III. PADDLING CANOES.
The Double-Blade Paddle.
- "He knew that danger lurked ahead,
- From jagged rock and arrow sped
- From ambush, so the paddle planned,
- And watched his course on either hand.
- We rear no foe, as the braves of yore
- where beauty lurks by wooded shore."
-
-
INCE
MacGregor first went cruising in a canoe, the Rob Roy
has been greatly improved in model and construction.
It was a rather heavy craft, that first Rob Roy canoe.
The boat is now built of cedar, about fourteen feet
long, twenty-six inches wide and nine inches deep,
when intended for one man, and weighs less than fifty
pounds. It is decked over, and fitted with a cockpit
or well from three to five feet long and generally
eighteen inches wide. A Rob Roy intended for two men
is often built to a length of eighteen feet, and
sometimes even much longer than that. The English Rob
Roy holds as many as four men, all of whom paddle.
The canoe is usually built lapstreak
(clinker-built, so called), with white cedar planking
and Spanish cedar deck, oak keel, ribs and coaming,
and hackmatack stem and stern posts and
knees.
46 47
Some Rob Roy Points.
The keel projects but half an inch
below the garboards to protect them when the canoe is
on land, and is built no deeper, to render turning as
easy as possible. The bow and stern are well rounded
for this reason -- quick turning. Bulkheads are placed
about thirty inches from each end, and rendered as
nearly watertight as possible for safety in case of a
capsize. Airtight cans are sometimes placed in these
compartments to provide absolute safety. The double
bladed paddle only is used. The position of the well
-- a little aft of amidship -- is such that the canoe
will float on an even keel when crew and such weight
as it is intended to carry are properly placed on
board. For fast paddling it is well to have the canoe
trim a little down by the bow, as the motion has a
lifting tendency -- action of the water on the
spoon-shaped bottom forward -- and if on an even keel
to start with, this causes a drag aft.
The paddler sits at the aft end of the well his
back resting against a backboard hung from the coaming
behind him. A light movable bottom board prevents his
feet and stores from injuring the bottom planking, and
on this the seat rests. This canoe, with bottom board,
seat, backrest and paddle, is complete. Indeed, the
seat and backrest are often omitted -- a camp blanket
taking their places. The painter (a rope, eight or ten
feet long usually, run through a hole in the stern and
knotted) is often useful when landing to secure the
canoe or tow it if necessary. The footrest is a light
board, movable, fitting into racks screwed to the ribs
on either side, just under the deck forward of the
well. The footrest can be shifted to adjust itself to
any length of leg. This footrest serves as a brace for
the feet when paddling, just as the stretcher does in
a rowboat.
The bottom board, stretcher, backrest and any loose
thing in the canoe should always be secured in some
way, so in case of an upset nothing will be lost. It
is well also to secure the paddle by a light line
fastened around the ferrule in the middle and carried
forward several feet and fastened to a rib or the
floor, if so secured it can be dropped overboard,
perhaps -- at any moment without fear of losing it.
Without a paddle you are helpless. In general, look
after the paddle first, the canoe next. If you don't
profit by the experience of others in this matter, you
will not have long to wait to profit by your own.
Given a Rob Roy canoe, a paddle and a purse not
entirely empty, and you are at once the most
independent person alive. You can go alone in your
canoe from Canada to Texas, from Maine to Oregon. The
natural treasures of the Adirondacks, the fruits of
Florida are within reach of your arm -- but it must be
a strong arm. If it is not a strong one now, it soon
will be by moderate and constant use of the puddle,
likewise your lungs, back, shoulders and chest -- the
legs can take care of themselves. Your house carries
you on your journeys, also clothing, provisions and
covering and shelter for the night.
48 49
Launching
What more do you ask? When cruising,
take Nessmuk's advice, and "go light." Make everything
about the canoe serve a double purpose, or more if you
can. Farnham once mentioned in the presence of a lady
that among his cruising stores dried fruits found a
place -- apples, etc. She asked him if he ever carried
prunes. "No, because I have to carry the stones, and
they occupy valuable room," was his logical reply. An
Englishman has said "give not even a fly deck
passage." Your sleeping mattress, or blankets, can be
used for seat and back cushion. The paddle can be used
as a pole for shoving off shore, a ridge pole for your
canoe tent, and it constitutes your only weapon of
defense.
