This old man may look goofy but he's an understated genius and badass. Practicing this in balls freezing water so he'll know what to do in a real emergency is a complete Alpha move. Huge respect.
A good example of the sarcastic remarks made by so many on you tube. No matter what the situation there's always those who know little about a sport, yet have all the smart answers. In any sport, we ALL start out as beginners. Nobody is born an expert.This man could have chosen to not upload this video, to avoid embarrassment. Instead he still did, knowing that there will always be beginners who can learn from this experience. Respectfully, I Thank You & wish U the very best!
I agree, but it was his dad doing it he just uploaded his dad it is good to have it out there I am just starting out and found it helpful to see this and def am going to train on getting back in my kayak!
This is a great video! It is important to see how very uneasy it is to get back into the thing without practice, even if you might have some idea of the steps to self-rescue. If this were a sea-going rescue situation with high winds and fast current, anyone without this sort of controlled practice would be crab bait. Kudos for posting this!
This is a very helpful video for newbies like me. It helps to know what CAN go wrong. Most of the vid's I've watched show me the proper technique for getting back in. However, the subjects are experienced & thus it doesn't look too complicated. Thanks for posting this. I can see me doing these things. I will practice!!!!
This is priceless its so entertaining. Respect to you sir for not being embarrassed. Makes you realise though, in less than perfect conditions how much danger you'd be in after only a short time.
thank you for posting this. i paddle in british columbia canada . my first experience with cold water was in newfoundland. i am bcu 4 and as my friends with less training did some rolls and rescues after a paddle i thought how clever it would be to show a smooth roll. the water hit my head and neck, rushed down my neck and i was a swimmer. the boys had me back in an empty boat in well under a minute. it was an education.
jfree1998 Really, Alaskans practice in a pool. In Seattle we self enter in the ocean and lake and succeed. It is not as hard as this clown makes it look. In Seattle, we don't even use a paddle float.
Great to see a real person struggling to do this. Just like I will be doing soon,, probably more educational than watching an expert in a swimming pool. I hope you rescued the old boy in the end.
Kudos for trying and preparing for when you need to. Not enough people are ready for when a situation like this arises. I seriously wonder how many people I see on the water in kayaks have ever tried to remount their kayak from the water. well done
Man, That must be cold, you can hear his puffing as the shock and cold saps the strength right outta him. That man is no quitter...gotta admire that these days!
141000 views.. This is an important video. I hope you realize you have done a very good thing for the paddling community. I won't preach as i am sure you have all this and a roll mastered by now. I have been taken out of my kayak in COLD water. The rescue was required and I am well trained. I have a good roll but sometimes it is not enough. Good luck and hope to paddle with you some time.
Very, very admirable his perseverance and efforts! - I did not read your info until after watching the video. I actually thought he was an instructor being funny on purpose demonstrating "what not to do when you fall out of a kayak." At the end he is definitely getting clumsier and slower ... hypothermia. Good he asked for help to get out.
Haha also thought this was a funny "how not to do it" video! I was like "Oh come on, he was just about there and literally just messed up on purpose.." Finding out this was all real mistakes is sobering. It must be extremely easy to flip off the top even when doing the finishing techniques. I watched other videos before this and it seemed like his mistake was coming in dierectly from the side and not the rear. From the side, all your momentum to get up/in is pushing against the other side of the kayak. So once you get on top, that momentum keeps flowing and pushes you too far the other way. But from the rear, your momentum is pushing on the bottom of the kayak, basically trying to push an air filled container downwards (which is extremely hard to do). So going from the back is much more stable, and any momentum you have will only push the front of the kayak down, which won't effect stability much at all. Then you just scoot up until you're by the seat and lift your legs up and into the kayak. Really cool to see real mistakes though. Frustration and panic probably set in so fast that it makes all your mistakes even more dramatic!
Thanks for posting. I just inherited a nice kayak and was wondering about reentering from the water. Took the kayak out on the lake for the first time today. Its 98 degrees here today though. Haven't dunked it yet. I plan on practicing this as well.
