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#1
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Hi guys,
I would __greatly__ appreciate your help as you seem to really have an excellent grasp of paddling. My stats: 6'1, 220lbs, 36yo, novice So this year it is my goal to do the Texas Water Safari (TWS)and a friend lent me this boat he Bottom View: http://biocycle.atmos.colostate.edu/.../tws03_18a.jpg In Water: http://biocycle.atmos.colostate.edu/.../tws03_17a.jpg It's made by Hydra and it's called something like Rivertours or something. They are apparently out of business. It's about 16'4 and seems to weigh about 60lbs and is plastic. It has a rudder system but it has since broken off and the owner cannot find it so I'm trying to find a replacement. I paddled it and it doesn't seem to track very well but again, Im a novice so it could just be me. I'm sure you know but just for some, the TWS is 260 miles from San Marcos, TX to the Gulf. Although the owner paddled the boat and finished in 67 hours, everyone I speak to says I couldn't finish the race in this boat and if I did I would be "grunting it" the whole way. They might be saying that to sell me a better boat I just do not know for sure. (a few are paddling friends that do the race so they are just being honest). They all tell me to go with a Wenonah Voyager, but 1) I cannot afford anything more than 1200 and 2) Being a novice everything seems very tippy to me to be honest and those seem even more so from looking at them. Race is in June and I am just not sure what to do. Thanks guys, sorry this is so long. If you have any follow up questions pls ask and Ill keep refreshing this page as I live on the computer alot. Terry |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.paddle
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![]() "Terry" wrote in message ... Hi guys, I would __greatly__ appreciate your help as you seem to really have an excellent grasp of paddling. My stats: 6'1, 220lbs, 36yo, novice So this year it is my goal to do the Texas Water Safari (TWS)and a friend lent me this boat he Bottom View: http://tinyurl.com/c8t4u In Water: http://tinyurl.com/aghcs It's made by Hydra and it's called something like Rivertours or something. They are apparently out of business. It's about 16'4 and seems to weigh about 60lbs and is plastic. It has a rudder system but it has since broken off and the owner cannot find it so I'm trying to find a replacement. I paddled it and it doesn't seem to track very well but again, Im a novice so it could just be me. I'm sure you know but just for some, the TWS is 260 miles from San Marcos, TX to the Gulf. Although the owner paddled the boat and finished in 67 hours, everyone I speak to says I couldn't finish the race in this boat and if I did I would be "grunting it" the whole way. They might be saying that to sell me a better boat I just do not know for sure. (a few are paddling friends that do the race so they are just being honest). They all tell me to go with a Wenonah Voyager, but 1) I cannot afford anything more than 1200 and 2) Being a novice everything seems very tippy to me to be honest and those seem even more so from looking at them. Race is in June and I am just not sure what to do. Thanks guys, sorry this is so long. If you have any follow up questions pls ask and Ill keep refreshing this page as I live on the computer alot. Terry Hi Terry: You're going to get a slew of responses, and as a novice I won't go into a lot of water hydraulics and technical stuff for you, but sum it up. Your friends are right: you'll hate the whole experience. If you cannot paddle the boat straight, then you'll spend a LOT of your energy trying to steer rather than making headway. And you'll spend a lot of energy trying to overcome the warps in the hull. And you'll spend a lot of energy trying to push the boat forward. While that is acceptable for an afternoon outing, a novice doing a 260 mile paddle will spend as much energy as an expert doing about 1000+ miles...which is a LOT. I don't imagine you finishing...I expect you'd get into a stubburn headspace in about 5 hours, push yourself for another 3-5 ('grunting it out'), then quitting in complete frustration when you found yourself surrounded by a bunch of others in similar positions: poor equipment, poor conditioning, huge blisters, knotted muscles, aching back, a rash on your butt, chafing in your armpits, pounding headache from not drinking, and in over their heads. And really dejected about the whole paddling thing. If you really want to do a long distance paddle, not even a race, then consider renting a boat. A good quality, intermediate range, new edition boat. Rent it for 6-8 consecutive weekends, and paddle it like crazy. If you cannot rent a boat, then ask some of your friends to borrow one of theirs for a day. Then return it with a six pack of beer, and ask if you can borrow it again the next weekend. This will do several things for you: 1) it will help you develop those upper body muscles you will need. 2) you will get VERY familiar with your boat and how to paddle it. 3) you will learn to spend as little energy as possible moving the boat, which leaves you more energy to get the job done. 4) you will start to get knowledgeable about what other stuff you need, and don't need. Like for drinking, or what clothes to wear, or what gear to own. 5) you won't spend as much money as if you bought a boat outright, be it the right boat or the wrong boat. and most of all 6) you will either discover you really love paddling, and you'll be much more familiar with which boat you might want, or 7) you will quit and not be a thousand dollars into it with a boat that you probably couldn't sell. I would not consider entering any sort of endurance or long-distance event with novice skills in any sort of substandard equipment. You just have too much working against you. --riverman |
#3
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Excellent advice!