The Rob Roy has been built to a length of twenty
feet and more in England for racing purposes. The
Association rules here do not limit its length. It has
been built as narrow as twenty-four inches. Eighteen
feet is about its limit for ordinary usefulness. A
canoe of this size holds two comfortably if the well
is made six or seven feet long and is known as a
Tandem Canoe. The long canoes are difficult to turn
and to paddle in a cross sea, experienced on open
water when the course is laid not directly against or
before the wind. This canoe has been built as short as
ten feet for use on small rivers and winding creeks,
and for cruising in the lake regions of the mountains,
where it is often carried on the shoulders of the crew
from one water way to another through the woods. Such
a canoe is built of very light stuff, and often weighs
no more than twenty-five pounds.
Indeed, a lapstreak canoe has been made -- a little
different in model from the Rob Roy and minus the deck
-- to weigh but a few ounces over ten pounds. This is
Nessmuk's. His charming book on woodcraft no canoeist
who cruises should leave unread. Its chapter on
canoeing is as fascinating as a story, and the hints
dropped all through the book about how to live in and
enjoy the woods are invaluable to one planning a trip
to them.
In contemplating the extremes forget not the happy
medium 14 feet, 26 inches Rob Roy canoe.
Launching.
THE canoe is before you. Some of the things it is
capable of you have read about, and now you want
personally to verify the statements made. The canoe is
in the boat house, on shore, or somewhere. Get her
into the water. Have you a friend with you? If so,
each of you take an end, hold on by the keel, stem or
stern post, lift and carry to the water -- holding the
painter meanwhile, you, there at the bow. Always have
a care that while on shore the canoe rests on her
keel. In launching, slide her in (bow or stern first,
it matters not as both are rounded) on the keel. The
keel is strong oak, and is the backbone of the boat,
being capable of withstanding many knocks. Not so with
the thin cedar planking. A sharp rap will sometimes
start an ugly check (split) in a streak or the
deck.
Suppose you are alone and want to get afloat. You
have a smooth surface from the canoe's berth to the
water's edge, planks, grass, etc. -- no gravel or
rocks.
50 51
Getting Aboard.
Rest the canoe on an even keel on
the ground, take hold of the sternpost with both
hands, raise your end and push the boat before you --
the bow on the ground, wheelbarrow fashion -- to the
water. The brass shoe on the keel will prevent any
damage resulting to the keel or planking. After such
an operation do not at once put your hand on the metal
shoe at the point of previous contact with the floor
or ground -- you may get sadly burned if you do -- the
brass is hot. If you are on a rocky shore, pick the
canoe up bodily and carry her under your arm or on
your shoulders, being careful in getting her up there
not to let her get a fall. Do not lift by the deck.
All decks -- especially if canoe is loaded -- will not
stand the strain.
The canoe is in the water. The next point is to get
in yourself. This is a very simple matter if you are
launching from a float. See to it first, however, that
your cargo is properly stowed, the seat in position
and paddle near at hand on the float. Lean overhead
toward bow of canoe, which is close alongside and held
there by one hand if necessary -- place one foot in
middle at forward end of well, then both hands either
on the canoe -- one each side of coaming on deck -- or
both on the float; put the other foot in center and
then sit down on the seat without any unnecessary
delay -- yet not too quickly either. The paddle can
now be taken in hand and the canoe gently pushed from
the float. Many a "brave" has experienced an
unlooked-for ducking by not taking sufficient care in
getting into or out of his canoe. Remember in getting
in to keep your weight in the middle of the canoe as
much as possible, and low down. Never attempt to let
yourself down to the seat with one hand on deck and
the other on the float. If you wish to know why, try
it. After you are once seated you are safe -- if not
too restless. The weight of the body is low down. The
center of gravity likewise. The natural thing for the
canoe, therefore, is to keep right side up. The Rob
Roy is a narrow canoe, as canoes go, and somewhat
crank; but compared with a shell or light working boat
she is very stiff when crew is seated, as he should
be, not much over three inches above the bottom
board.
If you have to launch from a shore, find a rock
with deep water by it, a tree trunk or steep drop to
the bank will do, and then manage as you would from a
float In launching from a beach where the canoe cannot
be brought broadside on close up, wade in and step in
from the water. Put both hands on deck, then lift one
foot in, placing it in middle of the canoe, draw up
the other foot and sit down. If you have a Sandy,
shelving beach, run the canoe half into the water and
then occupy it while still partly on land. Get a
friend to push you off, or trust to your constant
friend the paddle. Launching can be done when only the
tip of the bow rests on shore. The crew then must
slide along the deck on all fours and into the well.
