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Cottage Life

Memorial fund set up for paddler who drowned in Beaver Creek, north of Marmora, Ont.

On April 15, Jeff Pappin of Ottawa, Ont. drowned while kayaking along Beaver Creek, north of Marmora. The river is a popular spot for whitewater kayaking in the spring when the water’s high and full of paddlers tackling technical segments, such as Fiddlar’s Rapid and Double Drop.

Pappin was a proficient paddler, first getting into the sport at the age of 16. He called the Ottawa River home. During university, he spent summers leading paddling tours. And later, he shared his passion for paddling with his family, introducing his daughter, Merrill, to the sport when she was 19. The two took summer trips together paddling along the Madawaska, Petawawa, Le Petite-Nation, the Rouge, and Ottawa Rivers.

“He never needed to prove himself on the river and never took risks he couldn’t manage because he knew he had too much to live for,” his family wrote in a statement.

One of Pappin’s most revered traits was his ability to bring others together to enjoy the outdoors. Besides paddling, Pappin was also a board member of Kanata Nordic, a cross-country ski club based in Ottawa. As part of his role, Pappin tackled mundane tasks, such as grooming trails, installing culverts, and arranging porta-potties. On its Facebook page, Kanata Nordic wrote that Pappin took on these jobs without the expectation of praise but just to make things a little better and a little easier for those around him.

“Jeff was an enthusiastic guy who volunteered so much of his time and energy to his passions, and Kanata Nordic was just lucky enough to be counted as one of his projects,” the club said.

To honour Pappin’s legacy, his family has created the Jeff Pappin Memorial Fund through Whitewater Ontario, a volunteer-run organization that promotes the development of whitewater resources and the paddling community within Ontario.

Under the guidance of the Pappin family, the funds will be used to get young paddlers out on the river and to train them in boat safety.

Those wishing to donate to the memorial fund can send an e-transfer to info@whitewaterontario.ca or mail a cheque to:

Whitewater Ontario

411 Carnegie Beach Rd.

Port Perry, ON

L9L 1B6

When sending the donation, make sure to note that it is intended for the Jeff Pappin Memorial Fund.

Categories
Cottage Life

The secret every paddler should know: the science of gunwale bobbing

Perhaps you too were routinely chastised by a camp counsellor for standing up in a canoe. But a group of scientists wants you to forget all that and take a stand on gunwale bobbing.

Gunwale bobbing (pronounced “gunnel”—“one of the delights is its funny spelling,” says Stephen Morris, a physics professor at the University of Toronto) is an odd pursuit with little purpose beyond novelty, the glee of thumbing your nose at dictatorial camp counsellors, and the chance to test a theory of quantum physics.

At least that was partly the motivation of Jerome Neufeld, a professor of earth and planetary fluid dynamics at the University of Cambridge and a cottager on Muldrew Lake. Neufeld remembered gunwale bobbing from his childhood—the goal then was to see who ended up in the lake first—and decided to pass down the pursuit to his kids.

Is the canoe the most beloved icon of the cottage?

Gunwale bobbing involves standing up in a canoe and creating waves by bouncing up and down, then riding those waves to move the canoe forward. Or, more academically, it’s “a phenomenon in which a person jumping on the gunwales of a canoe achieves horizontal propulsion by forcing it with vertical oscillations,” as described in the American Physics Society’s journal Physical Review Fluids.

Neufeld routinely finds himself “explaining fluid phenomena in the natural world,” he says. Gunwale bobbing turned into the perfect opportunity to demonstrate how a particle can be both a wave and a particle, a vexing ancient problem in quantum mechanics.

Physicists came up with a demonstration a few years ago, using liquid. The demo showed that if you shake a layer of fluid, and you put a little droplet of fluid on its surface, instead of just falling into the fluid, the droplet bounces up and down. “And that little bouncy drop can start to ‘walk’, to move across the fluid,” says Morris.

It was Jerome, Morris says, who noticed that the reason that the droplet moves is simply that it makes waves and then “surfs” on those waves. Neufeld summarizes it this way: “Long story short, the droplet and its wave then behave like a quantum particle/wave, and so can mimic many nanometre scale phenomena.”

How to calculate distance over water using physics

Fast forward to Neufeld holidaying and gunwale bobbing at his Muskoka-area cottage. The canoe, he realized, was doing the same thing as that surfing droplet. The physicists, great fans of wordplay, call it the “quantum canoe.”

