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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: rsk@gynko.circ.upenn.edu (Rich Kulawiec)
- Newsgroups: rec.boats.paddle,news.answers
- Subject: rec.boats.paddle frequently asked questions and answers
- Supersedes: <paddling-faq_763338044@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 10 Apr 1994 09:25:39 GMT
- Organization: Cardiothoracic Imaging Research Center
- Lines: 669
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
- Expires: 24 May 1994 08:57:03 GMT
- Message-ID: <paddling-faq_765968223@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Reply-To: rsk@gynko.circ.upenn.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Summary: Some terms, explanations and pointers to more information
- Keywords: canoe, kayak, raft, paddle, whitewater
- X-Last-Updated: 1993/01/04
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.boats.paddle:4825 news.answers:17866
-
- Archive-name: paddling-faq
- Version: $Header: /home/gynko/rsk/misc/period/RCS/ww.faq,v 1.7 93/01/03 13:43:52 rsk Exp $
-
- This is the first posting of the rec.boats.paddle FAQ in some considerable
- time. Many of the sections included here are new or much-revised; as
- a consequence, there are probably a fair number of errors included.
- Also, since this FAQ is also used for the whitewater mailing list, it
- is unabashedly slanted toward canoeing, kayaking, and rafting.
- Portions of the text below were written by Darren Bush, who deserves
- much of the credit for this article. Please send any comments, updates,
- corrections, or thoughts to me at: rsk@ecn.purdue.edu. And a big thanks
- to all of you who have already contributed your knowledge and experience!
-
- ---Rsk
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- This paragraph/disclaimer was originally in rec.backcountry FAQL, but
- it was so good, I though I'd leave it. What's true on the trail is doubly
- true on the river.
-
- "Books are not a substitute for skill, nor can they make safe those who do not
- practice the principles of safety. Books are not substitutes for training.
- We do not wish to discourage people who have age old urges. But they can
- answer simple problems and questions. It is urged that the inexperienced
- avail themselves of instruction, training, and mentorship. We would
- counsel you remember the virtues of progressive training."
-
- In other words, don't go to the library, get "How to Kayak Class V and Live
- to Tell", buy a kayak from the REI catalogue, and go for it. Not that
- anyone would be foolish enough to do that...
-
- WHY DO WE DO THIS?:
-
- "It is difficult to find in life any event which so effectually
- condenses intense nervous sensation into the shortest possible space of
- time as does the work of shooting, or running an immense rapid. There
- is no toil, no heart breaking labour about it, but as much coolness,
- dexterity, and skill as man can throw into the work of hand, eye, and
- head; knowldge of when to strike and how to do it; knowledge of water
- and rock, and of the one hundred combinations which rock and water can
- assume -- for these two things, rock and water, taken in the abstract,
- fail as completely to convey any idea of their fierce embracings in the
- throes of a rapid as the fire burning quietly in a drawing-room
- fireplace fails to convey the idea of a house wrapped and sheeted in flames."
-
- Sir William Francis Butler (1872)
-
- (as quoted in the Wild Rivers Survey series of pamphlets, Parks Canada;
- forwarded to Rsk by Don Wegeng, who got it from Brian Smith.)
-
- TERMS
- -----
-
- Most of the terms used in describing canoes, kayaks and rafts are the same
- as those used in describing other types of watercraft. However, there are
- some unique terms paddlers need to know.
-
- Boof -- To bounce off rocks in the process of paddling from point A to
- point B. Not healthy for fiberglasss boats. :-)
-
- C-1 -- Decked canoe, a cross between the C-boat and a kayak. Like the
- kayak, it's decked (and in fact, it looks a lot like one), but like the
- C-boat the paddler kneels on a saddle and uses a single-bladed paddle.
-
- C-2 -- A two-person C-1, often seen at whitewater slalom races. Requires
- a great deal of coordination between the paddlers to keep upright and
- moving somewhere useful.
