V. CANOE RACING.
"The race is not always to the swift."
Paddling Races.
HE
course for a paddling race is usually one mile; half a
mile to turn, and back. The turn is the key note of
the race; a moment lost or saved there may decide it
in favor or against you. If there are several
competitors and but one stake or flag at the turn, get
to it first, even if you have to strain a point, for
you then have dear way round the stake, and the others
have to keep away from you when they turn. You thus
get a good lead for the second half of the race. If
the canoe has any keel, heeling her over on the bilge
when turning often helps to get round in a shorter
distance than is possible when she is turned on an
even keel. Keep a true course from the starting line
to the turning flag, since the shortest distance
between two points is a straight line. Know the rules
governing the race by heart, to be prepared to do the
right thing, no matter what turns up. A triangular
course is better than a straight one with a full turn,
as it makes a fairer race for all hands. Every man
except the leader in a one-turn course is apt to lose
time at the turn by trying to avoid fouling with the
canoe ahead of him. A perfectly fair race with turn
can only be had when there is a stake for each canoe
to go round at the half-mile flag. Know the course and
character of water from your own experience on it
before you enter the race.
120 121
The Racing Stroke.
It is well at the start to take a
couple of short, quick strokes, to get way on the
canoe before the regular mile stroke is dropped into.
If a backboard is used, the work of paddling is made
easier by moving forward at the dip for a while now
and then to bring a new set of muscles into play. Some
canoeists thus reach forward at every stroke; others
never leave the backboard. When a high seat is used
the backboard is dispensed with. Look to the
foot-brace, and if you find in practice that your feet
slip off of it, run a strap across over the toes to
hold the foot firm.
Paddling races are less likely to do harm than
rowing or running races to the individual who has not
properly trained himself, as most of the work results
in tiring the muscles and not overexerting the lungs
and heart, though these organs are called on to do
their full share. It is foolhardy to enter any race
requiring muscular action without careful training of
the muscles brought into play. Constant paddling not
only perfects the skill of the paddler, but also
builds up his muscles to accomplish more work.
122 123
Tricks.
In a long race, over two miles, it
is well to follow behind the leader, to push him all
the time and yet not have to set the pace yourself. He
is where you can see him, and he cannot see you. The
leader is apt to attempt too great a pace at the start
to keep up all through a race. In a short race it is
well to get the lead as soon as possible. Leading
inspires confidence; following is discouraging and
tends to result in loss of nerve.
To do fast paddling requires study in the direction
of making every pound tell, reducing the lost motion
and wasting of power to the minimum. Watch the
objective point and not the canoes, except out of the
very corners of your eyes.
An upset race is a paddling race of about a quarter
mile, the canoes all being turned completely over at a
given signal, righted, and paddled across the finish
line. The signal is given by the judge when he
pleases, the paddlers not knowing when it is to be
given. By upsetting the canoe some water is sure to
get inboard. A light canoe is easier to paddle than
when it has water in it. Therefore, at the starting
signal, put in all your power and get just as near as
possible to the finish line before the upset comes, in
order that only a short distance will have to be
traveled with a waterlogged canoe. At the signal,
stand up and roll the canoe bottom side up, as you go
into the water; then reach over and turn the canoe
right side up as skillfully as you can, to get in the
least water; crawl in over the side, and paddle over
the line. As the canoe upsets be very careful not to
lose the paddle; hold it in one hand, or attach it to
a line fastened to your body in such a way that it
will not hamper you in getting into the canoe again,
or twist up as you go over and thus cause trouble.
Turning the canoe over without shipping much water,
and getting in her quickly from the water, are the two
points to be practiced in preparing for an upset race.
Everything but the paddle should be securely fastened
in the canoe, in order that nothing can get out of
place when the canoe is turned over, seat, footbrace,
bottom-board, backboard, etc. No rudder is needed in
such a race.
Canoe
Gymnastics.