When Neufeld, Morris, and their research colleagues got together to produce their paper on the bouncing droplet, the Powers That Be at the journal in which it was published wouldn’t greenlight mention of the quantum canoe. But it does use the same math, Morris says.

Though I, a Canadian, had never heard of it, Morris insists that “gunwale bobbing is a Canadian thing.” And it’s a Canadian thing that fellow Canadian, Neufeld, thought “needed an explanation.”

The applications of this research varies from better understanding the energy created by boat wake (and thus shoreline issues) or even ways that Olympic canoeists can increase their speed.

But, says Neufeld, “Being able to explain the physics of the phenomena is, honestly, mostly fun and I’m delighted there are fun new ways the kids can viscerally explore waves when they’re playing in the water at the cottage.”

Watch Jerome Neufeld’s one-minute video on gunwale bobbing.

Categories
Cottage Life

7 editor picks for your next outdoor adventure

Get ready to hit the water (or the hiking trail, or the singletrack) with these seven items perfect for summer.

Mustang Survival Callan Waterproof Top

The packable, lightweight, and breathable material means you can stay dry in rainy boating weather without also sweating your face off. An inner pocket keeps small items safe; the wrist seals keep water from trickling uncomfortably down your inner arm—grossest feeling ever.

Black Diamond Cosmo 300 Headlamp

This headlamp’s 300 lumens will light the way on a pre-sunrise or post-sundown hike or mountain bike ride; the waterproofing means it’s submersible in one metre of lake water for up to 30 minutes.

Kokatat MisFit Tour

This PFD gets CL paddling writer Conor Mihell’s stamp of approval. “This is my favourite PFD. It’s marketed as a women’s model, but it seems to fit everyone well,” he says.

World Famous Cast Iron Camping Double Sandwich Toaster

“Sandwich toaster” is actually a misnomer since, because of its 20-by-10 cm cooking surface, this gadget can cook sausage, steak, or burgers
over the campfire. Pfft, what’s a barbecue?

Hunter Bloom Algae Foam Sandals

Huh? Footwear made from algae? Yup. Hunter has introduced a new material “harvested from algae” that’s flexible and waterproof. We can’t make this stuff up.

Yeti Roadie 24 Hard Cooler

Yeti’s smallest hard cooler, at less than 13 lbs when empty, is light enough to haul around but large enough to fit 18 cans of beer. Oh, and tall enough to carry most standard bottles of wine upright. You had us at beer, Yeti. And at wine.

LandShark Pet Vest

Keep poochie safer—but still comfy—around water.Thanks to a wide range of sizes and multiple adjustment points, this vest fits almost any dog.

Categories
Cottage Life

Kayak buying 101

I cringed when my mother told me she’d just bought a kayak from a big box store. I’ve worked as a sea kayak guide and instructor on the Great Lakes for more than 20 years; I take pride in the fact that my sleek and seaworthy fibreglass touring kayak is worth more than my car. People like me use terms like “bathtubs” and “kayak-shaped floating objects” to refer to boats like the nine-foot, $300 plastic kayak my mom asked me to transport to her cottage on Lake Huron’s North Channel. I averted my eyes and cartopped it as fast as I could. 

My attitude softened when I noticed how often my mom ended our phone calls with, “Okay, I gotta go paddling now.” I understood the joy she’d discovered in gliding silently through narrow channels lined with polished granite and towering pines. As my mom came to love kayaking, she realized the limitations of her boat. She complained about its slowness and inability to track in a straight line. However, with COVID-19 driving a surge in demand and causing supply shortages for everything from bicycles to kayaks and cross-country skis, she couldn’t have chosen a worse time to shop for something better. Fortunately, I knew a friend selling a used 14-footer. It had all the features of my touring kayak, but in a smaller, easier-to-handle package—perfect for my mom’s morning outings. Soon, she was spending more time on the water than ever before in a sleeker, safer, and more comfortable kayak.

Tim Dyer smiles at my mom’s paddling discovery. Dyer, the long-time owner of White Squall, a paddling centre and kayak retailer in Parry Sound, Ont., sees the inexpensive kayaks sold in big box stores as gateway vessels. “Our days of looking down on Canadian Tire kayaks are long gone,” he says. “It’s about getting folks to go paddling, so who the hell cares what they are using? We cheer them on for choosing a great way to recreate.”

