Posts Tagged ‘practice’
Bob Mayo on the keyboards
Well, woke up this morning with a wine glass in my hand.
Whose wine? What wine? Where the hell did I dine?
Must have been a dream I don’t believe where I’ve been. Come on, let’s do it again.
Do you…you, feel like I do?
-frampton
You have to wonder sometimes. Especially those times when you find yourself upside down in your boat realizing you’ve totally forgotten how to roll. Well, no. I didn’t forget how to roll. I just forgot how to roll on my offside. It’s not like I don’t know my offside rolls. I certainly practice both sides. Just for some silly reason I found myself upside down and a complete blank! Bugger!
degrees of practice
There is no pain, you are receding.A distant ship’s smoke on the horizon.
You are only coming through in waves.
Your lips move but I can’t hear what you’re sayin’.
When I was a child I had a fever.
My hands felt just like two balloons.
Now I got that feeling once again.
I can’t explain, you would not understand.
This is not how I am.
I have become comfortably numb.
- waters
3 hours of rolling with a fever is about enough. Mary took the photo after I wet exited, came up, and just clung to the boat. My eyes were burning from the bleachy pool, my Tylenol was no longer effective. I was exhausted and a bit dizzy. I was cooked and ready to go home. ( I should add a disclaimer here that exercise while ill or with a fever is BAD and carries certain serious risks. Again, don’t do what Donny Dont Does) Read the rest of this entry »
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
THE BIG SWEEP
I’ve finally put the weights away and opted for early morning paddles. It’s much more fun to get up at 5am and be on the water at 6, than to just sit in the living room hefting steel. Especially at my age!!
I have to be on the water all the time otherwise I feel like I forget everything. No, it’s not like I go out on the water after a week and just fall over, but on the other hand I can feel myself out of sync with the water. I’ve noticed lately that my sweeps were getting sloppy and shallow. Not only was it harder to turn in waves but I was using much more effort in the process. So that meant taking some time the last couple mornings and going back to basics. Being sure to plant the blade up near the bow and sweeping the blade out away from the boat in a clock-like motion. Remembering to use torso rotation and not just arm movement, I reached out again to each number on the clock 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and then completed the sweep with my thick middle twisted like a pretzel and my paddle coming to the back of the boat before exiting the water. Much better. Sweeps are one of those things it’s easy to get lazy with. Most often you need not go through that kind of Herculean effort to turn the boat. Especially if you put it on edge. Then of course as you add more moves to your arsenal you begin to use more draws and rudders especially when in motion. But there are occasions when don’t have any speed up or you are in a confined area, that you may still need to get around quickly and efficiently. All of a sudden you’re back in kayaking 101 and going through the motions of the classic “BIG SWEEP”.
Heavy Horses
As much as you would like to think about kayaking everyday, life often draws you to other places. In my work as a web developer this time of year gets just rockin. I’m finding myself backed up into spring. At least then it will be time again to slip back out into the water on a more regular basis. I really miss the summer when I can end most days with a practice session at the lake. I keep my poor old laminated card with all the “must work on” notes out on the deck and begin the routine;
Unload the Warhorse. Carry it across the road and down to the lake. Now the gear. Gawwd, how’d I get so much damn gear!! Back on the water. Boat feels tight. Feeling fat again. Stretch. Paddle to “my spot”. Ready and. . .
Roll, Roll, Roll onside, roll, roll, roll offside. C to C, Sweep, sculling recoveries, laybacks. Grab the Greenland paddle. Do it all over again add in standard roll, storm roll and vertical sculling roll. Then lay on the back deck and catch my breath. It’s at this moment when all the day’s stress is gone.
Ok, now clean forward stroke. Reverse stroke. Keep the damn boat straight! High brace, Low brace. Scull for support, great onside, weak off-side need to work on this. Sweeps. Keep the boat on a dime. Why is it I can’t keep this boat on a dime anyway? Well, try again, and again, and again. Remember, model the stroke. Get on an edge. Slow, easy. . .
Draws. In water, out of water, sculling draw. . Go forward get up momentum. Bow draws. Pry? YIKES! almost lost it again. Never pry. . . Slide paddle from Bow to hip to stern. Neutral blade. Good. Open it up. Just a bit. Lay on the paddle turning in a nice wide ark. Look behind you, you’re safe just lean out on your paddle. Wrap right round to your goal.
Water & Candy Please.
Now work on that static. Still not there. leg down. . Arch the back. nope. . glug, glug, glug sweep back up. Hand roll?? Look at the bottom, look at the sky. Simple. NOT! Made it once, but VERY sloppy. . . No repeats.
Rest.
Ok. Paddlefloat onside, off-side. Scramble. Flip, scull, sit. No problem. Re-entry roll. No nose plugs. Ooops, choke!!
All right, let’s be Nigel Foster and stand up. wobble, wobble. . . I’m Up! I’m Up! Oh, Sh#T! I’m down!!
Lay on the beach. Stretch. Watch the clouds. Paddle back out. once around the lake and back to the car. Tired. Getting cold. Turn on the heater. Turn up Jethro Tull. Load the boat.
Go home. Find food. . . .
