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#1
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Since I last posted a question about sail sticks, I met a guy who gets
the wind to tow a canoe by attaching a kite to the canoe using heavy (trolling - woven??) fishing line. He claims that the canoe is much more stable than having a mast that could cause the canoe to flip in a cross gust. Has anyone else heard of this technique? |
#2
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![]() "Graham" wrote in message om... Since I last posted a question about sail sticks, I met a guy who gets the wind to tow a canoe by attaching a kite to the canoe using heavy (trolling - woven??) fishing line. He claims that the canoe is much more stable than having a mast that could cause the canoe to flip in a cross gust. Has anyone else heard of this technique? Not specifically, but I used to use the rainfly of my NorthFace VE24 (a standard dome tent) as a sail. It worked great when the wind was from directly astern, but if it was off even by 15 or 20 degrees, it was particularly hard to keep the boat on track. I used to tie the lower two lines to the front thwart, and the upper two lines together to make a sling that I just held behind my head. It kept my hands free, and I could trim the sail by leaning forward, back or to the sides. I once used this setup to sail about 5 miles across a lake to an island, and landed exactly on target. --riverman |
#3
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"riverman" wrote in message ...
"Graham" wrote in message om... Since I last posted a question about sail sticks, I met a guy who gets the wind to tow a canoe by attaching a kite to the canoe using heavy (trolling - woven??) fishing line. He claims that the canoe is much more stable than having a mast that could cause the canoe to flip in a cross gust. Has anyone else heard of this technique? Not specifically, but I used to use the rainfly of my NorthFace VE24 (a standard dome tent) as a sail. It worked great when the wind was from directly astern, but if it was off even by 15 or 20 degrees, it was particularly hard to keep the boat on track. I used to tie the lower two lines to the front thwart, and the upper two lines together to make a sling that I just held behind my head. It kept my hands free, and I could trim the sail by leaning forward, back or to the sides. I once used this setup to sail about 5 miles across a lake to an island, and landed exactly on target. --riverman The Kite thing has been done in a kayak , can't see why it would not work in a canoe. |
#4
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"riverman" wrote in message ...
"Graham" wrote in message om... Since I last posted a question about sail sticks, I met a guy who gets the wind to tow a canoe by attaching a kite to the canoe using heavy (trolling - woven??) fishing line. He claims that the canoe is much more stable than having a mast that could cause the canoe to flip in a cross gust. Has anyone else heard of this technique? Not specifically, but I used to use the rainfly of my NorthFace VE24 (a standard dome tent) as a sail. It worked great when the wind was from directly astern, but if it was off even by 15 or 20 degrees, it was particularly hard to keep the boat on track. I used to tie the lower two lines to the front thwart, and the upper two lines together to make a sling that I just held behind my head. It kept my hands free, and I could trim the sail by leaning forward, back or to the sides. I once used this setup to sail about 5 miles across a lake to an island, and landed exactly on target. --riverman The Kite thing has been done in a kayak , can't see why it would not work in a canoe. |
#5
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Ed Gillet used a kite powered kayak to sail from San Diego to Hawaii. You
can read about it in my new book A SPECK ON THE SEA available on www.amazon.com Yours, Bill Longyard "Graham" wrote in message om... Since I last posted a question about sail sticks, I met a guy who gets the wind to tow a canoe by attaching a kite to the canoe using heavy (trolling - woven??) fishing line. He claims that the canoe is much more stable than having a mast that could cause the canoe to flip in a cross gust. Has anyone else heard of this technique? |
#6
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Interesting. When I interviewed Ed in 1988, he told me of his
transpacific kite powered journey from Monterey, CA, to Kahului Harbor, Maui in 1986. I am not aware of any kite powered voyage beginning in San Diego. FWIW, Ed felt he had set a new recored for *paddling* across the Pacific. Though he used the kite for more than 80% of the journey, he always thought he paddled across. See: http://www.dcss.org/speedsl/KI289.html Dave Culp "Longyard William H." wrote in message nk.net... Ed Gillet used a kite powered kayak to sail from San Diego to Hawaii. You can read about it in my new book A SPECK ON THE SEA available on www.amazon.com Yours, Bill Longyard |
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