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#18
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(William R. Watt)
Typed in I'm pleased to see posters in this newsgroup accepting the fact that many people teach themselves the simple act of paddling naturally, and have done so at least since the beginning of human occupation of North Amercia. I consider it a shame that 80% of the population of NA are currently raised in congested cities, have little contact with water in its natural state, and lack the necessary experience should they come into contact with it in later life. I have to take exception to this statement. Native Americans were not self taught, but grew up in a culture where these skills were valued, taught and practiced. I did start out as a self taught paddler. The area I grew up in is not a paddling mecca and I'm the only one in my family that could even swim. When I bought my first canoe, I had to teach myself how to paddle. I read what little literature available at the time and picked up what I could from other paddlers. My skill level progressed very slowly and reached a plateau when I started trying Class III whitewater. After a bad, high water incedent, I decided to get serious about improving my skill level. I took a weekend course from Bob Ruppel at Riversports and ended up with private instruction because of some late cancellations. Bob was an old slalom C boater and a innovative OC-1er. My level of paddling jumped at least a class that weekend. I don't think that I would have ever had enough time to paddle to develope the technique that he had already learned from racing and coaching. SYOTR Larry C. |
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