CANOE tricks are very amusing often at regattas and
helpful to the skipper in that acquiring them affords
interest to the difficult work of getting perfect
balance and a knowledge of what can be done in a
canoe. Walking the decks (barefooted so as not to
injure the planking) from end to end; turning round
while standing on deck; sailing while standing or
sitting on deck; walking out to and standing on the
rudder head; crawling round a mast in the forward
step, feet first, head first; standing on one's own
head in the bottom, same on deck; paddling while
standing on deck; turning the canoe completely over,
remaining inside the while; upsetting the canoe so she
floats on the deck, then diving under her and coming
up inside, where the head can
124 125
Comparative Tests.
get out of water in the well and a
breath of air can be taken; getting on deck at any
point from the water; turning a somersault from deck
into the well; also one backward from the well
overboard-these are a few of the tricks that have been
done; many more will no doubt suggest themselves to
the reader. An open Canadian canoe floating full of
water can be shaken dry by an expert while he remains
in the water; he then gets in over the end or side and
paddles on naturally.
Read the Association rules governing races; know
them and what they mean, especially those referring to
fouls. Did all canoeists who enter races know the
rules thoroughly, much unnecessary talk and often
slight "unpleasantnesses" would be avoided at
regattas. The tendency to build sailing and paddling
''machines'' -- which would naturally be induced by
their desire to win in the races -- is vigorously
discouraged by the Association. The highest honors are
to be won by the best combined sailing and paddling
canoes-the Record prizes, the combined race, and many
other minor events likewise.
Sailing
Races.
SAIL to win by skill in handling and judgment; not
by tricks or special sailing appliances to the canoe,
useless except for races. The nearer equal two canoes
are the more interesting will be the race. In canoe
sailing it is not the canoe that wins, it is the man.
Canoes are such small boats that a slight difference
in size does not necessarily give one an advantage
over another. The skill of the skipper, trim, sail
balance and perfectly working gear will overcome great
differences in hull if they are not shared equally by
two canoes. Fourteen-foot (30 inch beam) canoes have
often beaten sixteen-footers of same beam. The wide
canoes have likewise been beaten many times by those
having two or three inches less beam to the same
length. Canoes with no ballast have won races in which
were heavy ballasted canoes carrying much more sail.
Model is something, yes, a large factor; but a greater
is the skill of the canoeist in sailing, and the care
he bestows on his canoe and rig, his understanding of
them, their possibilities and limitations.
A comparative test of the sailing qualities of two
canoes and the skill of their owners can be made by
instituting a series of, say, ten races over the same
course, on different days. Five of the races to be
sailed with the skippers in their own canoes, and five
with each canoeist in the other's canoe. The sailor
winning most races is pretty sure to be the better of
the two-and the same applies to the canoe. By keeping
a careful log of each canoe in every race, their
relative qualities on the wind and with a free wind
will also be settled. If you beat a canoe, and her
owner intimates that it is on account of the superior
qualities of your canoe, offer to exchange boats
and-after you have had time to inspect his gear and
trim, and make such modifications as your experience
dictates -- arrange to race him. If you lose a race,
find out why you lost it, what points you or
126 127
The Sit of a Sail.
your canoe are inferior in, and keep
your mouth shut. It is of no interest to others to
know why you lost, and any attempted explanation
reflects on yourself -- not on the canoeist you are
trying to take part of the credit from for winning.
Know your canoe perfectly, how much sail she needs and
can carry to advantage, how much ballast and where it
should be placed. Know the course and every part of
it, currents, depth of water, probable direction of
wind, the character of the water likely to be
encountered with any wind, the ranges for each buoy
and their exact positions. Study your opponents'
canoes and the manner in which they handle them. Get
all the sailing rules by heart, and know how and when
they are applied. Know the signals for getting ready
and starting, and cross the line as few seconds after
the gun is fired as it is possible to. The leading
canoe's has the advantage, and therefore it is well to
get the lead by a well-timed flying start.
