inside this issue
Transcription
inside this issue
The Paddler Tattler INSIDE THIS ISSUE (Click text to jump) Calendar December Events Whitewater of the Southern Appalachians: A Guidebook The Green Race Trip Reports First Aid with Larry: Shoulder Dislocation Sea Kayaking Overnighters Rob Taylor takes a big boof stroke as he flies down the river during the 19th Green Race. Many TVCC members, both pro and amateur, competed in the race this year, despite the wintery weather. Ride the Lightning! Photo Credit: Renee Bombardier DECEMBER 2014 Sun Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Nov 30 Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Outdoor Chattanooga Roll Practice @ SAU Annual Christmas Party 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Christmas Day 28 29 30 31 Jan 1 Sea Kayak & Overnighter Florida Trip 2 3 Sea Kayak & Sea Kayak & Sea Kayak & Sea Kayak & New Year’s Day Overnighter Florida Trip Overnighter Florida Trip Overnighter Florida Trip Overnighter Florida Trip Sea Kayak & Overnighter Florida Trip The Paddler Tattler December 2014 2 parking lot and bring a flashlight as it will be dark. The club will provide a Turkey, Ham, and a few R E B M E S C T DE VEN E nonalcoholic beverages. We ask that you bring a side dish to pass and any adult beverages of choice. If you party to hard, or just want to stay the night (it is a bit of a drive on a curvy, narrow road), there are beds upstairs and floor space downstairs. Lies will be told, a bonfire will be had, and heck, maybe we can roast a classic TVCC member if he’s up to it. You’ll have to come to find out who. If you have a guitar/ musical talent of any sort, we ask you bring that along and maybe we can sing a song. Seriously, this is a great even to get members together that don’t always see each other and say hello, catch up, December 9th—Outdoor Chattanooga Roll Practice 7-8 or 8-9pm, (WW). Southern Adventist University Hulsey Wellness Center. $2 fee to use the pool, $10 for non-members for roll practice. For full listing of dates and details, see page 10. December 13th—Annual Christmas Party It’s time for the Annual Christmas Party. If you’ve been a and make plans for the upcoming year. Questions? Contact Jen Maxwell or Rebecca Hendrix. December 27th-January 1st—Florida Trip (S, ON). Join the Sea Kayak and Overnighter crews for a multi-day trip to Florida. Paddle, swim, camp, and enjoy the warm weather. Lodging (campsites & cabins) at: TVCC member for a while, you know about this classic Carefree RV Resort event. If you’re new to the club or just never been 10200 W. Fishbowl Drive before, come out and join us on Saturday, December Homosassa, FL 34448 13th, 6pm, at the Pot House Cabin. 352-628-2928 17805 River Canyon Road Chattanooga, TN 37405 (35.090 N, 85.400 W) Click here for driving directions; turn right for the http://www.carefreervresorts.com/rv-parks/florida/ homosassa-river/ December 27—Drive down and get set up. Emma Ford, Liz Brunton, Debbie Heilner, Ben Johnson, and John Hubbard enjoy food and conversation at the 2013 Christmas Party. *** All paddling trips are weather and water dependent. It is mandatory that trip leaders be notified by phone by the Wednesday prior to the trip if you plan to attend. This will allow the trip leader to notify you of any changes made. Most events are detailed on the calendar section of the tvcc website. Contact the trip leader for specific training trip meeting times. WW = Whitewater S = Sea Kayaking C = Club Event ON = Overnight Canoe Camping The Paddler Tattler December 2014 3 December 28—Paddle Homosassa River accessible from the campground and explore. By not going far away this day, It will allow stragglers to come in a day late and still be able to paddle that day. We have never paddled this river, so there will be lots of new inlets and springs to see. Anyone want to do another shrimp boil this evening? That was fun and yummy last year! December 29—Three Sisters Springs/Hunter Springs. Swim with the manatees. December 30—Rainbow Springs. Bring your bathing suit. December 31—Wicki Wachee River. Everyone fell in love with this river last year. Crystal clear aqua water, Easy but moving right along fun. Don’t forget to bring President’s Corner From the Editor The holidays are here. Good times with friends and loved ones. We are all lucky in that we have paddlers in one or both of those groups. Some of these paddlers are special. As you’ve definitely seen by now, this is the first month of the new newsletter. As they say with most rebrandings: “New look, same great taste!” What makes a paddler special? The normal stuff: Willingness and ability to pull your drowning self out of the river and chase your stuff down, and then accepts your sorry excuse for swimming. Stephanie Whiting and I have spent a lot of time working on your new layout, and while there will still be some tweaking, I”m very proud of what we came up with. Beyond the obvious facelift, the file size is smaller, and