Whitewater

Confluence Lead Sponsor of Outdoor Nation Youth Summit

By jcarberry - April 30, 2010 - 12:17

Confluence Watersports is a lead sponsor for the Outdoor Foundation’s Outdoor Nation Youth Summit. Backed by the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), and in conjunction with “Backpacker” Magazine’s Adventures NYC, the weekend long event is an industry wide effort to promote youth participation in outdoor activities.  As the sole “platinum” level sponsor from the paddlesports industry, Confluence is committed to increasing participation in paddling and is tangibly empowering young adults to lead the charge.

The sponsorship consists of several levels of participation:
· Partnering with Eastern Mountain Sports for the Adventures NYC event in Central Park, Confluence brands will be available for test paddling, with free instruction and tips. Adventures NYC is one of the largest, urban, outdoor consumer events in the country, with an opportunity to offer an authentic kayaking or canoeing experience in the middle of Manhattan. It is free and open to all.
· Dagger and Wave Sport will host a “Paddling Place” hang out, adjacent to the Outdoor Nation Youth Summit.
· Confluence will recruit and choose five delegates (ages 18-26) for the Youth Summit. After the Summit, these delegates will be important resources for the Confluence team’s efforts in youth outreach, participation and product development.
· A $1250 grant will be awarded to one of the Confluence-selected delegates to apply toward encouraging the outdoor movement in their hometown.

“We’re proud to join other companies in the industry to support OIA’s Outdoor Nation,” said Sue Rechner, CEO of Confluence Watersports. “We signed on immediately in order to support the broad effort to get people outdoors in general, and in boats, specifically. Adventures NYC is fun and encourages a different vantage of outdoor recreation in an urban environment. Plus, we’re placing a lot of stock in the Youth Summit. The delegates we choose will be members of the Confluence family, with their opinions and ideas integrated into our broader strategy.”

Rechner added, “On a deeper level, I think we, as members of the outdoor industry, have a responsibility to encourage and develop ambassadors for healthy, active lifestyles. Obesity and stress are nationwide epidemics and there are strong arguments to name ‘nature deficiency’ as a classifiable disorder. In order to affect a difference, we need to engage the full spectrum of people interested in outdoor activities – from young to old and playful to core.”

Santa Cruz Rules!

By Canoe & Kayak - March 29, 2010 - 15:18

Cynics be damned: Paddlesurfers shred the ‘Lane

Galen Licht lighting it up at the Lane. Dave Elkinson

Galen Licht lighting it up at the Lane. Dave Elkinson


Above all else, the Santa Cruz Surf Kayak Festival is classic. Classic in the sense that the break at Steamer Lane is both user-friendly and high performance in nature. Classic in that the cliff band overlooking the venue makes for a natural stadium. Classic in that worldly paddle surfers of all types–board, boat and ski–meet here every March to rip the hell out of one of Earth’s best waves.
Airin' out the back. Dave Elkinson

Airin' out the back. Sean Watson


The swell started off big on Friday for the prelims, died out a bit on Saturday, and then opened up for the finals on Sunday where the last paddlers standing took advantage of pulsing, overhead El Nino swell. Local boy Galen Licht won the men’s High Performance kayak class, the 22-year-old’s first SCSKF title. “I can’t believe the surf went from 3-4 feet Sunday morning to 15-feet by the afternoon,” he said. “In the finals, I took a gamble sitting outside at Middle Peak, instead of taking the smaller inside waves. It paid off.” Licht was able to knock off current World Champion David Speller of Jersey (a British channel island) in the quarterfinals. Rachel Krugman took home the HP women’s crown while Idaho’s Devon Barker won the women’s International Class and finished second to Krugman in the HP.
Photo: Sean Watson

Photo: Sean Watson


Dynamic Pismo Beach, Calif. ripper Fletcher Burton put on a show Sunday, slashing his way to the Wave Ski Open title, beating five-time World Champion Mathieu Babarit of France in the process (read about Burton in the May issue of Canoe and Kayak).

