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28
May

Adidas Sickline Expedition “Sumatra 2009”

The latest expedition of the Adidas Sickline Team was destined to be in the heart of Indonesia. Torrential rapids, monsoon rain, lovely beaches and people getting hurt are only a small part of this exiting trip.

Cimadur river

The full story and photos on www.marnics.blogspot.com

Best regards,

Tomass Marnics

28
May

When 13 People Go Kayaking in Quebec Together Something’s Bound To Go Wrong

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I just got back from an awesome trip to Quebec.  As a group of 13 we were a travelling circus and party all in one.  We dealt with 4 swims, a dislocated shoulder (thanks Trip Kinney for the speedy riverside medical service), a severely broken kayak (not a Pyranha), and everything that went along with our “travelling celebration”.  In the end we logged almost 40 river miles between the Nielsen, Saturuski, and Jacques-Cartier.  Classic Quebec whitewater fun.   

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27
May

Demshitz in “the Boat”

fish creek race-jaredRacing the Karnali on Fish Creek in Steamboat Springs Colorado at the PaddlingLife Pro Invitational.
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Dave Fusilli throwing a loop at the C-Hole Steamboat pro invitational rodeo on the Yampa river. Read the rest of this entry for photos from our past weekend in Steamboat Springs.photos: Anna Bruno

 

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For those of you who do not know about Demshitz, we have an extreme kayaking movie out called Demshitz The Movie that just hit the shelves! With help from Lunch Video Magazine we are selling the movie online for $19.95 US, which includes a solid hour of whitewater kayaking footage in Chile, Argentina, Colorado, California and the Pacific Northwest as well as bonus features that will keep you entertained for years!!! Here are some teasers for the movie! more @ http://vimeo.com/lvmvideo/videos

 

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26
May

Metlako Falls

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The other day I ran this amazing waterfall on Eagle Creek called Metlako falls.  The falls are named after an ancient Salmon Godess.  After an amazingly soft landing you end up in one of the most beautiful gorges in the world.  Thanks to the NZ boys I ran this with, Bernard, Jamie, Josh and Haden who all styled it.

25
May

Finally back into the real world

After a year full of books, writing, working and finally finishing my diploma in psychology, I jumped back into the real kayaking world. I know what I missed so much ;-). I work now as a freelancer, and most of this working time is outside in the boat or in the mountains. Just two weeks ago we trained kayakers to become kayakinstructors, and see for yourself what else you can do with your boat a

part from sitting in it.

img_1781A river out of ropes

25
May

A weekend in Telemark

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Telemark is an area of Norway famous for its waterfalls and slides, and this weekend the sun is shining as well! We headed to the area for the weekend to see what paddling we could find. The group was a great mix of people, Team Pyrahna paddlers Per Christian Pedersen and Ric Moxon, as well as Mark Burton, Morton Bergsland, Olav HÃ¥vik and Paula Pridham.

First of all we all headed over to the most classic run in Norway – Homerun on the MÃ¥r River. The section consists of 5 waterfalls within about less than a kilometre, and is a must see for any visitor to this area!

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Rick Moxon on Homerun
Ric Moxon on Homerun
After that we headed to the Gøyst River, which is a great class IV-V run, with a small waterfall (shown in the picture), and some interesting slides at the end.
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Ric on the GøystÂ
The Gøyst
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After birthday celebrations on the Saturday night for Paula, we headed to the Austbygdåi, which starts of gently and gets gradually more interesting as you head down the river. A great end to a fun weekend, and we all headed home!
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Per  Christian Pedersen on the AustbygdÃ¥iÂ
Per Christian Pedersen on the Austbygdåi

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More of the AustbygdÃ¥iÂ

 More of the Austbygdåi

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Photos by: Paula Pridham
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23
May

Demshitz Stay out of Jail Tour 09

 

 

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Dave Fusilli throwin up the air brown at the Reno River Fest.

Demshitz is here in Buena Vista Colorado for Paddle Fest! We have been non-stop from Cheat fest WV to Reno River fest NV and into Californ-i-A ! Check out some of the photos and videos from the trip so far.

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22
May

Colorado Roadtrip

School finally ended and I got a well-deserved break and a chance to enjoy myself for a few days. Alexis and I have been planning to do something fun on our break and we decided that we’d take a short roadtrip out west so she could get a jump on grad school selection. After much deliberation, we decided to visit Boulder, CO so she could look at school there.


Kansas – yeah, that’s the curvature of the earth you’re seeing

We left NC Friday. May 8th, drove to Chattanooga and visited with Alex’s Mom on our way west. We got up the next morning and drove…and drove…and drove, finally arriving in Colorado on May 10th. We spent the first day in Colorado resting and getting acquainted with the city and most of the second day taking care of school stuff. That afternoon Ed Gaker called me and asked if I wanted to run Eldorado Canyon with him later that evening.


More Kansas…I was bored

The Eldo section of Boulder Creek is a fun little creek run about ten minutes from Boulder. It’s tucked away in a steep, scenic gorge that local boaters, climbers, hikers, and trail runners seem to love as one of the area’s many after-work hangouts. There were a lot of friendly folks up there, including the park rangers and we had a lot of conversations with folks on our way to the put-in. There was also a friendly dog, who we found out later belonged to a climber, that tried to go kayaking with us. Since we put on just above the first rapid of consequence, there was a little excitement with the dog for a few minutes.


