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Best Vacations
There is a place to plan the best vacations with the best people at the best location, Costa Rica and your frendly travel service http://www.theticoagency.com Tom Menten wrote: Thanks to all those who responded concerning college towns for paddlers. I received email replies as well as those that are posted; here is a summary of the replies. Much of this information was new to me. East and Southeast The concensus choice is University of North Carolina at Asheville. The location sounds like the winner for a serious racer/paddler who is willing to focus only on paddling, and wants to live in the Southeastern US. Advantages include proximity to the '96 Olympic site, nearby training facilities, year round training, presence of other racers, and nearby year round challenging whitewater. UNCA seems to be centrally located for Southeastern paddling in general. Right now the racing circuit is pretty well geared around the Southeast streamflows, so a racer in any other part of the country is bucking the tide (half the racing season is over by the time the water really gets going in the West.) Other eastern choices: " 1. Univ. of Maryland (no skiing, great paddling and race group) 2. Georgia Tech (good paddling, racing; forget skiing) 3. Univ. of North Carolina (reasonably close to Nantahala, unless he wants to go to the branch campus at Asheville; some skiing) 4. Dartmouth (great skiing, close to Mitchell's paddling group) 5. Penn State (active whitewater group, but less into racing these days; ski hill 5 miles from campus with some racing interest) 6. Amherst/U. Mass (close to training sites, somewhat diminished interest in racing; hot area for cross-country skiing and PC)" and... "...the University of Tennesee in Knoxville might be worth a look. Knoxville is central to the whole of Southeastern boating from the Gauley to the Chattooga." "...the rivers were closer in Tennessee: we used to go paddling after work." "Georgia Tech might be a thought. There are a lot of the elite racers living in Atlanta now with the '96 Olympics looming." Central Rockies This region seems to be the next choice for racers. I haven't yet discerned the paddling/racing season. Fort Lewis College in Durango. Durango is a small tourist town on the Animas river, with a permanent slalom course, a strong paddling community (including slalom racers), a USCKT training center, and close to a variety of good recreational paddling. Durango hosts national and international level competition each year (I believe it will be televised by a major network this year.) An alum of FLC speaks very highly of the school and the town. Other nearby recreation includes Purgatory ski area 25 miles from town and Wolf Creek 70 miles East, as well as the hiking and climbing the Colorado is known for. Colorado College in Colorado Springs. A "Block" plan, with 3.5 week sessions followed by 4-5 day "block breaks" facilitates monthly outings. Available outings nearby include the NF South Platte, Arkansas, and several others. The Arkansas is near enough for after school paddling. There is a strong paddling community; not sure about "racerheads". Also not sure about year round training possibilities, or how long the training season is. Colorado College, like FLC, has other nearby diversions as well (climbing, skiing, hiking...). Also like FLC, the town and college are both small and the College is high quality. ...and more... in Utah: "Well, Utah has been rumored to have good snow, and we here in Logan love to kayak! The logan river through town is runnable, and were not far from the Weber, Onieda Narrows, the Snake, the Green, etc. Utah State University is a fine school (in my opinion) and so is University of Utah in SLC." Southwest The San Francisco Bay Area gets a strong vote from a happy paddler. There are a number of well known schools (U. Cal. Berkeley, Stanford....) While not immediately surrounded by rivers, There is perhaps the best variety of difficult rivers with convenient highway access in the U.S., all within several hours to a day's drive. Most kayaking is done on weekends or multi-day trips, and there is no apparent slalom presence in the SF Bay Area. There is the possibility of evening trips to the coast for ocean surfing. California has three boating seasons: Storm runoff makes the coastal range rivers boatable in the winter, Spring (March - May/June/July depending) with the runnoff opens up the classics, and during the summer there are dam controlled rivers - including AF American, Trinity and the Tuolumne. SF Bay Area boaters learn to travel: Costa Rica is a favorite of at least two of them. Other activities include the nearby ocean, great windsurfing, wonderful expresso and bookstores. California skiing (lots of firm snow, lots of skiers and lots of amenities) is about an "hour" beyond the paddling. ...and... "...here at Cal Poly we are not very close to whitewater but we have a very active whitewater program. The school has an outdoor program called ASI Outings that organizes trips and classes for outdoor enthusiasts and those that would like to learn,...While we are not right on a river the longest drive is 6 hours to the American and only 3 to the Kern, surfing is right in our backyard with swells getting as big as 18 feet in the winter." Northwest Oregon State and the Univ. of Oregon have recreational kayaking year round. Ocean surfing is and hour away; the outdoor program at U of Oregon does 75 trips a year. Skiing (again, lots of firm snow) is also "1.5 hours" away. Mt. Hood features summer training for world class ski racers Editor's note: Some of the above places I've never been (how's that for provincial :-}). For those I have been, I note that different folks can have different perspectives, or different experiences - such as the driving time to access the rivers. Also, since my son races slalom, I've looked at the responses with a particular view, which you may wish to correct. Since this is a summary; lots has been left out, including phone numbers and contacts that were graciously provided to me, as well as lots of useful information about the academics of the various colleges. Please feel welcome to correct any misinterpretations and add any info you care to. I know that some info has not made it into the note string, since I am aware of paddling communities near Seattle, Wausau, and South Bend that are not represented here. No one mentioned college teams, though I am of the impression there are a few, including one at Notre Dame that supposedly offers scholarships. This has been fascinating, horizon expanding and otherwise helpful to both me and my son. Thanks for all the replies. Tom Menten |
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Well... if your looking for classes in the Chicago area, this is what we have
found available... If you know of others, please let us know... http://www.chicagopaddling.org/instruction.html -- John Nelson ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chicago Area Paddling/Fishing Page http://www.chicagopaddling.org http://www.chicagofishing.org (A Non-Commercial Web Site: No Sponsors, No Paid Ads and Nothing to Sell) |
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