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Getting Kids into Canoeing

Glenn MacGrady

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Here's an article on the subject . . .


. . . but it would be more interesting to read some advice and experiences from you folks. You can include how you yourselves got interested in canoeing as a kid, and pictures of kids in canoes are always popular.

I got interested in canoeing because I spent every summer at my grandparent's lake house on North Pond in Woodstock, Maine, and they got a Grumman when I was eight-years-old. I messed around with it almost every day of every summer for 10 years. I introduced my kids to canoes at the same family lake house in Maine, plus on day and overnight canoe trips in New York, Florida and Connecticut.

The only picture I have digitized of my kids in a canoe is this one of my daughter, at about 12 years old in 1986, in my Mad River Explorer on North Pond.

Kelly North Pond Mad River Canoe.jpg

North Pond is about three miles from Bryant Pond, where the Maine Canoe Symposium is now held, and which was the last town in America to have hand-crank telephones, which had to be used to contact a switchboard operator in order to make a call. The hand-crank system lasted until October 1983.

But my grandfather didn't allow a telephone in the house nor a TV when they were invented. He told us, "Those gadgets interfere with healthy country living. Go outdoors. Chop wood for the fireplace. Go swimming. Go fishing. Go canoeing!"
 
He was not wrong.

I got interested thru the Boy Scouts and learned a lot during my years as an lifeguard / aquatics instructor. The local Scout council also maintained (I think two) trailers full of aluminum canoes that the troops could borrow (maybe rent- I wasn't interested in specifics at that age) and our local troop took advantage of that regularly on Loyalhanna Creek or the Kiski River (the Conemaugh River nearest my home was pretty nasty with acid mine drainage in those days).

Today, they've cleaned up the river a lot, I've had the kids paddling since they were fairly young and my oldest two seem to enjoy it. Like the Harry Chapin song, however, their lives have become busy and I've only managed to get one (my son) on an overnight trip so far. (I think my oldest daughter would fall in love with Northern Ontario if she'd slow down a little)

I've recently become a grandfather so I'll bide my time until the newness wears off and mom & dad need a break, at which time I'll take the rug rat for an hour walk by the river, then a weekend backpacking trip on the ridge and, eventually, a month or so in the boreal forest. That is, of course, assuming I can convince the meathead father who tells me "Canada's dangerous" (like he's been there) :rolleyes:.

In the meantime, I'll get out when I can, attempt to make it look as cool as I can manage and try to get the neighborhood kids to believe that I'm this cool guy who takes these awesome canoe trips and that they can too. If all goes well, I might be able to recruit an entire generation away from plastic 'yaks and into the fellowship of the single blade.

Or maybe I'll go all Horace Nebbercracker on 'em... I haven't really decided yet.
 
My kids (now nine and eleven) have been paddling with me since they were 4 or 5. I never pushed it, but always asked if anyone wants to come went I go out. I usually get one taker for a trip around our small lake. I have made paddles for them that are size appropriate so that they can participate and feel like they are a part of it. My son, the 9 yr old, recently asked to go on his first canoe camping trip and we did that last weekend. He had a run in with a grumpy local black bear when he was younger and has been nervous to sleep outside. So again, I never pushed it. We went to a local lake where a vehicle was close by in case it didn’t pan out. He had a great time and is asking to go to the ADKs this fall.
My daughter last year asked if I would make her a solo canoe and I have been slowly getting it finished. I don’t see her going on trips, but I hope we paddle often.

Even if they aren’t fellow trippers as they get older, they will remember the times with their Dad and hopefully keep paddling.
IMG_0908.jpegIMG_7814.jpeg

Bob
 
Hayden paddling the Tugaloo.jpg
I fully support the idea of age appropriate paddles. Nephew Hayden started paddling at two the first time he was in a canoe. He didn't have a paddle, but leaned over the side of the canoe and snagged a stick floating in the water and proceeded to use it as a paddle. Here he is four and trying out his second, longer paddle after giving his first one to his little sister. Note that length is only half of the equation, Shaft and grip size for small hands is most important IMHO.

Hayden is now 13 and paddling both canoe and kayak. He listens to suggestions about technique because he likes to go FAST.

Besides small paddles for small hands I think a relaxed attitude in the adults is very important. We take youngest kids out in our biggest, most stabile canoe. They have free range of the boat and end up leaning over the side to get their hands in the water. They understand quickly what their movement does to rock the canoe. There is never any " sit still" commands from us. When kids are older and swimming we go out and capsize the canoe and play with it, get under it when overturned, climb around on it. Lots of fun on a hot day.

My canoeing days started at 10 when dad brought a Lund aluminum to a lake house we rented. Scouts helped me learn better technique with a good Canoeing Merit Badge instructor at summer camp. Our troop had a Voyageur Patrol of older scouts that went on canoe trips, alternating years with BWCA/Quetico and Namekagan/St. Croix trips. It kept the older scouts in the troop to teach skills to the younger scouts and something for the younger ones to aspire to.

Canoeing has been an important part of my life for 63 years!
 
I canoed with my father a few times/year as a kid fishing the local river and I paddled a couple times solo on the lake to go fishing but as soon as I had a driver's license it was goodbye canoes and hello motorized fishing boats. I took up paddling again in my mid-20's.

I grew up in a small rural town (pop. 250) where we kids had free run of the place. I spent a lot of time walking the railroad tracks, catching minnows and crawdads in the creek, and fishing in the gravel pits and river. I had a couple friends that did these things with me and others who didn't. Now, as grown ups, I know of only 1 or 2 that really seek outdoor recreation and a couple that want nothing to do with it.

No kids of my own. I have a few that I hang out with on a regular basis. I've taken most of them canoeing and kind of leave it up to them. If they seem to enjoy it and show interest then I'm happy to foster it. If they seem to enjoy other things then we do other things.

A fairly common theme seems to be people (re)discovering the great outdoors in their early 20's, maybe even after being exposed to it as a kid and rejecting it. I'm content to just show them what's out there and let them immerse themselves at their own pace.

Alan
 
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