-
- C-boat -- Whitewater open canoe, a version of the canoe that's made to
- handle rough water. Usually includes lots of floatation to keep it
- from swamping; paddler usually kneels on a saddle in the middle
- of the boat. Also known as OC-1, or OC-2 in the two-person edition.
-
- CFS -- Cubic feet per second, a measure of river flow.
-
- Eddy - the quiet area behind a rock, pillar, bend in the river, etc. A
- good place to rest. The line where the whitewater meets the quiet eddy
- water is called the eddyline. Eddylines sometimes cause sudden
- flips, especially if there is a significant velocity differential
- between the current going downstream (main flow) and the current going
- upstream (eddy flow). An "eddy turn" ("breakout" in the UK) consists
- of leaving the main flow and getting into the eddy.
-
- Ender/Pop-up -- A hot-dog move favored by hardboaters (and some rafters!).
- The idea is to paddle the boat into a spot where the river pushes the
- bow down, thus lifting the stern into the air. Doing this just
- right in the right spot can cause the entire boat to be launched
- into the air backwards, which is known as a pop-up. (Going in
- stern first results in a backender.) Optional paddle spins, salutes,
- and pirouettes complement this move. :-)
-
- Eskimo Roll -- basic self-rescue technique for kayakers and C-boaters. The
- paddle and body are used to turn the boat rightside-up after a capsize.
- Some even do it without a paddle ("hands roll").
-
- Flatwater -- sections of relatively slow-moving water in between rapids.
- Allows paddlers time to share their impressions of the last Huge Gnarly
- Boatmunching Rapids before the next one. Some people actually paddle
- flatwater rivers for fun, but then again, every sport has its lunatic fringe.
-
- Hairy/Hairboating: Usually means boating over your head, or boating
- extremely dangerous stuff. Some people consider the term "hairboater" to
- be an honorific. Running 300 FPM creeks or 50,000 CFS floodstage rivers
- are exercises in hairboating.
-
- Haystack -- Haystacks are big standing waves which are breaking on their
- upstream face. Many rapids will have a series of haystacks downstream of
- the main hole; riding these is much like bouncing along on a rollercoaster,
- and can be a lot of fun. Haystacks are a pretty benign form of whitewater,
- and allow paddlers to show off by "catching air".
-
- Highside -- This is what you do in a raft when one side goes way up
- in the air and the raft threatens to flip. Leaping to that side and
- pushing it down can prevent flips and/or wraps.
-
- Hole - the whitest whitewater. This is the area downstream from a drop
- or rock where there is a boiling action of the water, with a lot of water
- being reccirculated. This is also known as a "stopper", which is what they do
- to boats. Some people have named certain nasty holes: Maytag is one
- memorable one, and that's what it feels like to be in one, upside down.
- Stay rightside up, however, and they're fun to play in/on. Learning to
- read the water in and around holes in order to figure out what it will
- do to you if you land in it is an excellent skill to develop; learning
- how to get out of grabby holes is another good idea.
-
- Hull -- The bottom of canoes and kayaks can range from flat-bottomed to
- perfectly rounded. While rounded hulls have the speed advantage,
- flat-bottomed craft are more suited for whitewater due to their stability.
- The best bottom for most craft is some compromise of the two, usually a
- shallow-V type.
-
- Hydraulic -- Also known as reversals. This is a hole formed by current
- dropping over a vertical or near-vertical obstruction (or a drop in
- the riverbed). If the obstruction is perpendicular to the current flow,
- uniform, symmetrical, or some combination of all three, the hydraulic
- can become extremely powerful. The forces generated as the falling
- flow pulls surface water upstream can be powerful enough to flip a boat
- and hold it indefinitely. Swimmers caught in such places are said
- to be "maytagged", for obvious reasons, and it's not pleasant. Most
- hydraulics will let go of boats, boaters, and other gear after one
- trip around or so, but other "keeper" hydraulics will recirculate their
- contents indefinitely. There are some hydraulics, notably those formed
- by low-head dams, which are known as "terminal hydraulics", again, for
- obvious reasons, and are to be avoided at all costs.
