Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Gear Forum :: Kneeling - Wenonah Advantage
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Blatz |
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BeaV |
quote Blatz: "Just curious why would you kneel in an Advantage? I have many years experience in an Advantage. It would make a terrible white water canoe and I never felt the need to get lower even in choppy water. " Two reasons that I see why I would like the option to kneel would be to gain more stability in big waves (and as Charlie Wilson above mentioned, maybe to change how the boat is acting) and change positions during a long day in the boat to ease pressure off my duff and change up paddling muscles alittle. For me, big waves mean those which will capsize me and long days are 12 or more hours. I'll be paddling a couple big lakes, Mille Lacs and Leech Lake, this long weekend. Hoping for some big waves so I can find the unstability point of me in the Advantage. |
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Blatz |
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BeaV |
Paddled broadside in some bigger waves on Leech Lake and felt uncomfortable if wave crests were steep or breaking. Plus this is the wettest boat I've paddled under these kind of conditions. |
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Banksiana |
I fret about wind and reach when I paddle the Advantage. The colder the water the more I fret. I prefer heading into the waves to running with them (when running into them you generally start with the waves big, running with them it's hard to tell how big they will get as you extend the reach) and prefer running with them to broadside. If you're thinking to tripping in "all weather" conditions consider having Dan Cooke sew a cover for you- it'd cut that wind push down as well. |
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butthead |
quote BeaV: "quote butthead: I tend to rely more on feel of how the canoe is handling at the time and adjusting as needed. Hope that explanation is a bit clearer than mud." Yes I think it is quite different from most. Paddled tandems and many solo canoes by myself and thinking about it now, come to the idea you mention. Most canoes respond better with the bow planted sweeping and pushing the stern about. The Advantage with the square stern rake seems to prefer the bow to change than the stern. Guess I adjusted to the difference with little though, just did it! butthead |
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CharlieWilson |
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hexnymph |
Hex |
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butthead |
Can only reference my own use but I tend to keep the stern planted in tough conditions and sweep the bow. Yet planting the bow and loosening the stern in some conditions. I trip with 2 packs, 20 pounds in front of the foot brace and 35 pounds behind the seat. Between sliding the seat and packs I find adjustments easy, quick and reversible. I tend to rely more on feel of how the canoe is handling at the time and adjusting as needed. Hope that explanation is a bit clearer than mud. I know what the "stuck" situation is and try to keep ahead of such. If stuck I usually slid as far back as possible, plant the stern and sweep or push the bow in the needed direction. To me the easiest to recover from, and continue as best trimmed for the conditions. butthead |
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BeaV |
quote hexnymph: "When in doubt with a loaded canoe, I throw a rock up in the bow... this is strictly used head on in high wind. Last time was around 10 years ago coming out of Snowbank against the 2' white rodeo but it helped me grab. Thanks Hex. I've done the same when in a Prism with high winds and it works. But the Advantage acted completely opposite of the Prism. The Prism's problem was it caught too much wind on the bow and refused to be paddled broadside w/o a rock upfront. I hate to weight a solo boat that way...best way to deal with REAL big waves is to have weight centered in the middle to allow for the "bobber" affect of going up and over waves. Next time I get to play in the wind, I'll bring another weight to be my rock. |
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VaderStrom |
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BeaV |
quote butthead: I tend to rely more on feel of how the canoe is handling at the time and adjusting as needed. Hope that explanation is a bit clearer than mud." Thanks butthead, I need to acquire the "feel";) The feel is different, I think, than what I expected. I don't mind traveling broadside to waves, if that's the way I want to go. But I don't want to be stuck and unable to turn when a set of whitecaps is bearing down on me. |
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BeaV |
I revived this thread because I purchased one this weekend. I had 2 boats to pick from- one with the slider seat and the other with a web seat that is height adjustable. The height adjustable seat would have been a better choice to allow for the possibility of kneeling but I decided the slider seat would be better for me as it would allow more options for trimming the boat to my needs. Never having paddled an Advantage, I wanted to be able to play with weight shifting to find what works best for me. I think I could probably kneel in my new boat but other than assuming "the position" didn't paddle it that way. My reason for reviving this is not really about kneeling but something CharlieWilson said above was interesting. So yesterday I headed for a local lake to paddle in some highish wind conditions. Stopped at a gas station and picked up a 40-pound bag of salt for ballast. Placed said bag right behind my seat placed roughly in the mid slide position, 170 pounds of me in that and a 10 pound day bag in front of me. Off I go downwind (winds at 15 gusting to 20 mph) had great control. Then I decide to paddle broadside to the wind/waves to see how that goes. Found out that I easily got stuck broadside and very difficult to get unstuck either to escape downwind or upwind. Felt like the stern was "sticking" and the bow would not "skid" using Charlie's terms. Even when I planned my escape downwind thinking the wind would catch my bow, an oncoming wave would grab the stern and force me back broadside. "Ahhah" I thought, need to get my bow higher for more wind catch. I push the salt bag to the rear and get ready to wind-vane around. Nope, that didn't do it either. Seemingly counterintuitive, I pulled the salt bag back behind the seat and then adjusted the seat forward to get more weight forward. Now with more weight forward, I was able to turn the boat- not easily but possible. So with what I observed from a sit and switch perspective and what Charlie said would happen if kneeling, I think getting less "stick" in the stern and more "stick" in the bow by kneeling may have been a good thing. What have you experienced Advantage paddlers found works best for you in windy conditions? |
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cowdoc |
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Tariacuri |
quote CharlieWilson: "For what its worth, Dave Kruger deigned Advantage as a sit an Swith racer/tourer. To change that paradym is problematical. The bow will stick, the stern will skid. There are lots of good kneeling oriented hula available, get a boat designed for the disciplne." OK, thanks much, I'll keep looking!! |
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uqme2 |
quote CharlieWilson: "The bow will stick, the stern will skid. " I know that feeling from a number of different canoes. What if a bench seat were installed so that the overall mass was in the 'designed' place? |
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mr.barley |
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Tariacuri |
Thanks in advance Chris |
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lennart |
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butthead |
butthead |
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Banksiana |
I have large feet and kneeling is not a possibility unless I take my boots off. It does make the boat more stable. I can get a similar sense (much less crippling for my aged knees) by putting the foot brace into position that I can keep constant firm pressure on it- thus connecting my mass better to the boat as well as giving better ability for quick lateral adjustments in big waves or whitewater. |