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![]() "Ewan Scott" wrote in message ... Nope, I'm a pretty inexperienced kayaker. I'd love to know what wash diving is! I'm one of these people who is annoyingly curious about everything! The best way to see what happens is to watch someone in a short boat paddle as hard as they can past you. If their boat is trimmed to keep the nose out of the water, the stern dips. However what you watch is the series of waves created by the boat. The obvious one is the bow wave. But behind the boat, just rear of the stern is the transverse or stern wave,. As the boat speeds up this wave becomes a "hole" behind the boat. The stern of the boat as it dips, drags into the hole and gets held back. Hence every hull shape has a maximum speed that cannot be exceeded no matter how hard you paddle. You can get close to the boat in front and sit on the bow wave and surf along, easing the load on your paddling. However, I find it difficult to maintain position for any great distance. Alternately you come up behind the boat in front an surf in his stern wave. This is easier, but you tend to end up running into the back of the boat in front. It is very similar in theory to riding a bike in another rider's slipstream. I find it can give some releif from paddling, and can help slower boats keep pace with faster boats - for a time. At least that's my understanding. The above is a pretty good explanation. Marathon paddlers use wash riding (not wash diving, Charlie) to ease the amount of effort required to travel long distances and to get a rest without stopping. Sprint racers get disqualified for wash riding. (Sprint racing takes place in buoyed lanes on a regatta course and paddlers are not permitted to get within 5 metres sideways distance of another boat) A boat produces a wash which is shaped like a V with the bow of the boat at the pointed part of the V. This wash is highest and has the steepest slope close to the boat. To surf the front edge of this wash you first need to climb up and over the back of the wave. A trick to this is to cross the wash a fair way from the boat you are going to hitch a lift from. As you get onto the front of the wave, gradually ease closer to the other boat. you will find as you get closer you start to gain more help from the wash. The front edge of the wash is getting steeper so as you get closer you can go faster for less effort. You should be able to get within a couple of feet of the lead boat, just leaving enough space to get your paddle in the water. Several boats can do the same trick ending up like a flight of ducks. Anyone who allows the wash to pass them will slow down rapidly as they then find themselves paddling up the wave instead of down it. This is known as falling off the wash. Another common technique is to stern wash. You basically fall into the hole left by the boat in front as it moves forward. This can be done at almost any speed. Practice with a friend or two at low speeds to get the hang of it. Chains of paddlers can all take advantage of the work the lead boat is doing. It is normal for different paddlers to take the lead position so that the work is shared with every paddler getting a rest. If 4 paddlers go out as a group, one leads, two wash ride at the sides and the fourth rides behind in the V wash. This 4th position gains wash from all 3 boats in front and is the position needing the least effort to stay with the group. It is possible to have bigger groups but 4 is optimum, with the lead being regularly swapped. In a marathon race the fastest paddlers will try to get in front of the rest and form a group of 4, cooperating to complete the course, sometimes not paddling very hard at all, just making sure they stay ahead of the other paddlers. The real race comes at the very end when it is every man for himself and a mad sprint for the finish happens. What I've been describing is from seeing and paddling racing boats which are very long so the stern doesn't dip perceptibly. The same principles will apply to shorter boats but may be harder to put into practice. Try it and report back. We all learn from others experiences. David Kemper Not a fan of falling off. |
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