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11
Feb

Pyranha Memories: The Rob Roy, A Happy Accident

You may be aware that we recently released a Sit-on-Top version of the Pyranha Fusion, which has just been awarded ‘Coolest Kayak of the Show’ at PaddleExpo 2014; however, this isn’t the first Sit-on-Top kayak that Pyranha has produced!

Fusion SOT Wins 'Coolest Gear of the Show' at PaddleEXPO 2014

The team proudly stand next to the Fusion SOT and its new award.

Way back in the day, around ’86 or ’87 (maybe even earlier!) when most whitewater kayaks were 4m+ and made of fibreglass, boats getting pinned or wrapping around rocks were a common occurrence. As a result of this, manufacturers would produce kayaks with lightweight decks that, it was believed, would break away around the paddler in the event of a pin or wrap.

When Polyethylene started to become a common kayak material, many people worried that it’s strength and durability, which made it so resilient to the rigours of whitewater, would also make kayaks manufactured from it difficult to escape. Paddlers started carrying big knives to hack their way out of PE boats, and considered ideas such as cheese-wire-type mechanisms to ease these worries.

Around about the same time, some sea kayaks were equipped with ‘pods’ (an idea pioneered by Alan Byde), which were large sealed sections that did a good job of preventing the boat completely filling with water and sinking, but were quite cumbersome. The idea of an unsinkable, sealed section intrigued us, so we combined this with the idea of a break-away deck and started work on a polyethylene boat that would have a hollow, sealed hull and separate bow and stern deck sections that would seal over the paddler.

Pyranha Rob Roy Prototype

The Pyranha Rob Roy Prototype, with a removable deck section to allow the paddler to escape a pin.

The Alpine Kayak Club was also working on a similar system around about the same time period, with the idea of both being that if the paddler got into trouble, they could simply release the deck sections (which floated) and bail out, being left with an unsinkable hull that they could hold onto for buoyancy. This prevented any entrapment risk and meant there was no heavy boat full of water to struggle to unpin or empty afterward.

The Rob Roy's Removable Deck Section

The deck was attached by a string and cleat, which could be pulled in conjunction with the spraydeck to release the boat’s deck.

Here at Pyranha, we moulded the initial hulls for this new boat, which even featured a sailing dinghy style self-draining hole with a rubber bung in the paddler’s seating area. We soon realised however that with the deck sections attached, this boat would be one substantially weighty piece of kit!

Development was halted there and the hulls were sold off as recreational boats for beginners, and so the first Pyranha Sit-on-Top Kayak was born… The Rob Roy!

10
Feb

Season 2014 Recap

2014 was a busy year for me, and for the first time in a while I did not manage to venture on an international kayaking adventure. Instead I had to explore my own backyard a bit more. Fortunately, my backyard is beautiful British Columbia, a true whitewater Mecca.

Maxi on Dipper Creek

Maxi on Dipper Creek — Photo: Steve Arns

A below average snowpack had us worried at the start of the season. But all the worrying was in vain. Water levels were consistently great. In the early season we got many great runs on the Ashlu and the infamous Whistler triple.

Read the rest of this entry »

10
Feb

9R at home in the gorge

spirit-9r-screen
Back to reality after a sweet trip to the pristine waters of the Columbia river gorge. I was able to paddle the new 9R a few times, read more to check out my review!
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06
Feb

First Impressions of the 9R

I’ve been back in the UK a few weeks now and have had the chance to get out in the 9R a few times.

Long story short: it is my new favourite boat. After a day at CIWW I was sold on it as a great boat for messing around in on easy whitewater but was unsure of how it would handle steeper whitewater because of its length. Fortunately we had a bout of snow which meant the Fairy Glen was running last weekend at a cruisy low level. After moving the seat back a bit I felt pretty comfortable in the boat and absolutely loved how easy it was to hit the lines in the 9R, especially the big rock flair at the bottom of pipeline.

Anyway, enough of the words:

05
Feb

Gerd Serrasolses 2014 year review

I guess you are normally supposed to do this before the year actually ends but I was busy traveling in southern Chile so I didn’t have time then. Here it is anyway!

