Surfskibc’s Weblog

Your home for Surfski Racing in BC and the Pacific Northwest

Archive for February, 2009

Upcoming Race: Saturday, March 7 at Vancouver

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 25, 2009

PNWORCA Race #5 – False Creek Racing Canoe Club

Date: Saturday, March 7, 2009
Location: False Creek Outrigger Compound @ Burrard Marina, Vanier Park, Vancouver, BC Canada
Race Description: open to OC-1, OC-2 and Surfski. All paddlers will put in at Vanier Park and the race will start and finish off the dock at the Coast Guard station. The course is around the west shore of Stanley Park to the yellow QC marker off of Siwash rock then to a marker beyond Siwash Rock,towards Lions Gate Bridge returning to the start the same way. The distance is approximately 10km. You MUST have a Life Jacket.
Registration: starting @ March 7th (race day) @ 9:30am. FCRCC compound @Burrard Marina, Vanier Park
Facilities: Washrooms in the Park are open in the day.
Entry Fee: $10.00 for each paddler (racers must have CORA membership or day waiver)
Race Schedule:
9:30 Registration table opens
10:20 Safety and Paddlers’ meeting
11:00 Race starts
12:30 Awards

2008 Surfski Results:

1) Shane M.

2) Jeff H.

3) Jeff R.

4) Mike F.

5) John G.

6) Chris D.

7) Katja R.

8. Steve P.

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Race Results: February 22 at Nanaimo

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 23, 2009

Despite the rainy weather 12 surfskiers took part in Sunday’s Shack Attack race in Nanaimo. The sea was calm and the rain eased off for the race…the sun even came out as the racers trickled into the finish. The southeast wind provided a push out to Shack Island but required fighting against a headwind on the return leg.

Soon after the start the French connection of Jean and JF took the lead setting a 12.5-13 km/h pace. Jeff/Katja positioned their tandem ski behind JF while Gareth did the same to the tandem. Shortly before reaching Shack Island JF dropped off the pace, turned out he was overheating so stopped to remove his jacket. Jeff/Katja lead the 3 ski pack around Shack Island but as we entered the channel to push into the wind for the return leg Jean stepped on the gas openning up a gap on the other skis. Jean slowly extended then maintained his lead to the finish, with Gareth electing to enjoy the shelter of the tandem ski’s wash through to the finish.

After some fun dicing out on the course the next group of closely spaced finishers were Chris, Nathan, Derek then Don. Next came Robin with his training wheels outfitted surfski followed by Kathleen who is recovering from recent shoulder surgery. Unfortunately Jaden’s ski had steering issues that prevented him from starting the race. As usual the post race chilli, soup and baked goods were a welcome treat to the slightly chilled racers and volunteers.

Here is a video of the race as viewed from the back of the tandem surfski.

Surfski results:

1. Jean (51:16)

2. Jeff/Katja (51:50)

3. Gareth (51:54)

4. JF (54:25)

5. Chris (57:50)

6. Nathan (58:05)

7. Derek (58:27)

8. Don (58:56)

9. Robin (1:00:13)

10. Kathleen (1:02:36)

Next race: March 7 at Vancouver

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Race Results: February 14 at Jericho

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 15, 2009

Surfski results from the February 14 Jericho race.

1) Jean (48:59)

2) Jeff/Katja (50:14)

3) Reivers (54:32)

4) Gary (1:03:05)

Despite the nice weather there was a very poor turnout of surfskis at the race…not sure why. The course started and finished at the Jericho pier with a 10 km journey out around the red buoy off Point Grey in between. There were some small waves running into the bay and no wind which helped keep the racers from getting too cold. Jeff/Katja lead to the half way point but immediately after rounding the red buoy Jean launched himself onto the waves pulling out a comfortable lead. Apparently Reivers had a fun dice with an OC-1 on the return leg making for some fun racing. Gary found some of the waves to be a good challenge, providing some nice early season experience that will help him when the racing season gets into full swing.

The next race is Sunday February 22 at Nanaimo…Shack Attack. See the Feb. 13th post for more information.

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Race Report: February 14 at Victoria

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 14, 2009

Here’s Matt Kelly’s report for today’s Small Boat Delirium race in Victoria.

