Home

Technique —December 2007
The Continuing Evolution of Greenland Rolling
By Dubside
Photos by Tom Sharp and John Hodges
Rolling purely as a self-rescue technique is like jumping off a high dive without doing any twists or flips. It has a tendency to get boring once the initial intimidation is overcome. Kayakers who master the basic rolls often have an inclination toward creating more difficult tricks. “Because I can,” is often the only rationale for rolling a kayak in ways that have little basis in real-life capsize situations. With the growing popularity in the U.S. of traditional kayaking techniques, and the continuing activity of Greenland qajaq clubs, new ideas and innovations have advanced the state of the art in much the same way as the sports of skateboarding or BMX biking have evolved.

Yet unlike other relatively modern sports, kayaking has a much longer history, most of which was generated outside the purview of modern media. You could argue that at one time or another, some seal hunter probably already executed any “new” roll recently created. Whether today’s cutting-edge techniques in rolling are genuine innovations or merely reinventions of the past, they are fun to try, and they renew our appreciation for kayaks and Arctic culture.

Rolling without Reason
In the mid-1980s, the Greenland Kayaking Association (Qaannat Kattuffiat) organized national kayaking championships and compiled a selection of 30 rolling maneuvers for competition. Much of the input on the selection came from Manesse Mathaeussen, the legendary kayaker and seal hunter who lived from 1915 to 1989 and was largely responsible for keeping interest in traditional kayaking alive. (See “Manesse,” by John Heath, SK, Spring ’90.) It is clear that the variety of competition rolls was not intended to be all-inclusive. The balance brace, one of the most basic skills and one that Mathaeussen is known to have valued, is notably absent.

Looking further back into history, one of the earliest European descriptions of specific Greenland rolls is a list of 10 maneuvers made in 1767 by David Crantz, a missionary from Moravia (the eastern part of the present-day Czech Republic). Among the 10 were rolls that can reasonably be deciphered as: the standard Greenland roll; rolling with the paddle held behind the neck; rolling using the throwing stick (norsaq); rolling with one end of the paddle held in the mouth; rolling by sculling with the paddle “held fast behind the back”; sculling up with one end of the paddle “under one of the cross-strings of the kayak”; and rolling by sculling with the paddle held under the kayak. Not all of these maneuvers are in the current competition repertoire.

And not all of the rolls Crantz lists are useful. In his description of the under-the-hull sculling roll, Crantz attempts to provide an explanation for the circumstances that might call for this difficult technique: “This is of service when they lose the oar during the oversetting, and yet see it swimming over them, to learn to manage it with both hands from below.” Although Crantz clearly had an appreciation for the skills and dangers involved in seal hunting, I am inclined to discount this particular bit of analysis as uninformed speculation. In my experience, the under-the-hull sculling roll has no realistic application other than a demonstration of advanced sculling proficiency. I think anyone who has tried it will agree that sliding the paddle to one side and doing a standard roll is a much faster and easier way to recover. The inclusion on Crantz’s list of the under-the-hull sculling roll, as well as the roll with the end of the paddle held in the mouth, proves that kayakers in Greenland have been making up fun rolls of dubious practical value for centuries.

In 2006, in response to the rising skill level of the top competitors, five new rolls were added to the competition. The new rolls include variations on the closed fist and brick rolls previously used in competition, plus one of the rolls Crantz mentions, sculling with the paddle held behind the back, now known as isserfikkut aalatsineq. Even with the list of competition rolls now at a total of 35 maneuvers, it is still far from an exhaustive collection of all the rolls that have been developed in Greenland.

