Kayaking & Canoeing
Kayaking and canoeing get you out on calm, beautiful water with gentle, low-impact exercise that is easy on aging joints. You set the pace, soak in the quiet, and feel wonderfully refreshed by the time you reach shore.
What you need to start
- A stable recreational kayak or canoe (rented or bought)
- A properly fitted life jacket (PFD), worn every time
- A lightweight paddle sized to you
- A calm, flat-water spot like a pond, lake, or slow river
At a glance
Your learning path
Three stages, taken at your own pace. Start at the top, get comfortable, then move down as you grow. There is no rush, and no wrong place to begin.
Start here. These four short videos cover getting started, the basic paddle strokes, how to get in and out safely, and choosing your first boat, so you can plan a calm, confident first paddle this week.
Top 10 Tips for Beginner Kayakers
PaddleTVKayaking Expert Advice: Basic Strokes
REIHow To Get Into a Kayak
L.L.BeanHow to Choose Your First Kayak | Best Beginner Kayak
PaddleTVNow that you can get on the water, let's paddle farther with less effort. These videos cover an efficient forward stroke and turning, safety and self-rescue, reading calm lakes, canoeing with a partner, and getting your boat to the water.
Kayak Forward Stroke - Paddle Longer, Faster, Easier
TRAK KayaksKayaking | How to Self-Rescue || REI
REIKayaking on Lakes – Everything You Need to Know
PaddleTVHow to Paddle a Tandem Canoe | Tandem Canoeing Essentials
PaddleTVHow To Load Your Kayak | Car Top and SUVs
Chad HooverReady to go further? These cover the kayak roll and advanced rescue, handling moving water and light rapids, sea and touring kayaking, kayak camping, and advanced canoe strokes. Take a class before trying moving water for the first time.
How To: Do a Sweep Kayak Roll
NRSWhitewater Kayak Skills Practice on Class II
Wildwater River GuidesIntroduction to sea kayaking - How to sea kayak - learn to kayak
Online Sea KayakingTop 10 Kayak Camping Tips
PaddleTVHow to Do a J-Stroke - Canoe Technique
CanoeingTVWhy kayaking & canoeing is wonderful after 50
Kayaking and canoeing are wonderful after 50 because they are low-impact and gentle on the knees, hips, and back, while still working your arms, shoulders, and core. The water sets a calm, unhurried pace, the fresh air and quiet are deeply relaxing, and you can paddle alone for peace or with a partner for company. It is a real full-body activity that rarely feels like exercise. Two simple rules keep it safe: always wear your life jacket (PFD) every single time, even on calm water and even if you swim well, and check with your doctor before you start, especially if you have heart, shoulder, or balance concerns. With those covered, every outing leaves you refreshed.
Your first month, week by week
Before anything else, check with your doctor that paddling is right for you. Then watch the beginner videos and buy or rent a properly fitted life jacket (PFD). Practice sitting in a kayak on dry land or in shallow water to get a feel for it.
Take a beginner lesson or rent a stable recreational kayak from an outfitter, and stay on calm, flat water like a small pond or lake. A lesson or guided rental first is the safest, easiest way to start. Always wear your life jacket.
Practice the basic strokes from shore outward: forward, a gentle turn, and stopping. Stay close to shore, paddle for just an hour, and dress for the water temperature, not the air. Bring a friend so you are never alone.
Plan a relaxed hour-long paddle around a calm lake with a partner or club. If you loved it, look into buying a stable, wide recreational kayak or a sit-on-top, which are the easiest to get on and off.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Not wearing a life jacket. Always wear a properly fitted PFD every single time you are on the water, even on a calm pond and even if you are a strong swimmer. This is the single most important safety rule, and it is non-negotiable.
- Skipping a doctor's okay before starting. Check with your doctor first, especially if you have heart, shoulder, balance, or mobility concerns, so you can paddle with confidence.
- Going out alone, especially when new. Paddle with a partner or a club, tell someone your plan, and stay within easy reach of shore until you are very comfortable.
- Choosing the wrong conditions. Avoid wind, waves, cold water, and moving rivers when you are starting out. Stick to calm, flat water and check the weather and forecast first.
- Gripping the paddle too tightly. A relaxed, loose grip and letting your torso do the work prevents sore hands, wrists, and shoulders and keeps you paddling longer.
- Dressing for the air instead of the water. Cold water is dangerous even on a warm day, so dress for the water temperature and bring a dry change of clothes.
