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Q&A

What's the advantage to a bent-shaft paddle?

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What's the advantage (or advantages) of a bent-shaft canoe paddle?

I've been told that it allows for more efficient use of both arms: the rationale I heard was that your arm on the grip does more work than your arm on the blade with a straight paddle and this is "evened out" with a bent-shaft paddle.

I've also been told that it moves the water more efficiently (though, assuming the same blade, I fail to understand the theory here.)

I'm neither a kinesiologist nor a physicist, so I'm not convinced about either of these answers. I find a bent-shaft paddle more comfortable, but I've always chalked that up to personal preference more than anything else.

Can anybody shed some light on this?

Examples of bent shaft paddles

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3 answers

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With a straght shaft paddle, one of two strokes is common:

  • you put the paddle in the water ahead of you sloped like this \ and don't get great efficiency on the first half of the stroke, because it's hard to pull something down when you're above it
  • you skip that whole first half of the stroke and just put the paddle in vertically right next to you. Now you're paying the overhead cost of bringing the paddle forward again twice as often because your strokes are only half length.

The theory with bent shaft is you can still reach forward for a longer stroke, but the blade face will be vertical on entry, so you can just pull it toward yourself, and the whole thing will be more efficient.

Apparently I had the paddle backwards in my reasoning above. The theory is that the "in front of you" part of the stroke is weak, so by having the blade at an angle you can put it in the water not very far in front of you at all, and get a longer push part in the back half of the stroke (the stronger half) because the blade is not lifting up against the water.

I have enough trouble stowing flat paddles for portages, and don't really think that powering across the lake as fast is possible matters much on a multi-day / week trip, so I've never bothered with them. (I do feather my blades when paddling into the wind though.) But that's the theory.

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From your link, the manufacturer's claim is

The blade of the paddle is offset from the shaft to allow the blade to remain vertical to the canoe's path throughout the stroke. This improves the efficiency of each stroke and allows shorter strokes at an increased stroke rate.

I haven't used one, but I can see how that could help - a higher stroke rate can be more efficient in single paddle canoeing.

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The point of the bent shaft is to maximize the amount of stroke for which the paddle is vertical through the stroke.

Take a look at this video. The logic is explain in this video. He does a good job of visually showing why you might choose a bent shaft paddle. He also explains that it is not good for all types of canoeing.

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This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/1283. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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