It is taken for granted that you have, shortly
before the race, inspected every line, block, lashing,
cleat, mast and sail, and know all to be in perfect
condition and in good working order. Many a canoe has
lost races simply by the parting of a line or a jam in
the running rigging at a critical moment. Everything
must go like clockwork; no hurry, no chance movements,
everything systematic.
The best sailing races are sailed over triangular
courses, giving each canoe an equal amount of running
free, beam wind, and beating to windward, to test all
their points. In point of time the windward leg of the
triangle is the longest. A half minute gained running
free will not make up for a minute lost on the wind.
The best canoe, therefore, for windward work will
usually win. Look to this matter and sacrifice a
little on your free sailing perhaps for better
windward work. Trim the canoe for close-hauled
sailing, and get the best sails for this work, unless
at great sacrifice on all other points.
Reefing, in point of time, is a most important
matter. It often happens that the wind freshens or
dies down during a race, and this must be provided for
by the reef -- taking one in or shaking it out. Be
able by perfected gear to do this with the minimum
amount of lost time, and see to it by trial that the
sit of the sail reefed is as perfect as that of the
full sail. Have the spars sufficiently strong to keep
rigid even under strong wind pressure, since any
buckling on their part destroys flatness and the
perfect sit of a sail. This is a point often
neglected. Lighter spars can be carried on a roached
sail than on one having a straight head and foot.
When passing an opponent, go to windward of him if
you can. Do not try to retard him by getting directly
to windward of him, though, and thus taking the wind
out of his sails. It is allowable to do this, but
there is less satisfaction in beating a man when you
have hampered him in his sailing. For this reason do
not blanket the canoe ahead of you running free --
that is, steering directly behind him and Covering his
sails with your own, and taking the wind from them
till you get up to him, when you must steer out.
128 129
Turning Buoys.
Blanketing is not against the rules,
but it is jockeying, and jockeying is demoralizing in
canoeing, just as it is in horse racing. Sail a fair,
even, generous race, and have the satisfaction when
you finish of knowing that you won fairly, if you have
made no errors, or of having lost honorably by some
error in judgment you can correct the next time. Train
judgment down so it will not make errors. There is
great pleasure to be derived from knowing that you
have been able to sail a long race without a single
fluke, error or miscalculation, even if you lose. If
you do lose in such a case, some one else must have a
better sailing canoe than your own, in which case
there is only one thing to do -- build.
Little difficulty is experienced in keeping out of
the way of other canoes when there are few competitors
in a race, but at the Association meets, where twenty
or thirty canoes enter and start in a single event,
often great trouble is experienced in keeping clear of
other craft-especially in light winds -- and avoiding
fouls. Keep as clear of the fleet as possible to avoid
being penned in by canoes on both sides and thus
getting badly blanketed and prevented from shaking
them off. Sail slightly off the course, if necessary,
to keep clear of a bunch of slower craft than your
own. Steer neatly round all buoys, going as close to
them as you dare without running any risk of fouling.
Touching a buoy disqualifies a canoe. Rounding a buoy
necessitates changing the course and therefore
retrimming the sails. Do this with the utmost
dispatch. As you approach a buoy and just before
reaching it, trim the mizzen for the new tack; then
steer round, and at the same time trim the mainsail so
not an ounce of wind pressure is lost on it during the
turn. If you are running free to a buoy (centerboard
up) round which you have to jibe and at once start to
windward, steer well clear of the buoy, jibe the
mizzen over before reaching it, and trim down for
close-hauled work (drop the board); then jibe the
mainsail over just as you get even with the buoy,
turning the canoe round quickly so as not to go one
foot beyond the flag and consequently to leeward, trim
in and shoot off on the windward tack. If sailing to
windward, and you have to tack round a buoy, give
yourself room enough to clear it should the canoe miss
stays or hang long enough to make leeway. When the
turn is complicated by the presence of other canoes,
judgment alone can dictate the best course to pursue
to get round with least chances of fouls and lost
time. Take no chances in such cases, unless at the
very end of a race where everything depends on risking
something. Rule XV., ACA (see Yearbook), says the
leading canoe has the right of way, and any canoe
overtaking it must get out of its way, except at the
turning buoy, when the following canoe is not clear of
the leader -- that is, so close that it cannot steer
on either side of the leader -- in which case room
must be given by either canoe to the other that is in
danger of fouling the buoy. The second canoe, to be
entitled to recognition from the leader,
130 131
Canoe Handling Fouls and Tides.
must have established an overlap
before the leader has actually changed his helm for
rounding. It is a very nice question to decide just
when a canoe does establish an overlap on another,
especially by the leader, as he is looking ahead and
the approaching canoe may be hidden behind his mizzen.
