We were only 12 and 13 years old and we carried cedar and canvass canoes in Algonquin Provincial Park. Thus was in 1970. Back then the canoes weighed 60 to 80 lbs depending on how much water they had soaked up. Average was about 70lbs,. Very hard on your neck!!! We had leather tumps that distributed the weight on to our head. That helped balance it too. It was more art than strength to get the canoe up on your shoulders. Then it was how much PAIN could you endure on really long, or steep or slippery portages. The one between Canoe Lake and Smoke lake was straight up a mountain!!
For heavier canoes and older canoeists, do the same motion but farther towards one end while opposite end is resting on the ground and then walk it back onto your shoulders , This way you don't have to lift the entire weight of the canoe.
I was going to mention this as well. It also prevents injury when not truly being able to handle the weight of a canoe in such a fast and jarring movement. The way she does it is fine if you are fit and strong and have a relatively light canoe.... but.... then again, if someone hurts themselves with her advice, she can provide "therapy". ;)
@@TheWhiskeyCowboyLife Ya and that is also an ultra light kelvar and carbon canoe she is using probably 38lb soaking wet and long cry from a cedar strip or grumman tripper at 75-80lbs
Hi Amy, I've watched a lot of videos on lifting canoes safely and I do think that most videos demonstrating this technique, miss an important point of caution: this technique should be learned with a light weight boat. Trying it unskilled with a typical 15 or 16 foot plastic boat, weighing 75 - 90 lbs is surely risking injury. I've done it, but I don't find it easy and certainly feel safer using the lift one end and walk straight armed along the gunnels technique. It's more reassuring and mangeable with a heavy boat. For sure, people doing long trips with long portages through woods will be using a light weight canoe, but many people watching these videos are using much more affordable and much heavier boats.
My inexpensive 17' touring kayak is much heavier at 70 lbs than any recreational kayak short of a tandem. Putting all that weight on only one shoulder does not feel confidence inspiring.
I agree. I think THE MOST IMPORTANT way to prevent back injuries is to do things on a slow, careful gradient of gradually increasing the weight and difficulty. On my windsurfer I always remain on the super-careful side, even if it makes me look like an old grandfather at times.
I used to easily lift my previous 16-ft 72-lb prospector using that technique but it became too heavy so I got a 42-lb Swift Keewaydin 16. However, I got the detachable yoke and didn’t realize that I wouldn’t be able to use this technique anymore because the yoke thread could break if I lift the canoe using the yoke. It’s disappointing but at least I can use the other technique with one end on the ground to start with.
That's great! If you are built like Amy... I'm a bit less than average male, and she could fold me like a carboard box... If you are like me you need to start further to the back of a canoe using the opposite end as a third leg and then "walk" your way to the middle.
WOW, at 60 years old and being "only" a software programmer,I fear that even if I got that motion to go absolutely perfect, my back and shoulders would be totally out of whack regardless. I will stay on flat terrain where I can use WHEEL trailers for the canoe. But it is interesting to see that SOME people CAN do that motion. Congratulations, Amy!
Flabby untoned muscles will not be useful. When this technique originated people where better conditioned and not by working out at gyms in the 1700 and 1800s. They did physical tasks everyday so didn’t need any gym membership. Programmers sit too long.
Getting it onto my shoulders is easy enough but I do have some trouble balancing it during that move. The back end usually hits the ground before I am able to get it balanced. Just need more practice I suppose.
This is lovely...but what about an 81 lb canoe with no thwarts or yoke? I use a dolly, and it's about getting it on and off the vehicle by myself. I have a system, but am liking to see if I can do it better.
You are very strong! But that looks like a very difficult and risky manoever for a person my age! I prefer to approach the end of the canoe and, facing out away from its center rest both hands on the rails where the are about one shoulder-width apart. With feet close to the side of the boat about shoulder width apart or wider, I bend my knees and pull the end of the canoe up to close to my chest. I then rotate the canoe up and over my head while the far end of the canoe rotates up onto the point of the far end. Having lifted and pressed over head most of the weight I then raise the canoe to full height and drop it while quickly sliding and repositioning my hands along the rails until I get to the center of the boat where the balance enables me to raise the other end from the ground into the air as I rest the yoke on my shoulders for portage ... I reverse the procedure to lower the boat to the ground by first setting the point onto the earth, walking backwards to the end where my hands are closer together, then I lower it to my chest and rotate the boat close to my body, sometimes adding friction with my legs, as I complete the lowering to the ground. Be careful!
Rails are called gunwales. I'm 55 with a bad back and can still solo portage using the proper method Amy is using . IT uses inertia not strength to do it.