This is useful for new kayakers. He is attempting self rescue and making seemingly little mistakes that could so easily be fixed with a little coaching.
It's hard to do sometimes when folk are watching you, I kept screwing up while doing this re-entry at Loch Lomond to make matters worse it was the golf open, Tv carmeras were there and everyone was laughing making it harder, when i got in (after about 14 attemps )everyone gave a clap. Wonder if tiger woods seen me. Came accross this looking to see if someone posted my failure on youtube.
love it and makes me chuckle every time.....but important lessons learnt. learning to re-enter is so important and saves lives, learn now so u know how to for real...serious but funny. thanks and keep paddling
I felt for this guy, he got so close and I've been there. I learned a bunch of self-rescue techniques in the beginning of my kayak career. Murphy has a nasty way of taking your skills and throwing them out the window when you add things to the situation like cold water. Next add pride, defeatism, humiliation. Every failed attempt adds time to your exposure in the painful, life-sapping water. Then rushing, panic, more mistakes. What if YOU were not right off the dock with family close at hand video'ing this? Add some rough seas, wind... These videos are great for reminding us to be practiced and prepared. Have paddling buddies Have more than the basic gear and be experienced in how to use it. Dress for immersion, not the air temperature. Have a paddling plan and post it back on land where your emergency contacts can be aware of it.
Good effort. It's all experience. I'm sure you've figured it out by now, but for your viewers who don't know, once you have your butt back in the boat, you are going to be up high, therefore you will be unstable. Make all movements slow, smooth, and as low to the boat as possible. If you can swim, you don't need a paddle float. Tie your PFD to the end of the paddle, and secure the other end to the boat. Once inside, put your PFD back on and go paddling.
That was very enjoyable. If you want to get back into a Necky Manitou you need to come up from the rear, straddle the kayak and inch forward. The most important thing is to get your body out of the water quickly otherwise as the previous guy said your DEAD. You would only get maybe two opportunities to do that in very cold water before you become to tired to be able to manage to get in to the boat.
that will be me for sure im not to able and I want an inflatable kayak I hear are hard to roll over in the first place but im sure ill manage thanks for posting and great to see something to learn by ty again
well, that's what practicing is for after all. It's like mikelove said - keep weight firmly on the paddlefloat throughout, even after you're finally back in the seat. I've always come from behind the cockpit, doing this, where you actually crawl over the paddle one leg at a time and corkscrew into the seat. It might be easier to keep weight on the paddle going that way? The other really, really important thing here is to never, ever let go of your boat or paddle.
Aye yaye yaye! 1) After it's on the paddle...inflate the float to maximum. 2) secure the paddle under the decklines - not the bungees. 3) When you drop your butt into the seat, lean, slightly, toward the float side. That was your recurring error. Keep at it; you've almost got it! P.S. maintain possession of the paddle, at all times.
@FFForeverandevermore You are lucky to have a dad who's into outdoor stuff. Enjoy it and learn new stuff together. You'll remember the rest of your life!
One time I was testing out a kayak to see whether I can get back in it in open water and all of a sudden a rather large boat was coming in my direction. You had to move fast. It probably took no more than 4 seconds for me to get back in the kayak and start paddling. . You have to be aware that many kayaks are not friendly for getting back in from open water, especially short cockpit types and ones with too small or overly large cockpits as I have learned from experience.
@cockercane You likely have it. If you can learn a roll you are well away but learning other self rescue techniques is very valuable. I have BCU 4 star and have been paddling since about 1980. (I started very young LOL. Enjoy paddling, I have two oceans a bunch of lakes and a sea under my boat so far.
Absolutely love it... I guess he finally figured out what to do when you have a sit in Kayak ... great video... even if it might of been staged I have seen this ..... LOL...
i feel like enterring this kayak from the back or front will be allot easier than using the stabalizer paddle ps this may seem like an easy skill but he is a verry wise man for practising before putting himself at risk
He didn't seem to have any more trouble getting up on top when the float was off the paddle, just the same problem of going over the other side. BTW, my touring boat is 24" wide and I can roll it holding the paddle in one hand.