It is therefore well for the following canoe not to
try to get too fine a point in this matter, and thus
provoke discussion and trouble in case of a foul. If
the second canoe clearly has the right of way, and the
leader is not likely to recognize it, the skipper
should request the leader to give him room, and thus
notify him that it is expected.
The rule that canoes sailing free must get out of
the way of those on the wind should be always borne in
mind. A canoe sailing free can easily shift her course
in either direction to clear a canoe approaching on
the wind. Not so the canoe close-hauled. She could
either bear away, in which case she loses ground
greatly, or luff up, and therefore come to a
standstill. The canoe sailing free but changes her
course slightly and loses no headway. This rule is
logical, therefore.
If two canoes approach each other on opposite
tacks, the canoe on the port tack must give way, the
canoe on the starboard tack keeping directly on her
course. This is an arbitrary rule instituted to avoid
trouble and misunderstanding. There is no reason why a
canoe should give way on one tack more than on
another, except that, for the sake of a general
understanding, the port tack has been decided on. When
on the port tack, therefore, keep a sharp lookout
under your boom for approaching canoes on the other
tack, and do not try to run across their bows, unless
well ahead, so all chance of a foul is avoided. If you
are on the starboard tack, and a canoe on the port
tack, through ignorance on the part of her skipper, is
likely to run you down if you keep on, then luff and
come about; do not cause a foul by keeping on, he will
be ruled out of the race in any event, and if you get
about and avoid him you sustain no damage and probably
will lose no time. In general, keep to the right.
If any part of your canoe or person touches another
canoe or buoy it constitutes a foul. Be careful at all
times to avoid fouls; look ahead, behind and all
around, and know well beforehand what is likely to
happen, and provide for it.
If the course is affected by tides, study how the
current can help you, and take every advantage you can
get of it. Light winds on regatta day may result in
the honors being carried off by the man best
acquainted with the tides, even though he be not the
best sailor present. Calculate, when tacking, to get
the tide to carry you to windward, if it is possible
to so arrange it. Sometimes it will carry you to
windward on one tack and to leeward on the other; hold
on to the windward tack, then, as long as you can
without getting too far off the course. When beating
it is well not to get too far away from the true
course-though you do happen to be getting well to
windward, almost to the point, perhaps, from
132 133
Right of Way at the Buoy.
which you can lay a course round the
buoy (without a tack) -- for a sudden shift of the
wind may leave you clear down to leeward. As an
example, suppose that you are at one buoy and the next
one is dead to windward. You start off on the
starboard tack, and after sailing for a time you bring
the finishing buoy off directly at a right angle to
the keel of the canoe. At this point you are as near
to it as you can get on this tack. If you keep on the
same tack you are getting further away from the buoy
all the time, but more to windward. You will soon
reach a point at which if you come about you can clear
the buoy on the port tack, unless the wind shifts.
Now, if you had come about at the right angle point or
a trifle beyond it, you would all the time have been
getting nearer the finishing buoy, but you would have
had to make another tack to get round it. If your
canoe does not come about easily, and loses time and
headway when she does come about, it is perhaps best
to do all the windward work in two tacks. But if you
do not lose much by coming about, you will run less
risk of getting left way off nowhere if a shift of
wind occurs by making several tacks, for you have been
getting nearer the buoy all the time.