This all takes practice and skill in balancing, or a
wetting is the result. Care should be taken to spread
the weight of the body well over the deck, so as not
to strain or check it at any one point. This method
should be a last resource.
52 53
Paddling.
Paddling.
Once in the canoe and seated, paddle in hand, what
next? Why, paddle along, of course. Not one person in
a hundred has to be shown or told, when in such a
position -- it is the most natural thing to do. A
stroke is taken on one side, the blade being placed in
the water ahead as far as you can reach easily, and
then drawn aft. This motion brings the other blade in
position for a stroke on its side, and there you are.
First one side and then the other. Watch any one do
it, or try it yourself and in five minutes you will
find you can paddle a little; with half an hour's
practice you will be able to get fair speed out of the
canoe, will have gained confidence in the canoe and
yourself, and will have learned to back, turn and
stop, and withal, be mighty tired. Paddling to the
novice brings a new set of muscles into play. Like any
other new exercise, it should be gone at gradually to
avoid stiffness developing itself and soreness of the
muscles.
The paddle is jointed. Why? First, for convenience
of stowage when not in use, and, secondly, to allow of
feathering when paddling against the wind. To feather,
the blades are turned at right angles to each other --
ordinarily they are in the same plane -- so that the
blade in the air will present only its edge to the
wind, and not its broad, flat part. A slight turn of
the wrist just as the blade is dipped accomplishes the
result. A little practice is required to learn to
feather easily and do it constantly without tiring the
wrist. The turn may be made with either wrist, the
round of the paddle being allowed to revolve freely in
the other hand. It is well to train both wrists to
give the feather turn so as to relieve one,when it
begins to get tired, by using the other. First one
wrist and then the other may be used by turning the
paddle over and over, instead of quarter around and
back as is the practice when making the turn with one
wrist only. Grasp the paddle with hands well apart --
just how far experience must teach you -- the thumb
being opposed to the four fingers and not with them,
though this hold maybe resorted to as a rest. Dip the
blade well in to the water, and on the recover lift
the paddle so as just to clear the deck -- keep it as
low down as possible -- then spray from the blade in
the air will not be thrown all over you or your
passenger and the drip run down the round to your
hands before the blade goes into the water again. Drip
cups placed between the blades and the hands will hold
and empty this water on the next stroke. These cups
are unnecessary, however, with a fairly long paddle in
skillful hands, as the second half of the stroke is
taken before the water from the first runs down the
round far enough to reach the hands. With a short
paddle the stroke must be taken near the side of the
canoe, the free blade raised high in air. A long
paddle is held and worked more nearly horizontal.
Eight feet is long enough for a twenty-six inch canoe.
Seven feet was formerly the official length, but now
from eight to nine feet six inches is considered
better for all-round work.
54 55
Paddling Points.
When paddling for the first time,
sit as low down in the canoe as possible, even without
a cushion, perhaps, the canoe is thus much steadier --
stiffer, as it is termed. As confidence is acquired by
practice the seat may be raised. The most effective
paddling is done when sitting on a seat nearly if not
quite even with the deck. A seat as high up as this
should only be used for racing purposes; it makes the
canoe a very crank craft.
Paddle on smooth water first, during a calm or on
so small a body of water that the wind has not room to
kick up a bothersome sea. Paddling on smooth water is
very simple. Managing a canoe on 'lumpy" water, in a
''seaway'' or on rapids, requires skill, and skill is
acquired only by practice. Go at it gradually. Do not
expect to get all your experience in one day. A very
large amount of it may be got into one day. Every
canoeist of a year's standing will no doubt recall
many a day when he got a deal more experience than he
bargained for. Paddling before the wind en rough water
is managed without difficulty -- when once a paddler
is sure of his seat, to use a horseman's phrase. If
running free, but at an angle to the wind, the send of
the waves will change the course of the canoe in one
direction as it rises to the crest of the wave, and on
the descent in the trough the canoe will turn back
into its course or beyond it. Do not attempt entirely
to resist this tendency, as it requires great effort
to accomplish, but merely with slight effort and
watchfulness keep the canoe from departing far from
the course, its general direction being the correct
one. Paddling harder on one side than the other turns
the canoe. If there exists a decided tendency to turn
from the course in one direction more than in the
other, it is probably because there is more wind
surface at one end than the other. Do not try to
remedy this by paddling constantly harder on the
opposite side -- it will soon overtire one arm; but
shift your position or that of the cargo a little,
fore or aft. If the canoe falls off from the wind, the
bow is too high out of water. If there is a tendency
to broach-to (get broadside to the wind) and get in
the trough of the sea, the stern is too high,
therefore trim weight. The same expedient holds good
when paddling into (against) the wind but at an angle
to its direction. When paddling to windward always
feather and in every way reduce wind surface. Look out
for breakers in a high sea, and manage as well as you
can to get over a wave before it breaks, or let it
comb before you get to it. his only applies to combers
that would wash over the deck and perhaps reach the
well. On rough water, in a good breeze, there is
always a quantity of spray flying from the paddle and
the wash from bow and deck. The wind catches this and
often throws it in sheets over the paddler. Practice
will enable you to reduce this inconvenience to the
minimum. A clear, smooth deck is better than one cut
up with raised hatches and cleats, for dryness in
rough water paddling. You must not be afraid of a
wetting if you will insist on paddling on very rough
water, without oilskins.