Someone needs to teach this guy a proper paddle float rescue! Put the paddle behind the cockpit under the deck lines rather than in front of the cockpit under the bungees like he did. Once paddle float is secure on paddle blade,leverage your chest onto your back deck of your kayak by pushing up on your paddle shaft and cockpit combing at the same time. After your upper body is supported by the kayak pull your body forward (closer to the stern) and slide your legs in one at a time. After you're in your cockpit face down roll your body upright towards your paddle. Drain cockpit, secure paddle float, re attach spray skirt. good to go!
I tried that with mine but it was the middle of summer and there was a lot of people watching me. It was embarrassing but fun. if i can make a friend recorded me Ill post it LOL Nice video and keep trying you'll get better
love is eternal. only love can keep one (his wife) from busting up rolling on the dock laughing at this. i'm a kayak rookie and i hope this never happen to me. omg
As a kayaker, it IS what hes supposed to do. the manitou 13 is 24" wide, hard to roll, easier to re-enter. most people underestimate how hard it is . I dont think most people posting here know alot about kayaking. It takes alot of practice. Paddle float re-entry Is the sensible solution in a capsized manitou 13. only thing he did wrong was put the paddle float infront of the cockpit instead of behind.
@FFForeverandevermore Yes, the water is cold. And the colder it is, the quicker you want to be back in your boat. Once you are frozen, you are just a log in the water. It's over. Again, only 2 options to get back in your kayak in real situation: assisted T rescue or Eskimo roll. Practice both, they are not so hard and they can save your butt from freezing!
Best way is to swim to the rear of the kayak and pull yourself up so the rear of the kayak is between your legs. Next, use your arms to pull yourself forwards until you are at your seat. It even works in choppier water.
Practice practice practice. Practice under conditions where you will be paddling. Practice with your deck and cockpit are set up for the conditions where you are paddling. We had a capsize on Superior three years ago where the guy was great at self-rescues, but this time had a huge bladder of water in his cockpit that kept us from righting his kayak. He ended up in the water FAR too long...but for the grace of a nearby motorboat, he would have been in a world of hurt.
This is exactly why you need to practice. You rarely fall out of a kayak in calm water like he's in, so your self rescue should be second nature. For anyone interested in a common method, lookup self rescue heel hook.
A little training on a course would go a long way, I have beginners doing this rescue in under a minute and successful every time... Learn before you go out!
that was good to see it's not as easy as you think. Lesson for me is don't loose yr technique after the 1st fail. This blokes technique was sloppy after he failed the 1st time. Good lesson, it could save a life watching this.
Agree. If you're in the safety of a calm lake with people around to supervise then might be a convenient way of doing it, but if I was out on the sea or something there's no way I'd be removing my life jacket and start trying to tie it to things
Dude, remember behind, behind, behind. Place the paddle BEHIND the cockpit. Swim up on the back deck BEHIND the paddle until you are balanced. Work one leg over the paddle, while keeping weight on the float, get the other leg over and slide toward the cockpit on your stomach, get your legs in the cockpit and slide until your BEHIND is over the seat. Roll over in the direction of the paddle float. Keep your eyes on the float for balance.
Thanks for sharing. Im just starting out, been watching videos, maybe the ladder re-entry would be easier for you? I got an inflatable kayak, more buoyant and more stable as it is wider than the skinny hardshells. I think people get to hung up on having a super fast kayak, get a fat one that is more stable, it could save your life.
Next time when you come outof the kayak instead of turning it back over right away, keep a leg in the boat so it won't drift and you can focus on inflating and securing your paddle float.
I thought it was a clip from a Jerry Lewis movie!🙃 But it’s also a reminder that I have to practice and I will probably look like Curly in the three stooges!!🙃 Thanks for the reminder!!!
This old man may look goofy but he's an understated genius and badass. Practicing this in balls freezing water so he'll know what to do in a real emergency is a complete Alpha move. Huge respect.