2014 was a great year, super fun and almost 100% injury free with lots of kayaking on my favorite destinations! So stoked to be living this life right now, focusing on traveling, kayaking and trying to enjoy life to the fullest!

I spent the winter in Okere Falls, New Zealand where I did lots of paddling on the Kaituna, slept in a bed every night and had tons of fun hanging out, learning to surf and taking part on the different kiwi events. Went to the South Island in February but got injured on the Citroen BoaterX and couldn’t paddle any of the West Coast classics. I guess I’ll just have to go back!

Early March we flew to Vancouver, bought a 22 year old Astro van and started the drive south to the Gorge, WA. Settled down at Todd’s trailer and paddled non stop. We had nice weather and great levels on the Little White and White Salmon, it was a great season with lots of boating with amazing friends on my favorite spot in the world. Spring went by really fast and we left to the White Water Grand Prix in Quebec for a couple weeks in May.

We found big waves and lots of ice! It was good times with lots of freestyle and some good boating around Quebec and a 5th place finish with some bad luck and pretty average performances on most of the stages.

After Canada it was time for some races on the NW! First off we went to the Big Fork event in Montana, organized by my friend Jonny Meyers it was a great weekend with 3 different races (downriver, slalom and GS) for the overall. I was so stoked to take first and bring home some cash!

One of my personal most important races of the season was next, the Little White Salmon race! After some good training thisyear I was feeling really good, the 9r prototype was working really well and I was stoked. Race day didn’t go too well though, never felt good during the 15 minutes race, had a numb leg and went too hard at the start having nothing left for the end… Not feeling good about my downriver race run I was fired up to do well on the Spirit slalom. Training run was great, race run I go off and miss gate 1! Ahhhh  anyways it was a great weekend and finishing second wasn’t that bad! Stoked for Evan to take his second title and can’t wait for another chance next year!

After Ldub race is Idaho bound! We drove to Banks to paddle the North Fork everyday and get ready for the NFC III. On Thursday we had the Expert Lower 3 race, a 10 minutes race down some class III-IV where its pretty hard to go fast as there are lots of crashing waves and white water. I did my best but had lots of trouble keeping the boat under control and doing many mistakes, at the end I got first with less than a second lead though, it was a tight one! After the premiere in Boise where we showed our new SBP reel 2014 and partied a bit everyone got ready for Saturday at Jakes. I had two decent runs but lost quite a bit of time on gate 2 on both runs and hit a few more rocks than desired. This conservative runs were only good enough for 4th place this year, will have to go faster and take more chances next year for sure!

We paddled the North Fork for another week and then headed up to the Payette River Games just a few miles upstream. I entered the freestyle, boaterX and 8Ball races. Ended up 10th at the freestyle event after a couple training sessions, got 4th at the 8Ball and luckily took the win at the boaterX going home with some more dolla$! So stoked! After the PRG I started the drive back west and then north back to Canada, it’s BC time!

Got to Whistler early July, started working at Wedge rafting and padded the Cheak and Callaghan everyday with Ali and friends, pretty good times! Unfortunately the levels weren’t as high as I expected but it was a good time! We entered the Cheak time trial and the Callaghan race. I managed to win both events and it was a really nice time.

Time went by fast and the Stikine dropped in earlier than expected so by August 1st I quit and got ready to head north. After a long drive we got to the put in of this magical place ready to go for the first trip of the season. Nice weather, good flow and a sick crew, let’s go! We took it easy shooting a bunch and making it the traditional 3 day trip. We did another 3 day trip with great water levels and an awesome one day. It’s such an amazing place!

After the Stikine we went to Revelstoke where there wasn’t much water but enough for Sutherland and Pinkston. After a couple days we drove back to Whistler to finish off the trip on the Ashlu. A couple great weekends on the box and some days on the Cheak left us all tired and ready to go home.

