Watch Australia, here comes the big O...! Oscar Chalupsky will be running clinics in Byron, Melbourne, The Gold Coast and Sydney between 12 and 18 December.
{mosimage}
In surfski the dominant brands are Fenn and Epic... Ask anyone to name the dominant brand in the K1 world, and it's highly likely the name "Nelo" would spring to mind.
Can a K1 manufacturer really compete with the giants of the surfski world?
{mosimage}
Here's a new ski that has a design pedigree that stretches back twenty years or more. Two weekends ago, Hein van Rooyen paddled the first Carbonology "What?" into second place in a Discovery Men's Health series race in Port Elizabeth, South Africa...
{mosimage}
UK Women's Surfski Champion Chloe Bunnett, UK Olympian Ivan Lawler and a few friends recently hosted BBC Sports presenter Mike Bushell in Poole, UK...
Bushell had come to find out what the sport of surfski paddling was all about...
{mosimage}
Here's something radically innovative - and something we want to do for Surfski in the not too distant future... Live video streaming of a paddling race... This is the Molokai Hoe OC6 race in Hawaii...
{mosimage}
A few months ago we posted an article on a new surfski designed by Nordic Kayaks in Sweden. Notable was the innovative hardtop option, designed to keep the paddler dry during winter paddling when the water approaches freezing point.
{mosimage}
The Fish River Marathon is one of the biggest paddling races in South Africa - this year's race had over 1,400 competitors... The pic shows the only surfski [Editor: "only"? maybe not - see comment below] in the event, paddled by Tom Schilperoort!
{mosimage}
Is it time for Surfski racing to have its own International Federation? In my opinion, the answer to that is a resounding yes…
{mosimage}
3 September 2009, Port Elizabeth, South Africa: The body of 37-year-old Barry Guy Marshall was recovered from the sea 10nm off Port Elizabeth according to NSRI spokesman Craig Lambinon.
{mosimage}
While some debate as to what should constitute a surfski race – open ocean, downwind, 10km, 25km, triangle course – it occurred to some race organizers in Australia and South Africa that one group of paddlers was being neglected: the novices.
Novices are the life-blood of any sport. To nurture and grow surfski paddling, we need a steady stream of new participants in races around the world. But novices often find the bigger races intimidating – to satisfy the demands of the more experienced paddlers, the races are often held in challenging conditions.
So – this season two race series, one in Sydney, Australia and one in Cape Town, South Africa, have started up – aimed directly at the novice paddler.
Dawid and Nikki Mocke have been training people to paddle surfskis since 2003. But they noticed that nearly all their “graduates” remained social paddlers, in spite of the many and varied races on offer in Cape Town.
Dawid and Nikki Mocke (Pic: Meds Martin)
After doing some research, they discovered that many of the paddlers felt intimidated by the big series races.
So, along with Tom Schilperoord and Adam Bothma they started the Seadog Series in Fish Hoek Bay. It’s been a great success – with over 210 paddlers registering and an average of 40-50 finishers on any given night with the highest figure so far being 135. “I say ‘finishers’,” laughed Nikki, “because the races are run whatever the weather. Our motto is ‘never cancelled’ and this means that the conditions are often quite hectic.”
Nikki attributes the success of the series to a number of factors:
“We’ve really tried to target the surfski school type paddler,” said Nikki. “The races are not intimidating, yet they can be challenging and they definitely give the guys a goal to work towards.”
[Editor: the first race of the Sydney Harbour Series attracted close to 100 paddlers.]
The Bing Lee/LG/Epic Kayaks Harbour Series has been designed for paddlers who may never be in the elite class but want to enjoy competitive paddling on a ski, sea kayak or outrigger canoe on the beautiful waterways around Sydney.
Awesome Scenery! Sydney Harbour Series
It is also good for that large group of paddlers who are itching to get out on the ocean but don’t yet quite have that confidence to enter an ocean race. Just do a few of the Harbour Series races and you may well be ready to take the next step.
The first race was held at Balmoral on Sydney Harbour early Saturday 23rd Jan in a fairly stiff breeze on what turned out to be a baking hot morning. The mass start got everyone jostling for position with the usual quick starters getting out ahead and the beginners in the usual panic at the back! The course took you into the wind to Fairlight Beach and then came the downwind dash towards Bradleys head. Those less focussed on the competition could take in the beautiful views of the cliffs of the harbour foreshore and the beachside suburbs of Vaucluse and Mosman.
There were plenty going for a swim, mainly around Middle Head, but the Lifesavers from Long Reef Surf Lifesaving Club were there in their inflatable rescue boats and everyone was able to get back on and either finish or else think about how they would finish the next race, which is at Cronulla Bay on 13th Feb.
{gallery}2010/02/beginners/litebox{/gallery}
The series is run by Harbour Racing Incorporated which is an initiative of a group of surfski paddlers operating under the umbrella of PaddleNSW. It is a ground breaker in that all the paddlers entering the events are insured under the AC insurance scheme. Before this, the organisers of surfski events have been insured but not the paddlers.
These events are good for a wide range of paddlers, beginners young and old, women and men. Just grab a ski, outrigger canoe or sea kayak and see how you go! Find all the details at www.harbourracing.org.au