Posts Tagged ‘new river academy’
Saturday, November 12th, 2011
Being a student at New River Academy takes devotion to succed. You have to be ready to train every morning before school which gives way to the reward of kayaking on some of the most beautiful rivers in the world. You have to be willing to travel to places without power and away from large populations. With each experience at New River Academy you gain knowledge. Whether it is tying knots or reading water, you are always learning and growing from your experiences.

Galen standing in the hot springs in the upper Maipo Valley after a long day of classes. Photo by Colin Klein.
Being a student at New River Academy also takes devotion to kayaking. Not only do you have to be ready each morning to workout and train, you also need to be ready to accept consequences for your actions. If you are late to class or morning workout, you need to carry your kayak with you to classes all day.
The experience you gain from each trip with the school is amazing. Being in countries like chile where there is limited power and small populations is a learning experience. It really makes you realize what you need, and you just want. If you are considering attending New River Academy be ready to not just to become a stout boater, but to also gain knowledge about yourself.
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, Colin Klein, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in Kayak School, Uncategorized | Comments Off
Wednesday, November 9th, 2011
Felipe is first and foremost our cook, but he also acts as our entertainer, morning-work-out supervisor, and most importantly our friend. He formally works as a puppeteer, traveling around the world learning as much as he can about different cultures.

Felipe. Cook extraordinaire and Morning Workout Master
Every morning at NRA we get up at 7:30 am for our morning workout. Usually it consists of either yoga or a “21 gun salute,” which consists of simply too many push-ups and sit-ups. But every now and then, the coaches give us a treat, and Felipe relieves us from our routine and takes over morning workout. With Felipe, as always, you never know what’s going to happen. One morning we had an improvised team-building exercise involving our paddles.

Massaging our faces to wake up as instructed by Felipe
We did everything from charades with our paddles to throwing them in a circle without talking. The language barrier between Felipe and us would have been difficult if he wasn’t so experienced in using nothing but his hands and descriptive sounds to express his intentions. This allowed him to easily instruct us in whatever seemingly ridiculous exercise he had thought of for us.

Felippe guides through our next adventure with our paddles
Our second workout was a lesson on Capoiera. In Africa it is a lethal fighting style in which two competitors attach long knives to there feet and dual using nothing but their feet. In Brazil this fight has been turned into a dancing style. Felipe taught us the basics he had learned during the months he spent traveling Brazil.

Felipe demonstrates the porper form for a high kick
Our workout entailed two opponents encircling each other and mirroring each others motions. The goal is to move as in sync as possible, without coming into contact with the other person. The challenge for the morning was not getting kicked in the head, as we weren’t all fully awake yet. This was one of the most memorable morning workouts we have had, and one of the best so far!

Warming up

High Kick. Good Thing I warmed up first!

Kincaid Wurl goes for the handstand to scare his opponent

Dave takes on Felipe.
Thanks to Alex Zegart for the photos!
If you’d like to learn Capoeira for yourself, here is a link the Felipe showed me demonstrating how cool the dance can be:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMX9KKzG4-0
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in Culture, Kayak School, Uncategorized | Comments Off
Tuesday, November 8th, 2011
Hey every one it’s Drew McEachern here. Today I am blogging about the Lower Maipo Rio (river). The lower Maipo is a fairly easy run but very good for working on your skills to get ready for the upper Maipo. I would describe the lower Maipo as a class 3 river with a lot of boofs and eddies to practice your skills on.
The Maipo upper and lower are both high volume rivers and can be quite pushy at points. The Lower is a great river if you want to take it easy for a day, or if you’re just working to progress your skills. It is important to get your skills solid, from boofs to eddie catching, and this is the perfect place to get ready for the rest of the rivers we will paddle in Chile. The lower part of river is friendly but if you’re not paying attention you can still get a swim in the COLD water! Because the river is continuous, rescuing a swim can be a challenge if you are in the wrong place!
The Lower Maipo is a great river and I would suggest it to any one that is ever in the Maipo region- from kayaker’s to rafters.
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, Drew McEachern, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, grade 3, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, Maipo River, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater, whitewater chile
Posted in chile whitewater rivers, Whitewater Countries | Comments Off
Tuesday, November 8th, 2011
Getting 20 kids and staff from place to place is extremely difficult and can be stressful. It takes the whole group coming together and working as one to make it go smoothly. One way we try and make this is happen is by training students so we know how to work together. At the beginning of the school year David taught us how to load and unload the trailer efficiently. This saves us time and protects our gear.