The rules governing rounding a buoy should be
clearly understood, practically as well as
theoretically, for herein lies the most fertile cause
of fouls, errors and annoyances. Knowing a rule or
custom theoretically is very different from knowing it
practically. Theoretical knowledge is apt to be
imperfect and improperly applied. Practical experience
of the workings of rules leaves a picture on the mind
which will lead you to do the right thing in a similar
case a second time more from instinct than from
elaborate thought and a working out of the problem
just at the moment when things are complicated and
your thoughts all afield with a dozen things to do. A
peculiar case in point, and one generally
misunderstood, occurs when two canoes close-hauled are
approaching a buoy on opposite tacks. Suppose the
canoe on the starboard tack to be able to make the
buoy and turn it by falling off from the wind just as
she is rounding it. Suppose the canoe on the port tack
to be a little ahead, but obliged to tack to get round
the buoy, it being necessary by the sailing directions
to leave the buoy on the port hand (keeping the port
side of the canoe toward the buoy in rounding). The
port tack canoe is far enough ahead to come about just
at the buoy and get off on the starboard tack,
rounding the buoy at the same time without detaining
the starboard tack canoe. The starboard tack canoe
certainly has the right of way round the buoy, and
should not be detained an instant. The port tack
canoe, therefore, has no right to cross her bow and
come about directly in front of her, if by so doing
she detains in the least the starboard tack canoe. She
does this at her own risk, and if overtaken at the
turn by the starboard tack canoe she should be ruled
out. If she can cross the bow of the starboard tack
canoe, come about before reaching the buoy and get
headway on before an overlap is established, then she
has the right of way, since she is on the starboard
tack and leading, but not otherwise.
134 135
The Spinnaker.
The windward canoe has a right to
lay a course dictated by the best judgment of her
skipper, and if kept to, no leeward canoe approaching
him has the right to make him change it to avoid a
foul, though in the judgment of the leeward skipper
the windward man is not sailing a good course. The lee
canoe must get out of the way unless he gets the lead.
The windward canoe cannot, however, change his course
and bear away, though at all times he has a right to
luff. The lee canoe, if leading, has no right to come
about directly in front of a windward canoe, closely
following him without giving due notice of his
intention, as hew could thus cause a foul at almost
any moment with a good breeze blowing, by not giving
the windward canoe room to either come about or bear
away clear of him.
By constant practice learn just what angle you can
count on for your canoe in windward work; how much
leeway she makes, so you can calculate to a dot just
how far you must go on your last tack to clear a buoy.
Allowing too much may result in a serious loss of
time; while an underestimate of her capabilities
results in an extra tack, perhaps two, and still
greater loss of time. Figure to be just a little on
the safe side always, to allow for a slight shift of
wind or extra leeway from current or other cause. Keep
clear of the shore, bluffs especially, and out in the
open water, where the wind is steady and more
constantly from exactly the same quarter. Keep well
out of the lee of other canoes also, or you may meet a
fellow who delights in blanketing you.
When sailing a long race, a mile or more to each
leg of the triangular course, it is well to carry a
spinnaker. The spinnaker is an extra sail which can be
easily set on the mainmast for running down the wind
and boomed out on the opposite side to the mainsail.
It is usually triangular in shape, with a boom along
its base or foot. The pointed head of the sail is run
up to the very top of the mast by an extra halyard.
There must be a sheet on the boom, of course, to trim
the sail properly. This sail is a great help often in
light winds, especially if the wind and tide are
opposed to each other, making the running free occupy
some considerable time. The extra surface thus spread
does good work. A spinnaker is a useless appliance for
a short course; the time occupied in setting it and
getting it in may more than compensate for its
advantages. The paddle may be used in a very light
wind to keep the boom in position. In a stiff breeze
the spinnaker halyard can be carried aft to the
skipper's seat in the canoe, fastened to a cleat, and
thus serve as a backstay to help support the mast with
the greatly augmented weight upon it.
The sailing rules may perhaps seem unnecessarily
long, or complicated, at the first blush. They are,
however, nothing more than the usual rules that govern
all sailing races, but modified to apply to canoes,
and changed where experience has shown it to be
necessary.
