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![]() Kathy D'Errico wrote: I have a 16 foot hybrid canoe that I can use solo or tandem. It really takes a lot of work paddling solo and I was wondering if a kayak paddle would work better for me? or what would better than the traditional lightweight paddle? The canoe paddle serves as both paddle and rudder. Kayak paddles don't do the rudder job well. They don't need to because kayak paddlers sit amidships and on flat water turn by heeling the boat while paddling, and in white water use radically different hull shapes that turn but don't hold a straight course as well. A kayak paddle will allow you to extert more force at the cost of more effort. It's the same canoe and nothing is free. ![]() A kayak is typically 2 feet wide. A canoe is typically 3 feet wide. There are small canoes only 2 feet wide and there are open kayaks with large cockpits which resemble narrow canoes. (Empty canoes paddled solo should be paddled sitting amidships, heeled over.) In some circles the point at which a canoe becomes a kayak is determined by the type of paddle used rather than the shape for the hull. Long. extremely narrow dugouts on the Amazon are canoes because they are paddled with canoe paddles. A tiny "wee lassie" style canoe is actually an open kayak if it is paddled with a kayak paddle. ![]() |
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