Time trials have come and gone and close to 280 paddlers attended to
via for a seat on the 2012 World Sprints Team. We are seeing our
highest level of competitors, with several photo finish’s.
The standings are posted, and we are proud to announce our largest
Canadian contingency of 250 paddlers. This includes our largest junior
contingency with kids from Pemberton, Penticton, Victoria, and Calgary
attending.
Congratulations! We look forward to August to cheer on our paddlers!
The final day of racing was all Sprints and all fun. This was a
change in the order of events from previous years, which wrapped up with
the change race. In past years, there were too many paddlers tired,
bruised and beaten up from the change race to really enjoy the closing
party. Not this year!
Held at beautiful Muri Lagoon, the day started with a parade of
paddlers, led by local traditional drummers, warriors and canoes. Then,
the somewhat serious sprints began. Crews raced by club and age category
and were honest – for most part. Lots of teams filled up crews with
whoever they could get. The race course was a straight 500m. from the
ocean side of the lagoon towards the beach. It was quickly obvious that
there were a lot of steers that did not know how to race sprints – as
crews crossed one or more lanes to get to the finish line – all the more
fun for spectators. The more serious crews advanced to the final heats.
For the rest of us – the party had an early start.
After the race finals, there were a bunch of fun events – fun to
participate in and to watch: SUP relay (with and without paddles), the
underwear exchange (you’ll have to wait for pictures), piggyback race in
the lagoon with kids, and the Fly the Ama challenge. The winning crew
in that event made it look truly easy as they just popped that ama up
and kept paddling for another minute or two.
The closing party began with an amazing dinner. It was all served on
hand-woven plates of palm leaves and included many traditional dishes
and local food. The drink was iced coconut water, fresh out of the
shells. It was all beautiful to look at and delicious too. There were
speeches and thanks made, then it was drinking and dancing time. While
there was a deck to dance on, there wasn’t room for everyone, so most of
the dancing took place on the beach – under the stars, and into the
water. A great wrap up to a great week. Highly recommend Vaka Eiva for
any crew planning to do an international event.
We’ll get some photos here as soon as we can! Or, shall I say – as
soon as I stop shivering…. From 29 one day, to 2 degrees the next. Ah
well – all totally worth it
Up at 5am for a 7am Round Rarotonga change race start. There’s a bit of cloud cover but it’s mostly going to be a sunny hot day.
The canoe is set up, ready to go and the gear is loaded on to the support boat. The boat was excellent; a good size, had a nice cover, great coolers and a captain that had done this race every year. He got us settled and we were off.
18 women’s crews were in the race. The Australian crew – Crown Beach,
was in the lead, with the Cook Islands 1 crew closely behind. We had a
great start, and the first change was about 20 minutes into the race.
It’s so wonderful to jump off an escort boat (or canoe) and into warm
tropical water. The last changes we’d done were in a practice around
Passage Island. Each change into the water there was heart attack
inducing! Our escort boat dropped us in perfect position each time, and
timed it around the big reef breaks. He had a long towline to toss us
each time, so no swimming required to get back on to the supprt boat.
Conditions changed about every 5 kms. around the island, from big
waves, to tough choppy stuff, headwinds, and then a final 2 km run into
the finish line on small bumps, wind behind us and blue-green glassy
water below us. During the race, paddlers saw a humpback whale or two,
turtles and flying fish! As you round the final buoy, it’s a couple
hundred meter dash to the finish line. As soon as your canoe is in site,
there were four local drummers, who hit the Tahaitian drums to give us a
pounding welcome in. It was fantastic. The volunteers are there to take
the canoe off your hands, and then we were treated to fresh fruit and
iced fresh coconut water, right out of the shell. We managed to finish
12th out of 18, but with the smiles on faces, you would have thought
we’d come in first!
The men’s race went off at 1pm, with about the same number of crews
and very similar conditions. Teams from the same clubs won that event –
Australians from Crown Belle and the Cooks Islands top men’s crew. The
Cook Islanders put on a much better show coming in with big smiles, same
side paddling and flying the ama across the finish line. That race did
have a bad note as one of the paddlers on a local team suffered a heart
attack. They got him off the water, and quickly treated but he didn’t
survive. His crew finished the race and got a big welcome in.
All in all, an amazing day. Thursday, the mixed crews do their Round
Rarotonga, Friday – it’s time for sprints and wrap up parties…..