A good example of the sarcastic remarks made by so many on you tube. No matter what the situation there's always those who know little about a sport, yet have all the smart answers. In any sport, we ALL start out as beginners. Nobody is born an expert.This man could have chosen to not upload this video, to avoid embarrassment. Instead he still did, knowing that there will always be beginners who can learn from this experience. Respectfully, I Thank You & wish U the very best!
I agree, but it was his dad doing it he just uploaded his dad it is good to have it out there I am just starting out and found it helpful to see this and def am going to train on getting back in my kayak!
Wow, this dude demonstrates nearly every possible mistake all in one video. Very educational. Thank you for posting.
This is a great video! It is important to see how very uneasy it is to get back into the thing without practice, even if you might have some idea of the steps to self-rescue. If this were a sea-going rescue situation with high winds and fast current, anyone without this sort of controlled practice would be crab bait. Kudos for posting this!
This is a very helpful video for newbies like me. It helps to know what CAN go wrong. Most of the vid's I've watched show me the proper technique for getting back in. However, the subjects are experienced & thus it doesn't look too complicated. Thanks for posting this. I can see me doing these things. I will practice!!!!
The lady filming was funny too. Thanks for the video. It's great to see the family doing things together. Peace.
This is priceless its so entertaining. Respect to you sir for not being embarrassed. Makes you realise though, in less than perfect conditions how much danger you'd be in after only a short time.
Brutal! Makes me realize I need to practice my re-entries.
And priceless commentary in the background...
no one is born taught how to do this. Great that he's learning. I am sure he already knows.
thank you for posting this. i paddle in british columbia canada . my first experience with cold water was in newfoundland. i am bcu 4 and as my friends with less training did some rolls and rescues after a paddle i thought how clever it would be to show a smooth roll. the water hit my head and neck, rushed down my neck and i was a swimmer. the boys had me back in an empty boat in well under a minute. it was an education.
That's just classic!!! I could really feel the anguish in the Wife & Son BG dialogue. Way to keep at it man!
We Alaskans practice kayak re-entry in swimming pools for a reason, lol. Its awesome that he knew it was a skill worth learning.
jfree1998 Really, Alaskans practice in a pool. In Seattle we self enter in the ocean and lake and succeed. It is not as hard as this clown makes it look. In Seattle, we don't even use a paddle float.
marc d Sure, its warmer why wouldn't we prefer to learn first in comfort before trying it in freezing waters? lol
marc d so I suppose "clown" is Douche for "beginner" where you come from?
+marc d aren't you just a superior being ?
Not all of us have access to swimming pools. Right now, only water I have access to is Lake Ontario..... and its winter...
Thanks - this started my morning off with a giggle - albeit at your expense!
Just bought a kayak last week. Good thing I watched this video. Thanks for sharing it
Great to see a real person struggling to do this.
Just like I will be doing soon,, probably more educational than watching an expert in a swimming pool.
I hope you rescued the old boy in the end.
Kudos for trying and preparing for when you need to.
Not enough people are ready for when a situation like this arises.
I seriously wonder how many people I see on the water in kayaks have ever tried to remount their kayak from the water.
well done
Man, That must be cold, you can hear his puffing as the shock and cold saps the strength right outta him. That man is no quitter...gotta admire that these days!
141000 views.. This is an important video. I hope you realize you have done a very good thing for the paddling community. I won't preach as i am sure you have all this and a roll mastered by now. I have been taken out of my kayak in COLD water. The rescue was required and I am well trained. I have a good roll but sometimes it is not enough. Good luck and hope to paddle with you some time.
Very, very admirable his perseverance and efforts! - I did not read your info until after watching the video. I actually thought he was an instructor being funny on purpose demonstrating "what not to do when you fall out of a kayak." At the end he is definitely getting clumsier and slower ... hypothermia. Good he asked for help to get out.