After a late evening of livin’ large with the well heeled Victoria real estate set (wow, you get an actual back yard here with a tree or two for your 2 million dollars!), I arrived just in time to see the finish of the 10 km race. Gareth won in a sprint boat. He looks strong so watch out this summer. Local fast racer JF was second, I think Kris was third. Sorry if that is totally incorrect. The Gorge racers set me up with a boat so I got in a 5 km each, total 10 km, 2 person relay with JF as my partner. I rode Kris’ wash the whole way and was lucky he had already tired himself out in the morning race. I just hung on so JF was able to start almost even and was able to make up some good ground for the win. The Mako milenium I was using was super tippy! Never tried one before. I was saved at the final turn by doing a power high brace onto the bridge foundation. LOSER! Being just able to reach footrests with slack footstraps did not help though. Other racers I recognized included Jerome in a double(sporting custom Glad Ziplock brand pogies), Huki girl Kathleen testing her new and improved shoulder. Also there were a bunch of these people in these things that look like a cross between a surfki and Santa’s sleigh with the addition of a side stablizer attachment. Possibly they are divining a powerful force us surfski racers have yet to tap into as they go quite fast and only use one blade made of, get this – WOOD. They call their craft OC Wan Canobe or something like that. The world surfski council will probably use the evil death stars lazerwoodembagoraygun to oscarize the souce for production of their propulsion devices before their force becomes too strong to crush.

Back to reality: the race was good. The facilities and padling options here are great and the paddlers are keen.

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Upcoming Race: Sunday, February 22 at Nanaimo

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 13, 2009

Small Boat “Shack-Attack”

Categories: Will be determined based on entries. There will be a single mass start of all competitors. All small boats of up to four paddlers are invited.

Race Start: noon

Course: Out-and-back course from Departure Bay (near Kin Hut) to Shack Island (~11 km)

Entry Fee: $10/paddler

Awards: Will be handed out after the race in the Kin Hut.

Please note: A pre-race meeting will take place at 11:30 am. Start time and race course are subject to change.

Contact Chris Breakey: cbreakey@shaw.ca or 250-751-3624

http://www.nckc.nisa.com/

Check out the March 13, 2008 SurfskiBC posting (in the archives at the left of the home page) for information on last year’s Shack Attack along with some cool videos of the racing action.

Directions from Departure Bay Ferry Terminal:

About 400 metres as you come off the Ferry you take the first right at the lights (Brechin Road).

Follow Brechin up the hill and turn right just before the lights on Hwy 19. The road is Departure Bay road.

Follow Departure Bay road down the hill to the ocean. Right at the base of the hill, at the start of Departure Bay beach is the City of Nanaimo Kin Hut, which is race headquarters.

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So you caught a COLD…should you still train?

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 10, 2009

Check out this article which was lifted from www.trainharder.com.

Don’t Starve a Cold of Exercise
New York Times fitness writer Gina Kolata writes about exercise and colds is her latest article….

==============

YOU have what seems to be a really bad cold. You are coughing and sneezing, and it is hard to breathe. Should you work out? And if you do, should you push yourself as hard as ever or take it easy? Will exercise have no effect, or make you feel better or worse?

It is a question, surprisingly enough, that stumps many exercise physiologists and infectious disease specialists.
“That question has not been actually studied,” said Dr. Aaron E. Glatt, a spokesman for the Infectious Diseases Society and the president of New Island Hospital in Bethpage, N.Y.

Many avid exercisers make up their own rules, and it seems that many of them, like Dr. Michael Joyner, an exercise researcher at the Mayo Clinic who is a swimmer and runner, decide to keep exercising if they possibly can.

“I can tell you that unless I am really wiped out, I still work out but maybe scale back a bit,” Dr. Joyner said. “I think that would be the answer from most relatively hard-core, old-school types.

“If I have an obvious fever and muscle aches,” he continued, “I do very little or take a day or two off, but I really have to be in a bad way to skip more than that.”

Dr. Bill Schaffner, chairman of the department of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University and a member of the board of directors of the Infectious Diseases Society, said he was unaware of any studies that addressed the issue.

Dr. Schaffner described himself as a jogger who runs a few miles most days and goes to a gym for resistance training. And, he said, he continues his workouts when he has a cold.

Exercise, he said, makes him feel better. He speculates that perhaps it is because his blood vessels are dilated when he exercises.

“I think exercise pushes me along a route to recovery,” Dr. Schaffner said. “Of course, I recognize that I might have been on a route to recovery anyway. But I can’t think of a reason why exercise would affect you adversely.”

It turns out that, even though they were unaware of them, the strategies of people like Dr. Schaffner and Dr. Joyner are actually supported by two little-known studies that were published a decade ago in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. Results from the studies were so much in favor of exercise that the researchers themselves were surprised.