Landed in Spain mid september, hang out for a week painting my grandmas house and paddling in Sort and left to Sickline. Sickline was great, we had good flows and pretty nice weather overall. I surprised myself and I managed to win the qualification on the lower section and clocked a couple fast times on the top section, however I didn’t have a good run on my final and had to content myself with 4th after doing good all weekend… This was my best result yet and a good experience for next edition.

Right after Sick-Line we flew back to BC to finish The Keyhole Red Bull project as we needed Fall lows water flows. Everything went great and I went back home for a few days before flying to Chile for the whole winter.

After some days of traveling troubles I landed in Chile late October and paddled the Maipo just outside of Santiago. We then moved south and paddled around Pucon including a couple trips further south to GolGol area. Mid Novemeber we flew to Mexico for the Rey del Río, an event in Agua Azul that included a BoaterX and a Waterfall comp. After the event we went to Tlapacoyan and paddled on the Alseseca and Jalacingo, two of the best runs in Mexico.

After Mexico we spent some time around Pucón and then traveled south following the water and paddling as many rivers as possible. It’s been an awesome time just camping everywhere and paddling all of the good classics that still have some water. It’s been really dry and all the snow and rain from the winter is almost gone so the rivers are pretty low right now but there’s always water and rivers to paddle, you just have to keep going south.

Overall it’s been a great year for me, I’ve managed to spend all year traveling around the world visiting NZ, the USA, Canada, Chile, México and Argentina and only go home for over 2-3 weeks. I’ve only had minor injuries and I’ve paddled a lot, almost everyday and in some amazing places. I’ve paddled the 9r prototype all spring and I’m now super stoked to have the final version, it’s sick. I feel my paddling still improves year after year even though sometimes it’s hard to see it and easy to get frustrated. I can only ask for 2015 to be as good as 2014 and I’m sure it will be with plenty of adventures and expeditions ahead.

04
Feb

PQ newcomer

BONJOUR À TOUS!

First things first, I’m more than excited to be a part of the TeamPyranha! Since I’ve been paddling, I’ve spent most of my time in slalom boats. As they are reactive and challenging, I always chose boats because of how they give me feedback throughout my surfs, runs or “trainings” but also how fun and multipurpose they are. That said, Pyranha boats suit these criterias perfectly.

Movember's win

I started paddling in 1999 in the Valleyfield club summer programs. As I got older, I became a simple summer instructor in 2005 and I worked my way up to become the Technical Manager of this club. In the last couple years, I taught and coached newcomers. Some of them became good enough to compete around Canada and a few places in Europe so I have the chance to follow them sometimes with the help of CKC and the Quebec federation. As of now, while the winter hits its peak here, Read the rest of this entry »

01
Feb

Mexico for mere mortals

I’m pretty lucky to get good leave allowance where I work, so can usually get away for one foreign “lads” boating trip a year on harder rivers, plus one holiday with my better half which (due to her understanding my kayaking addiction) usually involves a good amount of boating – though generally at a more sedate grade!

Despite all manner of awesome footage coming out of Mexico showing enormous falls and grade 5 rapids, the country also harbours some excellent rivers at lower grades – i.e. runnable by mere mortals. Selectively chosen pictures of scenic sunny grade 3 / 4 persuaded my better half and another couple of friends that this was an excellent destination for a boating holiday, and promises of epic food and sunshine sealed the deal.

The first week was spent in and around Ciudad Valles in the north.

 

The unique travertine slides of the Micos were an awesome warm-up

The unique travertine slides of the Micos were an awesome warm-up

Mark-Skirrow-on-the-Micos

Micos: just like Disneyland

Despite some of the falls dropping >25ft, they were all super friendly with wide lines and minimal holes.

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26
Jan

Winter on the Mountain with the XL Burn III

 

Below: Adam Goshorn on Short Creek, photo by Shannon Goshorn

DSC_0114

Fresh off a winter Grand Canyon trip, I probably should be working on sorting pictures and video from that trip.  However, ever since I arrived back to my home the opportunities for great boating have kept me happily distracted!  The XL Burn III was awesome in the big water of the Grand Canyon and really shines back home creeking too!  The past few weeks have included lots of runs down our local favorite Little River Canyon at a variety of levels ranging from 250 CFS to 7,000 CFS.  We’ve also gotten runs on Short Creek, Tellico River, Upper Teddy Bear and Lower Teddy Bear.