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#4
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What riverman said! I paddle White water boats mostly, but still keep a
touring boat in the quiver, if you want a crash course on tracking a boat......borrow a WW boat for a while, they are not designed to go straight ( well with that said you can make ANY boat track when you develop your strokes), but once you can make the WW boat go straight, touring boats will be a breeze "riverman" wrote in message ... "Terry" wrote in message ... Hi guys, I would __greatly__ appreciate your help as you seem to really have an excellent grasp of paddling. My stats: 6'1, 220lbs, 36yo, novice So this year it is my goal to do the Texas Water Safari (TWS)and a friend lent me this boat he Bottom View: http://tinyurl.com/c8t4u In Water: http://tinyurl.com/aghcs It's made by Hydra and it's called something like Rivertours or something. They are apparently out of business. It's about 16'4 and seems to weigh about 60lbs and is plastic. It has a rudder system but it has since broken off and the owner cannot find it so I'm trying to find a replacement. I paddled it and it doesn't seem to track very well but again, Im a novice so it could just be me. I'm sure you know but just for some, the TWS is 260 miles from San Marcos, TX to the Gulf. Although the owner paddled the boat and finished in 67 hours, everyone I speak to says I couldn't finish the race in this boat and if I did I would be "grunting it" the whole way. They might be saying that to sell me a better boat I just do not know for sure. (a few are paddling friends that do the race so they are just being honest). They all tell me to go with a Wenonah Voyager, but 1) I cannot afford anything more than 1200 and 2) Being a novice everything seems very tippy to me to be honest and those seem even more so from looking at them. Race is in June and I am just not sure what to do. Thanks guys, sorry this is so long. If you have any follow up questions pls ask and Ill keep refreshing this page as I live on the computer alot. Terry Hi Terry: You're going to get a slew of responses, and as a novice I won't go into a lot of water hydraulics and technical stuff for you, but sum it up. Your friends are right: you'll hate the whole experience. If you cannot paddle the boat straight, then you'll spend a LOT of your energy trying to steer rather than making headway. And you'll spend a lot of energy trying to overcome the warps in the hull. And you'll spend a lot of energy trying to push the boat forward. While that is acceptable for an afternoon outing, a novice doing a 260 mile paddle will spend as much energy as an expert doing about 1000+ miles...which is a LOT. I don't imagine you finishing...I expect you'd get into a stubburn headspace in about 5 hours, push yourself for another 3-5 ('grunting it out'), then quitting in complete frustration when you found yourself surrounded by a bunch of others in similar positions: poor equipment, poor conditioning, huge blisters, knotted muscles, aching back, a rash on your butt, chafing in your armpits, pounding headache from not drinking, and in over their heads. And really dejected about the whole paddling thing. If you really want to do a long distance paddle, not even a race, then consider renting a boat. A good quality, intermediate range, new edition boat. Rent it for 6-8 consecutive weekends, and paddle it like crazy. If you cannot rent a boat, then ask some of your friends to borrow one of theirs for a day. Then return it with a six pack of beer, and ask if you can borrow it again the next weekend. This will do several things for you: 1) it will help you develop those upper body muscles you will need. 2) you will get VERY familiar with your boat and how to paddle it. 3) you will learn to spend as little energy as possible moving the boat, which leaves you more energy to get the job done. 4) you will start to get knowledgeable about what other stuff you need, and don't need. Like for drinking, or what clothes to wear, or what gear to own. 5) you won't spend as much money as if you bought a boat outright, be it the right boat or the wrong boat. and most of all 6) you will either discover you really love paddling, and you'll be much more familiar with which boat you might want, or 7) you will quit and not be a thousand dollars into it with a boat that you probably couldn't sell. I would not consider entering any sort of endurance or long-distance event with novice skills in any sort of substandard equipment. You just have too much working against you. --riverman |
#5
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Terry wrote:
My stats: 6'1, 220lbs, 36yo, novice So this year it is my goal to do the Texas Water Safari (TWS)and a friend lent me this boat he Bottom View: http://tinyurl.com/c8t4u In Water: http://tinyurl.com/aghcs Riverman has a pretty good take on the issues. It always amazes me when a person says they want to start paddling becuase they want to do something epic as their first trip. A guy locally wanted advice on kayaking from North Georgia to Mobile Bay. He was giving himself 14 days for the trip, had never paddled before, and wanted to know what boat to buy. I think we talked him out of most of it. Anyway, Terry, you've got some work to do. The TWS is a killer paddle for experienced racers, so start now working up to it. You might consider working up to the 2007 race, but maybe you're athletic and committed enough to make it work. You've got a boat, so get out in it today. Paddle every day until you find something better. You'll learn to go straight, which is a good skill. It wasn't clear if your friend was trying to sell you the Hydra and I wasn't sure what the 1200 referred to, but that boat is worth maybe $400, tops. But for $1200 you should be able to find a decent used touring kayak that you can paddle a couple of years and sell for 2/3 what you paid for it, assuming the TWS doesn't trash it too badly. Oh, yeah, get somebody who knows something to show you how to paddle efficiently. Yes, I am advocating training, and maybe you'll even have to pay a [gasp] "professional" (Just some in-group sarcasm here, Terry, nothing to do with you). Some of it you can figure out on your own, a lot you won't, and you don't have a lot of time for trial and error. Good luck. Steve -- Steve Cramer Athens, GA |
#6
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Hi Steve,
When you say "It always amazes me when a person says they want to start paddling becuase they want to do something epic as their first trip. " When I was 19 a guy told me about the race and I wanted to do it. I did alot of things in life but did not do the race. Then a guy I work with did it and I realized at age 36 that life is passing me by. I want to do this race not because I will win but because it's been a life goal for a long time, would be a great motivator and goal for me getting in shape the way I wish to be, and seems like a great way to challenge myself. Thanks for the above advice all. I will let you guys know how I do. Terry |
#7
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On Sat, 7 Jan 2006 22:34:17 +0000, Terry wrote:
Hi Steve, When you say "It always amazes me when a person says they want to start paddling becuase they want to do something epic as their first trip. " When I was 19 a guy told me about the race and I wanted to do it. I did alot of things in life but did not do the race. Then a guy I work with did it and I realized at age 36 that life is passing me by. I want to do this race not because I will win but because it's been a life goal for a long time, would be a great motivator and goal for me getting in shape the way I wish to be, and seems like a great way to challenge myself. Thanks for the above advice all. I will let you guys know how I do. Terry Terry, you say in your first post that you are 6'1", 220 lbs, 36 yo. I can envy you your stats, being 6'2", 270 lbs, 56 yo. I could wish I was still 36 and 220 lbs. I would settle for 36! I would not say for sure, but I expect that you are already 30-40 lbs over medical ideal weight, which would indicate that you are not the most athletic, though may have been before. I would recommend that you get a good physical checkup before trying this race. Get lots of training, and lose some weight, like 40 lbs. If this was one of your dreams and it is passing you by, I expect that there are other dreams that are passing you by as well. Welcome to the human condition! You might want to start with some of the simpler dreams, achieve those, and get into shape for this monster, or it will eat you alive, and you could get frustrated about even trying those other dreams. The exact boat you use will be more insignificant than a lot of other factors that you appear to be disregarding. Be sure and wear a helmet, and a good PFD. That way when you pass out, you don't hit your head and drown, and if you do drown, you will float and be easier to find. Otherwise have fun carrying that 60 lb boat and all your other gear on some of the portages that try the hearts of man and beast. RkyMtnHootOwl OvO |
#8
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#10
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![]() "KMAN" wrote in message ... in article , RkyMtnHootOwl at wrote on 1/7/06 8:55 PM: "Medical ideal weight" sounds like a total bull**** concept With all due respect, that's spoken like someone with a BMI of greater than 35 who's in a bit of denial. along the lines of the Body Mass Index, which is really nothing more than the old "weight charts" our grandparents and great grandparents might have seen. Your height and weight doesn't provide nearly enough information to make a determination about one's health. It obviously depends on the type of body you have, where you are carrying the weight on that body, and the type of life you lead. There are a great many professional athletes in the same proportion as 6"1 and 220. OK, then. What's your waist to hip ratio? http://www.healthstatus.com/calculate/whr Face it -- you're FAT. |
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