56 57
Winds and Currents.
A beam wind is most trying when
paddling. The canoe is either broadside on in the
trough of the sea, or on the very ridge of a wave,
perhaps just as it is about to break. If it does
break, either water comes aboard (unless you have an
apron completely covering the well) or the canoe is
likely to be rolled under -- or over -- as the wave
gives a rolling motion to the canoe very difficult to
obviate. Here you need all the deck and coaming you
have; and at the time when it is needed, the motion
may deprive you of deck entirely by rolling it under
and only leave the coaming out of water to protect you
from the breakers. Never take a course wind abeam when
the water is very rough. First go to windward a little
and then change the course and run slightly free, on
the principle that the longest way round is the safest
way in a sea. Small waves with ugly little breaking
tops may often be prevented from doing harm by rolling
them under the canoe with a quick shift of the body a
little to one side, so the wave slips away under the
canoe rather than sending its spray top clear across
the deck, perhaps entering the well.
The above points are given more as suggestions than
as absolute rules. Get the whole matter down to a sort
of second nature, and don't bother about looking for a
rule for this -- an authority for that.
The hints given above take for granted that you
know to a nicety just from which point the wind is
blowing. Do you know this? Can you always tell, when
afloat, say, at night? If not, learn at once, or as
soon as you can get on the water again. Practice it on
shore, too. Such knowledge is absolutely necessary
when you attempt sailing, and very useful also when
under paddle. The direction of the wind ripple on the
waves will give you a hint. Moving the head from side
to side -- Lee to the wind -- will give you the
direction of the wind pretty correctly, as you feel it
on your face, one side, then the other, and can settle
on the half way point. The point of a weather vane, a
flag flying, the bend of the lighter branches and
leaves on the trees, the course of driftwood or foam,
and many other signs of nature, by study, will soon be
read aright by close observation.
The direction of a tide or current can be
discovered by seeing vessels at anchor -- bow always
toward the current, pointing up stream; the shape of
the waves, being different when wind and tide are
opposed to what it is when they are in the same
direction, and various other ways. To test whether
there is a tide or not when in a canoe, bring it to a
standstill, take the range of two objects on shore in
line (one behind the other, and if you are moved out
of range by a current, note the direction. Ranging is
a capital thing to practice, and is very useful,
whether sailing or paddling, to keep a true course
when tide and wind or both are factors of your
problem. You are paddling across a river in a strong
ebb tide. You wish to each a certain point on the
opposite shore. If you head directly for it at the
58 59
About Upsets.
start, the tide will carry you
broadside down stream, and you will continually have
to change your course and head more up as you proceed.
In crossing thus your course will describe a curved
line, and as you approach the point you started for
you will find you are paddling almost directly up
stream against the current, and not broadside on as
you started. Your objective point is a house, perhaps;
its chimney just hides the top of a tree on the hill
behind the house. Now, when you start and get into the
current, head the canoe just far enough up stream to
keep that tree top behind that same chimney all the
way over. In that way you will cross in a straight
line -- the shortest distance between two points --
though at no time will the canoe's bow be pointing ill
the exact direction you are moving. When crossing very
swift water it is well to paddle up stream a little in
the slack water along shore, then start boldly across
-- heading well up -- and, if you run below your
landing, paddle up in the still water along shore.