@@reelchef67 I'm 70 and I would try to use the lap toss method if I were standing in the water unless I could get the nose firmly on the shore. .... I don't have room for guns in my canoe and the top of my 'wale' looks like a hand rail to me ... I don't have a powder room either, unless the bailer counts ... It does look like a scoop with a hollow handle :)
When teaching, the issue beginners generally face is which arm goes across to the far side. Also they need to know to bend their knees to lower their centre of gravity, and to engage their abs to stabilize their lower back and core when accelerating the dead weight skyward. (As a CAMPT designation holder, I am astounded you didn’t incorporate back safety into your how to video.). You raise the hull to inverted after rocking then slip your base of support under; you don’t bring the boat (thwart or yoke) to your shoulders, you bring your shoulders to the thwart; you slip under it you don’t muscle it over top of your head… there’s an optical illusion since your frame of reference is static from the fixed video camera position. You sneak underneath of the flipped over hull then extend (straighten) your legs shoulder width apart. These are the bio mechanics of how and why the methodology functions as it does. Not going with the flow of the forces can lead to sprains and strains. Learn with two spotters in place. It depends on 1) which direction of travel you intend to head towards 2) whether you are on the port or starboard side of the boat lying on the ground.
Notice the dog. He's been through this before: totally chill, then when she first moves the canoe, he's OUT of there! LOL In one smooth motion... momentum is your friend. If you don't follow Amy's technique it will be really hard to lift, it you use her technique momentum is your third hand.
In my old age I cannot lift even a 45 lb. canoe over my head. Instead, I grab the canoe towards its stern and lift the stern up over my head with the bow in the ground. Then in walk my way towards the bow until the portage bar is over my shoulders where I can then lower it. So far, I have not dropped the canoe using this method.
That's how I learned to do it years ago. Here's an alternate technique for older people or those who don't feel as strong: ua-cam.com/video/cHoyTaB5kkU/v-deo.html
As a physiotherapist I would think you would advocate a safer way to lift a canoe by yourself than this... I mean same basic technique done from farther back and then walking your hands to the balance point is way safer.. just sayin
Buy a lighter canoe!! Been thru when canoes were fiberglass monster heavy's. Someone very skillful dead on accurate artisans made a stripper canoe as the "plug" for the female mold. In marathon canoe racing competitors made their own designs in strip canoes. These had to be 27" wide at the 3" water line at the widest point(maybe midships) 33" wide at the gunnels with 18 foot-6" overall length 10" minimum at stern and 15" at bow. Most of the best builders strip boats came in at near or less than 35 pounds. Now some sellers do this in RIGID Carbon-Fiber @ 26 to 31 pounds. Duh one hand like a heavy briefcase handling.
Bet you wouldn't do it as easily with an 'iron horse' 30+ Kg's canoe...plus 'back country' you've no air bags etc in there, and shoes would be a good idea...it's flawed with holes. If your teaching 'best practice' you have to do 'best practice'
We were only 12 and 13 years old and we carried cedar and canvass canoes in Algonquin Provincial Park. Thus was in 1970. Back then the canoes weighed 60 to 80 lbs depending on how much water they had soaked up. Average was about 70lbs,. Very hard on your neck!!!
We had leather tumps that distributed the weight on to our head. That helped balance it too.
It was more art than strength to get the canoe up on your shoulders. Then it was how much PAIN could you endure on really long, or steep or slippery portages.
The one between Canoe Lake and Smoke lake was straight
up a mountain!!
Our councillors told us there was a coke machine at the far end of the portage!
As a young person with a bad back and is looking into canoeing. this is super helpful. Thankyou!
For heavier canoes and older canoeists, do the same motion but farther towards one end while opposite end is resting on the ground and then walk it back onto your shoulders , This way you don't have to lift the entire weight of the canoe.
I was going to mention this as well. It also prevents injury when not truly being able to handle the weight of a canoe in such a fast and jarring movement. The way she does it is fine if you are fit and strong and have a relatively light canoe.... but.... then again, if someone hurts themselves with her advice, she can provide "therapy". ;)
@@TheWhiskeyCowboyLife Ya and that is also an ultra light kelvar and carbon canoe she is using probably 38lb soaking wet and long cry from a cedar strip or grumman tripper at 75-80lbs
Hi Amy, I've watched a lot of videos on lifting canoes safely and I do think that most videos demonstrating this technique, miss an important point of caution: this technique should be learned with a light weight boat. Trying it unskilled with a typical 15 or 16 foot plastic boat, weighing 75 - 90 lbs is surely risking injury. I've done it, but I don't find it easy and certainly feel safer using the lift one end and walk straight armed along the gunnels technique. It's more reassuring and mangeable with a heavy boat. For sure, people doing long trips with long portages through woods will be using a light weight canoe, but many people watching these videos are using much more affordable and much heavier boats.