the format should be more electronic-friendly. Leads you down new rivers by showing lines and offering encouragement while stopping you from getting in over your head. With the bulk of the design work conquered, I’m looking forward to publishing all of the great trip reports and photos that are bound to come out of this creeking season. Keep the submissions coming! Paddles the same as you – plays every hole and wave, loves to boof and attain, just blast down the river, or enjoys the beauty that the river offers. Wishing everyone a joyous (and freely flowing) holiday season! you want to. Drinks out of a nasty booty when he or she swims. SYOTR! Meryl Stark, Newsletter Editor Contact Ben Johnson (423-593-5565), Carolyn Rand, Tells tall tales around the campfire and in newsletter of past paddling feats/beat downs. your cameras on this one. Eat out together somewhere on the way back and then usher in the New Year relaxing by our camp fire.. January 1—Drive home or stay another day and paddle way out on the Chassahowitzka River where it meets the ocean. Get salty! And drive home whenever or Eric Fleming if you are interested and have not yet responded. SAVE THE DATE: Movie Night January 24th, 2015 (C). TVCC will be holding a club movie night on January 24th (Saturday Night) at Dumpy’s on Hwy 64 in Ocoee. Check the Yahoo Group and next month’s newsletter for more details. Has refreshments at the takeout. Spends his/her time and energy making paddling better for others. We are lucky as a club to have a number special paddlers. I am lucky to have shared a river or two with them. Happy Holidays! Don Fletcher, TVCC President Former TVCC President Brandon Beaty fully embraces the early start to winter paddling season -- those are in fact icicles on his beard from the Tellico! Thanks to Mandy Beaty for the photo. The Paddler Tattler December 2014 4 Whitewater of the Southern Appalachians In addition to being a local paddling guru and TVCC member, Kirk Eddlemon instructs with Ace Kayaking School. Kirk can be often be found enjoying the local flows in his kayak, or passing on his love of whitewater to his son while they ride tandem in their purple ducky. by Kirk Eddlemon Those of you who attended the member meeting in May will remember Kirk Eddlemon’s presentation on his upcoming guidebook. It is now available for preorder. In case you missed the first pitch, here’s some more information straight from the author himself! The history of the Southern Appalachians is inscribed upon the land by the waters of a boundless web of streams, speaking only as rivers can to the profound rewards awaiting those drawn by the sound of flowing water. This comprehensive guide to more than 380 whitewater streams in the Southern Appalachian Mountains is the key to a lifetime of inspiration, exploration and aqueous fulfillment in North America’s oldest range. This ultimate guide to Southeastern Whitewater is divided into two in-depth volumes covering both the plateaulands on the western portion of the region as well as the mountainous remnants of the core of the range to the east. Filled to the brim with accurate, highly detailed, entertaining descriptions of most every stream worth paddling as well as of many never-before documented sections, this exhaustive work also contains hundreds of color photos of the highest quality, dozens of beautiful maps, and rich stories told by the most dedicated and prolific of paddlers. Coverage of geologic backdrops, educational content on how to most effectively chase rain, and many more appendix materials push this guide into a league of its own, delivering a compelling invitation to experience the captivating rivers and creeks of the Southern Appalachian Mountains. Pre-sales are live at www.wolverinepublishing.com. Reserve your copy today! The Paddler Tattler December 2014 5 TVCC at The Green Race By Rob Taylor “That guy runs the Green.” It was a line my kayaker buddy told me around 1995. He pointed to a guy surfing a wave directly above Grumpy’s ledge on the Ocoee. Just surfing that wave (with certain death lurking below) was enough to garner my admiration. I promptly asked, “What is the Green?” He said it was a crazy river over in North Carolina. Brandon Beaty boofs while the crowd looks on. Brandon finished second out of all the first timers in his class! About 3 years later I was at OAR (where I was a guide) and the best kayaker I knew was leaving the parking lot and asked me and David Stone if we wanted to go over and run the Green with him. We promptly declined. As Jason puttered down the driveway in a car only a raft guide/ kayaker would drive, David turned to me and explained that he has a wife and kids and it would be irresponsible to ever run the Green River. It just wasn’t worth it. It was exactly two weeks later when Jason and his soon-to-be wife were above the famed “Frankenstein” rapid on the Green, showing David and me down. It was a day to remember. Fast forward to 2013. Brandon Beaty