Don't go up stream or against the tide if you can
help it. You waste power. If you are obliged to buck
the tide, take every advantage of eddies and slack
water along shore. Always plan your cruises down
stream. The wind you can't control, so learn to paddle
against it, and to paddle against it with the least
possible friction of mind, body, paddle and canoe.
You will upset some day -- don't contradict -- even
you will be unceremoniously dumped overboard;
therefore take the first day of the season that the
water is warm enough for swimming to practice righting
the canoe after an upset, and getting in it again from
the water. Try first getting in over the end, crawling
along on deck face down -- with feet and legs in the
water on either side -- to the well, and then bail
out: When you upset -- everything being made fast as
before directed -- right the canoe as soon as
possible, and keep your weight off of it till it is
righted and cannot take in any more water. If the
canoe has taken in much water, bail out while you are
still in the water to keep the canoe from taking in
any more, as she would sink quite low with your weight
added to that already in her. A canoe should be
provided with bulkheads, air compartments or
"something" to make her float coaming out when full of
water. Practice getting up on the deck just forward or
aft of the well, and thus regaining your seat. When
you can do this easily, then try getting in amidship.
This is difficult, but once acquired it is very much
the best way, especially when the canine has masts. To
do this, tread water, and with a sharp kick and a push
with the hands on the gunwale, throw the body clear
across the well head over the other side, leaving the
legs and feet still in the water; then gradually pull
them in. A canoe can be upset, turned completely )
over, and the crew slip in over the side and begin
paddling all in the space of twenty seconds. It has
been done in the ACA upset races, at the annual
meet.
Never be persuaded to tow your canoe behind a
steamer moving at the rate of over eight or ten miles
an hour.
60 61
The Winds of Heaven.
Put her on board, or stay behind. In
towing behind a steamer, fasten the painter and stand
by it. Start with the canoe's bow a little out of
water, and as speed is increased let out a little line
-- just enough to keep the canoe a little more than
half in the water. With more line she may move from
side to side and roll over; with less the stern and
aft deck will likely be awash, or the water pressure
come too directly against the garboard streaks in one
spot. If you are in the canoe when towing, hitch the
painter as low on the stem as possible -- about at the
ordinary waterline -- and don't let out much line. It
is well to have a long line, to reach from the stem to
steamer, around and a post or cleat, and then back to
your hand. You can then cast off at a moment's notice
if trouble comes. Keep your feet on the steering yoke,
if the canoe has a rudder, or your hands on the rudder
lines all the time, to keep out of the wash and have
the canoe under control. To tow the canoe yourself
from the shore, use a line thirty or forty feet long,
fastened one end to the bow, the other and at the
stern. Shove the canoe from shore and hold the line
about one-third its length from the bow. By shifting
your hold along the line you can readily steer the
canoe out of shallows, avoid rocks, and even run her
up pretty swift rapids. For rapids a longer line might
be used.
You cannot be told how to run rapids. Use a canoe
that draws little water and turns easily : learn to
choose the deep water, make up your mind quickly and
never hesitate or try to avoid disaster, but go right
ahead. You must know your ground somewhat beforehand
-- that is, as to dangerous falls and impassable
obstructions. Experience here is your only
teacher.
Your course being fixed, the wind may blow in your
face. This is a head wind. If it blows at right angles
to your course it is a beam wind. If on your back it
is a free wind. Going before the wind is running free
-- going with the wind. Wind on the quarter means a
wind blowing somewhere between a beam and dead astern
-- usually about half way -- and it is commonly called
a quartering wind. A fair wind is one abaft the beam
-- blowing on your back. In sailing, close-hauled
means having the wind about half way between abeam and
dead ahead.
As you face forward, the right hand side of the
canoe is the starboard side; the left hand, the port
side. Sailing vessels and steamers at night carry a
green light to starboard and a red light to port. Port
wine is red -- so is the port light. Canoes at night
should carry a white light only, when on navigable
waters (for larger vessels, to comply with the law
regulating the carrying of lights on all small boats.
Put this light on a mast or stick made fast behind
you, and it will not bother you in steering and seeing
where you are going. If forward, it will so blind you
that nothing can be seen ahead. Where there are
sailing vessels and steamers, the canoe should always
carry a light at night to prevent its being run down
by larger vessels. A candle lantern is much cleaner
about a canoe than one burning oil. It is better in
camping also.
62 63
Double and Single-Blade.
