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Canadian Paddles
Hi there everyone.
Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 2. Which wood is best ? 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. Thanks in advance J |
We use otter tail paddles, made of ash - light and tough. I find the otter
tail shape great for in-water manoeuvers - slicing out for draws, etc., as it doesn't tend to "hook" or "trip" as do larger bladed paddles. Re length - it's really personal. I use a paddle that is "too short" by about 4"-6" - my wife's paddle is a tad longer than the usual guidelines would suggest. She finds the extra length good for sweep strokes, as she paddles stern. Hang on to the plastics - it's always a really good idea to have a spare paddle per paddler aboard, well lashed to the thwarts or carrying yoke. If you want a pic of our ottertails, just drop an e-mail to , and I'll send 'em to you or post them to WebShots. "Julia De Silva" wrote in message . uk... Hi there everyone. Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 2. Which wood is best ? 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. Thanks in advance J |
Paddles can be a very personal choice. There are straight, bent, "s" shaped, wide, narrow, plastic, graphite, wood... Many. many choices. If you can, go to a canoe 'try out' around your aera first and try several different kinds. Length too can be personal. If I paddle a solo boat, I find that I want a paddle that is longer than typically recommended. Flat water makes use of a good bent or s paddle. In rapids a straight seems better. Good luck on your choice, but above all, have fun! Here's an new article on choices from GORP... http://gorp.away.com/gorp/publishers...a/pad_free.htm "Julia De Silva" wrote in message . uk... Hi there everyone. Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 2. Which wood is best ? 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. Thanks in advance J |
On 2-May-2005, "Julia De Silva" wrote:
1. What's a guide to the correct length ? Decide on how you paddle the most - i.e. kneel, sit etc. Get into that position and measure the distance from your shoulder to the water surface. This is the length of the paddle shaft. You may find you prefer an inch or two up or down from that. Then choose whatever blade style you like and add the length of that. Always size based on the shaft length, not overall length. See if you can rent a couple of paddles to get a feel for them before you buy. 2. Which wood is best ? Stay away from the cheap pine paddles. After that, there's lots of choice. Hardwood will last longer and oil finished paddles are easy to maintain. Black walnut looks cool to some, while others prefer a light maple. 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? As far as design - that's highly personal. I prefer otter tail, myself. For WW, I preferred a shorter, wider paddle. As far as make goes - there are lots of good brands. Look around and skip the cheapest. Mike |
The plastic paddles are good for shallow rivers, or anytime you are
likely to hit bottom. Also good when you loan out the canoe. ;-) I had the good fortune to be able to demo different paddle lengths in my own boat before I bought a wooden bent shaft paddle. I ended up with a somewhat different length than the rule of thumb would suggest. Richard Julia De Silva wrote: Hi there everyone. Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 2. Which wood is best ? 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. Thanks in advance J |
Julia De Silva wrote:
Hi there everyone. Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 2. Which wood is best ? 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. Thanks in advance J http://www.woodfinder.com/listings/005901.php http://www.cboats.net/paddles.shtml JAM |
"Julia De Silva" ) writes: Hi there everyone. Recommendations for wooden paddles please. I've currently got 2 plastick paddles which came with the canoe, and I'm looking to move on to wooden. 1. What's a guide to the correct length ? 5' is standard, 6' if you stand up much. I paddle solo style kneeling low on the bottom of my home made boats and 5 ft is good. If I paddled sitting up on a seat I'd want 6 ft, especially when pushing along off the bottom in a current. I find in shallow water I kneel high or stand to get a better look at what's in the water ahead. The 5' paddle isn't realy long enough for that. 2. Which wood is best ? ash wood has the advantage of a twisted grain so the shaft can be more flexible without breaking, and the paddle lighter weight. for distance paddling it helps to have some spring in the shaft. personally I don't paddle far enough to worry about it. 3. Which design / make of paddle is best ? sort of depends on what sort of paddling you do. We mostly go on smallish rivers, flat or grade 1 water at the most. I do the same and use a cheap Canadian Tire paddle on which I've sanded off and fibreglassed the tip. That tip has to be touched up once a year. I don't want to spend more money on a paddle and them be worried about scratching it on a rock or from pushing off the bottom. In spring when the current is swift I've poled my way up a shallow creek with a paddle. No way I'd do that with an expensive trophy paddle. If Canadian Tire sold a 6' paddle I'd probably go for it but they only sell 5' paddles and that's good enough. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-FreeNet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
Isn't the Internet Brilliant sometimes.
Thanks VERY MUCH to everyone for the advice. J |
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