ndk

Tripping Darkly

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Nothing remains
We could run /  when the rain slows / Look for the cars or signs of life / Where the heat goes
Look for the drifters / We should crawl under the bracken
Look for the shafts of light on the road
Where the heat goes
– bowie

Sometimes when you wake up in the middle of the night you’re not really sure why. Still you get out of your warm cozy bed and begin your day. You have to. If you just lay there, all those worrisome thoughts start creeping into your head like, “Why does my toe suddenly hurt?”, “What if I lose my job tomorrow?”, or “Why doesn’t Valley ever finish their website?”

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Old Is Fine, Sometimes It’s Flakey

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Old man take a look at my life / I’m a lot like you
I need someone to love me / the whole day through
Ah, one look in my eyes / and you can tell that’s true.
– Neil Young

I was sitting here working on an article about a couple new kayak models on their way to market and in the midst of a sentence, a bit of rational, clarity came to mind.  Old is fine too. Just as we would expect in our consumer driven society, companies become hard pressed to find something new and exciting to rabbit on about in order to sell their products. Regular business cycles and short attention spans make it challenging to keep churning out “awesome, game changing, amazing, paradigm shifting” wonders. Most of it is BS of course.  There’s nothing wrong with selling products.. but let’s be honest here, new is rarely all that much different from old other than there is a bit more shine.  A shine that will go away in 6 months when today’s “new” becomes tomorrow’s “old”.

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glitterati

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How’d you like a nice glittery pink kayak?  This one is from SeaKayakingUK.  I was amazed at the number of glittery kayaks here at the ISS symposium. These days you can find glitter pretty commonly on SeaKayakingUK & P&H kayaks. It was only a couple years ago when glitter was one of the things that made Rockpool Kayaks unique.  At least Rockpool still has the mighty stars! Continue reading

NDK Appaloosa

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Here’s a one of a kind kayak.  It’s an NDK Appaloosa.  Well, no.  It’s a Romany. A very old Romany that still says, “Designed by Nigel Dennis & Aled Williams.  (Aled as you may know moved on to form Rockpool with Mike Webb and then moved on to form Tide Race Kayaks… Confused?) This poor Romany has been around the block a few times.. and under a tree at least once.  You see, a tree fell on it.  Crushed it.  The story goes that one of the guys down at Rutabaga saw it sitting in a yard all busted up and offered to take it away.  He put it back together.  Much like the The Talosians from the Star Trek orignal series pilot he did the best he could but…  Continue reading

You’re Cut

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Hello, I must be going,
I cannot stay, I came to say, I must be going.
I’m glad I came, but just the same I must be going.
La La.
– groucho marx

Well, you’ve got to laugh, don’t you!?  This year General Motors here in the states has been trying to remain viable. So they started cutting brands. First on the block was Pontiac. Pontiac was meant to be the more sporty, muscle bound GM.  Pontiac was for adults who had to take kids to ballet but didn’t want to totally go “middle age”. I loved Pontiac myself. In fact and still own a Grand Prix.  GM is also talking about chopping or selling off Saturn and Hummer as well. So that got me thinking. In these tough times what if our favorite kayak companies had to cut back? Continue reading

Got Wood?

Now here’s something you don’t see every day. This rather natural looking kayak is an Explorer CS by Sea Kayak Services. Its based of course on the original NDK (SKUK) Explorer. The CS is a composite kayak using a combination of wood, carbon fibre, glass fiber and epoxy resin. It shares the same dimensions as it’s namesake and comes in around 52lbs. Keep an eye out in the next issue of Ocean Paddler for a review.You have to admit the woodstrip design is pretty sharp. It certainly takes the Explorer to a whole new place!

* photo from SKS. used by permission. Thanks!

Studio Drawings in Mixed Media. . .

And Maggie over lunch one day, took a cruiser with all hands, apparently to make him give it back – Roger Waters

Some days you just have little to say. So I let a few days pass to see if something would come. Nope! Oh, well, “To everything there is a season”. Some days you have something of value to add to a conversation and some days you should just keep your silly mouth shut. BUT as my European friends like to point out, Americans can’t keep quiet, we will just keep right on talking even if we have nothing worth saying. So with that in mind. . .

I did manage to get out on Devil’s Lake yesterday in some darned heavy winds. No one wanted to brave Lake Michigan and I don’t blame them. But if you can get 2 ft waves on our little lake that’s close to a miracle and certainly not to be missed. So I spent a couple hours Sunday rolling and bracing in the machine gun rhythm of steep flat faced waves on a small lake in central Wisconsin. I don’t think there was much more than 5 ft between crests which can really bat you around. When rolling in those conditions you have to be a bit patient especially when rolling up into the waves. If you try to come right back up you are usually catch your boat going down the next wave and your paddle does not easily find the surface. You need to just hold still long enough to get a feel for the rhythm and come up quick on the back end when your recovery side is angled to the surface. Or you can just skip the whole thing and quickly scull back up. But then again, what fun would that be??

This morning I was up at 5am and on the lake at 6. I’ve been putting a lot of time into the “hanging draw” recently and this morning was the first time I felt like I could repeat the maneuver on a regular basis without turning the boat. The hanging draw is sort of hard to explain in text. I saw in a recent discussion on Paddlewise that some folks described the move as a “side slip” which probably gives you a better visual cue. Anyway the point is to move the boat sideways wile (whilst??) keeping forward momentum WITHOUT turning the boat. Frankly there are major “cool” points if you can get this one down. It looks Soooo SWEEEEET!

Here is how the BCU describes it;

“With the kayak moving forward at a good speed, the paddle should be placed out to the side, level with or just behind hip, The kayak should move sideways without the paddle moving in relation to the boat, or the kayak turning. (It may be necessary for the bow to be held at a slight angle away from the paddle.)”

My experience in my NDK Explorer is that the paddle position is just behind the knee. For many of these kinds of maneuvers you will find paddle placement depends on the boat, displacement, conditions etc. Another key to this move is the old standby TORSO ROTATION. Yes, I know. . . All the world’s problems can be solved by good torso rotation. That whole Falklands Islands thing back in the 80′s could have been avoided if Galtieri would have just put more time into working on good torso rotation instead of spending so much time staring longingly out to sea. (Sorry for that little southern-hemispheric, quasi-historical aside) The problem is that those of us with thicker middle areas can find torso rotation difficult in normal situations, let along when on the move. Luckily I’ve found that you need not twist until your eyes bug out, just enough to get the paddle into a good vertical position in line with the boat. I’ve been dropping the paddle vertically into a neutral position and then opening it up while paying attention to how my boat responds. This usually gives me a hint if I need to go forward or back with the paddle before the boat over reacts to the blade.

On a silly note; I finally got my new license plate for the Jeep! I think we waited about 6 months for the things to show up. One nice bit is that I will actually be able to remember my license plate number!

It’s exactly one month from my trip to Michigan. But more on that later. . .

-dm



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