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Riot Brittany Fills a Niche

Much as I am endeared to composite sea kayaks, I recognize that polyethylene kayaks fill a useful niche — and a polyethylene kayak is my boat of choice at times. I’ve been using a poly VCP Avocet to run local rivers for the past 5 years. While a great sea kayak, the Avocet — maneuverable, rockered, durable — adapts quite well to the river. This year I’m paddling the Riot Brittany which at 16.5′ x 21.75 is slightly longer and narrower than the Avocet. This combined a deeper bow and stern (and less rocker)seems to make the Brittany significantly faster, which is important on the flatwater sections of local rivers. The Brittany turns readily when put on edge and appears to be able to handle Class I and Class II whitewater just fine. (I’ll get back to you later on Class III).

Overall the Brittany is a very nice boat, fun to paddle and fast. It includes outfitting details such as a adjustable thigh braces, rescue outrigger system, interior gear net, paddle hook and security bar in addition to details present on boats like the Avocet. The one thing I would change about the Brittany at this point is the high backrest. I’ll be looking into how I can modify the backrest or replace it with a back band.

(Disclaimer: I am a new dealer of Riot Kayaks this spring.)

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Paddling and knees

A visitor to touringkayaks.com asked whether the Q700 kayak would be a suitable fit for him, given the fact that he has a bad knee. I hedged in my response, asking for more information. In general, though, paddling can be a great activity for those whose knees may limit their ability to participate in sports such as hiking, bicycling, running, etc:

“Once you are seated in the boat with your knees under the deck, it is not necessary to use your knees a great deal. But that also depends on the type of paddling you are doing and the conditions you paddle in. Edging a kayak and rolling both involve using the knees. Paddling in rough conditions is also likely to demand use of the knees to help stabilize the boat. On the other hand, paddling in flatwater places little demand on the knees.

My overall answer is that I think kayaking can be an excellent activity for those with knee problems. I have worked with handicapped paddlers including amputees and have seen them do very well paddling conventional kayaks without any modifications.

A recent discussion on paddling.net has more views on this subject: http://www.paddling.net/message/showThread.html?

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Resolution and Wallpaper


One of my resolutions for 2006 it to post here more regularly. I thought I’d start out by posting some links to sites with kayaking desktop wallpaper, but was surprised when my Google search didn’t turn up much to my liking. (Please send links if you know of any. Two links that did turn up: Kayaking desktop wallpaper at Paddling.net and
Kayaking screensavers at Outdoorplay.com


Click to open
a 1034 x 768 copy of the image. Then you can right click on the image and either “copy” and “paste” into your own files, or select “set as wallpaper.”

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Paddling with Bears

I’ve been reading and thinking about bears (Timothy Treadwell, Among Grizzlies and the film, Grizzly Man). The prospect of travelling and camping in bear country should definitely give one pause. Many point out that guns and bear spray often give false security. An article at Backpackinglight mentions that for some bears, at least, spray can be highly effective in warding them off. The article also mentions concerns that bear problems will only get worse: “California wilderness parks make for good case studies of controversial bear management practices. The storage of food in so-called bear-proof containers (while the hiker is encouraged to sit back 50 yards or more and be patient) trains bears to be persistent and further habituated to the odors of human food.”

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Kayaking & Whale "Watching"

As a Maine outfitter, I get frequent inquiries about kayak tours that provide opportunity to see whales. The association of kayaking and whale watching apparently comes from the west coast. To my knowledge there are no places on the East Coast where you can consistently or predictably sight whales from a kayak. I did cross paths with a Finback whale in Maine’s Muscongus Bay one August morning several years ago, but — to date — that has been, in thousands of miles of paddling, my sole encounter with a whale.

I find it interesting to speculate on close encounters with whales from a kayak and am thus interested in a Paddling.net thread on the topic

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Around Oman – Mark Evans Continues his Journey Along the Oman Coast

As chronicled in the web site Around Oman which includes daily updates, Mark Evans is beginning the second phase of his 1,700 km kayak journey along the Oman coast. Evans hopes his journey will raise awareness of the Oman coast as a tourist destination as well as raising funds for the recently established Oman National Cancer Awareness Group. He is paddling 40 – 50 km each day.

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SIGN OF SPRING - Ray Wirth of Belfast sets off from the Belfast Public Landing for his first paddle of the season, Thursday, March 17. LOUISE SHORETTE

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Uproar Over Kayak Tax

I’ve been distracted this week by a proposal in the Maine legislature to require a $10.00 registration fee for all non-motorized watercraft. The proposal now seems dead in the water due to substantial uproar from paddlers near and far.

“What is it about this proposal that has gotten under my skin?” I’ve been asking myself. I stayed up late 2 nights exchanging emails with other MASKGI (Maine Association of Sea Kayak Guides and Instructors) members and typing rather cutting emails to local representatives and senators. Part of it, I think, is that for me — and for many others apparently — kayaking represents the opposite of the world that has anything to do with regulation, registration, government,or financial responsiblity. Kayaking is about getting away from all that. Something in me recoils at the thought of mixing the two: don’t put any red tape betweeen me and my kayak!

Although the $10.00 fee may seem small in the eyes of some, the registration is a symbolic intrusion upon a very fundamental recreational activity that has never been taxed before and still is not taxed in most other states. If you tax environmentally and socially benign activities such as canoeing and kayaking, it becomes a slippery slope toward taxing other activities — camping, hiking, swimming, cross country skiing, mountain biking, birdwatching, and so on. I can’t see the logic of taxing one of these activities unless you tax all of them. And the idea of paying a fee in order to step into my kayak and paddle it out into Penobscot Bay is just as repugnant to me as the idea of paying a fee in order to pull on a pair of boots and hike off into the woods behind my house. See the thread I started on Paddling.net for more views.

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A New Kayak Website of Note:

West Coast Paddler

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Snow Kayaking & Were Kayaks the First Sleds?

“Maine has two seasons: winter and 2 months of damn poor sledding,” goes the old joke. The quote betrays a bemused acceptance of long winters. I imagine a cynical Inuit might have said pretty much the same. The Inuit were obviously highly skilled in surviving the extreme conditions of the arctic winter; and many times, it must have felt to them that winter was the dominant force in their lives. What they lived for, however, was to get out in the water in their kayaks.

It occurred to me while cross country skiing today that a kayak was very probably the first “ski.” As a group of nomadic hunger / gatherers moved north and encountered ice, they likely found that they could tow their loaded kayaks across smooth ice with a minimum of effort. From there, it wouldn’t take much of a cognitive leap to lash two kayaks together catamaran style (the first sled) and eventually to lash smaller versions of “kayaks” directly onto their feet as skis.

Kayak touring and cross country skiing do bear a lot of similarities — and not just in muscle groups used. Cross country skiing also involves maximizing glide and minimizing drag while moving across the surface of (frozen) H20. And anyone who has set a kayak down on snow or ice knows that the kayak just begs to go careening down even the slightest slope.

Again proving that you can find anything on the web, there are several sites featuring “snow kayaking.” My adventures in snow kayaking” includes several cool photos and a moving background. The Des Moines Register has an article on snow kayaking in Iowa of all places. Reportedly whitewater kayaks work best, but I still think a touring kayak would give more speed.