몸이 편해지도록 하세요. |||9월||| 관절염, 저시력 또는 제한된 이동성으로 인해 카약과 카누를 편안하고 안전하게 유지하는 간단한 방법입니다. |||9월||| 앉아서 타는 카약 대신 앉아서 타는 카약을 선택하세요. 싯온탑은 승하차가 훨씬 쉽고 안전하며, 넘어져도 갇힐 일이 없습니다. |||9월||| 안정적이고 넓은 레크리에이션용 카약을 선택하거나 파트너와 함께 2인용 카누를 타면서 균형, 조종, 승하차에 도움을 받으세요. |||9월||| 가파르고 미끄러운 둑보다는 부두나 완만한 해변 입구에서 발사하세요. 도크를 사용하면 웅크리는 대신 좌석 높이에 앉아서 미끄러져 들어갈 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 패들 끈에 가벼운 패들과 클립을 사용하면 패들을 더 쉽게 들어올릴 수 있고 내려놓거나 놓아도 떠내려가지 않습니다. |||9월||| 등받이가 좋은 좌석이나 애프터마켓 하이백 카약 좌석을 추가하면 허리를 보호하고 오랫동안 편안하게 노를 저을 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 카약 카트(작은 바퀴가 달린 트롤리)를 사용하여 차에서 물까지 보트를 굴리면 무거운 선체를 운반하거나 끌 필요가 없습니다. |||9월||| 당신이 듣게 될 말 |||9월||| PFD(구명조끼) |||9월||| 개인 부양 장치, 물 위에서 매번 착용하는 구명 조끼. 그것은 당신을 물에 띄워주고 안전 장비의 가장 중요한 부분입니다. |||9월||| 싯온탑 |||9월||| 조종석 내부가 아닌 오픈 데크에 앉아 타는 카약. 승하차가 가장 쉽고 안전한 유형으로 초보자에게 이상적입니다. |||9월||| 선체 |||9월||| 물 위에 떠 있는 배의 몸체나 바닥. 더 넓은 선체는 더 안정적이고 관용적이며, 이는 시작할 때 원하는 것입니다. |||9월||| 조종석 |||9월||| 데크 아래에 다리를 집어넣고 앉을 수 있는 좌식 카약의 개방형 좌석 공간입니다. 싯온탑에는 밀폐된 조종석이 없습니다. |||9월||| 앞으로 스트로크 |||9월||| 보트를 앞으로 나아가게 하는 기본 패들 스트로크입니다. 팔뿐만 아니라 몸통을 사용하면 효율적이고 어깨에 힘이 가해집니다. |||9월||| 에디 |||9월||| 바위 뒤의 잔잔한 물 주머니 또는 흐름이 느려지거나 역전되는 강에서 구부러진 곳. 패들러는 흐르는 물 위의 소용돌이에서 휴식을 취하고 재편성합니다. |||9월||| 포티지 |||9월||| 예를 들어 댐 주변, 급류 또는 다음 호수에 도달하기 위해 두 개의 물 사이에서 육지 위로 보트를 운반하거나 바퀴를 옮깁니다. |||9월||| 당신의 사람들을 찾을 수 있는 곳 |||9월||| 신규 회원을 환영하고 종종 초보자 친화적인 그룹 패들을 운영하는 지역 패들링 및 카누 클럽입니다. |||9월||| 직원이 마구간 보트를 찾아줄 수 있는 장비점과 대여점에서는 조용한 장소를 제안하고 강습을 안내합니다. |||9월||| 해당 지역에서 카약 또는 카누를 위한 모임 그룹은 친절한 사람들과 함께 편안한 패들을 찾을 수 있는 쉬운 방법입니다. |||9월||| 지원적이고 잘 갖춰진 환경에서 기본과 안전을 가르치는 REI 수업과 가이드 투어. |||9월||| 주립공원 및 카운티 공원 프로그램으로 가이드가 안내하는 패들, 장비 대여, 동식물 연구가가 주도하는 잔잔한 물 여행 등을 제공하는 경우가 많습니다. |||9월||| 카약과 카누 배우기 시작하기 |||9월||| 무료로 친절한 수업에 등록하시면 첫 걸음을 내딛을 수 있도록 도와드리겠습니다. 당신이 어디에서 출발하는지 알려주시면 그곳에서 만나겠습니다. |||9월||| 나는 그것을 시도한 적이 없다
Simple ways to keep kayaking & canoeing comfortable and safe with arthritis, low vision, or limited mobility.
- Choose a sit-on-top kayak instead of a sit-inside. Sit-on-tops are far easier and safer to get on and off, and you are never trapped if you tip over.
- Pick a stable, wide recreational kayak, or paddle a tandem canoe with a partner so you have help with balance, steering, and getting in and out.
- Launch from a dock or a gentle beach entry rather than a steep, slippery bank. A dock lets you sit down and slide in at seat height instead of crouching.
- Use a lightweight paddle and clip on a paddle leash so the paddle is easier to lift and never floats away if you set it down or let go.
- Add a seat with good back support, or an aftermarket high-back kayak seat, to protect your lower back and let you paddle comfortably for longer.
- Use a kayak cart (a small wheeled trolley) to roll the boat from your car to the water, so you never have to carry or drag the heavy hull.
Words you'll hear
- PFD (life jacket)
- A personal flotation device, the life jacket you wear every time on the water. It keeps you afloat and is the most important piece of safety gear.
- Sit-on-top
- A kayak where you sit on an open deck rather than inside a cockpit. It is the easiest and safest type to get on and off, ideal for beginners.
- Hull
- The body or bottom of the boat that sits in the water. A wider hull is more stable and forgiving, which is what you want when starting out.
- Cockpit
- The open seating area of a sit-inside kayak where you sit with your legs tucked under the deck. Sit-on-tops do not have an enclosed cockpit.
- Forward stroke
- The basic paddle stroke that moves the boat ahead. Using your torso, not just your arms, makes it efficient and easy on your shoulders.
- Eddy
- A calm pocket of water behind a rock or bend in a river where the current slows or reverses. Paddlers rest and regroup in eddies on moving water.
- Portage
- Carrying or wheeling your boat over land between two stretches of water, for example around a dam, rapid, or to reach the next lake.
Where to find your people
- Local paddling and canoe clubs, which welcome new members and often run beginner-friendly group paddles.
- Outfitters and rental shops, where staff can match you to a stable boat, suggest calm spots, and point you to classes.
- Meetup groups for kayaking or canoeing in your area, an easy way to find relaxed paddles with friendly people.
- REI classes and guided outings, which teach the basics and safety in a supportive, well-equipped setting.
- State and county park programs, which often offer guided paddles, equipment rentals, and naturalist-led trips on calm water.
Start learning Kayaking & Canoeing
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