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Double paddle in open canoe?
"Bubba" wrote in message ... All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? Well, there is a certain erosion of style in using a double-bladed paddle in a canoe. Not that there is explicitly any rule stating that canoes must be paddled with a single blade, but that creeping change is on the same road that eventually leads to using a motor. so who's to say where the line gets drawn? For me, I only use a single blade, solo or tandem, because I feel cheap if I use a double. Thats the big disadvantage, and AFAIC, it outweighs any advantages. YMMV --riverman |
Double paddle in open canoe?
I disagree that using two plades leads to using a motor. Where's the
reasoning? My argument would be that on a mixed WW trip, with canoeists and kayakers, two blades would help to keep up with the kayakers. riverman wrote: "Bubba" wrote in message ... All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? Well, there is a certain erosion of style in using a double-bladed paddle in a canoe. Not that there is explicitly any rule stating that canoes must be paddled with a single blade, but that creeping change is on the same road that eventually leads to using a motor. so who's to say where the line gets drawn? For me, I only use a single blade, solo or tandem, because I feel cheap if I use a double. Thats the big disadvantage, and AFAIC, it outweighs any advantages. YMMV --riverman |
Double paddle in open canoe?
Andrew is right, but it takes more out of you. You can go faster in a
canoe with a double bladed paddle. It allows you expend more energy in a shorter time. A paddler in good condition can generate about 1/20th horse power over long distances, more in sprints. Canoes are not as hydrodynamically efficient hulls as kayaks. Andrew wrote: I disagree that using two plades leads to using a motor. Where's the reasoning? My argument would be that on a mixed WW trip, with canoeists and kayakers, two blades would help to keep up with the kayakers. riverman wrote: "Bubba" wrote in message ... All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? Well, there is a certain erosion of style in using a double-bladed paddle in a canoe. Not that there is explicitly any rule stating that canoes must be paddled with a single blade, but that creeping change is on the same road that eventually leads to using a motor. so who's to say where the line gets drawn? For me, I only use a single blade, solo or tandem, because I feel cheap if I use a double. Thats the big disadvantage, and AFAIC, it outweighs any advantages. YMMV --riverman |
Double paddle in open canoe?
Interesting thread...Some canoes are being designed to be paddled
sitting on the bottom with a double bladed paddle (as per Bill's post). To me, they seem to be very much like an open kayak. And I think that's the key. Sitting low, with low sides would make a double paddle more efficient, whereas sitting high with high sides (as in a traditional canoe) would argue for a single bladed paddle. From Wenonah's web site, it appears to me that the Prism may be one of the more traditional canoes. Another observation, that might not be accurate, is that it seems to me that double bladed paddles have less surface area per blade than do single bladed paddles. Is it possible that each stroke sequence pushes about the same amount of water in double and single bladed strokes? Bubba wrote: All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? |
Double paddle in open canoe?
WG wrote: Interesting thread...Some canoes are being designed to be paddled sitting on the bottom with a double bladed paddle (as per Bill's post). To me, they seem to be very much like an open kayak. And I think that's the key. Sitting low, with low sides would make a double paddle more efficient, whereas sitting high with high sides (as in a traditional canoe) would argue for a single bladed paddle. From Wenonah's web site, it appears to me that the Prism may be one of the more traditional canoes. Another observation, that might not be accurate, is that it seems to me that double bladed paddles have less surface area per blade than do single bladed paddles. Is it possible that each stroke sequence pushes about the same amount of water in double and single bladed strokes? Bubba wrote: All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? I have used both single and double paddles in my Folbot, which is more of a tandem, decked canoe, that you sit in like a kayak. The boat is 35 in beam, so is very stable on flat water, and does not require alot of bracing stokes. I set in the rear seat, where it is not quite as wide, and you can easily use a single paddle. However even then the standard double is quite long, I think like 255, and I use a long single. I heard that the special forces use the single to reduce the effect of wind on a double paddle, and I have definitely seen a difference. The main problem with the single, is that as you shift sides your paddle drips into the boat, and onto the front paddler, for which I have been chewed out a few times. Otherwise both seem to work just fine, at least on flat water lakes where I am usually sailing, and just need to give a couple strokes to complete a tack (turn into the wind) :) HYY |
Double paddle in open canoe?
