editorial
Remember to take it easy. PHOTO: JOHN IRVINE
The Slow Kayaking Manifesto F
oodies know that faster is not necessarily better, but do kayakers?
Carlo Petrini founded the Slow Food move-
ment in Italy in 1986 to recapture the pleasure of eating from the incivilities of fast food culture, to “seek a slower and more aware pace of life.” According to the movement’s founding doc-
ument, Te Slow Food Manifesto: “We are en- slaved by speed and have all succumbed to the same insidious virus: Fast Life, which disrupts our habits, pervades the privacy of our homes and forces us to eat fast foods….Homo Sapiens should rid himself of speed before it reduces him to a species in danger of extinction.” Maybe it’s time for a Slow Kayaking Mani-
festo. Tere’s no better time than now, in this issue where we have a feature focusing entirely on going fast. Hey, I’m not saying I know how to relax.
Just ask my wife. She’d tell you to rip out this page and use it to fertilize your vegetables. I have a long history of speed addiction, on and off the water. Tat’s why I know that we need to be extra
careful not to always carry the hamster wheel mentality of our work lives into our recreation. In these days of adventure racing mania and the media obsession with speed expeditions
4 ADVENTURE KAYAK | EARLY SUMMER 2010
(always easier to report on than just another great trip) I think we need to pause to remem- ber the value of going slow. Tis summer we are witnessing yet another
record attempt around Vancouver Island, with the indefatigable Joe O’Blenis setting out to beat Brit powerhouse Sean Morley’s 17-day circumnavigation. Ten we have Freya Hoffmeister for whom
it wasn’t enough to be the second person in his- tory, and first woman, to kayak around Aus- tralia. She called her expedition a “race” and set out to beat a time set by only one other kayaker a quarter century ago. Why should the people who go the fastest
get all the attention? Wouldn’t it be better for our sport to be
known for its lifestyle, the way surfing is with its culture of Jack Johnson tunes, board shorts and scruffy kids on skateboards—a culture of leisure? Leisure is the polar opposite of trying to pad-
dle as fast as possible around a landmass. It’s a near spiritual state of mind—a state of play, a creative and meditative mindset. It’s apart from and opposite to the ultra rational state of mind that dominates our everyday lives—in which time is better spent at a desk earning money
than it is walking outside breathing fresh air— and dominates our society that values fast cars more than the clean efficiency of bicycles. I would rather people look at sea kayakers
and say, “I want to live like that” than “those dudes are crazy!” Yes, partly I’m just jealous. When I read
about Morley or O’Blenis racing around Van- couver Island, I wish I could be there with them. Taking time away to do nothing but paddle is a dream. I’d love to know how fast I could go. And even at top speed, kayaking is still leisure. But let’s also celebrate our slow side. In the words of Te Slow Food Manifesto:
“May suitable doses of guaranteed sensual pleasure and slow, long-lasting enjoyment pre- serve us from the contagion of the multitude who mistake frenzy for efficiency.” By all means, perfect your stroke, push
yourself to the pleasure of exhaustion, but also take rest days. Flip to page 22 and read Ginni Callahan’s tribute to contentment. Ten go to page 27 and fashion a batch of Vince Paquot’s maple syrup dumplings, brew a cup of fair trade coffee. Kick back and read about some- body else’s epic. Te coast will wait for you as it always has.—Tim Shuff
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