However, both Dyer and Kelly McDowell, the president of the Complete Paddler in Toronto, insist that cheap kayaks lack safety features, such as floatation chambers, that are important if you want to paddle in open water. “Cottagers think, We’re not going long distances, we don’t need an expensive kayak,” says McDowell, who has been selling kayaks since 2002. “We ask them, ‘How far away from shore will you paddle? If you flip, can you swim that distance dragging your flooded, partially sunk kayak back to shore?’ ” If these questions raise any doubt in the buyer, McDowell advises them, “You need a proper kayak.”

Sit-Inside Kayaks

These kayaks are direct descendants of the Indigenous hunting vessels of the High Arctic, featuring decks to shelter the paddler from waves, wind, rain, and sun. A ridge on the cockpit rim, called the coaming, allows a paddler to attach a sprayskirt for additional protection from the elements.

Many types of sit-inside kayaks are available in several general categories. The most popular recreational kayak that McDowell sells has a key safety feature that’s most often absent in kayaks sold at department stores. The Wilderness Systems Pungo 125, for example, has a foam wall (known as a bulkhead) separating the cockpit from a watertight rear compartment. Sit-inside kayaks without bulkheads have no floatation should they capsize; swamped with water, they’ll barely float and submerge if the paddler attempts to re-enter. A bulkhead (touring kayaks have watertight compartments fore and aft of the cockpit) keeps the kayak afloat when the cockpit is filled with water. But, “I still wouldn’t paddle the Pungo 125 too far from shore,” McDowell says.  

Length is a factor in how well a kayak will track through the water, and width is a good determinant of stability. The 12.6-foot Pungo glides better than shorter kayaks, and it maintains a broad 29-inch width through most of its midsection for good stability. McDowell says the boat’s greatest selling point is its seat: a foam-padded, multi-adjustable version with a comfortable backrest that’s also found in Wilderness Systems’ kayaks. The Pungo 125 is “great for cruising the shoreline, fishing, or floating out on the lake with a coffee in the morning,” McDowell says. “It’s such an easy boat to paddle.”

Dyer’s most popular touring kayaks (a.k.a. sea kayaks) are in the 14- to 15-foot range. These models are longer and narrower than recreational kayaks—and therefore faster and somewhat less stable—reflecting the interests of more adventurous paddlers wishing to explore larger bodies of water, such as the Great Lakes. The Delta 15.5 is popular for Georgian Bay weekend camping trips. (The shorter Delta 14 has less volume and is easier to control if you’re primarily interested in day trips.) British Columbia-built Delta kayaks are popular for their thermoform plastic construction, a glossy laminate that’s lighter than both rotomolded polyethylene kayaks (such as the Pungo 125) and fibreglass, with a price point right in between. (The Delta 15.5 weighs 49 pounds.) This sleek material won’t withstand being dragged along the ground or dropped on hard surfaces as well as other plastics, says Dyer, “but we’ve been renting them for years and never had a major issue.”

The persuasions of Bob Putnam, the co-owner of Deep Cove Canoe & Kayak in North Vancouver, often steer him to make a different kayak recommendation or new paddlers. Putnam—who calls himself a “fitness freak”—likes to remind his customers that recreational boats are slow and inefficient compared to sleeker touring and fitness kayaks. He inquires about their other interests in outdoor sports. If they like road cycling and cross-country skiing, Putnam says, “they’re often best in a high-performance kayak.”

For Putnam, the 14.5-foot Epic 14X strikes a nice blend of speed, comfort, and safety. Most high-performance kayaks are 17 feet long or more; this model is sportier and far less cumbersome to maneuver for novices. Made of a high-tech mosaic of fibreglass, Kevlar, and carbon, it’s responsive yet reasonably stable, Putnam says. A foot-operated rudder adds directional control. “Inside the cockpit there’s a fixed footboard with hinged rudder-control pedals on top,” he says. “The paddler can engage their legs while paddling, allowing them to use bigger muscle groups to generate power.”

 

Sit-On-Top Kayaks

These kayaks don’t have cockpits, so they’re easier to clamber on and off and won’t flood with water if they capsize. Recreational sit-on-tops look like surfboards. The Ocean Kayak Malibu 11.5 is super stable, easy to paddle (but relatively slow), and makes a great inexpensive, durable, beginner- and kid-friendly boat for use on cottage lakes when the water’s warm in the summer months. Putnam’s favourite sit-on-tops, meanwhile, are surf skis. These fast, torpedo-shaped kayaks are popular for racing in coastal areas. He recommends the rotomoulded plastic Epic V5, which is comparable to the sit-inside Epic 14X, as a solid beginner model. 

