Posts Tagged ‘Courses’

Pool sessions

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Yesterday I practised rolling in a pool for the first time in over two years. Its the first time for a long while I get some good rolling practise. My focus has been elsewhere, on touring in Sardinia, setting up a business in Venice, getting to know people and places in Venice, in general with emphasis on other skills than rolling a kayak.

My previous pool sessions were in late 2006, when I did two rolling courses to learn to roll in the first place. i did manage to learn a rudimentary C-to-C roll, but it was never reliable and I didn’t do much practice over the winter.

During a symposium in Spain in March 2007 I had a short lesson with Freya Hoffmeister, and she taught me a sweep roll and said the magic words: torso movement. She told me to lean forwards, sideways and backwards in a 1-2-3 movement and to me that made all the difference. Since then that’s what’s playing in my head when I need to roll: forwards, sideways, backwards, 1-2-3, and I usually come up (unless I rush it and skip one of the steps).

The C-to-C roll, and the butterfly roll Freya also taught me, were lost due to lack of practice. I only did the sweep roll and single-mindedly focused on getting it reliable and steady on both sides. Not that I practiced a lot. I would sometimes do a few rolls after a paddle or when I tried a new boat, or for showing off in Venice, but never really got into the “101 most essential rolls” game many others spent a lot of time playing. Until yesterday I only had one working roll in my repertoire.

Yesterday’s pool session wasn’t a course. We were a group of seven who had simply rented a public swimming pool for some hours to get some practice done and have a bit of fun. We all had some degree of rolling skills, and helped each other improve. As such it wasn’t very structured, but even without any coaching I still managed to get something working.

The C-to-C roll quickly returned, once I managed to suppress the habit of bending backwards I learned with the sweep roll.

To my surprise I managed to do a sculling roll easily, even though I’ve never even tried before.  I also tried to see if I could scull the kayak the full 180° around, but that didn’t work out.

I’ve only done a re-entry and roll a few times before, but that was quite easy too.

I tried but butterfly roll a few times, but it didn’t work for me. I’m going to need a coach to teach me that again.

I also tried a reverse sweep roll, based on what I’ve seen people do, but it didn’t work. I didn’t even manage to get the set up position correct, I think. I’ll probably need somebody to coach me there too.

I do know how to scull with my head and shoulders in the water, but I need more practise. I have a reluctance to staying there and move up again really quickly.  It’s probably some psychological I need to work with.

One of the others showed me how to do the static or balanced brace, and it did work for me once, so that’s another thing I need to work with.

While I was hard at work getting better, the others just fooled around in the children’s part of the pool :-)

Valentina made some short videos of my efforts.

Standard sweep roll filmed under water:

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Sculling roll (I think):

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Re-entry and roll:

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Kayak coach exam

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Back in August I took a kayak coach exam according to the Danish system. It was for the first of two levels, suitable for coaching beginners.

Its the first time I have ever taken any kind of formal assessment of my kayaking skills. I followed the coaching course last year during the summer, but never got to take the exam because it was postponed several times, until September when I was in Italy, first in Venice and later in Sardinia for the circumnavigation of that island.

The exam was scheduled several times this summer, first for late June, then for early August and until it was finally held on August 31st.

I passed the exam, both the theoretical and the practical part, but I still haven’t received any kind of documentation for the pass, which is a bit of a problem.

Everybody here in Denmark are moving from the old national system to EPP – the European Paddle Pass – so I must have my new certification translated into the new system, and that is the problem. The deadline for applying for transfer of was November 1st, but without a proper Danish coach certificate I have not been able to send in a complete application. I’ve sent in what I had, so now I’ll just have to wait for some kind of reply.

I believe the exam I have taken will be converted to an EPP2 coach award, but there seem to be some confusion about what EPP skill award will follow. I have heard  that some only get an EPP2 skill award, but I believe the exam I passed is equivalent to at least EPP3. Maybe it doesn’t matter, since I haven’t been able to present a complete EPP application at the deadline.

Nigel Foster visit

Saturday, May 19th, 2007

Nigel FosterNigel Foster visited my local kayak dealer, Kajakhotellet.dk, on May 17th and 18th. I participated on the 18th.

Nigel Foster is a very soft spoken man. He explains a thing, demonstrates it and sends us of to try it. At first this exercises were very simple, like edging the kayak to make it turn, but then he build more things on top of that, like leaning over the kayak while edging to edge further, adding bow rudders and stern draws to turn faster and so on.

Nigel FosterIn the end the movements became really complicated and few really managed to do it. Some exercises took a while to settle in, like moving in zig-zag patterns by an combination of edging left and right while making coordinated bow rudders, side draws and stern draws. It was so incredible elegant when Nigel Foster did it, but I suspect the most of us must have looked rather fumbling, going here and there with little control.

At the end of the course I was exhausted :-) I had been in my kayak, edging it left and right, for hours, and the muscles in my hips and sides were rather sore. When at the end I wanted to practice my roll a bit, I had absolutely no hip flick and always had to revert to the sweep roll to get up.

(foto by Anette Kjær)