-
- K-1 -- One person kayak; the paddler is seated and uses a two-bladed
- paddle. Variants include the squirt boat, bat boat, creek boat, slalom
- boat, downriver boat and sea kayak.
-
- Peelout -- Crossing the eddyline back into the current, usually facing
- upstream about 45 degrees. "Breakin" is the term in the UK, I think.
-
- Pillow -- When water strikes the upstream side of a rock, it sometimes
- tends to "pile up" in a standing wave. These "pillows" tend to bounce
- a boat away from the rock and can be used as an aid to maneuvering...
- provided you don't wash into or over the rock. The absence of a pillow
- on the upstream side of a rock can mean that the rock is undercut.
-
- Pool and Drop -- Many rivers are characterized by fairly short rapids
- interspersed with flat stretches which make rescue a bit simpler and
- allow paddlers to compose themselves before the bottom drops out again.
- Such streams are known as pool and drop rivers.
-
- Pourover -- Pourovers are rocks with flat tops that are just under the
- surface of the water. Running them can be tricky: if there's not enough
- water flowing over the rock, the boat (especially a raft) may become
- lodged on the rock. Occasionally, pourovers also come complete with
- sharp surfaces capable of putting new holes in boats. Generally to
- be avoided unless you're sure of what you're doing.
-
- Rocker -- another measure of the shape of the hull, this time below the
- water line. Rocker refers to how curved the bow is along the keel line.
- As expected, no rocker produces a fast canoe that loves to go straight, a
- nice feature when touring on large lakes. A heavily rockered boat will turn on
- a dime, but will not track well. Most recreational canoes will have a slight
- amount of rocker and a straight keel line.
-
- Sluice -- Water going through a very narrow passage between two rocks
- at high speed. Usually terminates in a strainer or something equally
- nasty, and should be avoided.
-
- Standing Wave - this is where fast water meets slow water, causing a wave
- to build up. They're fun, but can swamp open canoes.
-
- Strainer -- This is what happens when trees, trash, and other assorted
- items become lodged in rocks in the path of the current. Boats and
- boaters who float into strainers tend to stay there, so avoid these,
- period. If you do by some remote chance find yourself swimming into
- one, try to climb up onto whatever's in there -- you might be able to
- get over it and float off the other side, or possibly climb out of the
- water. Many undercut rocks have strainers under them, creating an
- extreme hazard.
-
- Surf -- Surfing the standing waves in a river is much like surfing the
- moving waves in an ocean. Surfing is done by getting onto the upstream
- face of a wave, and then letting gravity (pulling the boat down and
- upstream) balance the force of the wave (pulling the boat up and downstream).
- All the boater needs to do is to keep the boat pointed parallel to
- the current, and the river does the rest. Surfing with the bow downstream
- is known as backsurfing. It's also possible to sidesurf hydraulics;
- one leans downstream on a low brace and balances the recirculating
- force of the hole against the friction of the current on the boat's hull.
- This takes quite a bit of balance, and one's first few attempts usually
- terminate in a *very* fast upstream flip ("window-shading").
-
- Tumblehome -- refers to the shape of the sides of a craft, especially open
- canoes. If the sides flare, the boat will be better at keeping water out,
- but harder to paddle, as the paddler has to reach out farther to place the
- paddle in the water. Again, a compromise is best: combinations of
- tumblehome and flare will change as the use of the canoe changes. Racing
- canoes which rarely see a wave will have extreme tumblehome, but larger
- touring canoes will have more flare to keep the waves out.
-
- Undercut -- Over time, rivers can erode out the bases of rocks which
- are in the path of the main current, forming undercut rocks. Undercuts
- represent an extreme hazard to boaters, since rescue is nearly
- impossible once someone becomes trapped under such a rock by the force
- of the current. Some, but NOT all, undercut rocks are characterized by
- the absence of a pillow on their upstream face: the current goes under
- the rock rather than bouncing off. Some, but NOT all, undercut rocks
- may also be recognized by the presence of a current coming out from the
- under the rock on the downstream side. Avoid undercuts, period.
