Monday, December 31, 2012

Open Canoes on the Stoney River, Minnesota

The Stoney River in the far North of Minnesota.  Class III and IV wilderness whitewater on the edge of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.





Located in the "Far North" of Minnesota between Babbit and Ely, the Stoney River flows north into Birch Lake.  The five mile run combines whitewater paddling with the scenery of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.  







For more information, visit http://www.americanwhitewater.org/content/River/detail/id/2866/





Friday, December 28, 2012

Open Pool for Open Canoeist

Open Pool for Open Boaters
A great way to get started with the sport of whitewater canoeing is to attend a pool session with a local paddling club.
Pools are a warm, clean, and friendly place for anyone looking to experience an open whitewater canoe.  The local paddling club I belong to, Rapids Riders, rents pool time at the Brooklyn Center Community Center.(Sundays-5-7, December through April)
Here's a link to the details
RapidsRidersEvents

At pool sessions you can work on the stokes, the braces, and rolling a whitewater canoe.  The pool is a great place to meet paddlers that can give you tips on techniques and help you access the sport of whitewater canoeing.
I feel fortunate to have found a very welcoming group of paddlers,  my skills have greatly improved because of the advice I have received during open pool sessions.  

The Northern Open Canoe Access Project aims to connect flat-water paddlers with
the training,
the inspiration,
and the equipment to get you paddling whitewater rivers.

Let me know if you are interested in testing an open canoe,
HardWaterSports@gmail.com


Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Adventure of Nothing


Life is either a great adventure or nothing. 
Helen Keller



Adventure or Nothing.

The Northern Open Canoe Access Project,
if you need some adventure.





Monday, December 24, 2012

The Whitewater Canoe


The Whitewater Open Canoe
Standard whitewater river canoe length 8’- 14’


Hull material :
  • Royalex (Probe, Viper, Outrage, Ocoee)  
  • Royalite, (Spark )
  • Polyethilene (Spanish Fly, L’Edge)

A standard feature of a whitewater canoe is a rockered (non-flat) bottom, allowing the boat to make quick turns.
Outfitted with a saddle, foot pegs, and knee straps - all designed to hold the paddler into the boat.


Whitewater canoes are float bag compatible, rigged to easily install float bags.

Whitewater open canoes are designed either for solo paddling or tandem paddling. The Mohawk Probe 14' can be installed with a unique saddle that can be paddled in one direction as a solo or turn around and paddle it as a tandem.

If you are new to the sport of whitewater canoeing, you will find that your skills progress at a faster rate if you start in a longer boat (11' -13')
Once you are proficient with your stokes and braces then you can move to a shorter canoe.




 

If you are a Northern canoeist looking to make the move to whitewater ...
please contact me at HardWaterSports@gamil.com
The Northern Open Canoe Access Project (NOCAP) aims to connect paddlers with the Training, the Inspiration, and the Equipment.
If you need access to the Equipment - contact HardWaterSports@gamil.com  
So, What are you waiting for??




Sunday, December 23, 2012

Open Canoe Paddling the Northern Rivers


The Joy Of Paddling
“Running rapids for the fun of it…in Minnesota and Wisconsin.”
This video was filmed and edited by a friend that helped to get me into the sport of whitewater open canoeing.
Dave Jurgenson has been canoeing and filming canoeing for over twenty years.  I met Dave at the first Kettle River Paddle Festival in 2006, and I’ve paddled many rivers with him since.  
Dave has a great collection of Northern Open Canoe videos, http://www.youtube.com/user/MnktoDave
Dave has been a great inspiration to me and to many in the paddling community. 




Friday, December 21, 2012

Essential Gear for Whitewater Canoeing


Essential Gear for WW Canoeing
To paddle whitewater rivers in an open canoe you really only need 5 pieces of equipment.
1. Canoe
2. Paddle
3. PFD (personal floatation device)
4. Helmet
5. Float Bags
That’s it.  Once you’ve acquired these 5 essential pieces of equipment you’re ready to get on the river.  In the following weeks I will be adding details and personal opinions on each piece of the essential whitewater canoeing  gear list, plus I will be writing about the other gear used by river paddlers (i.e. cold water clothing, throw bags, dry storage…)
I will also be adding links to where you can get deals on new and used paddling equipment.  
Of course, the gear is the easy part.  Anybody can go out and purchase equipment, it’s the skills and the desire that that can’t be bought.  The desire comes from within, the skills come from training and education.  Keep checking back, I’ll be writing about your options for gaining the skills to start river paddling.  I will also do my best to inspire and create the desire to move you from the flat to the white.
Are you open to the challenge of open canoe whitewater paddling?


The Northern Open Canoe Access Project provides ...
the Training
the Inspiration
and the Equipment

to get you paddling a canoe on whitewater.




Thursday, December 20, 2012

Whitewater Canoeing - How to get Started

The Northern Open Canoe Access Project hopes to connect canoeist with ...
the Training,
the Inspiration,
and the Equipment to get you on whitewater.

The project is designed for people that have paddling skills, for people that are comfortable in a canoe, and for paddlers that have the desire to get on moving water.