The Prism is not a 'traditional canoe' in that it wasn't designed to be
paddled 'Canadian style' spending all day on one side, J-stroking to steer and kneeling with your butt propped on a paddling thwart. Look at Bill Mason videos/books, or the 1922 Girl Scout manual for proper examples. It is more the 'sit&switch' design, best paddled with your feet out in front of you, moderate corrective strokes and switching sides every 10 or so strokes to keep going straight. Not to say you can't J-stroke, but that's not really the most efficient stroke in this boat. It has some design features specifically oriented to this style - lots of tumblehome, fairly narrow to start with, virtually no rocker, and the seat pedestal mounted at around 5" off the floor and meant to slide fairly easily to adjust tracking in a crosswind, or to accommodate different loads. This position is great for paddling with a 52" bent shaft paddle, or about a 230cm double blade. The kayak paddle is great for flat water, no side wind and no big waves. It is not as easy to use if conditions would favor lots of 'same siding' or ruddering might be required to turn the boat. Mostly, the blade size is more a function of windage and tempo. Racing blades for canoe and kayak tend to be relatively small, and I actually prefer to use a smaller blade even for touring- they put less strain on your joints. Also, you aren't pushing water - you are pulling the boat to the paddle:-) Marsh Jones Ketter Canoeing Brooklyn Park, MN (Wenonah Dealer) WG wrote: Interesting thread...Some canoes are being designed to be paddled sitting on the bottom with a double bladed paddle (as per Bill's post). To me, they seem to be very much like an open kayak. And I think that's the key. Sitting low, with low sides would make a double paddle more efficient, whereas sitting high with high sides (as in a traditional canoe) would argue for a single bladed paddle. From Wenonah's web site, it appears to me that the Prism may be one of the more traditional canoes. Another observation, that might not be accurate, is that it seems to me that double bladed paddles have less surface area per blade than do single bladed paddles. Is it possible that each stroke sequence pushes about the same amount of water in double and single bladed strokes? Bubba wrote: All of my paddling experience has been with single paddles in a tandem canoe. In a few weeks I'll be spending quite a lot of time in a solo canoe (a Prism) in touring mode. Is there any advantage in using a double paddle? Disadvantage? |
Double paddle in open canoe?
Yesterday saw Canadian Forces cadets paddling aluminum canoes with
double bladed kayak paddles. Probably says more about the relevance and condition of Canadian militray equipment than applied paddling theory. |
Double paddle in open canoe?
I have a 16-foot tandem with 36 inch beam and a 12 foot pirogue with 27
inch beam. When I was solo in the tandem tanker (before I made the pirogue) I paddled it from the bow seat heeled over with a single paddle using the j-stroke. I switched sides every 20 minutes or so, sliding over and heeling it the other way. In the pirogue (a Jacques Mertins "cheap canoe") I sit on the bottom and use a double paddle that is very long. Even though the sides are only 12" high, it is hard to use a shorter double paddle because the sides are flared out as opposed to the tumblehome shape of a kayak. I bring a single paddle as a back-up, but it is really awkward paddling with a single paddle while sitting on the floor. The long paddle length means not much water drips in because the strokes are quite flat. I can go faster in the pirogue with the double paddle, but I need more rest stops on long trips. I made the doublepaddle myself and it is fairly heavy with relatively large blades. I might reduce the blade size a bit. |
Double paddle in open canoe?
Wm Watt wrote: Andrew is right, but it takes more out of you. You can go faster in a canoe with a double bladed paddle. It allows you expend more energy in a shorter time. A paddler in good condition can generate about 1/20th horse power over long distances, more in sprints. Canoes are not as hydrodynamically efficient hulls as kayaks. And Riverman wrote: Well, there is a certain erosion of style in using a double-bladed paddle in a canoe. Not that there is explicitly any rule stating that canoes must be paddled with a single blade, but that creeping change is on the same road that eventually leads to using a motor. so who's to say where the line gets drawn? For me, I only use a single blade, solo or tandem, because I feel cheap if I use a double. Thats the big disadvantage, and AFAIC, it outweighs any advantages. YMMV --riverman The last couple of weeks I have been playing around using a kayak paddle as the stern paddler in a tandem 18+ foot canoe. The difference is quite noticable as long as the wind is not a factor. I imagine a solo boat would be like an Inflatable Kayak, but with much better performance. (No solo canoe yet). I have been taking two paddles, one a standard canoe paddle and the other a break apart kayak paddle that I can fit with a T handle extension. Right now I just switch paddles. Unless experience proves different, that will be the final choice as well. Taking the T handle gives me a backup paddle if I need it. I can understand the "cheapening" of the experience. But if it is not a birch bark canoe with a hand carved paddle, then I am already on that slipperly slope. Materials and methods change. I have the advantage of feeling less cheapend since I do not have a long history with a canoe. (I have always taken the IK). Blakely --- Blakely LaCroix Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA "The best adventure is yet to come" |
Double paddle in open canoe?
"Railtramp" wrote in message oups.com... I can understand the "cheapening" of the experience. But if it is not a birch bark canoe with a hand carved paddle, then I am already on that slipperly slope. Ouch, and that statement is precisely the grease on the slope. :-) --riverman |
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