To beach a canoe through a surf is a
dangerous and difficult maneuver. If the waves break
far from shore, it is impossible without disaster. If
the water is quite deep up to within a short distance
of the beach, the canoe may be safely landed when the
surf is not too high. Paddle in as close as possible,
and then wait your chance. Go in on top of, but a
little behind, a wave, and let it break under the bow.
When you once start, paddle like mad to keep your
position and not drop back into the trough for the
next wave to swallow you up whole. If you are
successful, the send of the wave will land you well up
on the beach. As soon as the canoe grounds , jump out
and pull her up well out of the way of the next wave.
If you get too far ahead of the wave as you start to
come in, when it begins to comb over the bow will have
no support, and will drop down and probably touch
bottom, in which case you personally may be hurled
high and dry, but the canoe will turn an end for end
somersault, get full of water and way go out with the
wave when it recedes, if no worse accident happens to
it.
On the water, anything off in the direction from
which the wind is blowing is to windward. Any thing in
the opposite direction is said to be to leeward. The
windward side of a canoe is the side the wind strikes.
The sheltered side is the lee side. In a blow, when
the water is rough, land to leeward of some pier,
point or shelter to find still water. If you have to
land on a lee shore -- that is, the shore to leeward
of the canoe afloat, the shore toward which the wind
is blowing -- in a breeze, it is sure to be a
difficult thing to do without damaging the canoe.
Usually jump out as soon as it is shallow enough and
haul the canoe out carefully; never mind the
wetting.
It has been conclusively proved, after many
comparative tests, that the double-blade paddle will
drive a canoe ahead faster than a single-blade paddle,
even the light, open Canadian canoes built specially
for the use of the single blade. The single blade has
many times beaten the double, it is true, but on even
terms the double will win. This does not mean that the
single blade will go out of use, far from it. The
single blade has several very important points of
advantage over the double, and on these it will hold
its own for all time no doubt.
When hunting in an open canoe the sportsman sits
forward and the guide paddles at the aft end. When
absolute stillness is necessary the skillful paddler
can propel the canoe without noise by never lifting
his paddle out of the water. The recover is then made
by pushing the blade foot forward in the water edge
first. Single blade paddling is much more graceful
than double blade work especially when a spurt is put
on. The double blade at a distance looks very much
like a windmill when the paddler It is exerting
himself. The single blade and open canoes are to be
preferred when you wish to take ladies its out for a
quiet afternoon's canoeing. More comfort and freedom
can be had in an open canoe with two on board than is
possible in a decked canoe with its necessarily small
cockpit.
64 65
Single-Blade Paddling
Double blade feathering will be
found useful in tandem paddling to prevent the drip
from the paddle of one being thrown by the motion of
the stroke over the other member of the crew. The aft
man in feathering turns the paddle half over each
time, thus throwing the water on the paddle as it
rises from the surface behind him. The forward man
turns the paddle under, thus throwing the water
forward and away from his companion. This description
may not bring a perfectly clear idea of the result to
the mind of the reader, but if he will try it
practically at the first opportunity he will catch it
at once. It is well to feather always in paddling and
thus become accustomed to it. When wind makes it
necessary, no inconvenience from wrist tiring will be
experienced.
Single-blade Paddling.
It has a sphere of usefulness all its own. It may
safely be said that the single-bladed paddle is used
only in open canoes -- those having no deck. The
reverse of this -- double paddle in decked canoes --
is not, however, the fact, as of late years the
double-blade has been much used in open canoes, and
its use is increasing. Open canoes carry one or more
persons. The decked canoes are built for one almost
entirely. When two men are in an open canoe they sit
at opposite ends of the craft, facing the same way but
paddling on opposite sides, each one keeping to his
own side every stroke, but at short intervals they
both change sides to rest one set of muscles. More
than two can paddle, and in the large open canoes of
the North used by the voyageurs of the Hudson's Bay
Company and other travelers, often three or more
paddle. This man-in-each-end method is a very good one
for rapid running and like experiences, the canoe
being thus easily handled and guided.
