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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

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?
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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

I know several people who use kayak paddles in their canoes. About the
only thing you lose is the ability to low brace.

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

Mothra wrote:
About the
only thing you lose is the ability to low brace.


I can't see why. If you're sitting on the bottom of a high-gunneled canoe,
maybe, but if you can low-brace with a canoe paddle, you can low brace with a
kayak paddle.

Oh yeah - if the canoe is really beamy, you'll have quite a reach.

Mike

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

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?


Kathy:

This was discussed a bit in an earlier thread this in group.
Some took issue with the asthetics of this, others offered
discussion on the relative merits. My experience will only
add more fuel to the fire.

I just returned from a BWCAW (Boundary Waters Canoe Area
Wilderness along the Minnesota/Canadian border - for the
international readers) trip where I carried both a double bladed
kayak paddle and a conventional canoe paddle.

We operated in two modes. In both modes, I was in the stern
and my wife was in the bow.

The first mode I used the traditional paddles and steered from
the stern. In the second mode we swapped roles. I used the
kayak paddle in the stern and my wife paddled/steered from
the from the bow.

First, let me preface this by saying, I love to row. On a raft trip
I will face downstream for 95+ % of the time and just swing my
oars all day. I never really seem to get excessively tired from it.
The same thing seems true when I run a double bladed paddle
in my inflatable kayaks. The IK's are not super low drag, but
again, I seem to be able to swing the blades all day.

Second, I am a complete canoe novice - this being our first
real outing. If different muscle sets are involved in using a
canoe paddle, then for certain, these were not as developed
as those used for rowing/portagee or kayaking.

Third, the kayak paddle used in this test was an old Carlisle
break apart unit that I usually let rookie paddlers use in the
IK. It is heavy, but did provide a mechanism for breaking
apart into two canoe paddles - thus securing us spares
if we needed them.

Fourth: The Canoe was a Wenonah Minnesota II. (18.5 ft)

So early in the trip, I swapped between the canoe paddle
and the kayak paddle about 50% of the time. Perhaps
because I was better at it, I preferred the kayak paddle.

The canoe paddle worked better in the small rivers and
was less likely to catch "Salad" in the weeds. But as
the trip progressed, I found myself using the kayak
paddle exclusively.

I really appreciated it in power situations like open water
crossing of bays in the wind. I was like giving us an
extra paddler. Also apparent was additional stability
from having a blade in the water nearly all of the time
and on both sides. This combined with my ability
to swing the blade continuously really pushed us
across the water.

This approach served us both well. We both really
enjoyed the trip and look forward to our next outing.
I consider myself fortunate that my spouse is willing
to be seen in such an unconventional setting. But it
works for us. And quite well too!

Blakely
---
Blakely LaCroix
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

"The best adventure is yet to come"

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?


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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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

Wm Watt wrote:
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.


Why not? It seems to me that a kayak paddle should be easier to use as a
rudder since you can rudder on either side without having to shift the
paddle in your hands. Kayakers use various types of rudder strokes all
the time, though kayaks can also be directed using leans and sweeps
which are probably more difficult in a canoe.

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.


True, but a kayak paddle is more efficient, since there is less time for
the boat to decelerate between strokes, so you do gain a bit of speed at
no cost.
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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

Brian Nystrom wrote:
Wm Watt wrote:

The canoe paddle serves as both paddle and rudder. Kayak paddles don't
do the rudder job well.


Why not? It seems to me that a kayak paddle should be easier to use as a
rudder since you can rudder on either side without having to shift the
paddle in your hands. Kayakers use various types of rudder strokes all
the time, though kayaks can also be directed using leans and sweeps
which are probably more difficult in a canoe.

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.


True, but a kayak paddle is more efficient, since there is less time for
the boat to decelerate between strokes, so you do gain a bit of speed at
no cost.


