I've slipped and fallen a few times while on shore, and one of those I tore up the back of my hand pretty good, required an emergency room stop on the way home from the river that day. That's the only time I can remember in about 55 years of paddling that I truly hurt myself, but I could be forgetting something. I have been on trips with others where similar things have happened. Cuts and scrapes and rolled ankles, etc. I also know of boat damage enough to require walkouts, of which none of them were my own, but we're talking about bodies here.
I do have a stainless steel shoulder (total replacement) done 11 years ago now that I don't consider paddling related, but it could have been a factor. I was also a competition swimmer in high school and college, and I don't consider it swimming related either. I chalk it up to genetic osteoarthritis that was diagnosed when I was about 25 years old and that is now over 50 years ago. Of course the paddling and the swimming could have aggravated a base arthritic condition, but I don't consider either one or even both together the reason for the joint replacement. Joint wear was so bad that a bone graft had to be done to the scapula in order to have something to attach the prosthesis parts to. Hey, we heat our house with a wood stove, and I've swung a splitting maul a few times in my life too. But that's not paddling.
I have been corresponding with a couple of folks on paddling injuries and both of them say that use of the J stroke has caused them hand or wrist damage. Has anyone else reading here experienced anything like this? Or from the high brace, which could lead to shoulder dislocates? Or anything else you can think of. I've done a lot of J strokes in my time, and also lots of high braces. I've not had any issues from doing a J stroke despite thousands of miles of them. Either I'm not prone to that sort of damage, or thousands more miles of the goon stroke has saved me from it. No offense to Bill Mason, but I consider it the latter. It doesn't mean I'm right, just sort of a gut feeling.
Rolling a decked C-1 has caused dislocates for me on the river, not many, maybe three or four at the most, but I'm one of those lucky guys who can shrug the shoulder and it reduces automatically right away, and though it hurts for a bit after that, I'm fine paddling, and I don't remember ever getting out of the boat for that reason. I've not been on a trip where anyone else has had a dislocate problem. One day trip we came across another group with a paddler who'd been run into with the pointy bow of a friend's kayak and caused rib damage enough that he couldn't paddle. We carried the guy out in our canoe to a takeout so he could be taken to the hospital. He wasn't with our group. I have heard of this happening to others, too, but wasn't on the trip.
Anyone else with paddle-related problems?
Thanks.