Class III is the Best!

Originally posted 2006

Lets all redouble our efforts to sell the availability of great fun on the super safety of class II-III!My wife has to continuously point out to her family that I am not a waterfall crazed kayaker. Her mom just returned from a trip to Alaska, carting a full page newspaper article about some extreme paddlers there. I respect anyone’s right to run the steeps, but I sure regret when that becomes the impression that the general public holds of kayakers. 

I am reminded of the stories we hear from Flatwater Kayaking Olympians,,, that everyone always says “oh, you are a kayaker, isn’t that dangerous?” Now the same thing is happening to whitewater paddlers as a whole. People perhaps even unintentionally see so much media on the extreme, that they link kayaking with waterfall jumping. Like the kids in recent blind tests who think food in a Macdonalds wrapper tastes better (even apples). The cumulative effect of media and advertising can have a detrimental affect on the sport.  

Lets all redouble our efforts to sell the availability of great fun on the super safety of class II-III!

AW History through the Covers

The American Whitewater Journal was first published in 1955 as the first whitewater magazine in the United States.

AW salutes the Journal 2017
Editor: Ambrose Tuscano
Graphic Design: Megan Seifert
Assistant Editors: Patricia Rutka, Erika J Seifert, Barry Tuscano

How to read whitewater

Attached is a diagram that depicts how various whitewater features are formed as a rock is gradually covered by rising water.  This is fundamental to understanding how to read water and how to read the river when kayaking, canoeing, or rafting.

These images are a side view from water level.

The DVD river runners edge has a water reading segment that nicely demonstrates how this works.  For teaching, the sketch works well because it takes away ambiguity.

Comments welcome to performancevideo.com/contact, thanks,  Kent Ford

Classes with Kent Ford

I really enjoy teaching paddling, and good thing, as demand for my classes is higher than ever.  I do teach beginner and intermediate programs on occaision.  However, my skills are probably best suited for providing intermediate and advanced training.  As a past US teach coach and Olympic announcer I have a better than average understanding of what makes a great paddler and how to convey that information.

One great way to develop your whitewater skills is through my Instructor Development and Certification programs.  While part of these are dedicated to teaching, a huge chunk of the program is designed to help you understand a framework of what makes a good paddler.  This conceptual framework leads to a quicker learning curve, even if you don’t plan to go on as a paddling instructor.

I offer these programs nationally, and will be happy to custom design one for your group.  On occaision I will teach paddler improvement classes at distant locations.  Other than my ACA certification programs, I do most of my teaching here at home in the Durango Colorado area.

Another option that I can offer is online training and critique programs.  This is done with video, so I can offer specific feedback for your issues.  Let me know if you are interested in this alternative.  (Use the contact link above)

For my full bio, see  https://performancevideo.com/kent_ford

 Heather Herbeck posted:  “Hey Kent –
Just wanted to say “hi”! Just finished up assisting in an ACA course in Port Angeles, WA and wanted you to know the inspiration, motivation and stoke that you have instilled in many paddlers. One in particular, has his heart and soul dedicated to paddling and it’s mostly because of you 🙂  

Water Reading and Strategy

Below you will find an excerpt from the River Runners Edge…  some tips on water reading and strategy that might be useful in your river running and paddling in general…

Enjoy!

Short Canoe Strokes

I know many people teach to never allow the blade to go behind the hip. Like most dogma it makes a good headline but gets a little trickier in the details. I prefer the approach of learning and mastering all the techniques and then seeing what fits the occasion. You probably remember we spend equal time on carving drills (steppingstone to the control Andy advocates), and stern pry/ J strokes. But yes, paddling from the bow has been a standard Decked C1 technique since the early 80’s. Especially racing, and heading down river. Gets a little thornier if you are surfing or doing tough offside ferries. Most C2s still use a pry at least on occasion because of the swing weight of the boat (length of boat does matter!) Paddling from the bow gets easier if you switch sides frequently, as the winners of the decked C1 Worlds do frequently now. While I switch more than I used to, I also enjoy the purest elements of paddling on one side. Paddling from the bow is easy if your cross stroke is strong and reliable. For many weekend warriors this cross stroke is a big ask. The short canoes do make for an easier cross stroke, but you do lose some speed in the process. I enjoy the speed that a longer boat provides. Start with: what are you trying to do? Surfing, ferrying, or heading down the river? Who is your audience? Weekend warriors not as flexy as they used to be? Short boats running steeper water? A great set of drills for eliminating many steering strokes at the stern are the carving drills outlined in my video DRILL TIME

