Shep wrote:I think it's silly to teach people the Duffek.
I think you're blinkered.
Once you learn how to plant a low telemark stroke [aka duffek] (or high telemark if you're in a slicy boat and hold a perculiar dislike of your shoulders) you've learned all of the core paddle positioning needed for the bow-draw, bow-pry, the sculled versions of both of those strokes... and most important of them all
The Hanging Draw.
Some might say that those are all variations on a theme, and they'd be right... that doesn't mean they should just receive one generic name though (hence my use of the high/low telemark nomenclature), each has a different (potentially very different) outcome... and paddling is all about outcomes!
Now almost everything you can do with a duffek, you can do leaning on a low brace, or just balancing;
The advantage is that you can use the duffek as part of a chain of strokes to achieve your goal. ie, duffek into the eddy and then just scull a pry or draw to help keep you off the eddy line, or come out of the eddy with a little upstream speed, plant a hanging draw, move halfway across the river effortlessly, then turn the blade into a duffek, lean hard downstream, pull on the duffek to form a powerstroke as you reach the desired angle and shoot off with lots of lovely speed!