and I are on the Green River with a group of TVCC paddlers. For many of them, it was their first time down the Green and we were showing them the ropes. I hadn’t run Gorilla in years and years and Brandon had never run it. We were feeling good, had plenty of safety set, and decided it was a responsible time to give it a go. After lots of nerves and scouting, we pulled the trigger. I ran the Pencil Sharpener entrance and he ran the Flying Squirrel. We hooted and hollered and celebrated profusely after a clean run apiece. Later that week, still apparently on euphoria induced high, Brandon asked me if I wanted to do the Green Race that year. As the race was only a few weeks away, I quickly declined. I offhandedly suggested that we do it “next year.” And like many “next year” conversations, I thought it may never come. Only incredibly skilled or equally incredibly ignorant people actually compete in the Green Race. Well, after the holidays that year we decided we should at least put forth some training if we were going to consider this feat. We decided that we should make the trek to Saluda, NC once a month for training. We skipped the first two months. But, after that we kept up with our plan and even added a few extra weekends in here and there. As we started the training our group began to grow. Brandon Koch became a constant traveling companion from the beginning. I hadn’t talked with him about the race, but I could tell it was on his mind by the way he approached the river. LaDawn Wolfe, volunteered her SWR skills to the official Green Race Safety Team! Go girl -way to keep ‘em safe! Brandon Koch, Brandon Beaty, and Rob Taylor are suited up and ready to race. The Paddler Tattler December 2014 6 As anyone who has kayaked or canoed for long knows, this sport starts out as an adventure to learn a new skill and quickly becomes an introduction into a new family. The friends that we make on the river turn out to be some of the best friends in our lives. The “Green Race Training Trips” evolved into a group of boaters traveling to NC for 2 days of paddling, eating ice cream, drinking a little, laughing a lot, and promising to “burn this place down.” It was a great year! We took numerous “first timers” down the Green and had an opportunity to share a river that everyone who runs it refers to it as “magical”. Weekends of cramming as many people as possible into a hotel room became the weekend we all looked forward to each month. One highlight was the TVCC trip of the Upper Green. It was great giving a large group a small introduction to one of my favorite places. Then it happened: We had one more training trip before the race. Even though we were training, we didn’t always run Gorilla or Go Left and Die. We wouldn’t run it if we didn’t “feel” it. But, really when do you “feel” like running a rapid that professionals walk around? At this point we knew we had to run them all because on race day it doesn’t matter how you feel. Regardless, I, Brandon Beaty, and Brandon Koch fired them up, and even though our lines were sometimes questionable, we were getting more comfortable. Finally, the week had arrived. Brandon Beaty and I went over on Thursday morning to get a few more laps in before the race on Saturday. We were joined by a lot of paddlers doing the same thing. It was great practicing lines and talking about different race day theories. The weather was warm for the end of October, and throughout the rest of the week friends from Tennessee, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Arizona, and WesserGinia began rolling in to town. We had the PERFECT cabin rented just up the road from the take-out. We joined in all the pre-race festivities, but couldn’t quite relax with a small monkey in the back of our minds. We awoke on race day to a nice blanket of snow. Yes, snow. It was a beautiful sight that the 80 or so of us woke up to at the cabin. Well, it wasn’t exactly 80, but close enough to round up. And, it was COLD! Still, the spectators that were hiking in to watch departed on time, the group that was kayaking in got off and running, and us foolish competitors made it to check-in on time. We met for the pre-race speech by Jason Hale. It has been said that this speech is a “near religious experience”. It did not disappoint. Surrounded by kayaks covered in snow, boaters bundled up, and people who had raced this for 19 years, Jason spoke with tears streaming down his face about how Green Race participants gather for a group photo prior to the snowy start. TVCC Members present included: Sarbrina Barm, Brandon Beaty, Eliot Berz, Jacob Clark, Nick Fiedler, Mary Katherine Fields, Zack Fraysier, Grady Flynn, Joe Gudger, Wade Harrison, Cole Henderson, Andrew Hiltbrand, Hunt Jennings, Pat Keller, Brandon Koch, Adriene Levknecht, Sam Manzer, Garrett Mays, Emily Shanblatt, Keith Sprinkle, Rob Taylor, Jake Trotter, and Alex Vargas much this family means to him. I was ready to GO! I was fired up and nothing was