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PADDLE SMARTER. NOT HARDER. PHOTO: PETER MATHER


GONE WITH THE WIND


Windy days on the water can be exhilarating or frightening, depending upon how you face the challenges they present. By keeping in mind the following tips for safe passage, you can cut out the frustration and paddle on to more sheltered waters.


MAINTAIN TRIM


Your canoe is a weathervane in wind. Avoid pinwheeling by weighing the bow down one to two inches when traveling up- wind and weighing down the stern in a tail wind. Don’t go overboard with this method; a bow or stern that rides too deep may take on waves.


QUARTERING WAVES


The most common advice canoeists receive for travel on windy days is to quarter waves. This means paddling into big waves at a 30- to 45-degree angle, which is effective because it allows the craft to fit between wave crests. While this technique prom- ises a drier ride and a craft that rises faster to meet oncoming waves, it’s not for everyone. A canoe quartering waves is constantly on the verge of


broaching to the wind. One mistake and it’s a potential cap- size. For this reason, quartering waves is for experienced pad- dlers only. Beginners are safer to move closer to the center of the boat, thereby lightening the bow and stern, and paddle head-on into the wind.


RUNNING SIDEWAYS


How your canoe handles waves is generally determined by wave length, rather than wave size. If you have an 18-foot long canoe and the waves are spaced 14 feet apart, you’re in for a wet ride. Facing those waves head-on could mean swamping. If head-on running results in a dangerously wet ride and you can’t hold a quartering course, try running broadside to the waves by paddling in the trough between them. Your ca- noe will fit between the waves and bob like a cork, up one face and down another.


SAME SIDE


Despite what you’ve heard, it’s sometimes okay for canoeists to paddle on the same side. Paddling on the same side—in uni- son—is the right choice when you can’t hold the course in a quar- tering or side wind. Paddle on the downwind side of your boat.


REST STOP


Take advantage of quiet-water wind eddies that form in bays and around points. Conserve your strength by darting quickly from one protected spot to another, then resting briefly before powering on to the next calm place.


BIG CROSSING


Make all open water crossings short and fast by crossing at the narrowest point when possible. Plan on paddling one mile an hour in a heavy headwind and five miles an hour in a tail wind. I’m suspicious of any crossing more than half a mile long with a headwind or five miles long with a stern wind, and will consider changing or delaying my route to avoid it.


Cliff Jacobson is one of North America’s most respected out- doors writers and wilderness guides. A regular contributor to Ca- noeroots magazine, he’s quick to admit he doesn’t always follow his own advice when it comes to big water crossings.


GET OUT ON THE WATER, NO MATTER WHICH WAY IT’S BLOWING TACKING


If you’re looking to paddle to a distant point but are confronted with a side wind, try tacking. If you paddle directly towards your destination, a strong side wind will blow your canoe off course and result in having to paddle back upwind. The solution is to aim 45 degrees upwind of your target and paddle hard—the wind will take you straight to your mark.


DIGITAL EXTRA For more canoeing tips and


techniques, go to Rapidmedia. com/0096 or check out the


iPad or Android edition of the Paddling Buyer’s Guide.


48 KNOW HOW|| Annual 2014


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