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![]() riverman wrote: Nonetheless, we can morph this into a rating system thread, if you want. :-) Sure, why not, RBP seems to have come alive again, and I enjoy the direction that some of these discussions are going. :-) What do you think: two identically skilled paddlers in the same type boat, on the same day, paddling the same river together. One is dressed appropriately, one is underdressed significantly. Is the river rated the same? Not according to me. I rate the difficulty of a rapid by how difficult it is to stay on the line, i.e. the skill necessary to stay on that particular line through that rapid. Danger or risk is not part of the rating for me, but it does have a big impact on whether or not I would run something, despite the rating. I was thinking about this on the way home, and began to get a grip on the problem with the rating system...allow me to soapbox a bit. :-) The solution is simple. The first step has to be to clearly and unambiguously define as much about that 'imaginary person' as possible. What boat, what clothing, what skills, etc. And that imaginary person has to be standard for all rivers, everywhere. Of course, we can always invoke the 'reasonable man test', as they do in law. "A reasonable person in such a situation", but I don't think the disparate types of boaters could ever come to agreement on what a standardized 'reasonable man' is. But until it is clearly defined, any attempt to make a river rating system is doomed to failure. Hmmm, so what according to you does the clothing of said imaginary boater have to do with how difficult it is for him to stay on his line? Anyway, my proposal: some recognized authoritative body must clearly define who the 'Reasonable Boater' is: what skills, what boat, what gear, as well as what the environmental situation is: what temp (air and water), what river level, what sky conditions are, etc. Then, all rating systems worldwide would be correlated and usable. If a person was in a more stable boat than the Reasonable Boater Standard, they could modify *all* river rating worldwide by just adjusting the rating system on their local river accordingly. Sort of their personal handicap. Sounds a bit like (in part) what AW has tried to do... In this way, a river's actual rating is meaningless. There is NO 'class 4 rapid', because no one is really the Reasonable Boater. But what is class 4 for YOU may be class 3 for someone who is a much stronger paddler, and class 5 for a newbie. Which actually represents reality much more, since people will argue all day about whether a class 4 rapid is runnable. I think that most difficulty ratings have grey areas, but for me the clearest line was the one between class III and class IV. Suddenly I found myself acutely aware of the differences between the two, it just felt so clearly different. Now that I've run plenty of each, I find that they seem to get closer, but still I find them to be rather clearly distinquishable. Do we need a clearer distinction? Maybe... For me it's more an indicator that is joined by a number of equally subjective arguments and measurements like tiredness, confidence, risk, danger, distance from the nearest help and so on. 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/ |