, followed by a frantic drive across 3 states to try to catch a plane home only to be foiled by a 1.5 hour security line wait. Was extremely fortunate to befriend Ken Taylor--whose one-man expedition to Greenland in 1959 is most commonly known for the skin kayak he brought home to Scotland which begat the Anas Acuta--and who is a master observer and storyteller who relates his visit as if he had returned yesterday. Lots of respect for new people passionate about learning old techniques, and for the seasoned people who make the old things seem fresh and new. Huge props this year to one of my students--a 57 year-old grandmother who finally learned to roll this spring after trying doggedly for over 4 years. She was with another instructor and something finally "clicked". I couldn't be prouder--perseverence pays off. Dogma sucks, sharing knowledge rules. Passionate paddlers are all experts in my book, no matter what their choice of craft or paddle. I have big respect for anyone who paddles around with a smile on their face--no matter what anyone else thinks. So, I've logged 47 days on the water, not necessarily a lot of touring miles, but countless hours of smiles. Work stinks; it's family, friends, and paddling that put life in balance. Shawn Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com *************************************************************************** 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 Wed Dec 08 2004 - 17:56:36 PST
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