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![]() Michael Daly wrote: On 15-Jun-2004, Bill Tuthill wrote: With unfeathered blades, your two hands have a paddling motion in two parallel circles, like cranking two old Model-T starters. With feathered blades, your shoulders get involved in the strokes and (with proper personal angle) the wrists and forearms stay mostly stationary with respect to the paddle. Upper-arm movement substitutes for a certain amount (10cm?) of paddle length This is a common misconception, typically propagated by proponents of feathered paddling. It's nonsense. There is nothing about paddling unfeathered that forces this kind of difference in technique. I don't see why you have this difference. I use the same technique (closest to your second description) whether feathered or not. The former technique is what I tell folks to stop doing and the latter is what they should do. Exactly. There is no difference in proper technique, whether the paddle is feathered or not. Placement is placement. Torso rotation is torso rotation. |
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