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![]() Bill Tuthill wrote: Brian Nystrom wrote: Dowd (I believe it was he) wrote that only in a direct headwind does a feathered paddle produce any advantage. Defintely words of wisdom and absolutely correct. When you consider that when paddling into a headwind, the paddler is in the strongest, most stable position, the difference that a feathered paddle makes is not that great. Also, feather angles less than 90 degrees will cause the paddle to lift or dive in a headwind. Overall, I found feathering to be a disadvantage. Some people think a feathered paddle (45-60 degrees) feels more natural during the paddle stroke, and blades are always in a nearly ideal position for offside bracing. If you think about it, what could be more natural than a paddle that's perfectly symmetric? The motion is identical from one side to the other. By definition, you MUST do something asymmetric in order to feather a paddle. Proper feathering technique must be taught, but anyone can use an unfeathered paddle with little or no instruction. Feathered paddles can be shorter (due to different technique used) and therefore lighter. How do you figure that? There's no difference in technique that would require a different length paddle, one way or the other. You seem to be assuming that there's a difference in paddle placement, paddle angle, torso rotation, etc. when there isn't. It's individual preference. True. |
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