History of the kayak
Kayaks were developed over hundreds of years. Indigenous cultures spent
centuries designing and redesigning, fixing flaws, or altering to changing skill
levels. The final outcomes were kayaks with a supreme design for a particular
region and People.
Peoples of the Arctic created
several designs, depending on what materials were part of their culture. Most
kayaks were fabricated using wood for the frame and then tied together using sinew,
or tendons, with a seal skin cover. Other kayaks were made from whalebone or driftwood.
A sea lion skin may then have been used as a covering, with whale fat as a sealant.
And yet, the designs of Greenland, the Baffin and Aleutian Islands, as well as
the Bering Strait, were all extremely unique.
The
kayaks from Greenland were sleek and low, whereas Baffin Island kayaks were known
for being wider, longer and were a much higher volume. High combing around the
cockpit was a clever design to keep the paddler dry come rough conditions. Kayaks
from the Bering Strait were short and known for their stability. The Aleuts are
known for a design with a clever forked bow to cut through waves .
The kayak was useful for transport but it was a miraculous hunting tool, facilitating
a quiet approach towards one's desired prey. It is said that occasionally a white
cloth would be strung over the front of the kayak to imitate a section of ice
drifting towards the hunted creature.
When kayaking
became a leisure sport for non-Natives is not known for sure, but many believe
it was introduced to Western cultures when John MacGregor constructed a kayak
and travelled Europe in 1845 .
Today, kayaking
is accessible to all skill levels, providing a quiet and gas-free form of breathtaking
travel, exploration and exercise.
References
"A
short history of the Kayak" found at http://www.geocities.com/pittoale/history.html,
21/11/2004
"Kayaking
Through Time with the Inuit". Pilot destination guide, http:www.pilotguides.com/destination_
guide/Europe/Iceland_and_greenl
21/11/2004