Haha also thought this was a funny "how not to do it" video! I was like "Oh come on, he was just about there and literally just messed up on purpose.." Finding out this was all real mistakes is sobering. It must be extremely easy to flip off the top even when doing the finishing techniques. I watched other videos before this and it seemed like his mistake was coming in dierectly from the side and not the rear. From the side, all your momentum to get up/in is pushing against the other side of the kayak. So once you get on top, that momentum keeps flowing and pushes you too far the other way. But from the rear, your momentum is pushing on the bottom of the kayak, basically trying to push an air filled container downwards (which is extremely hard to do). So going from the back is much more stable, and any momentum you have will only push the front of the kayak down, which won't effect stability much at all. Then you just scoot up until you're by the seat and lift your legs up and into the kayak. Really cool to see real mistakes though. Frustration and panic probably set in so fast that it makes all your mistakes even more dramatic!
This gave me a good giggle at work. Go Dad!
Thanks for posting. I just inherited a nice kayak and was wondering about reentering from the water. Took the kayak out on the lake for the first time today. Its 98 degrees here today though. Haven't dunked it yet. I plan on practicing this as well.
This is useful for new kayakers. He is attempting self rescue and making seemingly little mistakes that could so easily be fixed with a little coaching.
It's hard to do sometimes when folk are watching you, I kept screwing up while doing this re-entry at Loch Lomond to make matters worse it was the golf open, Tv carmeras were there and everyone was laughing making it harder, when i got in (after about 14 attemps )everyone gave a clap.
Wonder if tiger woods seen me.
Came accross this looking to see if someone posted my failure on youtube.
love it and makes me chuckle every time.....but important lessons learnt. learning to re-enter is so important and saves lives, learn now so u know how to for real...serious but funny. thanks and keep paddling
I felt for this guy, he got so close and I've been there. I learned a bunch of self-rescue techniques in the beginning of my kayak career. Murphy has a nasty way of taking your skills and throwing them out the window when you add things to the situation like cold water. Next add pride, defeatism, humiliation. Every failed attempt adds time to your exposure in the painful, life-sapping water. Then rushing, panic, more mistakes. What if YOU were not right off the dock with family close at hand video'ing this? Add some rough seas, wind...
These videos are great for reminding us to be practiced and prepared. Have paddling buddies Have more than the basic gear and be experienced in how to use it. Dress for immersion, not the air temperature. Have a paddling plan and post it back on land where your emergency contacts can be aware of it.
give you major credit for practicing. good on ya. and extra marks for knowing when your done.
I swear, really, best laugh I've ever had on here. thanks
Good effort. It's all experience. I'm sure you've figured it out by now, but for your viewers who don't know, once you have your butt back in the boat, you are going to be up high, therefore you will be unstable. Make all movements slow, smooth, and as low to the boat as possible. If you can swim, you don't need a paddle float. Tie your PFD to the end of the paddle, and secure the other end to the boat. Once inside, put your PFD back on and go paddling.
I'm dying here, this was too funny. Makes you think twice about kayaking alone in cold water.
i love how this is recommended after max falling out of kayak
THEY KNOW.
My Rating was 5 Stars. Good video for teaching and training
10 out of 10 for effort ;-)
I love when he gets in backward, what comic relief! How can they not be shouting out mockery!!
But right its good to practice!
LOL. I thought he was pretending to have trouble, but after trying this myself, I guess it was real. Thanks.
He is a natural comedian :D Good to practice before the real thing happens :D
Kudos for practice, practice, practice...and in the cold. Keep'n it real.
Love his perseverance! :)
That was very enjoyable. If you want to get back into a Necky Manitou you need to come up from the rear, straddle the kayak and inch forward. The most important thing is to get your body out of the water quickly otherwise as the previous guy said your DEAD. You would only get maybe two opportunities to do that in very cold water before you become to tired to be able to manage to get in to the boat.
I have to try on my sit on top......better to practice then wait until when you're not prepared and have to do it.