136 137
Simplicity and Complexity.
After having entered a race or two
-- even if with your friend and canoeing companion
only -- you will likely see the reason for having
rules, and just such rules as the Association has. It
is not necessary to have a complicated rig; a measured
course, and all the rules at the fingers' ends to
enjoy racing. Get up a scrub match with some other
fellow in the club-or in the same town, if you do not
live where there is a club. A couple of races may
teach more than a month of ordinary sailing about, as
to the handling of the canoe.
The new devices that appear and many of the
fittings that have come into almost universal use are
the result of racing, and the desire on the part of
canoeists to get the best and most perfect gear
therefor. Have no fear that racing may become the
prime object of canoeing. A canoeist who cares for
racing only is a sorry fellow and not likely long to
remain a canoeist; too many forces are working against
him. Canoeing is just beginning to make itself
seriously felt as a manly sport in the United States,
and its field is such a large one that racing can
never expect to occupy more than a small corner
lot.
In England canoeing has suffered in popular favor
by reason of a few men building special racing canoes
with most perfect gear and quietly sweeping the field
at every opportunity. Many have been discouraged from
it by the idea of its being a most complicated and
intricate science to master, as it is when looked at
through a modern Pearl or Nautilus canoe. In this
country, with its endless water ways of great variety
of character, canoeing takes on too many pleasing and
simple forms to be neglected from the fear of too
great complexity.
If the reader of these pages carries away with him
the idea that canoeing is too much for him to master,
then the object for which the book was written will
not have been accomplished-namely, the giving an idea
of what the canoe is, in how many ways it can afford
pleasure and profit, how simple and again how complex
it may be made, according to the whim of the party
interested.
The simpler canoes and limited uses to which they
are put need but little explanation to make them
clear, and therefore this part of the subject does not
occupy as much space as the description of the
managing of more complex varieties and their gears.
The majority of the present canoe owners want to know
something more about sailing-if they do not already:
feel that they know it all. It is not because the
larger canoes and sailing are more important or should
be taken up to the exclusion of paddling and cruising
that they are described at some length, but because it
takes more space to illustrate their points.
The handling of a canoe on a cruise is simple in
theory. Decision and judgment are needed to cruise
successfully, and these qualities can be acquired by
experience in great measure. The numerous accounts of
cruises available to every reader will give good ideas
of the obstacles likely to be met with and the methods
employed to make cruising pleasurable and healthful.
The best methods of camping out can
138 139
Dress.
also be got at from cruising records
and such excellent works as "Woodcraft." Every
well-organized canoeist should know something about
camping out, and especially cooking. MacGregor, in his
records of the Rob Roy, gives lists of the things he
carries with him on a cruise, as do most canoeing
authors who have written up accounts of their voyages.
Your cargo for cruising depends very largely upon the
country you are cruising through and the climate; the
distance between supply stations, and whether the
canoe is likely to be portaged or not.
Dress.
KNICKERBOCKERS are now much worn for walking and
bicycling tours, and are very convenient and
comfortable for canoeing. Slippers or very light shoes
should be worn when in the canoe, so as not to injure
the light planking when moving about. Canvas slippers
with rubber soles have proved serviceable; though
perhaps a good broad-soled leather shoe, with low
heels, or none at all, cannot be improved upon. The
flannel shirt is so universally worn for all kinds of
outings that perhaps it is unnecessary to mention it.
Use woolen garments next the skin, not cotton; they
are more comfortable and safe, when you are likely to
get wet at any time, and it is impossible to be
constantly changing one's clothing. When cruising,
always carry one complete extra set of clothing, so
that you can put on dry things when it is necessary. A
suit of oilskins such as sailors wear are useful for
rainy weather cruising and for rough water rapid
running. They occupy some room when not in use, and
for this reason are frequently omitted from the
canoeist's list. The long cruisers are about equally
divided as to their usefulness. A soft hat is
desirable, made as light as possible. A sort of helmet
hat without stiffening is quite popular. It should be
ventilated by a false rim around the head, allowing a
free circulation of air, or by holes in the sides or
top. Black is warmer than any other color. A light
colored hat soon gets soiled. A neutral color is best.
