High ball shooter

instert lyrics by Deep Purple here. . .

So the question you ask when someone’s feeling a bit timid is. .”Where’d you hang YOUR balls today!?” Well, the answer is, ” Out on the clothesline by the fence.” of course!

For the sake of those who’ve not heard this story, I picked up using tennis balls to help teach edging from the folks at Body, Boat, Blade a few years back. You basically have the student drop a tennis ball in their cockpit, right between their knees, then have them move the ball under one knee or the other by lifting and relaxing their legs. The concept gives them a mental image and a bit of physical feedback as well. Of course there are those occasions where the hull is not quite made for this sort of thing. .

So the question you ask at the end of every class. . . “May I have my balls back?” Hardly worth the effort sharing the other reasons you might ask that question. . . (like shooting fish in a barrel. .)

Sorry. . . one of those days!

Related Posts:

  1. balls
  2. dreamer’s ball
  3. High and Dry
  4. High Anxiety – Or how to roll a kayak without really trying
  5. Discovery Sea Kayaks

One Response to High ball shooter

  • Karen says:

    Did you see this ? I thought this was a very good story !!! WAY TO GO !!!

    http://www.nbc15.com/home/headlines/29843114.html

    Adaptive Paddling at Devil’s Lake
    Reporter: Zac Schultz
    Email Address: zschultz@nbc15.com
    0 comments
    VIDEO: Adaptive Kayaking 09-27-08

    A | A | A

    Posted Saturday September 27, 2008 — 3:55 pm
    By Zac Schultz

    Devil’s Lake State Park: A little more balance is opening up a whole new world of independence for people with disabilities.

    “It’s fun. It’s a beautiful day. It’s fun to be gliding across the water. It’s just gorgeous.” Jane Schmeiding looks like any other kayaker out on the water.

    Only two small outriggers give away that her kayak is any different. “It’s just so normal,” says Jane. “It’s just feeling like I’m just another boater and can go where I want to go on the lake.”

    But Jane has MS, and she enjoys the extra security provided by her this adapted kayak. “I’m in command of my own boat. I don’t have to wait for someone else to take me where I want to go.”

    “When you’re out on the water there’s no limits,” says Andy Janicki, who is behind this adaptive paddling event at Devil’s Lake State Park. He’s the Accessibility Coordinator for the DNR, and new to adaptive paddling himself. He needed a friend to paddle him around after an accident left him paralyzed from the neck down. “It was pretty amazing. This was the first place I went paddling by myself. It was a pretty amazing feeling. It had been four years since I paddled my own boat.”

    Kevin Carr is behind the seat technology. “The whole idea of this system is to provide that lateral support and a high enough back support that they feel secure in the kayak. The whole point is to make the person one with the kayak.”

    Carr designs canoe and kayak accessories, and says there’s no better feeling than helping someone regain their independence. “This is lifechanging. You watch the faces of people who get out there for the first time.”

    And the people in the kayak agree. “It’s a very liberating thing, being out on the water,” says Andy.

    “It gives a whole sense of freedom,” says Jane.





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