-
- Vee -- These come in two flavors, upstream and downstream. A downstream
- vee (i.e. the point is downstream) indicates the main flow of the
- current is passing between two obstructions. Generally speaking,
- the middle of the vee will have smooth, flat water moving a high
- speed; this is sometimes called the "tongue". Upstream vees indicate
- the presence of an obstruction at the point of the vee; they usually
- also indicate the presence of an eddy just downstream from the obstruction.
-
- Wrap/Pin -- What a boat does when it gets plastered onto some obstruction
- by the current. Rafts tend to fold around rocks, dumping the occupants
- into the river. If you're in a raft that's in the process of doing this,
- try not to (1) get caught between the raft and the rock or (2) get your
- foot stuck between the tubes and the floor as the raft pins. Luckily,
- most of the time, raft occupants will fall out to either side of the
- pinning obstruction and wash away. Hardboaters are in considerably
- more trouble: the decks of their boats may collapse, pinning their lower
- bodies inside. Wrapping and pinning situations are extremely dangerous,
- and call for quick, knowledgeable rescue.
-
- Wet exit -- What hardboaters do if they miss their roll. Embarassing
- in benign situations, and dangerous in big water.
-
-
- RIVER RATINGS
- -------------
- Rating rivers is part objective assessment, and part subjective impression.
- The scale below was compiled from works by Nealy, Jenkinson,
- Jackson, Evans, and Bechdel & Ray; it corresponds closely to the AWA scale.
-
-
- I Moving water with a few riffles and small waves.
- Few or no obstructions.
-
- II Small scale rapids; 2' waves; few large rocks; wide,
- clear obvious channels.
-
- III Rapids with high, irregular waves; narrow passages often requiring
- complex maneuvering. 3' waves, some small hydraulics, some rocks
- and eddies. Scouting a good idea.
-
- IV Long, difficult rapids with constricted passages often requiring
- precise maneuvering in very turbulent water. Powerful 4' to 6' waves,
- boiling eddies, dangerous rocks, hydraulics.
- Scouting necessary; conditions make rescue difficult.
-
- V Extremely long, difficult, very violent rapids with highly congested
- routes. Many riverbed obstructions, steep drops, 6' to 8' waves,
- strong currents and hydraulics. Scouting absolutely necessary;
- significant hazard to life in the event of a mishap.
-
- VI Difficulties of class V carried to an extreme. Nearly impossible and
- very dangerous; for teams of experts only, at favorable water
- levels and with all precautions.
-
- Now, a few words about all this rating stuff. The rating system is an
- attempt to reduce the complex and infinitely varied features of all the
- rapids on the planet to one of six categories, and as such, it has its
- limitations. Knowing that a rapid is class III, for instance, does not
- tell you all you need to know to run it. The only real way to assess
- the difficulty/danger of a rapid is to learn how to read the water,
- and then go look at it yourself. The advice of guidebooks and of
- other experienced paddlers can be invaluable; but in the end, the
- decision to paddle or portage is a highly personal one that everyone who
- runs whitewater should learn to make.
-
- There is endless discussion among paddlers about the alleged over-/under-
- rating of rivers in various regions of the world; your editor views most
- of this as pointless, as the difference between IV+ and V- on a remote
- wilderness river is probably irrelevant to someone who has blown their
- second offside roll attempt and is going swimming.
-
- One observation about the scale: the ratings from I to IV tend to have
- a lot to do with the size of rapids; the ratings from IV to VI have a
- lot to do with risk factors. For example, the Chattooga's Woodall
- Shoals deserves its VI rating, even though it's technically a III --
- unless you wind up in its terminal hydraulic.
