World Raft Championships: The Build Up

We have just completed our final day of training before the competition starts. We spent the day running the main gorge section of the Pacuare that the endurance will be held on, perfecting our lines and trying alternatives. Around 30 teams from all over the world were on the river, and the atmosphere was fantastic. We also discovered that spending some time speaking to the safety kayakers )a team of at least 20 strong, positioned at key points along the gorge) was most definately worth it to find out which teams were taking the fastest lines, where the most flips and swims were happening, and getting some local knowledge of how the lines would change with different water levels. I think we spent around 7 hours on the river today!

Tomorrow is the opening cermony for the competition and a rest day. The afternoon will be spent with our fantastic osteopath who arrived on site today and has scheduled in a couple of hours of treament or us all just in time to balance us all our before the competition starts.

Rosie Cripps (6th October)

The Exe Big Paddle 2011 – The Sunny Side

Shaking off sleep from Saturday’s ever-successful South West canoe show, the team were on site early on Sunday to set up the Exe Big paddle.

It didn’t take long for the Piazza to take on the appearance of a festival site, with tents, bunting and boats all creating a mass of colour ready for paddlers to arrive….. Which they did, right on the dot at 9am.

First up were the tours, fully booked out months in advance, the groups were keen to get out and learn about the nature and history of the Exe and adjacent shipping canal. We were fantastically lucky to have staff from the RSPB, Devon Wildlife Trust and an ex head of the Archaeology society as our guides so those lucky enough to secure a place came back a few hours later full of enthusiasm for what they’d learnt and seen on the five mile loop.

Meanwhile on the Piazza, the sunshine brought a great mix of participants, including passers-by keen to have a go at kayaking and canoeing for the first time. Our seasoned team from Bristol based canoe lifesaving club, Globe 360, were constantly busy and had to add boats to the pool of demos available as more and more people got out on the water.

Helping entice folk into giving it a go were the popular Canoe England ergo machines. Racing over a 100m sprint, young and old gave it their all through the day trying to better a time set by development racer Michael Sims and to get a top ranking on the Top Gear style leader board. Predictably no-one beat Michael’s time, but that’s what you’d hope with a national level athlete and it didn’t stop lucky winners getting their prizes!

The CKUK Magazine Throwbag Challenge also drew a crowd each time someone stepped up to throw the rope bag into a boat, gradually getting further away each time they threw. The winners managed an impressive 20-metre throw with pinpoint accuracy to win a year’s magazine subscription, although technique advice from the sidelines seemed as abundant as those trying!

As the afternoon came around so did preparations for the finale of the day: The cardboard canoe race. Starting quietly with boat building by Palm and AS Watersports’ staff, the ‘workshop’ area soon became a teaming mass of people cutting, folding and taping card into weird a wacky shapes.

As building finished, a parade of boats (if you can call some of them that) let head judge Ben Hedden from Haven Banks Activity centre scrutinize designs, before giving the entrants the go ahead to proceed. By now the banks were lined with spectators and, amidst the expected carnage, boats set off to try and get around a marker buoy.

Success was not widespread with some who’d put creativity in front of water tightness literally falling at the first splash. However the crowd began to roar as the first ‘floaters’ made it around the buoy and back on the home straight. At best many made one lap, including an ingenious catamaran design from the local deaf school, but as cheers continued a junior and senior race winner soon became obvious, as they were the only ones still afloat. Congratulations to Sea Hare and Back-to-Front, winners of the first ever Exe Cardboard Canoe Race!

Tea and medals swiftly followed and the tiring task of packing it all away began.

It was a great event, fulfilling the aims of the Big Paddle by showcasing the sport to new participants and widening the scope for those who already take part, all in aid of charitable causes, which for the Exe event were Devon Hospice care and the Canoe Foundation.

Events such as this are only possible with the dedication and help from volunteers. So to AS Watersports, Canoe England, Haven Banks, Exeter Canoe Club, Globe 360, CKUK the Palm team, and all of you who attended – a Big Paddle thanks.

