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A short seakayak video (holy.........!!!!)
A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!!
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/photokayak5/...du_kayak1.mpeg Yikes... JWH 2005 |
On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 08:56:22 GMT, JWH 2004
wrote: A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!! http://perso.wanadoo.fr/photokayak5/...du_kayak1.mpeg Yikes... JWH 2005 I just got an error file. My french isn't good enough to figure it out. |
Drew Dalgleish wrote: On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 08:56:22 GMT, JWH 2004 wrote: A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!! http://perso.wanadoo.fr/photokayak5/...du_kayak1.mpeg Yikes... JWH 2005 I just got an error file. My french isn't good enough to figure it out. I saw it last night. Spectacular footage! I sent the link to friends, but one emailed back this morning that he could not open the file. I hope someone can find a fix. JV |
Melissa wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi JWH 2004, On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 08:56:22 GMT, you wrote: A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!! While there are always good reasons to have a reliable roll, this particular video is said to be a fake that was used in an advertisement some time ago. I've seen this video posted by several people over the past couple of years, but I've never seen reliable source information about its origins. Isn't there something about it on snopes.com? That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, I've paddled in the midst of breaching Orca and Gray Whales countless times, and I've never seen a whale, breaching or otherwise, upset a kayak. They've always seemed acutely aware of the boats around them, and while they will come very close and interact with boaters, their movements around the boats have always been precise and graceful. Go ahead and learn to roll, but let's not give the whales an undeserved bad reputation! :-) Yeah, I also thought that just looked fishy (pardon the pun) when a paddling buddy sent me the video clip. Still, considering the way mother nature just showed in Asia what can happen when it unleashes some of its power, I'm not surprised by anything bad happening to humans anymore. Wilko -- Wilko van den Bergh wilko(a t)dse(d o t)nl Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe ---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.--- http://wilko.webzone.ru/ |
Wilko wrote: Melissa wrote: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi JWH 2004, On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 08:56:22 GMT, you wrote: A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!! While there are always good reasons to have a reliable roll, this particular video is said to be a fake that was used in an advertisement some time ago. I've seen this video posted by several people over the past couple of years, but I've never seen reliable source information about its origins. Isn't there something about it on snopes.com? That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, I've paddled in the midst of breaching Orca and Gray Whales countless times, and I've never seen a whale, breaching or otherwise, upset a kayak. They've always seemed acutely aware of the boats around them, and while they will come very close and interact with boaters, their movements around the boats have always been precise and graceful. Go ahead and learn to roll, but let's not give the whales an undeserved bad reputation! :-) Yeah, I also thought that just looked fishy (pardon the pun) when a paddling buddy sent me the video clip. Still, considering the way mother nature just showed in Asia what can happen when it unleashes some of its power, I'm not surprised by anything bad happening to humans anymore. Wilko -- Wilko van den Bergh wilko(a t)dse(d o t)nl Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe ---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.--- http://wilko.webzone.ru/ I saw the video from home in the evening but could not access it the next day. what probably happened was the server was taking to many hits as the word spread about the video and it was removed by the system adminstrator to relieve the bandwidth demand. Since the originator had protected the mpeg, I couldn't download it to keep. on the topic of being a fake - probably not. I looked close at the kayak / water interaction and the resurfacce / role sections. the scene looked internally consistent, i.e. there were splashes where there should have been, the kayaks moved in synch with the waves, there were no fuzzed spots where the image was repaired. somebody like PIXAR could have faked it but I wouldn't expect an amateur to have the finesses required. |
Melissa wrote:
....stuff deleted That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, I've paddled in the midst of breaching Orca and Gray Whales countless times, and I've never seen a whale, breaching or otherwise, upset a kayak. They've always seemed acutely aware of the boats around them, and while they will come very close and interact with boaters, their movements around the boats have always been precise and graceful. Melissa, An earlier edition of sea kayaker (probably 8-9 years back) contained a letter to the editor about a paddle in Magdalena Bay during the breeding season for grey whales. The writer described how he managed to inadvertantly get between momma and calf. Needless to say, the damage to the boat left the writer with a greater need for an efficient crawl stroke than a roll. Perhaps someone has that letter somewhere in their collection? Rick PS: My understanding is that, for economic reasons, it is difficult to venture to Magdalena Bay without paying for a guide, nowadays. I presume this may also provide some benefit to the whales and limit how many times such events occur, though this is probably wishful thinking on my part. |
If possible, please pass on the video. Have a friend who wants to learn sea