-
- A common question about upper end of the scale is "Does a successful
- run of a previously 'unrunnable' rapid make it a class VI, rather
- than 'unrunnable'?". The answer is no. Various expert paddlers with
- a certain cavalier attitude have managed drops such as Ohiopyle Falls
- on the Yough, but it is probably better for our collective health
- to continue to consider those places out-of-reach. Even though
- techniques and equipment continue to improve, bringing more rapids
- into the "runnable" category, we need to be very careful about devaluing
- ratings -- especially in rapids where there is significant danger.
-
- CANOES
- ------
-
- Canoes are incredibly diverse watercraft. They can be 10 feet long
- they can be 50 feet long, as in the case of the dugout canoes built by some
- of the northwestern native americans. While there is no real generic
- canoe, most of them are in the 14-17 foot range, with 16 feet being a very
- common length.
-
- Most canoes you see are for recreational use with two paddlers. Solo
- canoes are shorter and lighter than those designed for tandem
- paddling. They are usually about 13-14 feet long, but longer lengths are
- common in canoes where speed is important (i.e., cruising or racing).
-
- Canoes are made from a variety of materials. Aluminium canoes are
- quite popular because of their low cost and ability to take heavy wear, but
- like your grandfathers' old '67 Olds, are not very efficient. Fiberglas is
- also popular, as are royalex (a foam/plastic composite) and some kevlar
- (light, but very expensive) boats. Although aluminium canoes are less
- expensive, they are not often a bargain. You cannot produce desired hull
- shapes with aluminium, and they are heavy. Mowhawk Canoe makes a decent
- fiberglas canoe for about the same price as an aluminium boat. In defense
- of aluminium, it is almost indestructable, and is a little lighter than ABS
- plastic.
-
- Alumnium has a few other bad points as well: it's cold in the early
- morning, which matters to wilderness trippers who rise at dawn and glide out
- onto a misty lake before summer's heat notices them; and it's noisy in even
- tiny little wavelets, which makes all that gliding over a misty lake so much
- less romantic. Also a dull gray powdery guck rubs off on you. One advantage:
- nothing you can do to it will make it uglier. :-)
-
- Besides, it makes you look like you're in a rented canoe.
-
- So, keep the cold and the powdery guck in mind if someone tries to
- sell you a fibreglass/plastic canoe with aluminum gunwales. Stripper
- (fibreglass cloth over thin strips of cedar) canoes are beautiful, weigh
- less than aluminum or fibreglass, and are strong too. But you pretty
- much have to make one yourself.
-
- Decked canoes are a different animal altogether from open canoes previously
- discussed. A decked boat characterized by two features: the paddler
- is in a kneeling position, and uses a single-bladed paddle. Single-seaters
- are known as C-1's, doubles as C-2's.
-
- Decked canoes and kayaks are capable of negotiating just about any
- runnable water when paddled skillfully. There seems to be a general
- consensus that the learning curve for C-boats is flatter than that of kayaks.
- The problem is that because the paddler uses a single bladed paddle, there
- is the lack of a good strong brace on one side, and that takes a while to
- develop. Advantages are a very strong stroke, bringing in more big back
- and trunk muscles than kayaks can, because of the position of the paddler.
- They roll easily, are are extremely agile, and good paddlers beat
- kayaks sometimes. Jon Lugbill routinely beats kayakers in identical
- situations. Because of their shape, they are often mistaken by the ignorant
- bystanders as "kayaks" ["Hey! How come you're using that canoe paddle in
- that kayak?"...]
-
- I like the way it makes my toes cramp up after a long day.... :-)
-
- KAYAKS
- ------
-
- From the Inuit word "qayaq", which means "kayak". :-) Kayaks are decked
- boats characterized by two features: the paddler is in a seated position,
- and uses a two-bladed paddle. Single-seated kayaks are known as K-1's;
- doubles as K-2's.
-
- Whitewater boats are usually made of either fiberglass and/or kevlar, or
- more commonly, rotomolded plastics. The later are not as fast or
- manueverable as the lighter, more agile cloth/resin boats, but they are
- practically indestructible and a lot of fun. An ultra-low-volume kayak is
- sometimes called a squirt boat; a very short kayak with blunt ends
- is sometimes called a bat boat (it looks like a suppository with a
- cockpit). K-1s are the rule in whitewater, and you rarely see K-2 slalom
- boats.