The studies began, said Leonard Kaminsky, an exercise physiologist at Ball State University, when a trainer at the university, Thomas Weidner, wondered what he should tell athletes when they got colds.

The first question was: Does a cold affect your ability to exercise? To address that, the researchers recruited 24 men and 21 women ages 18 to 29 and of varying levels of fitness who agreed to be deliberately infected with a rhinovirus, which is responsible for about a third of all colds. Another group of 10 young men and women served as controls; they were not infected.

At the start of the study, the investigators tested all of the subjects, assessing their lung functions and exercise capacity. Then a cold virus was dropped into the noses of 45 of the subjects, and all caught head colds. Two days later, when their cold symptoms were at their worst, the subjects exercised by running on treadmills at moderate and intense levels. The researchers reported that having a cold had no effect on either lung function or exercise capacity.

“I was surprised their lung function wasn’t impaired,” Dr. Kaminsky said. “I was surprised their overall exercise performance wasn’t impaired, even though they were reporting feeling fatigued.”

He said he also tested the subjects at different points in the exercise sessions, from moderate to intense effort, and found that their colds had no effect on their metabolic responses.

Another question was: Does exercising when you have a cold affect your symptoms and recovery time?

Once again, Dr, Kaminsky and his colleagues infected volunteers with a rhinovirus. This time, the subjects were 34 young men and women who were randomly assigned to a group that would exercise with their colds and 16 others who were assigned to rest.

The group that exercised ran on treadmills for 40 minutes every other day at moderate levels of 70 percent of their maximum heart rates.

Every 12 hours, all the subjects in the study completed questionnaires about their symptoms and physical activity. The researchers collected the subjects’ used facial tissues, weighing them to assess their cold symptoms.

The investigators found no difference in symptoms between the group that exercised and the one that rested. And there was no difference in the time it took to recover from the colds. But when the exercisers assessed their symptoms, Dr. Kaminsky said, “people said they felt O.K. and, in some cases, they actually felt better.”

Now, Dr. Kaminsky said, he and others at Ball State encourage people to exercise when they have colds, at least if they have the type producing symptoms like runny noses and sneezing. He is more cautious about other types of colds that produce fevers or symptoms below the neck such as chest congestion. Exercising with a head cold is not an issue for athletes, Dr. Kaminsky said, because most of them want to train no matter what. “If anything they tend to push too much,” he said.

Dr. Kaminsky also runs a fitness program at the university, dealing with regular exercisers. When he tells them it is all right to exercise when they have a cold, many are “a little suspicious,” he said. Often, they want to back off a little, lowering the intensity of their efforts.

“We tell them that’s O.K. if it’s for a short period of time,” Dr. Kaminsky said. “But what you have to be cautious of, where I see it as more of an issue, is with people who are trying to build that exercise habit. They’ve got all these barriers anyway.”

AND too often taking time off because of a cold is the start of falling away from the program entirely.

Dr. Kaminsky, who runs and works out on elliptical cross trainers and does resistance training, takes the studies’ findings to heart. Now when he has a cold, he continues to work out.

“It did give me the personal assurance that it was a good thing to do,” he said.

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Jimsquad coaching vidoes

Posted by bckcrainbow on February 5, 2009

Stewart O’Regan of Quantum Kayaks in Australia provided the link to Jimmy Walker’s coaching videos. It appears that Coach Jim videos the paddlers during their workouts while speaking into the microphone about what they need to work on…then he posts the videos on youtube allowing the athletes to watch the videos to hear and see what the Coach wants them to work on.
Jimmy Walker (1996 Olympian) runs the extremely successful Jimsquad paddling team, which is based at St George Kayak Club on the Cooks River. Now you can spend hours on youtube as Jimmy guides paddlers of various different levels through their paces. There are plenty of hints and tips to be gained from watching his videos, especially those of national teams paddlers like Luke Michael and Steve Byrnes as well as Olympian Tony Schumacher and Dubai Shamaal winner Tim Jacobs. Even Olympic Champion Kenny Wallace makes a guest appearance.

Check out this link to the jimsquad videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/jimsquad

Also, here is a note from Stewart regarding the World Masters Games which will be taking place in Australia during October 2009.

World Masters Games

If you have any friends coming to Australia from overseas for the World Masters Games later this year, we can offer a kayak rental service. We will have stock of the full range Quantum Kayaks as well as the Think Super Lancer available, but best to give us plenty of notice so we can guarantee a boat for the duration of the event.

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