going to get in my way. Well, except the 5 hour wait until my start time. TVCC Members show off their creativity and Halloween Green Race spirit at the costume pre-party at Highland Brewery. Eventually, Brandon Koch’s time was up and he took off and disappeared into the Frankenstein rapid. A few minutes later, I was off. And, bringing up the rear was Brandon Beaty. Brandon Beaty killed it and finished in second for all first-timers in our class. I was 7 seconds behind him and Koch wasn’t able to finish due to an injury at Gorilla. The experience was amazing as you plow through rapids with your heart racing, lungs burning, and ears on fire from the screams of more spectators that you have ever seen on a river. It was indescribable. Continued to page 10 The Paddler Tattler December 2014 7 over boulder and its grab-ass hole. I became a Last Chance Saloon Goon by dropping in, then inverting for a quick drink. P I TR RTS O P E R The Dogpaddle Chronicles: Death Falls, There I Was (Nov. 1st) by Spence Lycan There I was, just above Death Falls swimming for my life. Again. This time Death Falls was situated at North Carolina’s Cheoah River,releasing at a thousand cubic feet per second. We (Chazrowski, John, Justin #1 and Lucas) tried twice to make our launch. A foot of snow had dumped higher Appalachian elevations, including the Cherohala Skyway. Apparently Tennessee has snow plows and knows how to use them, North Carolina does not. At the TN/NC border, top of the Skyway, we got turned around, dropping back down into Tellico town. Took the Valley Girl route through Murphy and Andrews. Launched late of a cold and windy afternoon. But we were good to go, went and got down. Until. Chaos Rapid is a hundred yards of adrenaline above Bear Creek Falls, leaving sixty feet of fast, quiet waters between. The last chance to screw up at the bottom of Chaos is a pour- One flappy-paw non-roll later, this panicked river weasel was swimming hard toward the far shores of happiness. Swimming Bear would have been hard on my moral and skeleton, its bottom rocks just bad to the bone. I was flailed across the water, wanting rescue dolphins beneath my fingernails, terra firma beneath my toenails. Hit earth fifteen feet above Bear, bless us everyone. Lucas and Justin #2 prepped ropes from the road side. I waddled upstream and swam hard across, needing to grab offered throw rope rather than suck down into Bear. Is this great recreation or what? Competent paddlers found my boat downstream whilst I made yet another Walk of Shame. When I grow up, I want to roll rather than keep rocking my Life O’Schwim. So thanks but no thanks to fine Tallulah offer by Rob and the Brandons but I’ll be chasing better attitude, increased range of motion, outrageous hip snap, and tincture of courage. Maybe learn to earn a roll. Chattooga Section IV PFD (Nov. 14th) by LaDawn Wolfe Once the crew was reunited, we started our hike into Bull Sluice, a fun boof that starts our run. It is a good place for pictures, and can be hiked back up and rerun if desired. The crew boogied down a good stretch of river; boofing, rock spinning and utilizing many other creative boating techniques, depending on the need as we all enjoyed the scenery, shared tales of recent runs, and plans for the evening, “You’re staying where?!?” The question of the day was, “If the river runs north to south, how come the sun is always in our eyes?” We were soon at Woodall Shoals, where at the 1”/ 1.27 water level on the bridge gauge, the right line slide becomes more of a wheelchair move onto a drainage ditch. With the promise of less manky, flushier rapids, more scenery and lots of camaraderie, our spirits remained at high flow. After more “read it, run it, dang that sun glare is blinding, oops that’s a rock”, we found ourselves at 7 Foot Ledge. Here the river narrows as the gradient increases, setting the tone for the rest of the run. As the name implies, 7 Foot Ledge is just that: a 7 foot ledge that must be traversed to avoid a pin spot. The run-off pushes into the undercut rock wall on river left. I come off the ledge perfectly, but fail to react and get pushed up against the wall. With a “spelunk,” I’m upsidedown, getting a closer look at the underwater features. I My Dream Team: Tyson Capehart, Tony Hill, Ashley Teel, and Terra McGill. The weather was crisp with a chilly bite when the wind blew, but the blue sky promised a good day for boating. We caravanned to the put in, dropped boats, gear and two members of our crew, then the drivers went to set shuttle. The takeout, a 30+ minute drive down a curvy, roller coaster of a dirt to paved road, is a fortress of concrete block and guard rails that somehow can’t help but accentuate the beauty of Lake Tugaloo by contrast. “When I grow up, I want to roll rather than keep rocking my Life O’Schwim.” The Paddler Tattler December 2014 8 rescued boat, paddle and myself in the eddy, conveniently located at the end of the rock wall. Everyone else decided