-
- Speaking of slalom boats, they're halfway between ordinary river-running
- craft and squirt boats. They're 4 meters long (because that's the
- minimum allowed length), and have very flat decks (to sneak the ends
- under the poles). They are built to optimize speed and agility
- at all costs...including stability.
-
- A relatively recent innovation in kayak construction is the "funyak"
- or "ducky"; these are essentially one-person self-bailing rafts in the shape
- of a kayak. What they lack in maneuverability they make up for in stability;
- they're an ideal craft for a beginner interesting in solo paddling, as
- they allow folks to get a taste of whitewater without developing
- skills such as the eskimo roll, eddy turn, etc. They're also used
- by experienced river runners as well, and can be paddled anywhere a
- decked kayak can. However, since they can't be eskimo-rolled, they
- may not be appropriate for some big-water situations.
-
- Some generalizations:
- Fiberglass kayaks tend to be lighter, faster, and more costlier (~$1500).
- Rotomolded kayaks are heavier, slower, yet cheaper and virtually
- indestrucible (~$750).
- Portable kayaks are heavier, wider, and very expensive (~$2000) but
- great for travel on planes or if you live in an apartment. Not as
- low maintenance as fiberglass though.
- PVC inflatable kayaks are light, cheap (~$500), and easy to
- transport. Not much storage space and prone to punctures, but easy to
- fix. Although designed for warm water, they have been successfully
- paddled on long trips in Alaska.
- Wooden kayaks are usually kits, and are fairly light and durable but
- require more maintenance (~$600 for a kit).
-
- Before you pick a kayak, decide what you'll be doing with it. Camping,
- fishing, photography, day trips, aerobic workouts, expeditions, racing,
- surfing, etc. Also consider your size in relation to the boat's size.
- You should comfortably fit in the boat, not too snug and too loose.
-
- RAFTS
- -----
-
- These are neoprene rubber boats capable of carrying 2 to 8 people, generally.
- (Some western outfitters run mega-rafts with engines [barf] on rivers
- like the Colorado; one can only hope they'll go broke.) Some rafts are
- equipped with oar frames and a pair of 10-12 foot oars; while the oars
- and the frame add to the weight, they also greatly increase the agility
- of the raft. Properly-paddled rafts can handle extreme water, especially
- if they're self-bailing. Most commercial outfitters send their customers
- out in some type of raft.
-
- Over the last several years, neoprene/hypalon material has been getting
- a lot of competition from PVC plastic. Also, in the last year or so,
- a new generation of material (eg. "Lexatron" from Whitewater Manufacturing)
- has entered the market. Another inovation is the "cataraft", which is
- raft formed by putting a frame across two "outboard" tubes. Rafts are
- evolving rapidly (sorry).
-
- Most human-powered rafts range from 10 to 18 feet in length, with
- most boats being 12 to 16. 10 foot boats are used by people who want to get
- very wet, or by pairs of paddlers, often on water too technical for
- larger boats. 18+ foot boats are used as gear boats on Grand Canyon
- style trips. Oars for common sized rafts are generally 9-10 feet.
- Rafts are classified by the number of paddlers, usually: e.g. "R-4", "R-8".
-
- SAFETY
- ------
-
- * About safety equipment:
- - learn to use a throwbag, knife, carabiners, and other rescue
- equipment. The life you save may be a life worth saving.
- * Always wear a lifejacket.
- * Always wear a helmet when kayaking or when rafting anything > class II
- * Read the river guidebook -- but remember that it's no substitute for scouting
- * Don't hesitate to portage any section; ignore peer pressure to run
- * Have proper safety gear, including throw bag, river knife, carabiners.
- * Hypothermia can kill you, even in July.
- * Don't drink or use controlled substances on the river; if being out
- there isn't enough of a high, get another hobby
- * Consider taking a class to learn basics well.
