seawolf856 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2024 10:09 am
learning to roll with a greenland stick and skulling up from a capsize. This is causing lots of shoulder aches!
We have some very good greenland rollers in our club now (I blame YouTube) but every session now becomes a dick swinging contest and I think their circus acts have made them lose sight of the real reason we learn to roll...
Guilty as charged with regards to the dick-swinging contest: the only practical reason for learning anything more exotic than a hand roll is to show off. I don't believe the narrative that Greenlanders needed the various different rolls for different types of hunting mishap and equipment failure - I reckon they just liked showing off to their peers, same as the 'top hat' or 'pint of beer' euro rolls. But I wouldn't expect any correlation between Greenland rolls/stick and having shoulder problems: the standard Greenland roll can be completed with your elbows locked by your sides, i.e. with zero risk to your shoulders and far safer than any other roll I can think of. If, however, what's going wrong in your pool sessions is the primadonnas sticking their oar in uninvited and confusing students with techniques other than what they're already being taught, then those people definitely need to F. off, in my opinion...
But in defence of showing-off/dick-swinging... '
The real reason we learn to roll' is to get you back up when the chips are down. As we know, lots of paddlers can do a roll under ideal conditions, but it will let them down when a capsize happens for real and haven't had time to set up etc. To develop a bomb-proof roll, you need to have practiced it repeatedly in real capsize conditions, and that's why good whitewater paddlers and surfers develop a very reliable roll - they have to. Showing off with fancy rolls achieves the same thing - when learning to do a double-pretzel walrus-evisceration roll, you're going to be repeatedly dumped back down unceremoniously without having had the chance to take a breath or set up for the plain-Jane roll you'll use to rescue yourself. This is good practice, and the nearest you'll get to a practical reason for doing the fancy rolls.