Dave shows Fly how to load the trailer before heading out to the Siete Tasas. Photo by Colin Klein.
Even so, it is hard to travel with 20 people, 20-40 kayaks and all of our gear. This is why Dave also told us to pack light which helps a lot in our large group. Each student has his own backpack and a bills bag. A bills bag is an extra large dry bag with backpack straps. This is what we live out of for weeks at a time. I like using the bills bag because they are easy to pack, but it is not always easy to find things in them.
We share almost everything, we are a big family caring family. It helps that we are all close because we live so closely during the time we are traveling. This would be stressful, but we all know the routine so well it makes it easy to adapt to our new homes. That is how it goes super smoothly for a group of 20 traveling with kayaks in a foreign country.
Tags: Alternative Education, bills bag, boarding school, Chile, Colin Klein, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, Transport, Travel, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in chile whitewater rivers, Kayak School, Uncategorized, Whitewater Countries | Comments Off
Tuesday, November 1st, 2011
Unknown: Ottawa paints the picture of born and bred Ottawa Valley rider Keegan Grady. His powerful voice narrates, while his enormous aerials and impressive river and creek lines remind us of the simple and pure essence of kayaking. Progression, passion, and the need to recognize and take action upon the ever-looming threats to rivers all over the planet are brought to life through the ardent soul of one of the whitewater world’s great Unknowns.
Tags: Kayak School, Keegan Grady, Keeners Kayak Camp, new river academy, Nomade, Ottawa river, Playboating, Tino Specht, Unknown, whitewater kayaking
Posted in Kayak School, Video, Whitewater Video | Comments Off
Monday, October 31st, 2011
The flight into a foreign land is frightening. Not knowing what to expect or what you are going to see. The sights are breathtaking. The mountains are tall and steep and nothing like anything I have ever seen in the States. At first it is somewhat offsetting. But after a little bit you start to feel at home in this tough rugged land.
The air in the Maipo Valley is clean. You simply feel healthy living in such an amazing area. The food is all so fresh and the water is so cold and sweet. The people here are very friendly. They make you feel at home instantly. Even the stray dogs are friendly. It is hard to believe that just a 30 minute drive will take you back into a hustling city, crowded with loud cars and people. But here in the Maipo Valley, you don’t think about the city. You are just totally happy to be in location that is as beautiful as this.
The ” daily grind” here is not such a grind. It’s more of a vacation. On the average day here you wake up around 7:20 AM to go do a short workout that gets your blood flowing. Then directly after that you, and the rest of your classmates, head over to Carla’s house. She lives about a half mile away. To get to her house you have to cross two swinging bridges. The first bridge you must cross is about 40 feet above the, brown, fast, and breathtaking, Maipo river. Once you are across the bridge, you walk a short distance and you are at a far sketchier swinging bridge. It is over a small dried up creek, there is not much water in the creek but there are hundreds of beautiful yellow flowers growing on the banks. After walking very carefully across the second bridge, you walk about 100 yards and you are at Carla’s house and you can already smell the delicious breakfast Feilipe, our cook, has made for us.
After a delightful breakfast of fresh fruits, fruit juice, eggs, toast and various jellies and jams, you start your classes. Here in Chile you think it would be hard to concentrate on anything besides the breathtaking sites and the flowing rivers. But that is not the case. Being in an environment such as this it is easy to learn. Learning comes naturally. This makes the class work exciting. Every page of the books leads to something new and exciting, and this makes you eager to learn more! Even going down to the store to buy a snack teaches you something. You pick up on various Spanish words and phrases every time you interact with any of the locals. After your first four periods of school you take a short break for lunch. This involves embarking on an adventure across the two swinging bridges and back to Carla’s house where once again Felipe has prepared another fantastic meal to fuel our ever hungry stomachs. After the lunch we cross the bridges and begin the last 3 class periods of the day. The last three class periods feel like they will never end. Because at the end of our classes, we are able to do some of the best kayaking in the world.
The Maipo river runs fast, cold and brown. It is 100% snowmelt which makes the river somewhat brutal to paddle. You have to roll fast or you will most definitely get an ice-cream headache. Even with the harsh conditions of the Maipo, it is impossible not to fall in love with such a beautiful, strong, and mysterious river. Not knowing what is just inches below you, hidden in that brown muddy water, is part of the beauty of this incredible river. The other part of the Maipo’s beauty comes from the surrounding landscape. The rugged, dusty, rock mountains shoot up thousands of feet from the river’s edge into the great, blue, Chilean sky. It is safe to say that the Maipo Valley is a magical place.
Kincaid Wurl
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in chile whitewater rivers, Culture | 1 Comment »
Monday, October 24th, 2011