- * Consider taking a safety class.
- * Always wear a lifejacket.
- * Always wear a lifejacket.
-
-
- BOOKS
- -----
-
- The Kayaking Book, Jay Evans
- - Dated, but still a good place to start.
-
- River Rescue, Bechdel & Ray; published by AMC Press.
- - I consider this a standard textbook for kayakers. Full of good
- information, which should be practiced as far as possible by groups
- planning on boating together. Everything you wanted to know about
- Z-drags, but were afraid to ask. 8-) Endorsed by Charley Walbridge.
-
- Boatbuilder's Manual, by C. Walbridge; published by Menasha Ridge Press.
- - THE manual about "rolling your own" (pun intended).
-
- Path of the Paddle by Bill Mason
- Song of the Paddle by Mason
- Also the film Water Walker by Mason as well.
-
- - In short, anything by Mason. Good "spiritual" quality; the essense of
- paddling is captured nicely.
-
- Kayak, William Nealy
- - This is a book for intermediate and advanced kayakers; but it
- also contains many hints helpful to the novice, as well as
- some highly enlightening prose on hydrotopography. I refer
- to this book more than any other.
-
- Performance Kayaking, Stephen B. U'Ren; published by Stackpole Books.
- - Excellent beginner-intermediate book with tips on racing and
- a nice section on play paddling by the legendary Bob McDougall.
-
- The Guide's Guide, William McGinnis
- - It has extensive coverage of a guide's duties and responsibilities,
- but is light on actual river-running and safety details. Could be
- very useful for anyone planning a long trip.
-
- Wildwater, The Sierra Club Guide to Kayaking and Whitewater Boating,
- by Lito Tejada-Flores.
- - It's better than Evans' but somewhat preachy and not as
- well illustrated as Nealy. Still, it might be good for some folks.
-
- Wild Rivers of North America, Michael Jenkinson.
- - Not really a guidebook, but it does cover these rivers in detail:
- the Salmon, the Rogue, Rio Urique, Colorado, Suwannee, Yukon,
- Buffalo, and Rio Grande. Trip reports from those rivers are
- very helpful. Also has about 50 pages covering about a hundred
- wild rivers; also has extensive appendices with pointers to sources.
-
- Medicine for Mountainering, ed. by James A. Wilkerson, published by
- The Mountaineers.
- - The definitive work on backcountry and emergency medicine.
- Good reading during the winter months; excellent book to take
- along on in a drybag.
-
- The Whitewater Sourcebook, by Richard Penny; published by Menasha Ridge.
- - This is a *great* reference. It's full of pointers to outfitters,
- suppliers, guides, guidebooks, and darn near everything else that
- you can think of. If I were going to plan a trip on an unfamiliar
- river, this is the first book I'd reach for. Highly recommended.
-
- Wilderness Waterways, by Ronald Ziegler, published by Canoe America Assoc.
- - Like Penny's book (see above) this is full of pointers to outfitters
- and suppliers, maps and guidebooks, and so on. (Now if we could just
- get Penny and Ziegler to combine their books and drop them on CDROM...)
-
- Best of the River Safety Task Force Newsletter, Charlie Walbridge, ed.
- - A tad gross, but worth reading.
-
- River Safety Report, 1986-1988 by Charles C. Walbridge
- - This is a follow-on to the "Best of the River Safety Task Force
- Newsletter". It consists mostly of incident descriptions and
- analysis. While it's somewhat scary in places, the overwhelming
- message that I got from it is "Don't get stupid. You'll die."
- Only a tiny minority of the victims were actually "doing
- everything right"; most were in over their heads, or using
- inadequate gear, or ignoring instructions, etc.
-
- Charley is the chairman of the ACA River Safety Taskforce, and has
- done more for whitewater safety than anyone alive. He's not afraid
- to be honestly blunt, to point out where the victim was stupid,
- etc. The truth hurts, but it also saves lives.