The open canoe can be, and often is paddled by a
single person. If the crew sits at the end of the
canoe, his stores or some weight must be put forward
(he sitting aft) to keep her trim. The paddle is used
on one side for a considerable time and then for a
like time on the other side, if a rest is needed. The
canoe is kept on her course by a turn of the wrist,
and consequent turn of the paddle toward the end of
the stroke, thus making it possible to paddle on one
side without the direction being changed at each
stroke. The paddle is turned by the hand holding the
round and not the one at the top. In turning the
paddle, the edge nearest the canoe is pointed slightly
aft so that as the paddle leaves the water at the end
of the stroke, it comes out edge first and not
broadside on. This steering and paddling motion)n is
learned by practice, and it takes considerable
practice to become master of it. The Canadians usually
sit in the middle of the canoe)e when paddling, and
paddle on one side, using the twist to keep the canoe
on her course. Perhaps it is not strictly correct to
say sit, as the position of the paddler is almost
always a kneeling one, both knees being on the bottom
board -- or a cushion on it. As a partial rest,
however, and to relieve the knees from the entire
weight of the body, a stretcher from gunwale to
gunwale is so placed that the paddler partially rests
on it while kneeling at the same time.
66 67
In this position, when once used to
it in the open canoes, with single or double blade, a
very good purchase is got on the water, and paddling
moderately can be kept up for hours without great
fatigue.
These open canoes can float enormous loads; they
are very easy to carry over portages, and for river
and forest wilderness cruising are excellently
adapted, also for hunting, especially jacking for deer
and fishing. The single-blade is the paddle for this
work. When quiet is necessary, the paddle can be so)
handled that its blade never comes above the surface
of the water, and all splash and throwing of spray
avoided. The cargo, having nor) deck covering, must be
protected from rain and spray by rubber blankets or
some like device. The open canoe, of course, is not as
well adapted to rough water as the decked canoes. Much
information about this kind of canoeing can be got
incidentally from books on hunting, camping and
fishing in Canadian waters.
The Paddle.
A NUMBER of the forms in which paddles have
been made are shown in the illustration. The length
has varied for the double-blade paddle from seven to
eleven feet. When the blades are short they are made
wide in proportion to the length, to get the necessary
surface. The long blades are made very narrow, the
extreme being Mr. Farnham's paddle, consisting of two
single paddles ferruled together.
68 69
About Paddles.
The double paddle is commonly found jointed
for convenience in stowing and to enable the paddler
to turn the blades at right angles -- feathering, in
other words. As a rule, the shorter the paddle the
more power, coming under the natural law of the lever,
the dip-water being the weight; the still hand is the
fulcrum, and the moving arm the power, though the
fulcrum hand is not held stationary, but moves
slightly in an opposite direction to the stroke hand,
to increase the power. Paddles are made of pine,
spruce and maple principally, these woods combining
strength, elasticity and lightness. Red cedar has been
used and proved very successful; it is difficult,
however, to get a piece large enough ordinarily. The
joint is similar to the ferrule joint of a fish rod,
one half having a projecting brass tube into which the
other half is telescoped, its end protected and kept
from swelling when wet by a brass ferrule. The
ferrules should be slipped over the ends of the round
and a rivet run clear through ferrule and round
hammered at the ends, so it cannot drop out or allow
the ferrule to turn. The round ought not to be cut
away to sink the ferrule even with it, as a weak point
is thus established where strength is needed. The
parts of a paddle are: blade, round, ferrule.
The two parts of the ferrule must fit easily and
closely one within the other. A catch should be
arranged to hold the blades in exactly the same plane,
so turning at the ferrule is impossible, or at right
angles.
A round-ended blade is better than one pointed or
with a straight edge and two angles. The end should be
protected by a strip of brass or copper 3/4 inch on
each side, turned over the edge for six or eight
inches and securely riveted. This is necessary to keep
the wood from splitting or becoming ragged when the
paddle is used to push the canoe from shore or as a
pole in shallows, as it has to be thus used often. A
strip of 1/8 brass wire run over the edge of the wood
and in the angle of the metal tip is an addition in
the matter of protection, thus preventing dents when
the paddle gets a hard knock on its end on rocks or a
hard bottom. It is a little troublesome, however, to
put in. Some tips are protected by having a toothed
piece of brass or copper set into a saw-cut in the end
and having the teeth alternately turned over on
opposite sides and flattened on to the blade. Some
protection is absolutely necessary here. Blades have
been spooned like oars, but are not generally used, as
they are inconvenient in feathering and backing. The
round is tapered a little as it approaches the blade,
and may be circular in form or oval. If the section is
an ellipse, the long diameter should be at right
angles to the plane of the blade, for strength. One
and one-quarter inches is a a good average diameter
for the round of a paddle where the hands grasp it.
