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Proctologically Violated©® September 2nd 04 01:48 PM

Stroking in Kayaks vs. Canoes in Olympics
 
All:

I'm not either (semi-afraid of water!), but here's what I noticed
(hope this is the right place to post):

The canoe-ers stroked on *opposite* sides of the boat, I think
alternately (one would stroke while the other finished/readied to
stroke--IIRC), while in kayaking, they stroked in unison on *one* side, then
the other.

I'm wondering why the difference (physics? tradition? a rule?), and
if one has an advantage over the other?
What would happen if kayakers stroked like canoe-ers, and canoe-ers
like kayakers?

How about unison stroking on opposite sides?

Thanks for any input.

----------------------------
Mr. P.V.'d
formerly Droll Troll



William R. Watt September 2nd 04 02:19 PM


I'm pretty sure it's to provide more constant power so the boat doesn't
porpoise as much. I'm also pretty sure the kayak paddles would be less
effective if one was thrashing water just disturbed by the one in front as
would happen if they were not synchronized.

"Proctologically Violated©®" ) writes:
All:

I'm not either (semi-afraid of water!), but here's what I noticed
(hope this is the right place to post):

The canoe-ers stroked on *opposite* sides of the boat, I think
alternately (one would stroke while the other finished/readied to
stroke--IIRC), while in kayaking, they stroked in unison on *one* side, then
the other.

I'm wondering why the difference (physics? tradition? a rule?), and
if one has an advantage over the other?
What would happen if kayakers stroked like canoe-ers, and canoe-ers
like kayakers?

How about unison stroking on opposite sides?

Thanks for any input.

----------------------------
Mr. P.V.'d
formerly Droll Troll




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Paul Skoczylas September 2nd 04 03:41 PM


"Proctologically Violated©®" wrote in message
...
All:

I'm not either (semi-afraid of water!), but here's what I noticed
(hope this is the right place to post):

The canoe-ers stroked on *opposite* sides of the boat, I think
alternately (one would stroke while the other finished/readied to
stroke--IIRC), while in kayaking, they stroked in unison on *one* side,

then
the other.

I'm wondering why the difference (physics? tradition? a rule?), and
if one has an advantage over the other?
What would happen if kayakers stroked like canoe-ers, and canoe-ers
like kayakers?

How about unison stroking on opposite sides?


If the kayakers stroked on opposite sides, their top blades could
collide--well, not if they did everything perfectly, but the risk is much
higher than if they stroke on the same side.

-Paul




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