When I tell people I am a math teacher I tend to receive the same sentiment every time: “I am so glad I never have to take a math class again” and “I hate math”. I sympathize. Even engineers and other science professionals struggle with math. This will inevitably persist because math is a difficult and abstract subject, but the majority of the reaction people have to math is the way that it is taught.
Ever have to memorize the times tables? Do you remember around 4th or 5th grade when you had to take a timed test showing your proficiency in multiplication? The feeling of anxiety and fear are probably already creeping up. The bottom line is that standard pedagogical practices such as this teach students that math is to be memorized by rote, and it is to be done quickly, without thinking. I am a math teacher and I honestly do not have the times tables memorized. I know the threes, fives, tens, elevens, and the perfect squares. From this I can derive every multiple up to 13 times 13. Take 9*6, that is 9*5 +9, 54. It has been shown that the most high achieving math students minimize the amount that they memorize by using strategies such as this. Many books encourage students to believe that memorization and short problem solving is the way that math really is.
That is why this year NRA chose to overhaul it’s math curriculum. We chose a curriculum entitled cpm: College Preparatory Math. There are two fundamentally diametrically opposed approaches to teaching math. One is where the students are told math, and asked to repeat it. In the other students are given problems that require them to problem solve and in some way recreate math themselves. Each has it’s advantages, telling students math is very fast, and can lead students to be able to solve a variety of problems efficiently and accurately. Having students problem solve leads them to develop a general approach to solving problems, they are more self reliant and can be more critical of their own methods and strategies. CPM strikes a balance between these two extremes, students are asked to solve problems that are challenging and often wordy(much like real life problems). When the students get stuck the instructor can fill in gaps in knowledge to move them forward with their thinking and approach.
CPM has been shown to be effective through research and multiple studies. You can read the research and philosophical basis for the curriculum here. The main issues with this curriculum is that students have less procedural proficiency and they tend to cover fewer topics. This tends to happen because students cover each topic in further depth, giving students a better chance at retention. Does anyone remember what the law of sines is now? That is probably due to the fact that you were asked to learn it and then tested on it five days later, never to return to it. That is not the case with CPM. CPM has a review and preview section at the end of every lesson where students practice past and future concepts for homework.
So far this curriculum has been very successful with the students. We have done a number of group presentations, projects, and experiments. I wouldn’t set the goal of math to be for every student to love math, but a good gauge is how well people understand the math, and the effort that they are willing to put into solving a problem . Every student has shown improvement in there understanding of number relationships, functions, and graphs. They also tend to spend more time working independently to answer their own questions before asking the teacher(self-sufficiency will be key in later academic life). This I believe is math success, students who are willing to spend time solving problems, and change their strategies when they are not successful(pliability in problem solving), and are constantly evaluating their own processes to come up with better ones.
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, College Preparatory Math, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, Seth Dow, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Monday, October 24th, 2011
To finish up our time in West Virginia we took a day off to learn about ropes and knots. This ropes and knots safety day was lead by two highly qualified safety experts: Moose and Logan. They taught us about many different kinds of knots, systems, and practical uses for these systems. We started off the day with some simple knots such as the figure 8 followthrough, bowline, anchor, water knot, prusik, and double fishermans. A variety of these knots are necessary to any safety system that you will put together. One of the big systems we learned and practiced was the Z-drag. The Z-drag provides a mechanical advantage of three times, so you can do three times the work with the same amount of effort. To make a Z-drag you need an anchor, two biners, three prusiks, and a rope. You attach one end of the rope to the thing you are trying to move (boat?) and then you attach the rope to a biner that is attached to the anchor. Then you take the rope back towards the boat and attach a prusick to the rope attached to the boat and then the new end of the rope, making a V shape (half of the Z). After that you attach another biner to the end of the V and go back in the direction of the anchor, completing the Z. Some of the others things that we learned were how to use a car as an anchor, how to tie someone into a body board, and how to lift someone from a canyon. All of these skills will be very useful when we go to Chile because we will be in many canyons while paddling. A big thanks to Moose and Logan for spending the day with us and making the course so fun!