Look out for the full report in the December issue of Canoe Kayak UK Magazine. Until then, we hope you enjoy these shots. Massive thanks to Daniel Bewsey for capturing the event for us. For the whole gallery see Dan’s Big Paddle Flickr Album.

More information about the Big Paddle events: www.thebigpaddle.com

Palm Sponsor Senior Women’s GB Rafting Team

We’ve got 7 new exciting additions to the Palm fold this autumn in the form of the Senior Women’s GB Rafting Team and they’ve just arrived in Costa Rica for the World Rafting Championships. With nearly 80 years experience between them they’re strong contenders for the gold medal. Stay tuned here for updates during the competition.

For now though, here’s long time Palm paddler Rosie Cripps with a run down of the team and the competition.

We have arrived in Costa Rica – Pura Vida!

As a team of 7 from Wales, England and Scotland together we make up the GB ladies whitewater rafting team. Having been rafting or kayaking for most of our lives we are passionate about rivers and paddlesports, and have travelled to Costa Rica to compete in the World Rafting Championships. We’re proud to be sponsored by Palm, who have been incredible in kitting us out at short notice in matching kit just before we flew out – most importantly a set of super comfortable Helix PFDs, grippy neoprene Cartwheel Pants (don’t want to slip out of the raft!) and throwlines which are most definitely a must on the Pacuare river where the competition will be held.

We’ve already been here a week and have spent 5 days on the river, training and acclimatising to the intense heat and humidity before the competition begins. Over 30 countries will compete over three days and 3 disciplines for the title of World Champions.

Getting to the river is an endurance test in itself – and very exciting! Every day we leave camp around 7.30am for the first stage; a half hour bus ride through where we are deposited high above the Pacuare, just about able to glimpse its glistening brown form snaking though the dense jungle clad gorge below. An hour’s trek down to the river follows with discarded spider skins and bright green and red poison frogs underfoot. Yesterday there was an enormous tarantula on the track; it must have been special as even the local Tico’s stopped to look at this one.

Once at the river we’re surrounded by an intricate system of cables, pulleys and zip lines that criss-cross the river to transport the rafts upstream to the top of the sprint and slalom course. The rafts are loaded up onto the zip lines and fly across the river. We then clip it onto a series of other cables and hoist it a further around a km upriver through the jungle to the top of the sprint and slalom course. I think the first day it took us around 3.5 hours to get from the camp to on the water.

Once on the water the river is awesome! Huge boulder gardens in a tropical jungle set the scene with lanky vines and spider webs hanging overhead. Tight lines and numerous horizon lines maintain a super focussed and powerful boat. Never thought we would get so much boofing practise in a 16 foot raft. Ah well, Pura Vida as they say! The gorge section is big 4+ water, which will easily become class 5 with a bit more rain. And in Costa Rica it appears to rain like few other places on earth!

Return to the bull ring/camp where we’re staying after a full day on the river takes around 40minutes. Most of the teams taking part in the competition are staying at the camp, the Tico’s are super friendly and amazing hosts. Last night we were all treated to a bull riding show/rodeo. The skill and bravery of the cowboys, whilst riding incredibly well muscled bulls with enormous horns, along with their horsemanship was incredible to watch. Mike the owner of the bull ring was able to, without fail, lasso a full sized bull right around the horns whilst galloping at top speed past it on his Appoloosa stallion. Impressive indeed!

Finishing a day usually ends with a wildlife show starring the cleaner of the ladies loos at the camp – the top three items extracted from the toilets so far have been:
1. Enormous puffed up toad/frog as big as two fists that spits a milky substance into your eyes which may blind you
2. Huge beetle that looked very like a stag beetle but was around the size of a can of baked beans
3. Giant grasshopper/stick insect, masquerading very well as a leaf.

We’ll be posting more updates from training and the competition as much as we can, although rather like getting to the river, getting to the internet is more complicated than it first appears!

Hasta Luego! Rosie.

 

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