to leave the exploratory swim to me, and paddled by the wall, unscathed. trail is on the other side,” the other boaters took pity on us. Instead, it was boat demo day at Jawbone for Ronny B. of GA, sponsored by three of TVCC’s best hikers, climbers and aspiring paddlers. After 7 Foot Ledge, the river has several rapids (III- to III+) that are fairly close together, making for a fun, read and run boogie water, that’s not a slot that’s a rock, creeking experience. As we approach the Five Falls, we see a large wall canyon as the river turns to the right and drops over the horizon, marking Entrance Rapid, the first of the five. The rapid runs from river left to right, and resembles a slide with 2 alternating reactionary waves. Our crew, whom at this time had been joined by 3 paddlers from Georgia, smoothed it and everyone’s excitement increased as we paddled toward Corkscrew. Everyone beached their boats river left to get out and scout the rapid. Two of the GA paddlers went first, followed by our own Tyson “ ‘Merica” Capehart, who had the best line with an impressive boof off rock on river left that allowed him to bypass two ugly holes. Laura D, of GA and our Tony “Twigs” Hill were next to run it and both made it look easy. As for the three of us, we gladly ferried our boats across to river right and started our soon to be, epic portage. At Sock ‘em Dog, we got back into our boats, caught the eddy river right, big enough for three boats, to get a good look at Alison’s rock, the marker for your line and a boof that should get you over the hole. Everybody successfully makes it through upright and we head on down river. We keep a good pace when we get to the lake as the sun is starting to drop behind the mountain and daylight is quickly waning. The lake paddle to the take-out is long enough to affirm why we are all whitewater enthusiasts and to distract ourselves from the flat water workout, the groups starts the teasing/ ragging, “Tell me again, Where are you staying at tonight?” Beautiful campfires reward those who select OUTDOOR accommodations. Take-out obtained. Boats and gear loaded. Bootie beer was paid. Karma was restored. Dues were paid for the swim at the takeout. Mandy and Ashley running shuttle bunny services both days. At our current water level, Crack in the Rock has little reward to high risk and can easily be portaged as well on river right. And that was the plan. A fairly easy portage of Crack in the Rock, possibly Jawbone (depending on how things looked), and to avoid Hydroelectric Hole. However, apparently one must ferry back across from river right to river left to make the easy portage. We did not. Instead we, being the adventurous, athletic and slightly insane women boaters that we are, thought we would carry our boats up a mountain, down several boulders and across a rock cliff. Which we did! To some degree. But since this was time consuming (let me remind you it gets dark at 5:00 in the afternoon), there was still the 2+ mile lake paddle out (which some of us were blissfully unaware of ), and I am sure at some point the GA paddlers were thinking, “What are they doing? The portage Tallulah trip report... To make a long story short: It was a little cool for November. Tyson and Tony stayed in a Hotel Friday night. Everyone else camped at Chattooga River Resort. Two laps Saturday with a group of 9 and one first timer on the first lap and 4 for the second lap. I swam Bridal Veil on the second lap Saturday trying to keep Mike Stovall from swimming the Bride (He made it to the bank). Tyson and Tony stayed in a Hotel Friday night. Humble Pie for dinner. Draft bootie beers from the tap at CRR while listening to a live band. Tyson and Tony stayed in a Hotel Friday night. Tallulah Trip Report: The Short Version (Nov. 15th & 16th) by Brandon Beaty Told lies around the campfire and ate moonshine cherries. Two laps on Sunday with a group of 4 for the first lap and 2 for the second lap. Tyson and Tony stayed in a Hotel Friday night. Just Rod and myself for second lap on Sunday. He heard how much fun I had the day before swimming the Bride so he thought he should try it also. 4 laps for me+2,448stairs+2mile lake paddle x 4 +10 of your closest friends + Tallulah Gorge= Dam Good Time! Tyson and Tony stayed in a Hotel Friday night. ROW TIDE! OBJ to Nemo (Nov. 22nd) by Kristin Evans Mid 40 degrees, approximately 1500cfs, sun shining, brilliant blue skies and the river to ourselves…seven intrepid paddlers descended a half a mile into the gorge on what would be a perfect day of paddling. For two of us, myself included, it was our first venture down the Obed. One warm up roll confirmed that the water was The Paddler Tattler December 2014 9 ice cream headache cold. There were icicles on the cliffs and in the trees. We did class III read and run all the way to Oh My God. 90 Right 90 Left was a scream, literally. Lost my mojo at Oh My God with a belated eddy out attempt and attempted to run the whole thing