Naming New Rolls
In April of this year, I had a chance to attend the Pagaia Symposium Internationale in Llança, Spain. Greenland kayakers Maligiaq Padilla and Pavia Lumholt also participated in the symposium. Pavia, a surgeon now living in Denmark, is a past club president of Qajaq Nuuk. He has attended traditional kayak symposiums in the U.S. for several years. Maligiaq’s name is familiar to anyone who has followed the recent growth of interest in traditional kayaking. In 1998, he won the annual Greenland championship at the age of 16 and has proceeded to take the title five more times. He is an impressive athlete and worthy ambassador of the sport. A very unfortunate accident and injury shortly before the 2006 championship left him out of the competition that year. He has recently said he wants to follow other athletic pursuits such as adventure racing, yet he maintains an involvement in kayaking activities and was an enthusiastic presence during his visit to Spain.

The symposium lasted a full week and gave us a chance to exchange ideas and experiment with different techniques. By the end of the event, we had thought of more than a dozen rolls that are not done in competition. They range from familiar and easy to quite difficult, if not borderline impossible. As I was keen to know the proper Greenlandic names, Maligiaq and Pavia determined what these new ones would be called in the native tongue.

Butterfly Roll—This is the easiest one, known by a number of Greenland-style paddlers as the “taa-daa” roll or one-hand roll. It can be thought of as an adaptation of the balance brace. For a reasonably flexible paddler using a kayak with a low back deck, it can be taught as the first roll. Maligiaq named it pakkaluaq, which is the Greenlandic word for “butterfly.”

Set up by holding the paddle in one hand at the center of the loom. Cross your arms in front of you with the free arm closest to your chest. Lean forward and capsize toward the paddle. When you feel yourself start to surface on the far side, draw the paddle away from the kayak, moving it along the surface while keeping your elbow straight. Simultaneously drive the kayak up with your inside knee. Continue the arm and knee action while bringing your torso from a forward leaning position to a full recline on the back deck.

For fine-tuning, make sure the paddle blades are flat to the surface when you initiate the sweep, keep your head tilted back and down as you come up, and try to drop your upper shoulder so that your chest is parallel to the sky. If there’s a secret to doing an effortlessly smooth butterfly roll, it’s the same secret for all the other rolls—a limber, supple body honed by regular stretching, yoga or rope -gymnastics.

Butterfly Roll (photos show starting position and finish)


Scarecrow Roll—The Greenlandic name is tunusummillugu tallit illuttut siaarlugit (touching one’s neck with the paddle with both arms stretched out). This can be thought of as an adapted behind-the-neck roll. The paddle is held across the shoulders with a blade equally extended on both sides. Set up by twisting sharply from the waist and turning the paddle parallel to the kayak. Capsize face-first. Only one blade actively contributes to the righting action. The hardest part is being able to twist far enough for the setup. That’s where flexibility training pays off.

Scarecrow Roll


Alternate Storm Roll—Maligiaq and Pavia decided to call this siukkut pallortillugu killormut—which translates roughly as “storm roll the wrong way.” The regular storm roll is a forward-ending move in which the paddle sweeps from bow to stern while head and shoulders turn downward, finally coming to rest facedown over the front deck. In this alternate version, the paddle goes from stern to bow, and you must cross your forearms to finish the motion.

Set up with the paddle held at the gunwale, extended rearward with the aft hand reversed so the thumb points toward the stern. Rather than extend the paddle all the way, leave a little exposed past your forward hand. Capsize toward the paddle and recover by prying the extra bit of paddle against the gunwale and ending leaning forward as per the usual storm roll. Note that the competition roll known as the reverse sweep also begins with the paddle extended toward the stern and ends facedown on the front deck, but you would capsize onto your back to initiate it. In this killormut roll, you capsize face-first.

Alternate Storm Roll


Sculling Rolls
Several of the new rolls we came up with in Spain are sculling rolls, a category that is often neglected by intermediate rollers. The most common cause of failure of any sculling roll is trying to right the kayak all at once with a bracing action and neglecting to keep the arc traveled by the paddle blade wide enough. For an effective technique, initiate the sculling movement first with no hip/knee pressure so as to concentrate only on a wide smooth scull. While keeping the stroke wide, ensure that the wrists are angling the paddle so lift is generated in both directions. Drive the kayak upright using the hips and inside knee, not as one forceful burst but with steady and continuous pressure. Most importantly, don’t struggle and rush the sculling motion—this only leads to shorter, inefficient strokes and sets up a vicious cycle of increased muscle tension and decreased flexibility.

