Kayaking In Dc
 In most situations, speed is your enemy. Too much 
  speed and you don’t have enough time to think. The slower you can go, 
  the more time you have to plan and anticipate events, and the more time 
  you have to react if something goes wrong. On a typical river, most of 
  the time I am back paddling, bracing, or drifting. Speed is usually easy 
  to acquire, from the current, and with speed comes it’s dangerous cousin 
  momentum. At times paddling a boat in a current can be like driving a 
  car on an ice rink – once you get going in a certain direction it can be 
  difficult to change direction, you can spin the car (or boat), but you 
  continue onward. Each genuine change in direction and change in momentum 
  requires you paddle hard simply to cancel the previous momentum, and to 
  build new momentum. For this reason I try to keep my speed down as I go 
  down the rapids.





No comments:
Post a Comment