-
- White Water Kayaking by Ray Rowe
- - This is a British text of paddling technique. While some of
- the language is a bit different (a paddling jacket is a "cag",
- a peel-out is a "break-in") the instructional material is
- quite good. There are extensive sections on gear, strokes,
- water-reading, and manuevering. I'd rate this as a beginner's
- book somewhat above the level of the Tejada-Flores book but
- below that of Nealy's.
-
- The Complete Wilderness Paddler by Davidson & Rugge
- - Told as a story of a three week trip in Northern Quebec (and the
- planning that went on beforehand), it's full of tips
- and techniques. Good section on reading contour maps.
-
- Rivers at Risk - The Concerned Citizen's Guide to Hydropower by
- John D. Echeverria, Pope Barrow & Richard Roos-Colins.
- - Published by Island Press (220 pg., about $30 hardcover, $18 paper,
- order from Pope Barrow -- see below under AWA) This book explains
- the issues involved in hydropower politics and is useful for anyone
- trying to fight dams and other waterway intrusions.
-
- ADDRESSES OF INTEREST
- ---------------------
-
- American Rivers
- 801 Pennsylvania Avenue S.E.
- Suite 303
- Washington, DC 20003
- (202) 547-6900
-
- American Rivers is a conservation organization which is trying to save
- as many rivers as possible. They publish a periodic newsletter as well.
-
-
- NORS ($15/1 yr, $28/2 yr, $39/3 yr)
- PO Box 6847
- 314 North 20th St., Suite 200
- Colorado Springs, CO 80904
- (719) 473-2466
-
- The National Organization for River Sports is involved in conservation,
- safety, and other aspects of river running.
-
-
- American Canoe Association
- 8580 Cinderbed Road, Suite 1900
- PO Box 1190
- Newington, Virginia 22122-1190
- (703) 550-7523
-
- American Whitewater Affiliation ($15/yr)
- PO Box 85
- Phoenicia, NY 12464
- (914) 688-5569
-
- AWA publishes "American Whitewater" bimonthly and is involved
- in safety and conservation efforts. They also produce the
- AWA National Whitewater River Inventory; for information
- on ordering it, contact:
- Pope Barrow
- 136 13th St. SE
- Washington, DC 20003
-
-
- Friends of the River
- c/o Kevin Wolf
- 902 12th Street, Suite 207
- Sacramento, CA 95814
- (916) 442-3155
-
- River Runner Magazine ($15/1, $25/2, $30/3) (now Paddler)
- PO Box 697
- Fallbrook, CA 92028
- 1-800-752-7951
-
- This is the one that I read; it focuses on all sorts of river running,
- has great photography, and a lot of good articles.
-
-
- Canoe Magazine (6 issues/$15, 12 issues/$28)
- PO Box 3146
- Kirkland, WA 98083
- 1-800-MY-CANOE
-
- I don't read this one, but I've heard that it tends to focus somewhat
- on flatwater cruising at the expense of river running.
-
- Colorado Whitewater Association
- 7500 E. Arapahoe
- Englewood, CO 80221
- (303) 770-0515
- Or contact Bill Baker at (303) 972-8437 or (303) 790-3415
-
- High Country River Rafters ($15/yr)
- PO Box 709
- Golden, CO 80402
- contact: Larry Stuhl 526-2426
-
- These last two are probably only of interest to you if you live in
- Colorado or boat there a lot. Both organizations are involved in training,
- safety seminars, and group trips.
-
-
- Georgia Canoe Association
- c/o GCA Membership Chairperson
- PO Box 7023
- Atlanta, GA 30357
-
- Yearly dues at $18; the club sponsors a number of trips on rivers such
- as the Hiwasee, Nantahala, Ocoee, Chatooga, French Broad, etc.
- They also run instructional, safety, and rescue clinics, as well
- as publishing a newsletter. You might contact Sam Smith,
- sam@eedsp.eedsp.gatech.edu for more info.
-
-
- See also the article entitled "Whitewater outfitter/dealer address list",
- which contains a number of addresses for outfitters, guides, schools, etc.
-