

Moderators: kenneth, sbroam, TheKrikkitWars, Mike W., Sir Adam, KNeal, PAC, adamin
can you tell us more about the type of rivers you'll be taking them out on?ohioboater wrote:I need to replace a couple of Impulses that are on their last legs. These will be used for students who are brand new to solo canoes and often brand new to class 1/2 as well. The Impulse was a great design for this type of paddler - not likely to dump them when they lean the wrong way, easy to keep on line as they learn boat control, but not super tracky.
Can anyone who has paddled an Impulse give me comparison data on either of these boats?
Esquif Vertige
Esquif Raven
I'm sure someone will recommend a Probe as well - it's in the running, too. I just don't need any comparison data, since I have years of experience in one.
*Like*smbjs wrote:When we had our Adult School & our youth school last year, beginner paddlers preferred the Black Fly Option over all the other solo boats available and almost every classic solo was represented!
Mid-Atlantic and southern class 2. Typical weekend class involves at least a couple hours on flatwater working strokes, then time in Ramcat on the Yough working eddy turns, ferries, s-turns, etc. Second day is the Casselman or Cheat Narrows if they are running (actually, if the Casselman is running, I'll do that on both days - great teaching river). Spring break class is a full week down south - Tuck, Nanty, Little T., top part of Sec. 3, etc.Craig Smerda wrote:can you tell us more about the type of rivers you'll be taking them out on?
gotcha'...ohioboater wrote:Mid-Atlantic and southern class 2. Typical weekend class involves at least a couple hours on flatwater working strokes, then time in Ramcat on the Yough working eddy turns, ferries, s-turns, etc. Second day is the Casselman or Cheat Narrows if they are running (actually, if the Casselman is running, I'll do that on both days - great teaching river). Spring break class is a full week down south - Tuck, Nanty, Little T., top part of Sec. 3, etc.Craig Smerda wrote:can you tell us more about the type of rivers you'll be taking them out on?
Typical students have little or no moving water experience in any sort of craft, let alone a solo canoe. They're supposed to have flatwater experience/knowledge, but I've learned to assume that most of my students won't know diddly about strokes when I first meet them. Even the ones who claim to be summer canoe instructors often can't make a boat go straight without switching sides, and their first instinct is usually a gunnel grab when the boat gets wibbly-wobbly.
So keep that in mind - we're talking total beginners here. No riversense, no strokes, no concept of edging. And my preference is for them not to swim every time they do something wrong.