Hey looks like you are videotaping one of my lessons! Only I don't get up on the boat that easy!!
that will be me for sure im not to able and I want an inflatable kayak I hear are hard to roll over in the first place but im sure ill manage thanks for posting and great to see something to learn by ty again
omg. poor guy! good way to learn!
well, that's what practicing is for after all. It's like mikelove said - keep weight firmly on the paddlefloat throughout, even after you're finally back in the seat. I've always come from behind the cockpit, doing this, where you actually crawl over the paddle one leg at a time and corkscrew into the seat. It might be easier to keep weight on the paddle going that way? The other really, really important thing here is to never, ever let go of your boat or paddle.
Aye yaye yaye! 1) After it's on the paddle...inflate the float to maximum. 2) secure the paddle under the decklines - not the bungees. 3) When you drop your butt into the seat, lean, slightly, toward the float side. That was your recurring error. Keep at it; you've almost got it! P.S. maintain possession of the paddle, at all times.
@FFForeverandevermore
You are lucky to have a dad who's into outdoor stuff. Enjoy it and learn new stuff together. You'll remember the rest of your life!
lmao - Many a tear shed in Joy...
(Personally, I was rooting for him.)
Poor guy kept trying to get back into the seat too quickly. Never thought about balancing.
One time I was testing out a kayak to see whether I can get back in it in open water and all of a sudden a rather large boat was coming in my direction. You had to move fast. It probably took no more than 4 seconds for me to get back in the kayak and start paddling. . You have to be aware that many kayaks are not friendly for getting back in from open water, especially short cockpit types and ones with too small or overly large cockpits as I have learned from experience.
@cockercane You likely have it. If you can learn a roll you are well away but learning other self rescue techniques is very valuable. I have BCU 4 star and have been paddling since about 1980. (I started very young LOL. Enjoy paddling, I have two oceans a bunch of lakes and a sea under my boat so far.
Absolutely love it... I guess he finally figured out what to do when you have a sit in Kayak ... great video... even if it might of been staged I have seen this ..... LOL...
SYMPATHY MY FRIEND, SYMPATHY...but I never had this many problems getting back in. Good video made me laugh!
always go to the back . and straddle it
Lucky was a calm day. Keep that boy out of rough seas.
Now I know what to do if I can ever kayak
Me : "what wrong with what he's doing? He's doing the procedure correc- oh....
Hahahahhahahahahaha"
he almost had that first one, then it just got worse. lol
Thanks for putting this out, now we know how bad it can get.
best way to learn.
i feel like enterring this kayak from the back or front will be allot easier than using the stabalizer paddle
ps this may seem like an easy skill but he is a verry wise man for practising before putting himself at risk
Haha he's so cute. I am just learning to kayak. Luckily I haven't fallen out in deep water yet but I'm sure I will get my chance to clamor around.
He's not a quitter. A Plus for effort, sir.
He didn't seem to have any more trouble getting up on top when the float was off the paddle, just the same problem of going over the other side.
BTW, my touring boat is 24" wide and I can roll it holding the paddle in one hand.
Someone needs to teach this guy a proper paddle float rescue!
Put the paddle behind the cockpit under the deck lines rather than in front of the cockpit under the bungees like he did. Once paddle float is secure on paddle blade,leverage your chest onto your back deck of your kayak by pushing up on your paddle shaft and cockpit combing at the same time. After your upper body is supported by the kayak pull your body forward (closer to the stern) and slide your legs in one at a time. After you're in your cockpit face down roll your body upright towards your paddle. Drain cockpit, secure paddle float, re attach spray skirt. good to go!
THis is sooooo funny. Thanks for the laugh.
I tried that with mine but it was the middle of summer and there was a lot of people watching me. It was embarrassing but fun. if i can make a friend recorded me Ill post it LOL Nice video and keep trying you'll get better
Glad I know what to do now 👍
Well done every one just the fact you are trying is enough for me. that's when you should try new things when you have help if it all goose wrong
Use your float in the rear brother, I bet you figured it out.
love is eternal.
only love can keep one (his wife) from busting up rolling on the dock laughing at this.
i'm a kayak rookie and i hope this never happen to me.
omg
As a kayaker, it IS what hes supposed to do. the manitou 13 is 24" wide, hard to roll, easier to re-enter. most people underestimate how hard it is . I dont think most people posting here know alot about kayaking. It takes alot of practice. Paddle float re-entry Is the sensible solution in a capsized manitou 13. only thing he did wrong was put the paddle float infront of the cockpit instead of behind.