My inexpensive 17' touring kayak is much heavier at 70 lbs than any recreational kayak short of a tandem.
Putting all that weight on only one shoulder does not feel confidence inspiring.
I agree. I think THE MOST IMPORTANT way to prevent back injuries is to do things on a slow, careful gradient of gradually increasing the weight and difficulty. On my windsurfer I always remain on the super-careful side, even if it makes me look like an old grandfather at times.
Better to roll from stern up & then walk up to yolk. No jolting this way. But each there own and one may work for some
What a woman! WoW! Great job!
I used to easily lift my previous 16-ft 72-lb prospector using that technique but it became too heavy so I got a 42-lb Swift Keewaydin 16. However, I got the detachable yoke and didn’t realize that I wouldn’t be able to use this technique anymore because the yoke thread could break if I lift the canoe using the yoke. It’s disappointing but at least I can use the other technique with one end on the ground to start with.
That's great! If you are built like Amy... I'm a bit less than average male, and she could fold me like a carboard box... If you are like me you need to start further to the back of a canoe using the opposite end as a third leg and then "walk" your way to the middle.
Hey ! that is what I said !
Very well demonstrated - good technique. Thanks
Im going to go try rn but im not sure if my canoe is much heavier than yours or you just make it look so easy!
that was amazing demo amy Thank you
WOW, at 60 years old and being "only" a software programmer,I fear that even if I got that motion to go absolutely perfect, my back and shoulders would be totally out of whack regardless. I will stay on flat terrain where I can use WHEEL trailers for the canoe. But it is interesting to see that SOME people CAN do that motion. Congratulations, Amy!
Flabby untoned muscles will not be useful. When this technique originated people where better conditioned and not by working out at gyms in the 1700 and 1800s. They did physical tasks everyday so didn’t need any gym membership. Programmers sit too long.
Look up the manoeuvre where you hold the stern seat and lift from the back, and then shimmy yourself to the yoke..
You and your technique are both beautiful. 🙂Very impressive! Thanks!
I finally noticed the dog's reaction 😀"What the woof?!"😯
Thanks for making a simple video. You sure are in great shape!
Outstanding demonstration!
Great technique. I'm gonna try that w/a 16 foot. Thanks!
A quality wheeled caddy is a lifesaver if you possibly can use it.
Great and simple explanation!
Getting it onto my shoulders is easy enough but I do have some trouble balancing it during that move. The back end usually hits the ground before I am able to get it balanced. Just need more practice I suppose.
Nice clear demo & technique, but just one question, anyway to get the doggo to help out? 6 paws are better than just 2! 🤪🐶
This is lovely...but what about an 81 lb canoe with no thwarts or yoke?
I use a dolly, and it's about getting it on and off the vehicle by myself.
I have a system, but am liking to see if I can do it better.
Good job!
Very nice. Gonna try. 👍
a hug straight from Brazil, like the video
Thanks Amy! Very helpful.
You are very strong! But that looks like a very difficult and risky manoever for a person my age! I prefer to approach the end of the canoe and, facing out away from its center rest both hands on the rails where the are about one shoulder-width apart. With feet close to the side of the boat about shoulder width apart or wider, I bend my knees and pull the end of the canoe up to close to my chest. I then rotate the canoe up and over my head while the far end of the canoe rotates up onto the point of the far end. Having lifted and pressed over head most of the weight I then raise the canoe to full height and drop it while quickly sliding and repositioning my hands along the rails until I get to the center of the boat where the balance enables me to raise the other end from the ground into the air as I rest the yoke on my shoulders for portage ... I reverse the procedure to lower the boat to the ground by first setting the point onto the earth, walking backwards to the end where my hands are closer together, then I lower it to my chest and rotate the boat close to my body, sometimes adding friction with my legs, as I complete the lowering to the ground. Be careful!
Rails are called gunwales. I'm 55 with a bad back and can still solo portage using the proper method Amy is using . IT uses inertia not strength to do it.
@@reelchef67 I'm 70 and I would try to use the lap toss method if I were standing in the water unless I could get the nose firmly on the shore. .... I don't have room for guns in my canoe and the top of my 'wale' looks like a hand rail to me ... I don't have a powder room either, unless the bailer counts ... It does look like a scoop with a hollow handle :)
How many kilos (do you recommend) should the canoe weigh to do this maneuver? Very helpful. Thanks.