One of the most inspiring aspects of the Santa Cruz event recently, though, is its evolution. In the newly revived pro plastic class, current Freestyle World Champion Jason Craig dominated with three crisp air screws on three separate waves during the finals. He landed each and maintained the section while the crowd roared from the cliffs. We’re going out on a limb here and calling that a first.

Two-time champ Chuck Patterson, nearly getting shacked.

Two-time champ Chuck Patterson, tearing into a Steamer Lane wall.

The standup surfers shredded this traditionally local break with plenty of good-natured grumbling amongst competitors over the helmet requirement. Chuck Patterson repeated as the Surftech SUP Shootout winner. “It’s pretty incredible to mix surfing and kayaking at a venue like this,” Patterson said. The talented Dana Point, Calif. waterman fended off 16-year-old upstart Zane Schweitzer of Maui. “The last time I surfed Steamers the crowds were crazy,” Schweitzer said. “I caught one wave in 45 minutes. This is sick to have it all to ourselves.”

The $125 entry fee is worth it when it’s just you and three other guys in a heat surfing a ridiculously good spot. “It’s definitely one of the best waves in the world,” says SCSKF organizer Dennis Judson. It is, of course, the definition of classic. – Joe Carberry

Please check back as we update this story and photo gallery

Watch daily updates from surfkayak.net here.

Click here for full results.

Vertical Challenge is On

By Canoe & Kayak - March 15, 2010 - 16:43

Time to drop vert and fight cancer
verical-challenge-is-on-article
Photo credit: Erik Boomer
(more…)

New WW park Raises a Fuss in Raleigh, N.C.

By Canoe & Kayak - February 26, 2010 - 12:06

new-ww-park-raises-a-fuss-in-raleigh-nc-article-1

Just below Falls Dam, the Neuse River rapids can churn up a bubbling playground of 3-foot waves, a brief shock of commotion on an otherwise sleepy waterway.

To paddlers, it’s the perfect spot for a whitewater park. With $350,000, [the city Raleigh, North Carolina] has taken the first steps toward making this stretch a more picturesque version of the U.S. National Whitewater Center in Charlotte.

But as their plans unfold, so does opposition. To people who remember the Neuse before it was dammed, any further fiddling with its natural course is a slap in the face. Many are pushing for an all-natural park that won’t look fake or chase off wildlife…..Read more at
newsobserver.com/2010/02/26/358962/rapids-project-stirs-fans-of-neuse.html

The New Big Guns

By Canoe & Kayak - February 24, 2010 - 15:41

the-new-big-guns-article1
The New Big Guns

2010 Rider of the Year Awards

Not since the IR Big Gun Show dissolved over four years ago has the best in whitewater boating been celebrated in annual peer-juried awards. Canadian paddler Patrick Camblin is attempting to recapture the prestige of being acknowledged as the best in the sport with the new Rider of the Year awards. Camblin’s awards pick up where the Big Gun Show left off, with nominations being accepted until Feb. 25 for top overall boater, expedition, photographer, video, freestyle paddler, trick, drop, line and carnage.

“Back in the day the Big Gun Show was an event that everyone wanted to be a part of,” says Camblin, who was a 2004 Big Gun award-winner. “It really gave boaters a platform to showcase their talents.”

THE 2009 GREEN RIVER RACE

By Canoe & Kayak - November 9, 2009 - 10:36

Sometimes the Monkey Spanks Back

By Harrison Metzger


The kayaker flips brutally as her boat twists off the launching pad of Gorilla. Upside down beneath the heavy curtain of whitewater, she plummets 18 feet into the deep rocky vortex, her boat impacting the underwater shelf below with a deep THUMP!

That noise is heard dozens of times throughout Saturday’s 2009 Green River Race, but with a scary difference in this case: the paddler is upside down upon impact. Yet before three tethered rescue swimmers can reach her boat, she rolls upright and paddles out of the swirling eddy at the base of the falls, apparently uninjured by the crash.