Good info. Thanks. I'm learning.
@FFForeverandevermore
Yes, the water is cold. And the colder it is, the quicker you want to be back in your boat. Once you are frozen, you are just a log in the water. It's over. Again, only 2 options to get back in your kayak in real situation: assisted T rescue or Eskimo roll. Practice both, they are not so hard and they can save your butt from freezing!
Ohhh so all i have to do when I flip my kayak, is panic, and fill it with water. Now I see what I was doing wrong! Thanks for the informative video.
Best way is to swim to the rear of the kayak and pull yourself up so the rear of the kayak is between your legs. Next, use your arms to pull yourself forwards until you are at your seat. It even works in choppier water.
Is this Max's Dad?
Lmao
Climb on from the end dude, pull yourself on and shimmy shimmy shimmy til the break of dawn
Practice practice practice. Practice under conditions where you will be paddling. Practice with your deck and cockpit are set up for the conditions where you are paddling. We had a capsize on Superior three years ago where the guy was great at self-rescues, but this time had a huge bladder of water in his cockpit that kept us from righting his kayak. He ended up in the water FAR too long...but for the grace of a nearby motorboat, he would have been in a world of hurt.
I love the filmers silent snicker.....
NEVER loose contact with your boat .. outside pool or bay
thanks for the heads up. Makes sense to learn in a safe and control environment. It was still funny at your expense though. LOL
It seems a very tippy kayak.. I am also a novice and will practice this but this kayak did not seem very stable.
mate that was some funny shit and i cracked up laughing at your wifes comments in the background , keep up the good work -cheers
This is exactly why you need to practice. You rarely fall out of a kayak in calm water like he's in, so your self rescue should be second nature. For anyone interested in a common method, lookup self rescue heel hook.
Points for trying tho... Hope you eventually made it and went yakn ..
So the beginning when he just tips over is pretty much my first experience with kayaking too!!
A little training on a course would go a long way, I have beginners doing this rescue in under a minute and successful every time... Learn before you go out!
This guy looks like a pro compared to me. That's why I learned rolling.
that was good to see it's not as easy as you think. Lesson for me is don't loose yr technique after the 1st fail. This blokes technique was sloppy after he failed the 1st time. Good lesson, it could save a life watching this.
I don't think I would do better...:) Congratulations!!
well dad, time to get a roll. :)
He's doing it the HARD way
Agree. If you're in the safety of a calm lake with people around to supervise then might be a convenient way of doing it, but if I was out on the sea or something there's no way I'd be removing my life jacket and start trying to tie it to things
THANKS FOR THE "TIPS"!!!! GET IT? NO? MKAY.
Dude, remember behind, behind, behind. Place the paddle BEHIND the cockpit. Swim up on the back deck BEHIND the paddle until you are balanced. Work one leg over the paddle, while keeping weight on the float, get the other leg over and slide toward the cockpit on your stomach, get your legs in the cockpit and slide until your BEHIND is over the seat. Roll over in the direction of the paddle float. Keep your eyes on the float for balance.
Well said. That can't be easy.
10 years later........ this is gold. :-O
Thanks for sharing. Im just starting out, been watching videos, maybe the ladder re-entry would be easier for you? I got an inflatable kayak, more buoyant and more stable as it is wider than the skinny hardshells. I think people get to hung up on having a super fast kayak, get a fat one that is more stable, it could save your life.
Next time when you come outof the kayak instead of turning it back over right away, keep a leg in the boat so it won't drift and you can focus on inflating and securing your paddle float.
your day is werry funny :)
I always exit and enter my kayak from the rear if I'm in open water. Want to hop out for a swim or whatever.
I thought it was a clip from a Jerry Lewis movie!🙃 But it’s also a reminder that I have to practice and I will probably look like Curly in the three stooges!!🙃 Thanks for the reminder!!!