Reclining Sculling Roll—Although all the competition sculling rolls are forward-ending moves, there are several layback sculling rolls. Nerfallaallugu aalatsineq involves lying flat on the back deck with the paddle across the chest and sculling completely around. Using the full length of the paddle helps when first attempting the roll, but the technique can also be done without extending the paddle. Twist the blades 90 degrees for a smooth capsize, then flatten them to begin the scull. Stay relaxed, and keep the stroke nice and wide. Practice until the paddle loom remains roughly parallel to the deck throughout the roll.

Reclining Sculling Roll


Reclining Behind-the-Neck Sculling Roll—Performing the previous roll but with the paddle behind the neck is called nerfallaallugu qungatsip tunuatigut aalatsineq. Hands grip the paddle palm-up and a few inches from each ear. You will need a clear unobstructed deck area so as not to get the shaft hung up in midstroke. Good technique is essential because the paddle can’t easily be angled up to cheat with a hard brace followed by a few phony sculls for appearance. Incidentally, if you’re having difficulty doing a layback all the way onto the stern deck, you can lift yourself out of the seat a few inches as long as your knees and thighs remain anchored securely enough to control the kayak.

Reclining Behind-the-Neck Sculling Roll


Reclining Crossed-Arm Sculling Roll—Whereas sculling in general is a tricky motion to learn, doing it with your arms crossed is very disorienting. It’s like having a dyslexic paddle. To minimize confusion, think of one arm as completely passive and the other as doing all the work. Focus on the hand that submerges last. With a little trial and error, the roll will start to come together.

Having never hunted seals myself, any conjecture I could offer on the practical application of a reclining crossed-arm sculling roll puts me in the same league as Crantz. Nevertheless, let’s say the harpoon line gets tangled around both forearms and pulled toward the stern, pinning the hunter to the back deck and pulling him under. If that sounds too farfetched, then we should just consider this roll—assaat paarlatsillugit kingukkut aalatsineq—another sculling proficiency feat.

Reclining Crossed-Arm Sculling Roll


Forward-Ending Behind-the-Neck Sculling Roll—Holding the paddle on the front deck and sculling around is already a competition roll. But it can also be done with the paddle behind the neck for siukkut tunusummillugu aalatsineq. I find this to be a good test of proper form because if you try to forcefully brace instead of scull, your shoulder is terribly vulnerable to dislocation. Yet if the righting action is applied incrementally with sculling strokes kept wide and driven by a flexible torso, there’s minimal risk of injury. Practice the regular competition forward-ending sculling roll masikkut aalatsineq until you can keep the paddle flat to the deck throughout the roll, bearing in mind the advice on sculling I mentioned earlier. Then, and only then, apply the same technique with the paddle behind your head.

Forward-Ending Behind-the-Neck Sculling Roll


Crossed-Arm Forward-Ending Sculling Roll—Maligiaq thought of an additional variation of a sculling roll, masikkut paarllatsillugit aalatsineq. I had previously tried this one at length and could never get it to work unless I braced hard at the end, which more or less turns it into a crossed-arm roll, one already done in competition.

Like all forward-ending rolls, the closer you can get your head to the gunwale as you come up, the better. But in this case, the crossed forearms are in the way, and additionally there is limited mobility to maintain a wide, efficient scull. None of us could do this roll. Maybe someone with the right combination of kayak and flexibility can succeed, but it’ll be a real challenge to do it without any bracing—that is, without pushing down forcefully on the paddle instead of sweeping it from side to side.

Crossed-Arm Forward-Ending Sculling Roll



   
NEXT >>