There are no slalom races within a 5 hour drive for me. Also nowhere to hang gates since water flows vary so much through the dam here: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nc/nwis/uv?dd ... o=02080500 I "trained" for slalom nats by catching every eddy & making every ferry that I could. I got whipped at nats, but I had a ball.
I've done 1 OC Slalom Nats, 1 Downriver Nats, 1 Aluminum Nats. I've also done a bunch of local flatwater & downriver races. Seems to me that the term "nationals" scares off a bunch of paddlers from all disciplines. Local events that are advertised through paddling club message boards & newsletters tend to have better turnouts.
I heard that OC nats was coming to NC & bought a boat (it's now for sale http://cboats.net/cforum/viewtopic.php?t=5152 ). Folks questioned my boat choice, but I just wanted an OC so I could race. I signed up with no delusions of winning & fulfilled my expectations

The canoe racing community is fun to hang out with & there's no competition when they're off the water. Heck, even sitting in the eddy prior to runs everyone was real freindly.
Slalom is the hardest paddling I've tried. A one day 70 mile flatwater race or big water (lower Gauley) are both easier. I think (as Craig has already stated) the best paddlers have a slalom background. For most moves while running rivers you can be off by 1/2 of a boat width & be fine. Try that in slalom & it's a 10 second penalty

Yesterday we caught the spike & I was in a 7' C-1. Flow jumped from 2,500cfs to over 18,000cfs
