I'm not sure of the evolution of term Goon Stroke, if anyone knows, it would be an interesting bit of info. I know that dedicated practitioners of the Goon ( and there are probably more Gooners than J'ers) like to call it the "stern pry". In no way should this be construed as someone covering up a fault, such as saying "I just passed gas" instead of "man I just ripped out a deadly fart". Indeed, I would hazard to say that millions of miles of canoe trips have been successfully completed by dedicated Stern Pry aficionados. I was one myself for many years, and put untold thousands of miles on an assortment of canoes SP'ing my way across countless lakes and rivers.
My evolution to the J Stroke was weird and wonderful. I had been practicing lucid dreaming, the act of waking up in one's dreams, and taking control of the situation. One night, my dream had me standing in a huge field of untouched snow. I had my paddle in my hand, and was wondering how to proceed. So I dug my paddle into the snow, and using a perfect J, I propelled myself over the snow in huge jumps. Eventually, I arrived at a snow shrouded river, and my last paddle-jump landed me in an icey-dicey wreck of a canoe. Still using the J, I took off, paddling into the winter wonder land.
In real life, it was the spring, the snow had just left, and the next day I put a canoe in the water, and The J came completely natural, like I had been using it my whole life.
However, magical dreams or not, I still can't J on the right hand side. I'm a dedicated lefty, only switch sides for pries or draws. It works out well for tandem travel, as most bows people seem to prefer the right. I can't even goon it on the right anymore. This in no way reflects my political orientations, it's just a physical quirk.
Mem, the first time I heard the term "goon stroke" was I'm pretty sure early '80s in the Bill Mason films, but I could be misremembering. Doesn't mean he invented the term, just spread it far and wide(?). I see the films are from 1977, but I didn't see them until the local canoe club aquired copies very early '80s sometime for showing at meetings. I see there's also a book out, published January 1980.
We also called it the stern pry. The whitewater I was paddling at the time simply required the stern pry. Bill's (or whomever's) goon stroke mainly refers to flatwater use, I think, which most people refered to as the "rudder stroke," performed with the blade usually farther back behind the paddler than a stern pry. My earliest canoeing experiences were guided Boundary Waters and Quetico trips, something like 6+ year's worth, so I learned the J, and it's a natural for me in flatwater, lakes and easy streams. In the very early 1970s I did a little marathon racing, where I learned hit and switch and the early renditions of "cab-over" technique, which related more to to later solo paddling. The J and typical stern rudder stroke work in flatwater, not in whitewater. Whitewater, at least what I became used to later, requires more power than a rudder stroke for immediate onside turn moves (like them gotta-catch eddies), and the stern pry, which is done closer to the paddler than the rudder stroke, is what works for me as well as paddling companions of the time. The rudder stroke works fine with likely thousands or more miles on it than the J, which is slightly more efficient, I think. But that goon works.
Does this make any sense?
In the '90s sometime I learned to refine the cab-over technique for solo paddling and also the "inside circle" from a Tom Foster clinic. Unfortunately my arthritis didn't allow that much longer. I was sore for a week from that weekend clinic, and shoulders rebelled when trying to make it work on rivers for real, so I just used rudiments after that. I think the "inside circle" has evolved to newer techniques now that I'm not up on as I haven't been paddling since Covid.
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