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Posts posted by tyson
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The last time Emilie and I went kayak camping, we took our tandem and did some rolls with it fully loaded while near shore. Everything stayed in its place in the boat, including the paddlers.
In our favor was that we were packed for only a single night.
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I've got to remember that one!"Do not learn from the master, learn as the master learned."
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yeah... I really enjoy watching lightning, but I don't like being the highest point in the area while doing it. The bridge was a very good move.Lightening, well that's not so fun.
Cheers!
Ty
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Follow Jason's instructions on where to put in and staying out of the way. You likely won't get through the canal if the flow is against you. It is a brisk ride when the current is with you. I've experienced a bit of a bumpy ride through there with some reasonable current induced swell. You also need to be careful about the other boat traffic. Its narrow enough to be a "single lane". The boats take turns going in each direction. If you have confidence in your participants or can time it for near slack, you'll be fine. If you have a group of folks with limited skills and hit it when its flowing well, you may find find yourself with your hands full. I don't think you need to worry about the tides at the school. Its the current at the canal you need to be concerned about.
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Sounds like a blast! ...wish I could have been there!
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You have not achieved a sufficient level of assimilation to be cleared to see the photos. I am able to see them.Dr. Lewis,
I get this message from facebook "This content is currently unavailable". Is it because I'm not a member or is there something else wrong?
Leon
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Pintail, what is that green boat your paddling? I ask because it appears (I could be wrong) to be a plastic boat (Nordcap?) with an ocean cockpit which is a combination I'd given up on finding. If a Nordcap RM/LV with an ocean cockpit were available, I'd be quite tempted.
Thanks!
Ty
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I will be sitting in a kayak with my favorite possessions. I expect to be lifted to thy heavens with my stuff.
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Busted link. Try this.heres the issue:
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Looks like it was a VERY tight finish! They show 1 second between first and 2nd place, and they only measure to the second. I wonder just how close it was.Ty, I think you'd be interested in this: A sit-in kayak beat all of the surf skis (22 skis) in this year's (2011) Essex River race. The SIK was a West Side T-Rex, almost the fastest of all the West Side racing models. The T-Rex was up against many of the fastest surf ski racers in New England and beyond. I believe you’d see more SIKs win if more were used.
Leon
Cheers!
Ty
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I'll have to take a look at the results! I'm not sure if Emilie and I will have time to make the Blackburn this year.Ty, I think you'd be interested in this: A sit-in kayak beat all of the surf skis (22 skis) in this year's (2011) Essex River race. The SIK was a West Side T-Rex, almost the fastest of all the West Side racing models. The T-Rex was up against many of the fastest surf ski racers in New England and beyond. I believe you’d see more SIKs win if more were used.
Leon
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I heard that someone won that in a raffle at the RWS last year but was never going to use it because of its funny, short, fat blades and long loom. They decided it would be bad karma to cash in on something that they'd received for free and so donated it to MITA.Someone else got a good deal on an all-carbon Lendal.
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If you start with the swamped boat upright, it can start up onto the deck w/no effort. This is even more true if the rescuee pushes down on their stern (as pointed out by Bob). You then roll the tandem onto its side and if needed pull it up a little further, then finally upside down. At no point is there a suction that needs to be broken. At no point do you need to lift the weight of the water in the cockpits.A roto tandem can go almost 100 lbs. empty. You end up taking a lot of the weight on your foredeck to keep moving the tandem up during the T to break the suction on the rear cockpit. I would try it with a plastic solo before before I put my SOF at risk.
Some expressed concern about damaging the SOF. This concern is not to be ignored, however, the primary load will be on the gunwale which is the strongest part of a SOF. Also, if my link is followed you will see a 150lb +/- person plus a 25-30lb qajaq all piled onto the fore deck of an other SOF. With just a little care, I doubt that the front half of a 100lb tandem is going to do any damage.
As always, it is better to test and train in a controlled context so that you don't have surprises when you need to do it in "conditions". I feel that my speculation is well grounded, but since I've never T-rescued a tandem with a SOF, it is still speculation.
Cheers!
Ty
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You shouldn't have any problem. You will need to have decent technique just because it will be more effort for you, but I'm quite sure that your F1 has at least as much buoyancy and volume as the Greenland qajaqs shown in this link. The point isn't the technique that they use, but that the qajaq has sufficient buoyancy to support Dan Segal. He's not a large man, but I'm certain that he weighs more than any tandem kayak.
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When a traffic light is adjusted to have a delayed green, it doesn't take long for people to figure that out and start stretching things when their light turns red. What's wrong with running the red light because we all know that no one will be coming the other way yet?50-50-50 is just a mnemonic that may err on the safe side for many swimmers. What is the problem with that if it keeps people close to shore on cold water?
Speed limits are generally ridiculously low compared to the capabilities of a modern car in typical dry driving conditions. ...speed limits or routinely exceeded.
Declaring limits that demonstrably have large safety margins in them will result in people routinely violating/disregarding those limits.
That still leaves open the question of if 50-50-50 is an over stated limit, or John is just that amazing.
Cheers!
Ty
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One strategy is to sweep, bow rudder, sweep, bow rudder... with a good strong edge to the boat.
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When I go backcountry skiing, I carry a pack that looks like I'm going overnight camping. At the sight if my pack, I am often asked if I will be out overnight. When I answer that I'm just out for the day, the person asking is often a bit surprised and asks what all my stuff is for. From time to to time, my explanation of what happens if someone gets injured and/or the weather turns gets a wide eyed expression of realization of the risks they are exposed to in response. More often they just don't get it. However, when they do, its worth it.
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I like rituals. They give life a feeling of comfort, home, predictability.I believe appropriate to add a little info snippet for new members that this thread, or one of similar ilk, is a Spring ritual at NSPN.
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...and seems to require a MS Live account which not everyone has.BTW the link points to your personal e-mail.
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That's not always the case.right. the coasties don't say boo, the f&g don't say boo. it's not their business until someone ends up in the drink.
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Manipulative S.O.B.buttons, buttons, all these buttons....which ones to push?
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Chart, compass and situational awareness are your foundation and will be for a long time. Batteries run dead. Electronics fail. Charts and compasses keep working.Are GPS used by seasoned sea kayakers at all? I've been considering purchasing one, but won't if it's a waste of money. I understand, and plan to learn, the necessity of hard-copy charts, but thought they'd be outmoded by today’s technology.
I don't think I yet qualify as a seasoned kayaker, and I do use a GPS. However, most of the time it stays in a dry bag in a hatch and just records the trip for looking at later. In some cases I'll use it to make the task of tracking my position, speed and direction easier. ...but always cross correlated with the chart and compass so that I can pick up on them in an instant if the GPS fails.
One of the things I find a GPS very useful for is tracking speed and distance. Some may find it easy, others may not care, but I find it difficult to estimate speed and direction of travel when far from land and when currents and winds aren't exactly known.
The other problem with a GPS is that its screen is very small. You can miss the big picture and get into big trouble if you aren't paying attention to things further away than your immediate location.
Cheers!
Ty
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That's why I'll not continue that thread unless I find time to prepare better material. There are multiple aspects to rocker and you guys are missing one of them.I also think that Leon knows what he's talking about in a conversation about racing, so tread carefully...
I dare you to say that to John Carmody. ...and I hear he knows a thing or two about kayaking.Emilie, the inherent problem with using bow rudders is that it also causes <tons> of drag.
Why not? Having an off day?I am not trying to start an argument here, please note! ;^)
Cheers!
Ty
Kayak camping: after the capsize
in General Message Board
Posted