Applause erupts from hundreds of spectators perched on mist-blasted rocks above Gorilla and its brethren in mayhem: Green Scream Machine, Nies’ Pieces, Power Slide and Rapid Transit downstream; and upstream, Pencil Sharpener, Chief, Zwick’s, Go Left and Die, Boof or Consequence and Frankenstein.

Yells of “yeaaahh!” and gasps of “whoah!” reverberate throughout the coliseum of hotel-sized boulders lining the shore, announcing the procession of racers as they boof, splat and plunge down the Class V Green River Narrows.

About 1,000 people, mostly young and clad in fleece and hiking boots, have climbed 600 vertical feet down into the thundering cleft of spurting granite for the show. They’ve come to cheer more than 150 kayakers, a handful of C-boaters and two open canoeists dropping the vertical rapids.

Photos: Matt Fields-Johnson


The Green River Race has exploded as the East Coast’s biggest extreme downriver attraction since 1996 when Leland Davis organized a group of 16 friends for the first race.

“It’s the most exciting outdoor event in the world for me,” says Al Gregory, 38, a five-time Green racer who won the championship in 2000. “This is about the essence of kayaking, about us chasing each other down the river at dark and turning it into a race.”

Gregory, known to all as “Al G.,” is the guy who calls Duke Energy to make sure there is water released for the race. This year Duke is dumping water round the clock as it draws down Lake Summit upstream. Combined with natural inflow from recent healthy rains, the Green is running a respectable 9 inches or so.

“We have a little higher water — it’s really ideal because people can practice,” Gregory says.

Gregory is not racing although the race lineup lists him as the sole rafter, paddling a “long R-1” a 13’11’’ Shredder. It sounds like a joke, but the day before the race Gregory strided the Green standing up in — and getting repeatedly ejected from — a Thrill Seeker IK.

Green Reunion

This year is special because it’s the first time all the past champions have gathered at the Green. This year’s race includes past champions Clay Wright (inaugural winner), Jason Hale, Gregory, Pat Keller, Andrew Holcombe, Chris Gragtmans, and Tommy Hilleke who has won six times. Only Gregory and Keller are not racing this year, due to injuries.

Hale, “the original inspiration and fuel behind (the race)” lives in San Francisco and wasn’t going to attend this year. Gregory and his other friends got together and sent him a plane ticket.

“I called him and politely told him he had come and to get his days off from work,” Al G. says. “He and Tommy ran the Green four times yesterday practicing and I think they ran it once this morning. They want a crowd showing.”

A show the crowd got, not just from the top ranked paddlers but from all the racers daring to paddle the East’s most difficult dam-controlled class V river at top speed.

More than any other river in the East and perhaps the U.S., the Green has shaped the nation’s top creek boaters, their boats and their attitudes. Running on average more than 200 days a year, the Green is the reason this area is home to Liquidlogic Kayaks, Watershed and Green River Adventures, hundreds of creek boaters — and one Sasquatch.

The hairy-looking fellow taking a break behind a boulder above Go Left and Die is Alex Ohman, 23, of nearby Johnson City, Tenn. He’s wearing a Gorilla suit he borrowed from a friend for a mountain bike race.

“Since I went over the monkey upside down about a month ago, I just had to wear it,” he says.

Flipping in the notch and rolling partway up, Ohman had better luck than some other Gorilla-swimmers in Saturday’s race.

“I was right where I needed to be and I didn’t hit anything — well I must have hit something because my helmet got scratched,” Ohman said. “It was luck. And even though I had that incident, it was one of the most fun days on the river for me. I got to the takeout and completely forgot everything that went wrong.”

Although most of Saturday’s lines were fast, clean and skillfully landed, there were a number of tense moments that paddlers involved would probably rather forget.

Seconds after Ohman loped off downstream in his gorilla suit, a kayaker in an army green kayak pinned on the sharp rock splitting the flow at the bottom of Go Left and Die.