The large ferrule is of course twice as long as the
one sliding into it. A very light ferrule may be used
if its ends are strengthened by a collar and the short
end has a projecting conical piece of wood fitting
into a like
70 71
Canoe Seat.
socket in the other end (see
illustration). This form makes the strongest joint
known. A number of catches have been invented and
used, but put faith in none that cannot at once be
disconnected, allowing the parts to turn one within
the other before trying to separate the joints.
Usually they cannot be separated if they get stuck,
and you try to pull them apart without turning on
account of an imperfect catch. Keep the ferrule moist
with oil, grease or Vaseline, so the water will not
affect the brass -- corroding it -- and thus make the
act of separation a troublesome one. A good catch is
made of brass wire run round the ferrule, fastened at
one end and bent and pointed at the other to fit into
a hole in both ferrules. The inner ferrule has two
holes to set the paddle in its only two true
positions: blades in same plane; blades at right
angles. An excellent drip cup is made by cutting the
nipples off of two breast shields and slipping the
shields over the rounds beyond the parts grasped by
the hands and far enough to clear the water when the
blade is dipped. These shields can be got of any
druggist. Thus does the inventive and adaptive
canoeist know a good thing when he sees it, and
appropriates it to his canoeing uses.
The single blade, in length, depends on the reach
of the individual. A rigid paddle -- one with very
slight elasticity -- seems to be preferred for serious
paddling; the broad blade (beaver tail) limber paddle
being used by ladies, and is sometimes called a lazy
man's paddle. The average length is between five and
six feet. Hard and soft maple, spruce, ash, beech and
cedar are the woods used.
Comfort when paddling depends very largely on
having an easy seat, a suitable backrest and a firm
footbrace. The backboard commonly used is shown in the
Rob Roy canoe on page 18. It is suspended at
its middle by a strap securely riveted to it and
looped over a projecting screw on deck just aft of the
well. It is thus movable and adjusts itself to the
position most comfortable for one's back to take. Lazy
men use a cushion over the backboard.
The footbrace in the paddling canoes is usually a
board held by side braces not quite perpendicular to
the floor boards and wide enough for the foot to rest
its entire length against. The footrest in canoes
having rudders is combined with the steering gear, in
a great variety of forms, simple and complex. A
comfortable seat is of prime importance. It should be
large enough to reach down one's leg half way to the
knee. Then the upper leg can help to bear the weight
of the body, and the paddler is thus able to keep for
a longer time the sitting position. He sits firmer,
too, on such a seat, and can put force into the
strokes without wobbling about and thus losing power.
The seat should be high enough to get one's legs out
of the very uncomfortable position of being at right
angles to the body their entire length -- in other
words, allow a slight bend at the knee. From three to
five inches above the floor is perhaps a good rule.
The construction should be simple. The seat should be
light in weight, and of material not easily wet or
retaining moisture long when wet, somewhat elastic and
not uncomfortably warm.
72 73
Canoe Apron.
A piece of canvas stretched over a
frame, as shown in cuts on page 67, makes an excellent
seat. The only objection to it is that such a seat
serves no other purpose, and this is an objection when
you are cruising. Both backboard and seat can be done
away with when cruising, though the backboard takes up
so little room it is usually carried. If you are
cruising and camping, you will have blankets; sit on
them during the day, but have them inside of
waterproof bags, so there will be no possibility of
clamp blankets to sleep under. A veteran cruiser
carries a mattress (50in. x 18in. x 4in.) in three
longitudinal compartments, each compartment a little
over half full of fine cork shavings 1-1/4lbs. to
each. This serves as seat during the day, bed at
night, and life preserver in case of an accidental
upset far from land. The tick of the mattress should
be made of some coarse material to allow a free
circulation of air. Then the mattress will dry out
quickly when wet.
An apron or hatches over the well should be
available when paddling on rough water. The apron is
perhaps best. It should be made of waterproof canvas
cut to exact size of well forward of the paddler, and
supported by 1/8 brass wires, to which it is sewed.
The wires run athwartship, rest on the coaming, and
are bent near their ends to reach down the outside of
coaming to deck, thus keeping the apron in position
and the water out. The apron can at once be lifted or
thrown off. This is necessary, as otherwise it might
hold the crew in and drown him if the canoe upsets
suddenly. The apron should reach down over coaming so
its edges rest on the deck. If the apron is cut to fit
close around the body and has its after edge turned up
to form a sort of coaming, and the skipper wears a
waterproof coat reaching down outside of this apron
coaming, he can have the deck entirely awash without
shipping any water.
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© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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