Kayak Rolling Preferences

A typical question:

Would you be kind enough to share your thoughts on the Sweep vs. the C to C roll? I’ve open boated in the Northeast for a decade, but have moved to Colorado and have decided to learn to kayak. I learned to roll an open boat, but I tend to leave my boat ASAP and swim for shore! My husband is a certified ACA kayak instructor, and feels pretty strongly that the C to C roll is better than the sweep roll since it does not expose the face to the rocks, and may decrease risk of a shoulder dislocation. Although the sweep roll is popular here, and people think it is easier to learn, I’m trying to learn the C to C, but haven’t had much luck yet. In your opinion, is the sweep roll easier, but riskier? Is it worth the extra trouble to learn the C to C? Thanks very much in advance for sharing your time and expertise.

One vocabulary problem is that there are two types of sweep rolls… the “back deck sweep roll”, which some argue does expose face and shoulder, and the “low resistance twisting sweep roll” which our Kayak Roll video teaches. It is interesting to study our Kayak Roll video to see if it exposes face or shoulder more than C to C rolls (which our Kayaker’s Edge video teaches along with the sweep).

The bottom line is that bad form rolls of any style leave your face and shoulder exposed, and that the good form rolls can keep a person protected. SO I wouldn’t label either as riskier if done properly.

Wider, planning hull boats perhaps tend people towards sweep rolls more now than in the past. Even people who learn a c to c tend to evolve to some sort of a mixed roll. Arguably, C to C is best suited for flexible, long-limbed people, in narrower boats, in a cookbook- shorter time frame class situation. The sweep is arguably best suited for inflexible, short torso and limb people, in wider boats. 

In my ACA courses, an instructor candidate learns both types of rolls, for commercial necessity if nothing else. Most schools stick fairly dogmatically to one or the other to reduce confusion.

In my experience, people tend to “diss” the roll or technique they are unfamiliar with. Even at Olympic level paddling, the best are those who learn all of the techniques, and apply the ideal technique to the situation.

That is probably more than you needed to know. Id leave the tiebreaker as the roll you have best access to instruction for.You can see more about the two rolls at:

The J Stroke for Correction

The J is a great correction stroke to keep you going straight. Paddling longer distances, smoothly and with less effort, is easiest with the J stroke correction because the same face of the blade works throughout the forward stroke and correction. The J stroke is much smoother and ultimately faster than a rudder, or stern pry: but it has its limitations. The J is not very good for starting from a standstill, or for making sharp corrections, or for ferrying.

The J is a great correction stroke to keep you going straight. Paddling longer distances, smoothly and with less effort, is easiest with the J stroke correction because the same face of the blade works throughout the forward stroke and correction. The J stroke is much smoother and ultimately faster than a rudder, or stern pry: but it has its limitations. The J is not very good for starting from a standstill, or for making sharp corrections, or for ferrying.

In the J stroke, the top thumb of the T grip hand twists forward and down thus the power face of the blade works throughout the stroke. To learn the J, get your speed going with forward stroke and a pry correction, switch to the J, and try to go in circles towards your paddling side. When you have that mastered, increase the radius of your circles until you can go straight. Expect some difficulties tripping over the J until you get a feel for getting the J to catch.

To accelerate from a standstill it is often easiest to aim the boat towards your paddling side to avoid corrections on the first few strokes. Remember, the rudder/pry is often easier than a “J” for starting and for many moves on whitewater.

As you develop some experience and learn this basic stroke, you will be able to anticipate the boat turn, and correct before the boat really starts to spin. Don’t waste energy trying to correct with stronger forward strokes.