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Canoez
09-02-2008, 07:39 AM
Those who have capsized a canoe and those who will.

My 9 year old daughter, "The Divine Miss M" had her second ever solo paddle in a canoe yesterday. It ended with a surprise for her.

The day started very nicely. The weather was gorgeous - sunny and in the high 7o's, clear and dry with a slightly increasing breeze. We packed up the family, three of our canoes and a breakfast and drove up to a local state park with my father.

When we arrived, we brought the breakfast over to a table overlooking the water and started a wood fire. Soon, the smells of coffee brewing in the French press, hot chocolate, sizzling sausages, home fries and wild blueberry pancakes with real maple syrup were dancing on the breeze along with the aroma of woodsmoke. Leftovers? Nahh...

After we got breakfast cleaned up, we drove over to the launch ramp. The three boats are all hand-made. The lapstrake canoe is a Charlotte, the small cedar strip is a Wee Lassie and the larger one is a Wabnaki. The Divine Miss M had only been on her own in a canoe once. In the fall she paddled the Charlotte in a small area of the same pond. She decided that she wanted to paddle my Wee Lassie, so I was paddling the Charlotte.

http://i38.tinypic.com/dvqd6s.jpg

My father, Weasel #2 (My son) and SWIMBO were in the Wabnaki. It was Weasel's first time in a canoe - ever. He was very excited. SWIMBO was excited too, but only because she's not particularly comfortable in a small boat.

http://i36.tinypic.com/t8821s.jpg

We finally got out on the water and The Divine Miss M was trying to paddle with a Greenland style paddle that I made for her. She wasn't having much luck as it was a bit short for the Wee Lassie's beam. She then tried a larger paddle which she managed to work with. I was trying to stay close, shadowing her in the Charlotte and at the same time having a running tutorial on paddling as she tried to go along in a straight line. She was finding it a bit frustrating as she's very light and the wind was pushing her around a bit. Pretty soon, she felt she was getting the hang of things and was paddling fairly aggressively. I warned her not to get too cocky.

http://i33.tinypic.com/b3vu48.jpg

It was very sudden, really. She appeared to try to take a stroke, but the flat of the blade was not oriented correctly and as she tried to push, she got no resistance from the paddle as the blade sliced through the water - over she went.

The next thing I saw was the canoe's bottom and a floating paddle. The Divine Miss M was nowhere in sight. I had a moment of panic only a parent can have and began closing the short distance at an amazing speed. While I was paddling, I was relieved to hear her screaming very loudly from underneath the canoe - I knew she was OK if she was screaming. Little girls have this really piercing scream when they want to.

As I got to the boat and rolled the gunnel of the submerged canoe up to get her out from under the canoe she darted out and grabbed the gunnel of the Charlotte. She was going to haul herself aboard.

Not so fast, young lady! Let's wait for Grampa and he can help balance us while you get in - before you swamp a second canoe and the camera, wallet, key fob and dry gear!

It took me a minute to convince her to hold onto the canoe and float while waiting for my father come over. Amazingly - she hadn't lost her hat, her glasses or anything else. She finally stopped screaming once she got in the boat again. She was wet and cold, but OK. After being transferred to my father's boat, I went back and collected the loose paddles floating in the water and towed the swamped canoe to shore to empty it.

Amazingly, The Devine Miss M wanted to get right back into the canoe and paddle back to the put-in. I've got to give her kudos for wanting to get right back in the canoe. It was very brave of her, considering the scare she had.

She did learn some valuable lessons today:

-Always, always, always wear your PFD.
-Don't overestimate your skills.
-Don't paddle with your shoes on, you may need to swim, and it's easier without them.
-If you got over, stay with the boat.
-Even when the boat is upside down, there is (usually) air underneath!
-No matter how warm the day may seem, the water can be COLD.
-Always dress for the water temperature, not the air temperature.
-Always have a dry change of clothes. You may not be going swimming, but Murphy may have other ideas.


Amazingly, I think that SWMBO will let her back in a canoe as she seemed pleased with the way that the situation was handled.

The Bigfella
09-02-2008, 08:28 AM
Great story and photos. Thanks for sharing.

I bet that tale gets told at school

J. Dillon
09-02-2008, 08:47 AM
Well ya all survived with a tale to tell. ;)

JD

Canoez
09-02-2008, 09:09 AM
I dropped her off at school this morning and the tale was being spun before I even got out the door...

Any trip that everyone comes home from in one piece is always a good one. ;)

Tar Devil
09-02-2008, 10:19 AM
Great story! (Just not quite enough pictures!! :) )

Canoez
09-02-2008, 10:25 AM
I unfortunately left the camera in the car while cooking breakfast. That feast was a sight to see, actually. Pancakes, sausages and home fries sizzling away on the cast iron griddle. MMm... Smella-vision would be better, but people would have to wipe the drool from the keyboard and Lefty would be claiming that I was dissing the pub's menu for the day.

I also didn't get a good picture of her going over or in the water. Priorities, don't'cha know - and priority #1 was in the water. :rolleyes:

I do have a picture of Miss M as a drowned bilge rat wrapped in a towel after the fact. I'm negotiating with SWMBO about posting that one...

hokiefan
09-02-2008, 01:24 PM
Great story, glad she wants back in.

Does it count if you dumped one or two on purpose while you were being taught? I did that in the Boy Scouts and learned; (1) how to dry your canoe by yourself, (2) how to dry a canoe (that someone else dumped) from your dry canoe. Actually used #2 in real life, it was quite handy to know how to do that. Other than that, I haven't dumped one yet. I will admit, however, that all of my canoeing has been on lakes and sedate rivers.

As soon as we can, I plan to teach the kid how to do both with his canoe.

Cheers,

Bobby

Canoez
09-02-2008, 08:01 PM
Great story, glad she wants back in.

Does it count if you dumped one or two on purpose while you were being taught? I did that in the Boy Scouts and learned; (1) how to dry your canoe by yourself, (2) how to dry a canoe (that someone else dumped) from your dry canoe. Actually used #2 in real life, it was quite handy to know how to do that. Other than that, I haven't dumped one yet. I will admit, however, that all of my canoeing has been on lakes and sedate rivers.

As soon as we can, I plan to teach the kid how to do both with his canoe.

Cheers,

Bobby

Geez, I never thought about if "it counts" or not if you roll the boat by yourself. Self-rescue is a great skill. I learned in the Scouts as well.

I've emptied most of the water out of a canoe and a sea kayak that I deliberately swamped, got back in and bailed/pumped/sponged out the rest. I've only once dumped a boat when it wasn't on purpose - I was trying to catch a Nerf football in a Wee Lassie. Fortunately there wasn't anything else in the canoe but me and a paddle.

We were once camping on one of the islands at Lake George in New York on a Scout camping trip. My father and our scoutmaster at the time took a canoe out for a paddle. They went out fully dressed, but with life jackets. While they were out, the wind whipped up in a fierce way. The lake was putting up some big rollers - about 3-4' peak to trough. I remember the water came quite far up the rock that made up most of the island.

At any rate, they returned and came around from the lee side of the island into the teeth of these waves. They were doing just fine until they decided to try to make a turn to get back to the dock. (BTW - the surface of the dock was awash at the time from the waves!) As they got broadside to the waves in this 17' long canoe, over they went. One of my friends and I who were in bathing suits grabbed another canoe and went out to do the rescue. We pulled the swamped canoe over the gunnels to drain the water, flipped it and put it back in right side up. We then used paddles to stabilize the two boats and let them climb back in.

After the fact, my father and the scoutmaster were known as "The Overboard Brothers".