On my recent trip/experiment, I found that directional adjustment was
instinctive using either type blade. The only exception to this is
when you crossed modes. It felt awkward and ineffective when you tried
a blade specific stroke using the wrong type of blade. Canoe strokes
did not work well with a kayak paddle. I suspect this is more mental
than physical (a blade is a blade after all - though there are length
and grip differences). The instinctive part just disappeared. With
sufficient practice, perhaps this would resolve itself.

Blakely
---
Blakely LaCroix
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

"The best adventure is yet to come"

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

Thank you everyone for your feedback. I really APPRECIATE IT! As I
canoe mainly on an open bay following the shoreline, I think I will try
the kayak paddle approach. I stopped down to a local kayak store
yesterday and tried out a kayak paddle with a canoe. It seemed to work
fine for me except that the 245cm paddle was a little short. I think a
slightly longer one would do the trick. Blakely-what size kayak paddle
is your Carlisle? As you are sitting in the stern which is narrower,
you are probably able to use a standard size kayak paddle? My problem
is that I am sitting in the midsection going solo, so that the paddle
was slightly short for the mid. Also, do you sit or kneel when using
your kayak paddle? Thank your for your "experiment".

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?


Brian Nystrom wrote:
Wm Watt wrote:


The canoe paddle serves as both paddle and rudder. Kayak paddles don't
do the rudder job well.


Why not? It seems to me that a kayak paddle should be easier to use as a
rudder since you can rudder on either side without having to shift the
paddle in your hands. Kayakers use various types of rudder strokes all
the time, though kayaks can also be directed using leans and sweeps
which are probably more difficult in a canoe.



Why would you want to "rudder on both sides"?
You only need or want to paddle on both sides in white water or some
other extreme conditions where efficiency is questionable, and when
poling is sometimes better.


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.


True, but a kayak paddle is more efficient, since there is less time for
the boat to decelerate between strokes, so you do gain a bit of speed at
no cost.


That's only a problem in a short boat. Once a canoe exceeds about 12 ft
in length a moderate paddle stroke will maintain a steady rate of
speed.

- a paddle blade is better formed to act as a rudder

- the handle of a paddle has a grip at the top to facilitate twisting
the blade. Twisting the blade in the water is part of a normal canoe
stroke.

- in a canoe the solo paddler sits amidships like a kayak paddler but
because a canoe is wider the paddler sits to one side where the paddle
can be dipped vertically into the water. For a solo canoe paddler, a
kayak paddle is not as efficient. The canoe is too wide amidships. A
kayak paddle with a sufficiently large blade may be more powerful, but
not more efficient.

For someone who mostly uses a kayak paddle it may feel more efficient
than a canoe paddle but that's because the person is conditioned to a
kayak paddle. I've used both kinds in the small boats I built. The
shortest boat needs a kayak paddle because it does't track well. It's
like one of those short white water kayaks.

I was interested in the account of using a kayak paddle when paddling
double in a canoe. Sitting in the end of the canoe would be narrow
enough to make a kayak paddle practical. I've never tried it but think
it would be interesting. There would still be the problem of the kayak
paddle not acting well as a rudder, but on a straight course it would
be interesting to try. People use bent blade paddles on straight
courses so there is a precedent.

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Default Kayak paddle efficient for a canoe?

In article , Kathy D'Errico wrote:

Thank you everyone for your feedback. I really APPRECIATE IT! As I
canoe mainly on an open bay following the shoreline, I think I will try
the kayak paddle approach. I stopped down to a local kayak store
yesterday and tried out a kayak paddle with a canoe. It seemed to work
fine for me except that the 245cm paddle was a little short. I think a
slightly longer one would do the trick. Blakely-what size kayak paddle
is your Carlisle? As you are sitting in the stern which is narrower,
you are probably able to use a standard size kayak paddle? My problem
is that I am sitting in the midsection going solo, so that the paddle
was slightly short for the mid. Also, do you sit or kneel when using
your kayak paddle? Thank your for your "experiment".

Kathy D'Errico
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