Join the Cardboard Kayak Race!

Calling all educators, campers, and community groups to join us and the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance on July 12 for the 2014 Cardboard Kayak Race! Everyone comes by boat to Governors Island for City of Water Day, but only the most creative and humorous mariners make their own zany boats right at the festival. Let your team of kids be among them!

HarborLAB will be providing public paddling programs at City of Water Day and safety support for the cardboard kayak race, as we did last year. We would be happy to help teams of junior high, high school, and college students practice their paddling in the weeks before competing in this unique design-build-paddle event! We and the MWA can also connect you with swim instruction organizations.

For information and registration, please click HERE. To partner with HarborLAB, email edu@harborlab.org.

 

 

 

SATURDAY SCIENCE STUMPER!

Intrigued by these images? Then head over to our Facebook Fan Page (https://www.facebook.com/HarborLAB) to enjoy the challenge of our Saturday Science Stumper! Each week we present an image that relates to our estuary and watershed ecosystems, plus a hint to help you identify it. The following week, we provide the caption.

HarborLAB is an environmental service learning organization, not a club, so we’ll shamelessly geek out on the wonders of science around us. Join the fun!

 

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How to Paddle a Tandem

HarborLAB uses the Malibu 2 XL by Ocean Kayak as the core of its fleet because these boats are stable, reasonably quick for day trips, and (like all sit-on-tops) easier to re-enter. Another huge advantage to this boat model is that it’s a tandem, which means we were able to use your donations wisely (one tandem is cheaper than two singles) and keep trips safer (fewer boats to manage, and the social pressure of shared boats reins in carelessness). But a tandem can be frustrating when poorly coordinated. Ocean Kayak posted this quick and handy video to avoid difficulties.

One small note: if you want to make a very sharp turn while maintaining momentum, it’s better to *not* turn by the method demonstrated at the end. Instead, keep in sync, but hold your paddles by a blade and middle-shaft, making very wide arcs that turn you while keeping the energy you’ve built up. Again, this method (learned from NY Kayak Co.) is meant only for sharp turns without slowing down. Ruddering or back paddling can be great tools for slowing while turning.

When you’ve progressed beyond sit-on-top kayaking, here’s a demonstration of the more advanced (and ultimately more recommended) sweep stroke: