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"Felsenmeer" wrote in
: A kayak that is just over 9' long and almost 30" wide with a nearly flat hull is *not* going to be a stiff tracking kayak. Even someone with minimal skills should have little trouble manoevering it whitewater up to class II. The orignal author asked about paddling it in whitewater, not class IV-V whitewater. I've taken much stiffer tracking kayaks (a 16'6" sea kayak) through class II whitewater several times. On one such occastion I was leading a couple of other people on a two day trip down a river that had a lot of class I+ rapids and one class II section. My bosses boss was in a 15 1/2' sea kayak and only had about a years experience. She had no trouble whatsoever handling the class II rapid. But I think you have to consider that class II is every bit as lethal as class IV-V if you don't have experience. So is a bathtub with 6" of water in it. Class II, by definition, doesn't require much manoeveribility nor are the consequences severe or is group assistance often required. From the AWA site: class ii: novice. straightforward rapids with wide, clear channels which are evident without scouting. occasional maneuvering may be required, but rocks and medium sized waves are easily missed by trained paddlers. swimmers are seldom injured and group assistance, while helpful, is seldom needed. rapids that are at the upper end of this difficulty range are designated "class ii+". In fact, it seems like a large number of whitewater accidents I've heard of recently happened on class II stuff. A recent drowning on the Nantahala occurred in class II, if I recall correctly. A friend of mine was nearly drowned early this spring on a class II section of a class IV river in the Obed-Emory system, after he broached on an innocent looking rock which happened to be seriously undercut. How many of those incidents were in recreational kayaks vs. "real" whitewater kayaks? In conditions up to class II I was suggest that an inexperienced kayaks would less likely capsize in a 9' long, 30" rec boat than in most of the "real" whitewater boats on the market these days. An inexperieced kayak has no business being on anything class III or above, no matter what kind of boat they're in. And on a class III river closer to home in the early summer, I saw another badly wrapped rec boat pulled off the rocks, badly trashed. Do you think that was a result of the boat or the operator? I'd suggest that whoever was paddling that rec boat would just as likely have run into trouble had they been in a real whitewater boat. A Sparky has no place in whitewater of any sort, IMO. It wasn't designed for it, and given the way the original poster posed the question, he has absolutely no preparation for whitewater paddling anyway. Whether a Sparky is designed for whitewater or not, even someone with marginal experience could successfully handle whitewater up to class II in one. An inexperience paddler that attempts anything more difficult is dangerous regardless of what they are paddling. |
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