Learning and practicing some basic knots.

A prime example of an anchor for a Z-drag.

Moose demonstrating how to use a PFD as a harness.

Ziggy being lowered down a cliff by his classmates.
Tags: Alternative Education, boarding school, Chile, education, experiential education, fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
The small town of Fayetteville is a hotspot for outdoor lovers of all kinds, from whitewater kayakers to base jumpers. Like any other town, Fayetteville has signature locations, people, and even signs. These are things that people who have been to Fayetteville before would instantly recognize if they saw them.
For this photo assignment my goal was to capture some of these special locations in Fayetteville through photograph. I used different photographing techniques such as interesting angles, framing, leading the eye, and the use of colours to make photos of the town interesting. I captured to the best of my ability the essence of the town by taking photos capable of telling stories all around the town of Fayetteville.

New River Gorge Bride emerging from the fog early in the morning.

New River Gorge capturing the early morning clouds.

A popular destination for kayakers. Can you recognize the house?

This way to the park.

A gas station in Fayetteville.

Can you tell where you are on the main street in Fayetteville?

Anyone who has partied in Fayetteville has partied at Charlie's.

These friendly robots are found all over Fayetteville.
Tags: fayetteville, Gap Year, go huge, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, Playboating, rivers, West Virginia, whitewater
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Wednesday, September 28th, 2011
On our way to West Virginia we took two days off of school to stop in Niagara Falls. Not only did we get to see the magnificent falls from a helicopter but we did many other fun activities. We got a fun pass for the night in downtown Niagara and also got to go on a jet-boat whirlpool tour. Our night in Niagara was lots of fun with all the different activities on our fun passes. There was a great outdoor mini-golf course which was a main attraction for our group. There was also a huge wheel from which you could see the falls. In the morning we headed towards the falls for our helicopter tour. At first I was really nervous to be going up hundreds of feet in the air in a small, loud, enclosed space. After many horror stories from the boys and a lot of nervous energy burned I was up in the air in the first helicopter with the owner Rudy as our pilot. It turned out that I survived the ride of a lifetime. Soaring high above the class 6 rapids of the Niagara Gorge was a very exhilarating experience and seeing the falls for the first time in my life could not have been better from the ground. Right after our trip to the falls we got in the van and moved on to our next adventure. We flew up and down the class 6 rapids that we saw from the helicopter in a huge jet-boat. With 20 foot crashing waves it was almost as exciting as the helicopter ride but it still did not compare to seeing the falls from that unique angle. Thanks to Joe Kowalski and the Droujkos for making these fun-filled few days possible.

Students back on the ground after their helicopter ride.

The horseshoe falls from the helicopter.
Tags: Canada, Freestyle Kayaking, Go Huge Experiences, high school, Kayak School, Kayaking, new river academy, whitewater
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off