backwards. You can imagine how that ended up. Unfortunately, one of my comrades suffered the same fate with the addition of a mangled thumb. The jury is still out on how bad the damage is. She put her big girl pants on and tackled the rest of the river with determination (Rocked three combat rolls that day…congrats!). We dove deep at Submarine Falls and bounced, surfed, zigged and zagged our way through the rest of the day with the breeze and sun on our faces. Powered through the flat water doldrums to thaw out with the hot coffee Heather so thoughtfully brought to share. In the spirit of Thanksgiving, these are the things I’m thankful for: Friends that have supported me during my rookie year, the beautiful whitewater of TN, a best friend to relive the day with on the ride home and pogies. Outdoor Chattanooga Roll Practice But, the most amazing thing was the family of people we kayaked with all year. And, there is one important person who we didn’t kayak with all year. If you don’t already know it, Mandy Beaty is the Shuttle Bunny boss! I have no idea how many trips she made up and down the switchbacks, but I imagine it was much harder than actually paddling the river! To all those that joined us this year, THANK YOU! And, I look forward to more trips in 2015 and a few more people to show down this magical river. Fall/Winter Roll and Kayak Skills practice will take place on select Tuesdays at Southern Adventist University’s Hulsey Wellness Center. There are two sessions—7pm and 8pm. Anticipate only being in the water for one session; if it is busy, the pool gets crowded quickly. • December 9th • February 3rd, 10th • April 7th, 14th • January 13th • March 3rd Admission to the pool is $2, and roll class is $10/person for non-members. Non-members must provide their own gear. Outdoor Chattanooga annual membership are $75/ individual or $125/family. First session is free for new participants. John Hubbard, Stephen Walker, Kristin Evans, David Luinstra, Mack O’Rear, and Vera Pencheva take a group shot before starting their paddler. Heather Curry was also in the group, but she volunteered as photographer. Continued from page 7 Boats and gear should be dropped off at the door at the back side of the Hulsey Wellness Center, to the right of the track, next to the heating and air units. Outdoor Chattanooga staff will bring your boat to the pool. Your kayak must be clean in order to bring it into the pool. Note: Southern Adventist’s dress code emphasizes modesty and cleanliness. Please wear modest workout and pool apparel, including one-piece swimsuits. Brandon Koch digs in to keep his speed as he races below Pencil Sharpener! Hulsey Wellness Center 4870 University Drive Collegedale, TN 37315 https://www.southern.edu/wellness/Pages/default.aspx For more information, contact Outdoor Chattanooga. 423-643-6888 or [email protected]. The Paddler Tattler December 2014 10 Shoulder Dislocation actually medical training. Don’t try any of this if you haven’t gone through some type of First Aid class, or more advanced training like Wilderness EMT or Paramedic. If you haven’t, then for the love of Pete, go take a class! First Aid with Larry By Larry Boothby We’ve all heard about it. We know someone, or know of someone who’s done it. Maybe you have the personal experience of seeing it happen or doing it yourself. No, I’m not talking about drinking a booty beer; I’m talking about the infamous shoulder dislocation. From the first day I started paddling, I have been warned of the dangers of improper technique. Primarily, dislocation of one or both shoulders. This month we are going to talk about it: the anatomy, the mechanism, and what can be done when there is a shoulder injury. As usual, this does NOT replace This paddler demonstrates the proper low brace (above), and shoulder-danger high brace (below). SHOULDER ANATOMY The shoulder is one of the most complicated joints in the body. The joint is formed by the articulation of the Humorous, that big bone in the upper arm, with the Scapula, or shoulder blade. The joint itself is a ball and socket arrangement that allows the arm to make 8 very distinct motions. This kind of movement requires 9 separate muscles to cross the shoulder. If this isn’t complicated enough, there are several major blood vessels and a large nerve plexus that occupy space in the shoulder as well. PADDLING PROTECTION When it’s operating properly, the shoulder offers an amazing amount of strength and movement. Abuse it and you will find out just how much you depend on that movement, and just how difficult life will be without it. How do paddlers end up with shoulder dislocations? The evil “High Brace”. Get your paddle over your head, hands above shoulder level, elbows up, then brace into moving current. That pain you will feel is the end of your paddling season. How do you protect yourself? Keep your hands and elbows down and in “the box” in front of your chest. Rotate your torso to plant the paddle, and use a