So...
if you are skilled in flat water canoe paddling
and
if you can comfortably paddle a canoe
and
if you have the desire to start paddling an open canoe on whitewater rivers,

then contact me, Tony Vavricka, at hardwatersports@gmail.com  

The Goal of the Northern Open Canoe Access Project is simple; 
By providing the training, the inspiration, and equipment...
Convert 100 or more Northern, flat water canoeist into whitewater river paddlers by the end of the 2013 paddling season.

Get started now - be a part of the project

Contact hardwatersports@gmail.com 


Whitewater Canoeist 






Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Open Canoeist Surfing Hell's Gate on the Kettle River


Open Canoeist, Dave Jurgenson surfing Hell’s Gate on the Kettle River.  One of Minnesota’s most accessible whitewater rivers, the whitewater section of the Kettle River is located in Banning State Park.  
The two and a half mile run includes four class III rapids and some of the best river surfing in the midwest.  The river is designated “scenic and wild” - Access the whitewater section in Banning State Park, three miles later, take out at Robinson Park in Sandstone, Minnesota.

The Northern Open Canoe Access Project 
connects paddlers to the Training, the Access, and the Equipment.




Table Rock Falls on the Vermillion River, Northern Minnesota, 675 cfs
Open Canoe descent of a Northern Minnesota classic waterfall on a beautiful and wonderfully clean, North flowing river.
      Inspiration
            This could be you…
All you need are; the skills, the equipment, and the desire.  The Northern Open Canoe Access Project is here to connect you to the training and the gear.
                       Do you have the desire???

Tuesday, December 18, 2012


Open Canoe on the St Louis River - Swinging Bridge - Jay Cooke State Park, Minnesota
My first run down the lower St Louis River in 2010.  









The Lower St Louis River, Swinging Bridge Rapids.  
Northern Canoe Country’s ultimate whitewater river.  One drop after another- table saw, Highway 210 drop, the Sisters, OCTOPUS, the boneyards, swinging bridge into the hanging pool, and Snake Bite (if you dare).
Before getting on the Lower St Louis the skills a canoeist will need are:
  • a solid roll (or be able to self rescue)
  • confidence in your ability to catch small eddies
  • proficient in fast water river ferries
Get the skills, then get a good crew of boaters that know the run.  The St Louis is dam released, I love the river at the normal 350 cfs-fishflow, and it is even more fun (or scary depends how you look at it) at a 650 cfs release.
The Training, the Inspiration, the Equipment
The Northern Open Canoe Access Project 

Monday, December 10, 2012


2012 Paddling Season


Ripping it up in 2012- I will say, for an open canoeist with moderate skills, I had quite a wonderful season of paddling.  Plenty of Northern Adventure paddling with a banner year of personal first descents.  
  • Baptism River
  • French River
  • Knife River
  • Stony River
  • Jump River
  • Northern Vermillion

My personal list of first descents (rivers that were new to me) starts with the Baptism, one of Minnesota’s Great Northern Rivers. I made a low water run of the Eckbeck to Iligen Falls.  Then carried up from the parking lot in Tettegouche State Park to run “Whole in the Wall” rapids and the final class III stretch into Lake Superior.

The first descents list continues with the French, and Fish Ladder on the Knife - two more Minnesota, North Shore rivers.

I was lucky to get in three runs on the Stoney River. A remote, wilderness river, in the far north of Minnesota, roughly half way between Ely and Babbit. 

When the Jump River is up, it’s time to JUMP. A short but very intense run of class III/IV whitewater in central Wisconsin. For my first day on the Jump River I hooked up with a few other open canoeist for 3 trips down the half mile run.

I also canoed on the Northern Vermillion River for the first time  A delightful, end of July day on the last section section of the river before it ends in Crane Lake, a stretch that includes the  “Shoot,” and the “Gorge.”  Quick break for lunch and then finished up with “Table Rock Falls.”

Throw in a few runs on the upper and Lower St. Louis, the ice off runs on the lower Verm, and to many to count days on the Kettle.  Add to that 3 trips to the Wausau Whitewater Park, and that equals a lot of days on the water.
   
Northern States of Minnesota, Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula are blessed with great whitewater and a wonderful paddling community.  Thanks to all the river guides and shuttle friends that helped to make this year so wonderful.


Whitewater Open Canoeist on the Stony River, Northern Minnesota


Open Canoeing - Get Started
How do I get started paddling whitewater rivers in an open canoe?
I asked myself this same question for over ten years. I knew I wanted to be on the whitewater, and I knew I wanted to be paddling a canoe.
The Northern Open Canoe Access Project is here to help you get started, we’ll provide you with the access to the training, we will inspire you to get on the whitewater, and we’ll help you get access to the equipment.
Let’s start by connecting you to the Midwest paddling community, here’s some links to GET YOU STARTED:
http://www.rapidsriders.net         MInneapolis/St Paul paddling club
Links to national paddling organizations



Northern Open Canoe Access Project
Northern Open Canoe Access Project, (NOCAP) helping to convert flat water paddlers into whitewater canoeist.
Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the UP have amazing whitewater rivers of all grades, and there are very few paddlers who are enjoying them.  
Nearly 100,000 paddlers visit the Boundary Water Canoe Area (BWCA) every year. A small percentage of these canoeist crave to make the transition to moving water, these few want to learn the skills to have the ability to safely paddle whitewater.
The Northern Open Canoe Access Project aims to connect experienced flat water canoe paddlers with the equipment and the training to safely paddle on moving water.