Fantastic! The only thing I have to get now is a canoe. 🙂
Wow, I want to go canoe camping with you!!
try that with my old town discovry....no thanks to heavy
dam, im impressed... strong af
When teaching, the issue beginners generally face is which arm goes across to the far side. Also they need to know to bend their knees to lower their centre of gravity, and to engage their abs to stabilize their lower back and core when accelerating the dead weight skyward. (As a CAMPT designation holder, I am astounded you didn’t incorporate back safety into your how to video.). You raise the hull to inverted after rocking then slip your base of support under; you don’t bring the boat (thwart or yoke) to your shoulders, you bring your shoulders to the thwart; you slip under it you don’t muscle it over top of your head… there’s an optical illusion since your frame of reference is static from the fixed video camera position. You sneak underneath of the flipped over hull then extend (straighten) your legs shoulder width apart. These are the bio mechanics of how and why the methodology functions as it does. Not going with the flow of the forces can lead to sprains and strains.
Learn with two spotters in place.
It depends on 1) which direction of travel you intend to head towards 2) whether you are on the port or starboard side of the boat lying on the ground.
Notice the dog. He's been through this before: totally chill, then when she first moves the canoe, he's OUT of there! LOL
In one smooth motion... momentum is your friend. If you don't follow Amy's technique it will be really hard to lift, it you use her technique momentum is your third hand.
In my old age I cannot lift even a 45 lb. canoe over my head. Instead, I grab the canoe towards its stern and lift the stern up over my head with the bow in the ground. Then in walk my way towards the bow until the portage bar is over my shoulders where I can then lower it. So far, I have not dropped the canoe using this method.
I love this woman.
Hahaha
With a $5000 dollar 35 pound canoe.
Now let's see a 70 or 90 pounder😅
Don't spend the first twenty years of your adult life framing houses or pouring concrete foundations.
Or hauling lobster traps…
Or working in a bronze foundry.
I recommend a Kevlar canoe
sure, but can you cook, clean, and chop firewood?
Wow, I bet you can roll a cigarette in one hand and me with the other. And no padding on the yoke. Well done.
Beautiful canoe!
this girl looks strong
Great for young people. Older people will end up with a sprained back with just one wrong “ twist “.
Because they stopped moving at some point in their life. If you keep moving and dancing every day, all your life, you won't break so easy.
Not if you utilize the proper biomechanics and are fit.
@@junefourth9821 and are fit - is the key
I think it’s also about maintaining your flexibility
@@richarddsouza7761 for many of us we don’t think about that until it’s too late. 😩😩
Great job!👍🏻🇺🇸
Very nice, but that canoe probably weighs 32lbs..Mine weighs 60lbs
Pretty easy to do with 70 lb canoes ,,,
Well then you need a 32 lbs canoe. It's that simple
its easier than you think. im 15 and perform this move easily
edit: (on a 70 lb canoe)
That's a Prospector 16 Kevlar it weighs close to 60 lbs.
Wow ! ❤️
That's how I learned to do it years ago. Here's an alternate technique for older people or those who don't feel as strong: ua-cam.com/video/cHoyTaB5kkU/v-deo.html
That's exactly what I do I get my wife to do it.
Always be a gentleman and let your Wife porter your canoe. Yes!!
Mine is 91lbs……
Take the wife out first Justin.
BOSS.
Крепкая девченка😊
I could do that I'm 65 years old and just had a stroke and I could do that of course I make cedar strip canoes.
Like an old pro
As a physiotherapist I would think you would advocate a safer way to lift a canoe by yourself than this... I mean same basic technique done from farther back and then walking your hands to the balance point is way safer.. just sayin
Buy a lighter canoe!! Been thru when canoes were fiberglass monster heavy's. Someone very skillful dead on accurate
artisans made a stripper canoe as the "plug" for the female mold. In marathon canoe racing competitors made their own designs
in strip canoes. These had to be 27" wide at the 3" water line at the widest point(maybe midships) 33" wide at the gunnels
with 18 foot-6" overall length 10" minimum at stern and 15" at bow. Most of the best builders strip boats came in at near or
less than 35 pounds. Now some sellers do this in RIGID Carbon-Fiber @ 26 to 31 pounds. Duh one hand like a heavy
briefcase handling.
I prevent back injuries by letting everyone else do the lifting.
Looks easy enough. But to be fair, she looks in shape enough to dead lift a Volkswagen.
"i wood not piss her off"
Super Girl :)
That is one rugged lass.
"Not evr one is as strong as you "honey."
Bare feet. You drop that thing what could go wrong.
Wow !look at you great video! I love a woman I can lift a canoe😉
A great way to prevent back injuries is to LIFT WEIGHTS EVERY DAY your welcome
Bet you wouldn't do it as easily with an 'iron horse' 30+ Kg's canoe...plus 'back country' you've no air bags etc in there, and shoes would be a good idea...it's flawed with holes. If your teaching 'best practice' you have to do 'best practice'
How to lift an ultralight canoe...easy...How to lift a real canoe....outch
It's a shame and very disappointing that you don't answer the questions or at least say thank you for watching your video and comments.
Or just pay someone else to carry it for you.