low brace instead of a high one. IDENTIFYING INJURY If the worst happens, and you or one of your crew suffers a shoulder injury, you’re going to need to deal with it. First thing is recognition. Aside from the pain, a shoulder dislocation is recognized by the drooping and rounding of The Paddler Tattler December 2014 11 FIRST AID GUIDELINES Photograph and diagram of a shoulder dislocation. Notice the assymetry on the patient, and the misalignment within the joint on the diagram. What can we do: We need to get them off the river and to a safe location where you can work. Next we need to evaluate circulation and neurological function. Have the person wiggle their fingers. Touch the hand and make sure he/she can feel it. Next pinch the fingertip and watch the nail. It should turn white when you pinch it and when you let it go, it should turn pink again within 2 seconds. If any of these don’t work, or if there is a lack of neurological function, or circulation, you have a true medical emergency. It is now time to start thinking about 911 calls and rapid evacuation. Depending on where you are, that may mean a helicopter ride. If the neuro and circulation are ok, then we can sling the arm across the body, get the person up to the road and go to the hospital. Placing the arm in a sling doesn’t require any fancy equipment. I carry a couple of triangular bandages, but a piece of rope will work in a pinch. Anything that will moving the arm and meet resistance: STOP!!! DON’T FORCE ANYTHING!!!! Remember there may be a fracture. You really don’t know what is going on in there. If you have this problem, the best thing you can do is try and immobilize the entire arm in the position it is in. Depending on the situation, a 911 call or activating an emergency locator transmitter may be your best bet. Let the professionals come and handle it. The truth is, that for the majority of the places we paddle, there are hospitals and professional help very close. Unless you are on an expedition, you should be able to evacuate the patient, and get the injury taken care of at a hospital. If you’re interested here is a great video on the FARES reduction technique: http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=RCD0sZREYIg That’s all for this month. If you have questions, suggestions, or you just want comment, I can be reached at lboothby1908@ att.net. SYOTR! the effected side. The shoulders should be symmetrical. If they are not, something is wrong. The problem is that we don’t have any way to tell if it is really a dislocation, or if something is broken. Until we can take an X-ray machine paddling with us, there is just no way to know. With the younger crowd it will more than likely be a dislocation, and with older jokers like me, there is an increase in probability of a fracture. So what do we do? Go to the hospital. I know, we’ve all seen the tough guy in the movies reduce his dislocation by slamming his shoulder into something solid. That’s Hollywood, DON’T DO IT. You may break a bone, or you may knock the joint back into place, only to find that the nerves are crushed and your partner can’t move his hand--EVER. Worst of all, you may cut blood circulation to the entire arm resulting in a catastrophic outcome. These two diagrams show how to splint a shoulder with a triangle bandage. The goal here is to immobilize the affected joint. support and stabilize the arm, elbow bent, across the body. It can even be done with a PFD. The point is to immobilize the shoulder joint and the elbow joint. This protects the injury and should help manage the pain. After you get the arm splinted, you want to go ahead and check neuro and circulation again. Same as before. If it’s ok, then you are good to go. If not, then you need to shift gears and start moving with a purpose. Finally, if you are The Paddler Tattler December 2014 12 Sea Kayaking: Nickajack Bluffs Saturday, October 25th by Eric Fleming 14 paddlers met at 10 am at the Nickajack Shellmound ramp on Saturday October 25th. We put on and headed upstream along the shoreline. There is a nice bay to check out, followed by a sheer rock bluff with a cave at the waterline that you can swim through and come out on the other side! The cave exit is around a short curve, but the turn is too sharp to get a boat through it. It’s always surprising to me how trees and other vegetation can grow out of seemingly sheer rock surfaces, especially when I plant stuff at home under ideal conditions only to have them die. We paddled up around one of the islands in Rankin Cove near I-24 and back to the ramp. It was a perfect day for a paddle, and definitely too nice to be at home, especially as winter is closing in fast. 10 of us stopped at the Cracker Barrel afterwards and were surprised to be seated next to fellow sea kayak club members Angela and John (Angela was just getting off of work). It was another fun day of fresh air and exercise in the great outdoors with great company. The Paddler Tattler