Below: Adam Goshorn blasting through holes in Little River Canyon, photo by Ben Bernhard

AG Terminal Eddy by BB 2

 

Below: A mixture of footage from the past few weeks here on Lookout Mountain.  Be sure to set the resolution up to 720 for best viewing!

Below: my wife, Shannon Goshorn, boofing her way down Short Creek, photo by Adam Goshorn

DSC_0149

 

Until next time…

-Adam Goshorn

Below: Adam Goshorn in the XL Burn III in Little River Canyon at a healthy flow, photo by Ben Bernhard

AG Terminal Eddy by BB 1

15
Jan

Tamur with Pat – Nepal River Trip #1

IMG_2592

Way back in 2014, I spent six weeks in Nepal; a country that has been on my ‘hit list’ for countless years.  Arriving before the rest of our buddies, Erik Johnson and I signed up for a Tamur river trip with Pat O’Keefe and Ultimate Descents.  I didn’t know much about the trip, but a raft supported river overnighter sounded pretty awesome… and it was.

Photo - Pat O'Keefe

Photo – Pat O’Keefe

The crew at the start of the hike – 20 kayakers, 10 rafters, 12 guides (I made these numbers up, but I think they’re close enough…plenty of good people from all over the map)

You can read more about my trip, but if you don’t like reading, you should probably watch this cool video Nicholas Price filmed and edited… It probably does the trip more justice anyways!

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12
Jan

Meghalaya 2014

This year’s season in Meghalaya has been absolutely ridiculous. For the past two years we’ve ended up paddling into steep gorges with crazy geography that for the most part have offered up awesome adventures, but often not that great whitewater. This year has delivered on the awesome adventures, but now we’re really starting to make headway with finding some gems!

Scouting one of the first rapids on the Kopili

Scouting one of the first rapids on the Kopili

What has become apparent this year is Meghalaya’s two distinct seasons – monsoon runs and lower water multi-days.

In the monsoon the rains hit hard (wettest place on earth hard), which combined with the sandstone and limestone bedrock in the more modestly steep areas makes for some awesome steep creeking.

As the rains mellowed out we started looking for larger rivers. This year we paddled two new rivers that, combined with the already known lower section of the Kynshi, now means that Meghalaya has three accessable multi-day runs that have enough whitewater to entertain any kayaker looking for a jam packed two and a half weeks.

The Umtrew was one of the first we headed to and is an absolute gem of a river! The first descent (which I unfortunately missed) took the guys three days, on the second run we paddled it in a fairly stress free two days, and whilst I was busy Dan, Jamie and Jakub smashed it in an impressive four hours. This is such an awesome find for Meghalaya’s whitewater as the put-on is only three hours from Shillong, the capital.

One river which kept drawing us back over this season was the Kopili. We paddled it first in September, and returned two more times. Each descent was totally a different water level which really changed the charachter of the run, but each time it was nothing short of world class. Great camping, a wild jungle and a shuttle shorter than an hour for those who would like to smash out laps.

In October I flew home for a wedding, and missed out on the only epic of the trip – The Khri Bah, a river that cuts through a very remote area draining the northern platau. Reports from the lads say it could be immense with less water, so who knows, we might be checking it out in future years.

Of course, it wouldn’t be a proper trip to Meghalaya without paddling the Kynshi, and as we were there for nearly four months this year we made sure we got in a lot of laps. From scary highwater to dirty low water the Kynshi never failed to blow my mind with its incredible scenery, remoteness and phenominally unique whitewater. The more I paddle it the more I love it and it is unquestionably my favorite river in the world.

2014 was an epic season, and I can’t wait to get back next year to see what else is hidden away in Meghalaya’s deep gorges. As always thanks to Zorba Laloo for being a total lad and keeping us away from trouble, Greg Diengdoh for allowing us to convert his house into a paddlers den, and everyone else who makes Meghalaya such a great place to visit year after year.

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