The soft hammock hats now made, gray in color, are
very good for ordinary wear. They are perhaps as good
as any for both canoe and shore wear. Two hats are
unnecessary.
Most of the canoe clubs have designed and the
members now wear a club uniform on all state
occasions, at regattas, the annual and local meets,
etc. It is desirable that the uniform should be quiet
enough in color and design to be worn on shore, even
away from the canoe. The Norfolk jacket,
knickerbockers, dark stockings and low shoes make up
the dress now pretty widely considered the most
available, with any quiet, neat hat that may be
chosen.
The End
of the Rope.
MR. C.H. FARNHAM is a veteran cruising canoeist,
the inventor of many devices for economizing space and
giving comfort, and one who has made a special study
of every part of the canoe and her cargo from a
cruising point of view.
140 141
Canoe Handling.
The following extract is from a
short magazine article by him, giving the history of
his canoe Allegro -- the original Alden-Everson
Shadow, in which he cruised every summer for six years
before he parted with her for a canoe better meeting
his educated requirements and one that he designed and
superintended the building of himself.
"* * * The keel and sternpost were soon
cut off to make the Allegro manageable on the
rapids, and she was henceforth steered with the
paddle. These paddles have increased gradually in
length from seven feet to eleven -- the one now
used.
"During two or three years she served as a bed;
but a small muslin tent, oiled, now gives me more
comfortable quarters during her cruises, lasting
from three to five months each. The clothes,
provisions, photographic apparatus, etc., have
always been carried in oiled-canvas bags.
"The cushion-mattress-life preserver has been
described in the Canoeist, also the down bed,
shaped, when buttoned up, like a bag, and the
telescoping apron. These three articles are the
only parts of the kit that give me perfect
satisfaction.
"Experience leads me more and more to seek
lightness, compactness and simplicity in everything
connected with canoeing; but the necessity of
safety and comfort also increases.
"When you travel all of every summer, your
living must be made comfortable and be enjoyable;
and when you make and break Camp, 'carry,' and
handle over and over your entire outfit, every
article is weighed over and over again, and many
are found wanting on the next cruise. I have thus
reached a pretty satisfactory understanding with my
outfit.
"But the sail, keel (the Allegro is built with a
flat keel, and has a deep adjustable keel which is
held in place by screws through the keelson),
rudder, and such appurtenances are still the most
annoying features of my cruise. These bulky and
heavy articles irritate me; their weight and the
drag of the keel and rudder retard the boat very
perceptibly, and they fail to give any help on very
many days of a cruise, even in large waters. I am
generally more lighthearted when free from their
burden. But, on the other hand, they do give great
enjoyment, and even increase the ability of the
canoe to escape in a storm.
"I find but one satisfactory solution -- to
follow the charming inland routes, where, on lakes,
rivers and rapids, you have all needed variety of
scenery and activity, where you enjoy a compact
outfit and a light, easygoing canoe, and where you
are perfectly satisfied with the paddle alone."
Some of us like the keel and sail, and prefer the
open waters of the bay and sound to the "charming
inland routes." Thus it is that
"Talents differ,
All is well and wisely put.
If I cannot carry canoes on my back,
Neither can you sail the Dot."
"Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty," so
saith the seer. Had he been a canoeist he might truly
have said that it is the price of safety in a canoe.
Perhaps the slight flavor of risk attendant on
canoeing is an added charm. The Saxon race has always
had the reputation of enjoying sports with some slight
danger in them. This factor is no greater in canoeing
than in rowing, bicycling and yachting, and therefore
should deter no one who can swim. Foolhardy trips and
exploits are possible of course; but moderate canoeing
done intelligently is so nearly free from risk that it
may well be considered one of the safest, as it is one
of the most enjoyable sports yet devised by the
fertile brain of man. Try it!
THE [ROPES] END.
© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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