beef_bourito wrote:
chesapeaker wrote:
beef_bourito wrote:
i would absolutely love to have a single scull and a small sailboat at my cottage. I could just go up for a week and row in the mornings, come in and eat, sail when the waters are too rough, row in the evenings, eat. it would be heaven for me, and i'd probably improve my sculling a lot.
What exactly is a scull?? I'm from Minnesota USA. Never hear the term??
a single rowing boat. sculling is when you've got two oars, sweeping is when you've got one big one. they've got single, double, quads and, in Europe, those crazy people, oct sculls (banned from international competition because they're dangerous). they've also got pairs, fours, and eights, those are sweep boats.
the problem with buying a single is that they're freaking expensive. if i want to buy a new one from Hudson or Fluidesign i'm going to fork out over $8,000. if i buy used it'll probably be at least $2000 if i go for a cheap one. my parents are thinking of buying two kayaks, but those do me no good because they won't help my rowing much because the technique is completely different and legs aren't involved in kayaking.
I'm used to paddling a canoe on smaller lakes, where the shoreline is never too far away. It is dangerous to think you can take a canoe onto a large lake like Michigan or Superior. The lakes I paddle on, the shorelines are visible at all times. I paddle a 17 ft aluminim canoe by myself quite easily. I just switch back and forth. If there are two people, the one in the back calls the commands and steers, sometimes using the paddle as a rudder.
I just bought a used aluminum canoe for $100. I throw it up on top my Suzuiki and go, where ever. I had a friend make a canoe from some mahogany boards. It was too funny, because it was gorgeous, but it took 8 strong men to move it. The whole idea o a canoe or kayak is mobility, portaging, light quick travel, etc.
Tell you the truth, my favorite sport with my dad was what we called "jump shooting". In Wis where I come from we have thee small creeks with huge swamps. In the fall, the person in the front has a shotgun and the person in the back quietly paddles. Sometimes when you round a bend in the creek, there are ducks or geese and they "jump" up and fly. the guy in the front shoots what he can.
then comes the dog. You have to have a dog in those marshes or you would never find your ducks/geese. It is all pretty crazy but fun. The dogs jumps out of the canoe and makes as many retrieves as necessary, and then you have to find a bog to get the dog up on to jump back in the canoe without tipping it over. It is all a very very wet deal no matter how you do it. Wet and cold. But extreme fun. If you like that sort of thing.
That is why I have Chesapeakes. They are the best at this sport.
thanks for explaining the scull. One learns something new every day. Sounds very Viking to me. I'm 1/4 Norweigan, so I guess I come by this wet/cold stuff naturally.