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Double blade paddle . . . worth it?

I was wondering, if paddling a double is the equivalent to being on crack, what paddling methods would be associated with alcoholics, methhead tweakers, and potheads?

Alan
 
Tweaker will use anything, but paddle with a super fast stroke rate. Pothead will use anything, but paddle at a super slow stroke rate. Drinking enthusiasts, such as myself, single stick only, with great panache, but often falls out of the canoe while draining the excess alcohol out of their bodies.
 
I was wondering, if paddling a double is the equivalent to being on crack, what paddling methods would be associated with alcoholics, methhead tweakers, and potheads?

Alan

Don't forget the pole.

Seriously - poling set my paddling skill development back a few years. Yes, it can be addictive. I was poling class 2+ and doing multi-day poling trips before I managed a halfway decent forward stroke with the single blade - nevermind all the other boat control strokes. I'm still a better poler than paddler.

But in the traditional timeline, poling came first - so there's that. Wow...it just occurred to me how much my time with a paddle has held back my developing poling skills. :D
 
Drinking enthusiasts, such as myself, single stick only, with great panache,

Alcoholics would be the ones that love to sit around and tell you how great of a paddler they are, of all the great paddling feats they have, and will, accomplish, and tell you about all the things you're doing wrong.

Then when you actually get them on the water you realize they're just a goon stroker

Alan
 
I have been with the same woman now for 26 years a personal record. We have one cardinal rule and only one rule.
"Don't Tell Me What To Do."
 
Then when you actually get them on the water you realize they're just a goon stroker
Maybe so, but in their beat up Grumman and dirty old keds sneakers and cut off jeans,with the accompanying once white armless beater shirt, they will probably still be out paddling the posers with their fleece paddle socks. That's been my experience many times lol.
 
Think I've asked this before, but when one is cruising along with the Devil's Double Blade, what sort of speeds are you averaging, let's say on flat water, minimal wind? On my gps, single sticking, I'm usually between 6 and 7 k and hour without trying too hard.
Last time I tried using a double blade I ended up doing a 10 yard sprint straight into the branches of a fallen oak tree and managed to tangle up myself, the boat, and the paddle. I think I may have said some bad words.

I'm a happy single-blader but I admire those that have a lot of double-blade experience. I want to build my double-blade experience.

I don't know if a cruising speed comparison will tell the story without including distance. Even I can sprint faster with a double but after a mile or five or twenty the comparison could get interesting.
 
Here is another benefit of a traditional straight shaft single blade.
Dang it, I thought I had invented that move! It's a little more difficult in the 20 foot canoe, usually involves some contortions before the paddle will reach.
 
This was fun. Now, lets do ottertail vs carbon bent. :D

Since I never single blade any more I was willing to use my beavertail and carbon bent for the comparison. They were long enough that two bolts through the top of the shafts gave me the preferred 270 cm length in the new double blade. The bent shaft lost in all categories until I twisted it 180 degrees and used it like a scoop.
 
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