December 2014 13 Overnighters: Etowah River November 8th-9th by Jamie Wendt Our small group made the 2 1/2 hour trek from Chattanooga to Dawsonville, GA to paddle and camp on a short stretch of the scenic Etowah River. The Etowah is perhaps most well known for the gold-mining tunnel located further upstream, on one of several Class I/II sections below the river’s headwaters. We paddled a 9-mile stretch below the tunnel that runs through protected forest land in the Dawson Wildlife Management Area. Access to the river is especially easy here and we were able to leave a shuttle vehicle (for a small fee) at the Kelly Bridge Rd. takeout. Dawson County has constructed an attractive and well-maintained park at the Hwy. 9 bridge below Dawsonville, and we put in there. Launching around 2:00, we paddled several miles and stopped before dusk to camp at a well-used site on a small bluff above the river. We had a pleasant evening around the campfire, cooked a shared dinner in the Dutch oven, and ducked early into the tents as temperatures started to dip. about 120 cfs on the Hwy. 9 gauge, but there was just enough to negotiate all of the shoals without dragging the boats. After paddling past the confluence with Amicalola Creek, we arrived at the takeout early in the afternoon. Though the drive would make it a bit long for a day trip from Chattanooga, I thought the river was pleasant enough to warrant a weekend camping visit. For this particular stretch, we thought the mix of driving time, paddling and riverside camping was just about right for a low-key weekend. Participants: Jamie Wendt, Pat Carver, Ben Johnson, John Hubbard. The following day we had an easy paddle out, about 5 miles through some shoals and the interestinglynamed Radioactive Rapid. (Apparently the area was the site for many years of a government program to develop a nuclear-powered airplane.) We stopped once for a short hike to a scenic waterfall, and we climbed next to it far up the hillside. Water was fairly low for the weekend, The Paddler Tattler December 2014 14 Our Mission The Tennessee Valley Canoe Club brings together those interested in canoeing, kayaking, and related activities; increases the knowledge, safety, and appreciation of paddle sports for those who are interested; and supports conservation and preservation of recreational waterways. Membership is open to persons of all ages. Both families and singles are welcome. The club’s activities include: TVCC Yahoo Group All club members are invited to join the club’s online paddling forum. The Yahoo Group is a The Paddler Tattler is the monthly publication of the Tennessee Valley Canoe Club. great place to find out about paddling trips in The Paddler Tattler invites submissions of addition to those posted in the newsletter, post articles, trip reports, videos, and any other pictures and trip reports of your latest adventures, news or information of interest to the paddling or just find someone to go paddle with. community. The only requirement for the forum is active Submit an electronic copy no later than the membership in the club. To join, go to http:// 20th of each month to the newsletter editor by groups.yahoo.com/group/tvcc/ and click on emailing [email protected]. Submissions “Join This Group”. Please be patient and allow a may be edited. • Whitewater & flat water kayak and canoe training few days for the page administrator to respond • Whitewater & flat water river trips for all skill levels and accept your membership. Send an email Past issues of the Paddler Tattler can be accessed to the group moderator at tvcc-subscribe@ online at: yahoogroups.com with your name. See you on http://tinyurl.com/tvccpastnewsletters. • Water safety & rescue training • Extended canoe & camping trips the river! • Annual & monthly meetings Sea Kayaker Email List • Community service The TVCC Flatwater Flotilla uses an email contact list to send out information about upcoming events. To be added to this list, please send 2014-2015 Officers an email the TVCC Sea Kayak Cruise Master at President Safety Chair Don Fletcher [email protected] Vice President Ashley Teel [email protected] Assistant Vice President LaDawn Wolfe [email protected] Treasurer Debby McRae [email protected] Secretary John Hubbard [email protected] Newsletter Editor Meryl Stark [email protected] Webmaster Teri Zur [email protected] River Conservation Chair Jim Ledbetter [email protected] [email protected]. Mike Shillinger [email protected] Public Relations Chair Katie LaRue [email protected] Cruisemaster I, Class II/III Spence “Dogpaddle” Lycan [email protected] Cruisemaster II, Class III/IV Brandon Koch [email protected] Tennessee Valley Canoe Club P.O. Box 11582 Chattanooga, TN 37401 www.tvccpaddler.com Cruisemaster III, Overnighters Carolyn Rand [email protected] Cruisemaster IV, NonPaddling Jen Maxwell & Rebecca Hendrix [email protected] Cruisemaster V, Sea Kayaks Eric Fleming [email protected] The Paddler Tattler December 2014 15