For a few seconds, only the bottom of his boat was showing. Then he fought his head to the surface and, bracing furiously, tried to wiggle off as the crowd above yelled and safety boaters scrambled to toss ropes.

Finally the broached kayaker managed to fight his way around one side of the rock and drop into the pool below. There his boat floated upside down for an uncomfortable second before, looking spent, he rolled up and paddled off to face the ape (the rapid, not the guy in the monkey suit).

Winning Premonition

Top-seeded Chris Gragtmans, in the poll position because of Keller’s injury, was smiling, but he said he was not too happy. Mistakes at Go Left and Neece’s Pieces had cost him precious seconds. Although his long boat time of 4:35 tied his winning finish from last year and was only one second off his personal best, it wasn’t good enough to win first.

“The course is really fast this year and everybody is in really good shape,” he said. “The caliber of paddler is just increasing every year too. It’s a pretty crazy event to be involved in.”

More than an hour before the final racers splashed down at the finish line below Rapid Transit, Gragtmans made his prediction of the winning order:

“My guess is the order will be Andrew Holcombe, Isaak Levinson and Eric Deguil. Fourth could be me or a couple other people.”

Gragtman’s prediction was uncanny in its accuracy. In the long boats, Holcombe repeated his first place long boat championship from 2007, setting a new course record 4:18 that broke the old one by nine seconds. Levinson was second, also breaking the old record with a finish 4:25. Eric DeGuil took third at 4:29, followed by Eric Hurd, who tied with Gragtman’s at 4:35. Adriene Levknecht shattered a record in the women’s long boat class with a 4:59 finish.

Despite the disappointment of not winning first place, Gragtmans was charged up to race before the enthusiastic throng of supporters lining the shore. They included his mom, his sister and his girlfriend. “They are always down to come out and watch the mayhem that goes on,” he said.

He has competed in many sports, but “there is nothing like this race,” he says.

“I compare it to going into battle. There is nothing else in my life that gets me going like this race.”

Broken paddles, bruised egos

Back down at Gorilla, boats are getting looped and endered in “Speed Trap,” the hole formed by the horizontal jet of water at the bottom of the main vertical drop. Kayaker Curt Lamberth grins gamely as he rolls up holding a paddle with one blade snapped off. It takes about 50 seconds for the crew on shore to toss him another stick.

It’s closing in on 3 p.m., three hours after the starting gun, and the sun has long since crossed the narrow gorge top above, leaving the crowd in chilling shadow and spray from the rapids. In quick succession, two kayakers are thrashed: a hand paddler who swims the main drop from the top and another boater who gets vacuumed out of his cockpit at the bottom. The safety crew is on the ball and doing their best to keep swimmers from washing into the class IV+ drops below.

Throughout the crowd, people keep asking: Where are the canoes? They crane their necks as the ringing of a bell announces each boat coming through the Notch above Gorilla, hoping to see that rarest feat: an open canoe running a Class V waterfall. They wait for Eli.

Eli Helbert, multiple world champion rodeo canoeist, is running his eighth Green Race. For only the second time, he has a competitor in canoe — gutsy young Wes Gentry.

Eli has styled the course many times including clean and dry landings at Gorilla. But today things go awry for The Canoe Guru.

Eli lands a great boof off the Pencil Sharpener, the first entrance drop to Gorilla. But instead of ferrying river left to get a right angle through the narrow Notch, he tries to cut through with less angle. His Esquif Prelude catches a rock in heinously undercut Notch and flips him just above the main drop. He rolls up, but flushes down the beast sideways, backwards, full of water.

Ejected upon impact, Eli is out of reach before rescuer Chris Harjes can grab him. After a bruising swim through the mammoth slides downstream, he gets to shore. His canoe stays stuck in Speed Trap for more than a minute until the tethered rescue crew pulls it out.

As hundreds of spectators start clearing out, hopping over massive boulders and climbing fixed ropes up the steep ravine out of the gorge, Eli watches Gentry, the other open boater, launch his canoe off Gorilla.