 

Five Things to Remember Before You Buy

 Aim for “just enough” 

Consider how you’ll use the kayak and where you’re most likely to go paddling. “Some folks imagine themselves in a sleek, expedition hull doing longer trips,” says Tim Dyer. “But the truth is they’re only going to be day paddling. Purchasing a longer, bigger boat to accommodate the camping dream means you end up with a boat that’s way more than you need.”

 Take a test paddle if you can 

At White Squall, Dyer insists customers go for a test paddle. “Engage with the boat in all the little ways,” says Dyer. “Carry it to the water, try getting in and out, and learn the adjustments. It’s all a learning experience while you discover the attributes of a boat.” Of course, it’s not always possible to go for a test paddle. No matter where you’re shopping, take a moment to sit in the kayak to see how it feels: brace your legs in the cockpit; tweak the seat and footrests; and then get hands-on with some of the other features, like hatches and rudder. “You’ll know pretty quickly if it’s comfortable,” says Kelly McDowell. 

Lighter is better (but more expensive) 

Like most sporting equipment, a lightweight kayak (usually constructed from composite materials) will perform better than a heavy one. “The lighter the boat, the longer, faster, and further you can go,” says Dyer. “Your muscles will thank you, and the enjoyment dividend goes up.”

Floatation is key 

Most kayak-related near-drownings and drownings have two common elements: the paddler wasn’t wearing a PFD, and the kayak lacked proper floatation. Your kayak is a serious liability if you capsize offshore and it starts to sink. You can purchase air bags to stuff into cheap recreational kayaks. Better yet, McDowell says, is to choose a kayak with a bulkhead that creates a watertight chamber within the hull. Touring kayaks with bulkheads fore and aft of the cockpit allow trained paddlers to perform rescues with such a kayak on open water, making it a far safer choice if you want to paddle offshore.

It pays to take some lessons 

The first thing you should do after buying a kayak, says Bob Putnam, is to sign up for a paddling course. Paddle Canada offers one- and two-day introductory kayaking courses in all parts of the country. You’ll learn proper posture, efficient paddling strokes, and rescue techniques. 

Categories
Cottage Life

Keep paddling! 3 easy ways to care for your canoe

Sometimes, it’s the little things we do that best show our affection. In celebration of Canada’s most beloved paddling vessel, here are three easy ways to care for your canoe that will boost its longevity.

illustration of a hand painting resin on the bottom of a canoe
Illustration by Jacques Perrault

1. Install skid plates

A canoe’s stems, the curved ends, see more rough treatment than any other part of the hull, especially if your paddling style involves scraping over rocky river beds or running ashore. When the gelcoat wears thin at the bow and stern, or if you’re planning some abrasive whitewater paddling, it’s time to install skid plates—strips of Kevlar felt, applied with a two-part resin to reinforce and protect these vulnerable areas. It’s a job that you can do yourself with kits available from your canoe’s manufacturer. The plates prolong the life of the canoe while minimally impacting weight and performance.

man applying protectant to the bottom of a canoe, illustration
Illustration by Jacques Perrault

2. Apply a protectant

As with human skin, UV damage will age a canoe’s gelcoat. Canoe manufacturers suggest applying a protectant to the exterior of your hull to reduce fading and cracking at least three times a season. Nova Craft Canoe, a canoe manufacturer in Ontario, recommends 303 Aerospace Protectant, a water-based formula that works like a spray-on sunscreen, protecting surfaces from UV rays. It can also be used to protect paddling gear, including life jackets, helmets, and neoprene wetsuits.

man oiling the gunwales of a canoe, illustration
Illustration by Jacques Perrault

3. Oil the gunwales

Glistening brightwork makes the heart sing, but that gloss also protects exposed wood. Left untreated, wood gunwales—which are usually ash—weather to a rough, grey surface that eventually rots. Don’t use polyurethane here; gunwales need to flex, which will cause varnish to crack. Instead, use boiled linseed oil or hemp seed oil—Canadian-grown because you’re feeling patriotic. Start by sanding off any grey. Apply two or three coats of oil using a lint-free rag, allowing the finish to dry overnight between coats. Freshen three or four times a year by running an oiled rag over the rails.