Eldorado Canyon

You could drive a car to the top if you wanted to, but we decided to shoulder our boats and leave Ed’s truck at the takeout so we could scout on the way up. I really enjoyed the scenery and the warm, pine-scented air as we hiked up. The creek seemed like it was a good medium flow and the riverbed reminded me a lot of the Cullasaja back at home. It’s a steep, low volume creek full of sharp, badly placed rocks with a few sieves and undercuts thrown in for more pucker factor. Mostly continuous boogie whitewater, there is a good eight-foot boof and an awesome rapid toward the middle of the ¾ mile section of whitewater – Harmon Falls. It’s a long, tight rapid with several drops and a few tough moves. I dropped in first while Ed filmed from a high overlooking rock then I held a rope for him and filmed. Between the second and third drops, I grinned when I heard the dog howl at me in the rapid from the bank.


Driving shuttle for the USB

Later that evening, I talked to local creeker, Nick Wigston, and he suggested that we paddle his favorite Front Range run the next day since he thought it would be running: Upper South Boulder Creek. Upper South Boulder is actually near Pinecliffe – about half an hour outside Boulder. When it’s going, it’s a treasure for the local hairboaters. I had the opportunity to get on this creek twice on my trip at two very different levels. My first run was with a big crew at about 300cfs and we opened the creek up with the season’s first run. We did a bit of filming at the most notable rapids since we were already out and looking for new wood.


USB put-in

A couple of days later, Nick and I headed back to USB with a third paddler in our group to find the creek at nearly 500cfs. The difference in the character of the run at the two levels is night and day. On our first run, we had a pretty scrapey level with little push in and between most rapids. I would have rated the overall difficulty of the run at about the same as the Green Narrows, minus the Big Three. Our high water run ranks up there in difficulty of things like high water West Prong or Raven Fork, only not nearly as steep. A word to the wise: don’t go firing off downriver without someone who has run USB before. There are several places that you need to be aware of. Mayhem would be the result. If you know the info on this run, it’s a great place to paddle near Boulder.


S-Turn on USB at high water, photo courtesy of Nick Wigston

Because the season was so early when I was there, things were just starting to come in on the Front Range. That meant that every day wasn’t great for paddling. So I explored. One day I paddled at Matt’s Whitewater Course in downtown Boulder and had a really good time in the new Z.One. I had heard that the playpark wasn’t that good but decided to go anyway, and was glad that I did. The park is about a quarter mile long, with pourover ledges every 50 or 75 feet. The holes range from shallow and flushy to pretty retentive. This seems like an awesome place to teach someone interested in creeking proper boof stroke timing and placement. Most of the holes had some play potential when I was there but there was one about halfway down the course that I had a lot of fun blasting and throwing cartwheels in. The Z.One has turned out to be an awesome kayak for people who like to paddle downriver and play along the way. More on that later.


Boulder Playpark in the Z.One, photo courtesy of Alex Decosimo

Another day Alexis and I got some trail beta from University Cycles in downtown Boulder and decided to head up the road through Boulder Canyon to the town of Nederland for some mountain biking at West Magnolia. Being Western NC locals who race cross –country and downhill, we’re used to the wet, rooty, technical trails of Pisgah National Forest and we asked for the worst (best) they could give us. Magnolia turned out to be a pretty easy trail by our standards, but the high elevation kept our minds off that most of the time and turned our attention toward getting enough oxygen. Actually, while I was collapsed on the ground after climbing singletrack up a hill, the thought that the trail wasn’t that hard never crossed my mind.


On the Magnolia trail above Nederland

During our time in Colorado, the whitewater in the rest of the state started to come in. We considered driving all the way out to Durango to meet up with Tommy Hilleke and others before things got too high but we decided that would be too much extra driving on our short trip. I really wanted to head over to Crested Butte to run Oh Be Joyful Creek and Daisy Creek as soon as they came in, but that was even too far to be feasible. The remaining time we had left was spent exploring the city of Boulder and the surrounding areas and the fun there was to be had in town.


Pinning it on a berm at the Fix dirtjump course in Boulder, photo courtesy of Alex Decosimo

Ten days after we arrived in Boulder we began packing the car to drive back to NC. My break from school was entirely too short but I enjoyed every minute of it. After this summer session is over, I don’t expect to encounter any more mandatory summer nursing classes, meaning that I will be able to travel more next year after I pass boards. I’m very excited about getting more freedom to paddle soon but for the next year, I’ll be busier than I have been to this point. All I have to say is that I hope it keeps raining in the southeast! This trip to Colorado reminded me that we have some of the best whitewater in the world here in Western NC and made me appreciate all my home runs that much more. But to all of you that are traveling to the High Sierras and BC this summer, keep me in mind. I’d be there with you if I wasn’t doing Maternal/Child nursing this summer.
Good lines out there.

20
May

Paddling in Austria

Waterfall in Untertalbach

I spent cuple of days with my Burn in Austiria. We pallded in Kopentraun, Untertalbach, Lammer, Loferbach etc. The water level was little higher, but it was fun.

10
May

Years with Pyranha Kayaks

I have been paddling Pyranha Kayaks for years and have recently been reunited with the Large Burn. It has proven to be another solid whitewater kayak with smooth edges and effortless control. Throughout the years Pyranha has continued to create many boat designs that have helped shape the sport and make it more comfortable to get out there and paddle harder. Here are some images from my Pyranha days.

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Micro 240 – Oregon Salmon     

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H3 235 – Big Brother Falls, WA

 

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M3 233 – Spirit Falls
                                           

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H3 255 – Frustration Falls

 

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Large Burn – The Nuke Flume

 

You can also check out this video -Click Here- with Team Paddler Cody Howard in the Large Burn and Scott Baker in the Large Karnali getting some early season goods in California. Pyranha, Thanks for all the great designs over the years!

Photos by Lana Young and Nate Herbeck

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