Canoe Wrecks & Rescues: Pin, Wrap, and Extraction from Ontario's Petawawa River

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  • čas přidán 25. 03. 2021
  • A whitewater canoe is pinned on a rock and then removed using a Z Drag pulley system, with only limited damage.
    At Crooked Chute, Petawawa River, Algonquin Park.
    #AlgonquinPark

Komentáře • 47

  • @vatsalsoni4839
    @vatsalsoni4839 Před 3 měsíci

    Matthew you’re a great person and a great patient adventurer.

  • @TS-xj5mt
    @TS-xj5mt Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for posting - lots to learn all the way around - what to do and what not.

  • @MrPwor
    @MrPwor Před 2 lety +2

    I think this video just sold me on a Esquif boat!

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 2 lety

      Careful though. This is a Royalex canoe and they are made from T-Formex now.

    • @whodatcanuck3519
      @whodatcanuck3519 Před rokem

      Rest assured, T-formex is just as durable. Please check out Northern Scavenger and they wrapped their Esquif Canyon around a rock as well. After a very dramatic recovery, they were able to pop the boat back into form and continued their journey.
      That video and now this one has sold me entirely on Esquif Canoes.
      I'm looking into getting a Pocket Canyon myself.

    • @BurtReynoldstash
      @BurtReynoldstash Před 5 měsíci

      😂before I saw this I’ve planned to pick up an Esquif prospectuer tomorrow. 😂
      I’m even more sold now, I was flipping coins about a nova craft tuffstuff epd but not now lol😂

  • @TomBeakbaneToronto
    @TomBeakbaneToronto Před 3 lety +3

    That water is powerful! Royalex is magical.

  • @TimRobinson
    @TimRobinson Před 2 lety

    Great demo video for teaching about this stuff. Thanks for sharing.

  • @tombeckett4340
    @tombeckett4340 Před 3 lety +1

    The first thing I thought about was lifting the end closes to the shore up over the rock . Lucky thing you had a rugged Royal X boat. And that device with you guys. Cheers.🇨🇦👍

  • @TOOZECRUISE
    @TOOZECRUISE Před 3 lety +2

    Great video! Thanks.

  • @roocanoe6338
    @roocanoe6338 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video guys, so glad you had a body camera on you to show all the action

  • @Twobarpsi
    @Twobarpsi Před rokem

    So much energy in flowing water!

  • @CanadianSledDog
    @CanadianSledDog Před 3 lety

    That was a great demonstration! Can't wait to try it out myself, lol.

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 3 lety +2

      Please don't get yourself into anything you aren't prepared for!

    • @CanadianSledDog
      @CanadianSledDog Před 3 lety

      @@wildernesscanoeassociation nope, I'm taking it slow and learning properly :) ...actually had one good scare in Alberta's Sturgeon River that set me straight. Got way too close to a strainer and it just looked like the mouth of the beast, is the only way I can describe it.

  • @HowardMorland
    @HowardMorland Před 3 lety +2

    The bow paddler tried to avoid the rock by doing a back stroke on the left at the last moment. (Did he think he was in the stern?) He should have done a draw on the left or a sweep on the right. But the stern paddler, who has the most control, should not have let the boat get in that position in the first place.

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 3 lety +2

      His thumb is clearly pointed upstream; he was doing a draw. But then, attacking the rock never helps.

  • @careyrobson5722
    @careyrobson5722 Před rokem +1

    Letting the force of the water do the work would have worked. The boat "stuck" because it was at equilibrium. If your partner had just held the bow rope downstream without pulling on it and you had lifted the bow the force of water on the stern would have pulled off the boat.
    Where the boat was creased, (folded), it will be vulnerable to cracking because of flexing over time. I would suggest one or two layers of 8oz cloth with epoxy on the inside over the crease. Sand the royalex, (t-formex) and wipe with alcohol only. Feather the repair.

  • @Loonislandoutdoors
    @Loonislandoutdoors Před 2 lety

    Which part of Crooked Chute was this? Was it between the 1st and 2nd take outs? Any idea what the water level was on this run?

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 2 lety +1

      This was in the bottom third, after the main chute. Most of the equipment was on the portage trail to the very bottom. This is where most experienced people resume paddling after skipping the most dangerous part.
      It looks healthy but no, we don't know exactly what the water levels were. Pretty sure it was summer.

  • @joeburns9876
    @joeburns9876 Před 3 lety

    👍

  • @JayhooOutdoors
    @JayhooOutdoors Před 2 lety

    My biggest fear my canoe would be done for.
    Luckily I’ve never pinned or flipped. But that just means I haven’t pushed hard enough yet lol

  • @victorziebenhaus3229
    @victorziebenhaus3229 Před 3 lety +2

    No need to overcomplicate its a basic 3:1 system. The travelling friction hitch can easily be replaced by a midline knot if ur not going to bottom it out at the anchor.

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 3 lety

      Yes, but a knot would weaken the rope and could result in a failure there.

    • @victorziebenhaus3229
      @victorziebenhaus3229 Před 3 lety +1

      Adding two prusics with spliced or stitched eyes adds four spots for potential failure (at each splice or grizzly stitch). Also knots only reduce a ropes tensile breaking strength by up to 50% so unless your using a way underated rope or old rope its not going to fail. More likely to tie your friction hitch improperly than have a rope fail. Also the bite of a friction hitch on a rope also reduces a ropes strength. Basically reducing the amount of spots a failure could occur in a system is always a good idea is what im saying.

  • @georgevenckus
    @georgevenckus Před rokem

    Your canoe survived cause it was an esquif

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před rokem

      I am sure that esquif likes to hear that, but it is not the only reason. There are many comparable canoe models made from royalex with vinyl gunwales that should have performed similarly.

  • @sed6
    @sed6 Před 2 lety

    We used to do that with aluminum rental canoes all the time. We'd just leave it where it is and let the rental guy know where to find it.

  • @kirilprochorov7662
    @kirilprochorov7662 Před 3 lety

    Looks great, but you could’ve avoid this if just could better paddle and maneuver. River took control of you 👌🏻

    • @wildernesscanoeassociation
      @wildernesscanoeassociation  Před 3 lety +3

      I agree there was a moment where an aggressive move could have saved the day, but it would have been best to paddle out farther from shore in the first place.

  • @tedanderson463
    @tedanderson463 Před rokem

    If you want to see something incredible..... Tie a 50 foot long rope to a tree.... Tie the other end to your truck... Put the truck in neutral... With brake off... Stretch the rope tight... Go halfway between the truck and the tree... And pull 90°to the rope... The physics book says that a man is capable of moving 1500 lb like that... But as soon as the object moves afoot or so you have to retighten the rope again and block the truck tires... So you don't lose what you gain ...a man can pull a truck up a hill like that... It may only move one or two feet at a time. Or even less. I think they call it a vector pull.