“I’m good, just sort of a bruised ego,” says Eli, who has never before not finished the race. “I was lucky I was wearing a lot of padding.”

As he walks upstream to get his canoe and paddle out, a fan yells out: “Hey Eli, you’re amazing!” It’s a good word for anyone willing to brave the Green at top speed in front of a giant crowd.

Love and Marriage: Emily Jackson and Nick Troutman Win Freestyle World Titles

By Canoe & Kayak - September 8, 2009 - 09:25

Emily Jackson and Nick Troutman Win Freestyle World TitlesHusband and wife duo, Emily Jackson and Nick Troutman, captured world titles this weekend in Thun, Switzerland during the 2009 ICF World Freestyle Kayaking Championships. It was the second title in a row for Jackson, who also won in 2007 on the Ottawa. Reno, Nevada’s Jason Craig won in the junior men’s category and Pennsylvania’s Jeremy Laucks took home the OC1 title. For details, click here: http://www.icf-thun2009.ch/index.php/en.html

Jackson Kayak: Freestyle World Championships Quarterfinals

By Canoe & Kayak - September 8, 2009 - 09:16

jackson-kayak-freestyle-world-championships1

For photos and results of the Freestyle World Championships Quarterfinals click here!

World Championship Prelims

By Canoe & Kayak - September 3, 2009 - 14:24

Rush Sturges Provides the Soundtrack

Kayakers Helping Kayakers: A Benefit for Matt Thomas

By Canoe & Kayak - August 13, 2009 - 13:56

picture-11

On the river, Matt Thomas was always ready to help a friend. Now after a horrific accident, they’re looking after him.

Matt Thomas used to work as a civil engineer in Medford Oregon, but did not let the rigors of his career slow down epic feats as a weekend warrior. Last Labor Day weekend he grabbed a first descent on the South fork of the San Joaquin with Ben Stookesberry and drove through the night in both directions to make it back to work on time. Another weekend last summer he ran two stout 50-plus-footers in as many days.

These types of expeditions test the strongest paddlers’ mettle and form the strongest type of bonds among team members. As you read this, Matt’s greatest challenge is working to regain use of his arms in a rehab center far away from most of the expeditions he participated in, but his buddies are still there for him.  picture-12
About two miles into a mountain bike ride, on Chuck’s Chips trail outside of Talent, Oregon on the morning of July 10th, 2009, Matt saw a newly changed jump, judged that it would go, and charged it. He overshot the landing, went over his handlebars, and dislocated his C6 and C7 vertebrae. After a helicopter ride that he barely remembers, he woke up in a hospital to find he was paralyzed from the chest down.
Matt made a name for himself as a cheerful soldier on expedition kayaking trips. When he was in extreme discomfort, he wouldn’t let on, and he always remained positive in the face of adversity. He is bringing this toughness towards an impressive physical recovery but there is an obstacle to his rehabilitation that he cannot control: He had no insurance when the accident happened.
Outdoor industry professionals and lifestylers alike have rallied around Matt in the face of this incredible obstacle. With less than two weeks notice Thomas’ old friends and fellow whitewater paddlers Kyle and Ryan Allred threw an event that raised over five thousand dollars. Shasta Boyz Productions are dedicating their August 21st release of “Wet Dreamz” to Thomas and all proceeds go his way as well.

picture-13 “Kayaking is a sport where most of the time you are self reliant, but when something goes wrong you know your friends will do anything possible to help,” says expedition kayak photographer and organizer of the Matt Thomas Rehab Raffle, Darin McQuoid. “Matt’s in a difficult situation, albeit off the river, but anytime a partner needs help its not a question of if you will help, but how you will.”
–Joe Jackson

Please join in this effort to support this great outdoorsman and amazing friend by buying tickets to the Matt Thomas Rehab Raffle—http://mattthomasraffle.blogspot.com/— and possibly win some of the finest paddling gear available. You can also track Matt’s recovery and donate directly at http://www.mattnevergivesup.blogspot.com/.