kayaking, but doesn't seem to understand my insistence on the importance of safety issues. I.e.: roll, wet entry, don't paddle alone.......besides, from what you all have to say, the video sounds interesting Carol "JWH 2004" wrote in message ... I do have the video saved, if you'd like it, let me know and I'll send it off..... There is an ad for Mountain Dew (I think) that uses a faked scene like this.... This isn't that ad.... JWH 2005 in article , "greybeard" Made the following statement in a post to this newsgroup 1/4/05 11:35 AM: Wilko wrote: Melissa wrote: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi JWH 2004, On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 08:56:22 GMT, you wrote: A GREAT!!! reason to learn a solid roll.....!!!!!! While there are always good reasons to have a reliable roll, this particular video is said to be a fake that was used in an advertisement some time ago. I've seen this video posted by several people over the past couple of years, but I've never seen reliable source information about its origins. Isn't there something about it on snopes.com? That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, I've paddled in the midst of breaching Orca and Gray Whales countless times, and I've never seen a whale, breaching or otherwise, upset a kayak. They've always seemed acutely aware of the boats around them, and while they will come very close and interact with boaters, their movements around the boats have always been precise and graceful. Go ahead and learn to roll, but let's not give the whales an undeserved bad reputation! :-) Yeah, I also thought that just looked fishy (pardon the pun) when a paddling buddy sent me the video clip. Still, considering the way mother nature just showed in Asia what can happen when it unleashes some of its power, I'm not surprised by anything bad happening to humans anymore. Wilko -- Wilko van den Bergh wilko(a t)dse(d o t)nl Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe ---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.--- http://wilko.webzone.ru/ I saw the video from home in the evening but could not access it the next day. what probably happened was the server was taking to many hits as the word spread about the video and it was removed by the system adminstrator to relieve the bandwidth demand. Since the originator had protected the mpeg, I couldn't download it to keep. on the topic of being a fake - probably not. I looked close at the kayak / water interaction and the resurfacce / role sections. the scene looked internally consistent, i.e. there were splashes where there should have been, the kayaks moved in synch with the waves, there were no fuzzed spots where the image was repaired. somebody like PIXAR could have faked it but I wouldn't expect an amateur to have the finesses required. |
Rick wrote: Melissa wrote: ...stuff deleted That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, snip Tinkerntom wrote: Most comment from around the web is that this is an edited clip. Is it possible? I suppose, but none of the seakayakers I have been in contact with have experienced this or anything close. Probably more of a diservice to the paddling community. We have too many wonderful things to experience and share, to be considered foolhardy for exposing ourselves to such a tremendous risk. There are enough true risks, that we can be equiped and trained for, without dramatizing something we don't need to deal with. Apparently this clip was circulated a few years back, and as any good cyber legend reappears from time to time, and is debunked, to reappear. Actually a Powerade ad. and includes editing, and not good editing. I have watched this a number of times, and thought about my experience with cameras. I mainly considered the focus of the camera before the Orca, and then notice that the Orca comes up in focus between the unfocused kayaks. At the distance this video was shot, most camcorders would be shooting at an infinite setting inorder to focus the Orca, if in focus at all. So the kayaks should have been in focus as well as the Orca. Also the lighting on the Orca is much to bright, unless there was a very local break in the clouds for the sun to shine through, at that very instant. The movement, and point of recovery of the kayaker also seems out of place. To say nothing about a 5 or 10 ton Orca landing on you would break your kayak, and probably your back, so that recovery would require more than a good roll, try stem cell implants maybe. Now having written this I can put it to rest as far as I am concerned. Sorry to have bothered the rest of you again, since most seem to have previously determined it not worth the time to consider. TnT |
I've paddled with Orcas for about 5 hours once, they are just like dolphins,
they are keenly aware of you and avoid you. I remember paddling home alone back from the Christmas light parade with my 240 LED lights aglow. A dolphin surfaced alongside me as close as one ever had before, then did it twelve times in more. He was sure curious. And it sure seems improbable that a kayaker hit hard enough to be completely submerged for some time, then pop out and only need an Eskimo roll. But all that being said, the combination of a really rambunctious orca, a whale watching tour, and a really good kayaker isn't impossible. As to the risk, that isn't that much. I was sure far more afraid of the big cabin cruisers blasting about Puget Sound than the whales. Hardly any gave me a sign that they even saw me, much less a tiny 10 degree cut towards my stern. I had to maneuver in the waves and be ready to sprint at the last second. I remember being out in the middle of a 3-4 mile reach and the wind kicked up very hard and some jerk comes blasting right at me, so now I'm breaching, bracing, and backing in big waves and he blasts right by. I guess he figured if I was good enough to be out in rough seas, I was good enough to eat his big wake, too. "Tinkerntom" wrote in message oups.com... Rick wrote: Melissa wrote: ...stuff deleted That said, though anything is possible given the right - or wrong - circumstances, snip Tinkerntom wrote: Most comment from around the web is that this is an edited clip. Is it possible? I suppose, but none of the seakayakers I have been in contact with have experienced this or anything close. Probably more of a diservice to the paddling community. We have too many wonderful things to experience and share, to be considered foolhardy for exposing ourselves to such a tremendous risk. There are enough true risks, that we can be equiped and trained for, without dramatizing something we don't need to deal with. Apparently this clip was circulated a few years back, and as any good cyber legend reappears from time to time, and is debunked, to reappear. Actually a Powerade ad. and includes editing, and not good editing. I have watched this a number of times, and thought about my experience with cameras. I mainly considered the focus of the camera before the Orca, and then notice that the Orca comes up in focus between the unfocused kayaks. At the distance this video was shot, most camcorders would be shooting at an infinite setting inorder to focus the Orca, if in focus at all. So the kayaks should have been in focus as well as the Orca. Also the lighting on the Orca is much to bright, unless there was a very local break in the clouds for the sun to shine through, at that very instant. The movement, and point of recovery of the kayaker also seems out of place. To say nothing about a 5 or 10 ton Orca landing on you would break your kayak, and probably your back, so that recovery would require more than a good roll, try stem cell implants maybe. Now having written this I can put it to rest as far as I am concerned. Sorry to have bothered the rest of you again, since most seem to have previously determined it not worth the time to consider. TnT |
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