Issue #44 - Ottawa Outdoors Magazine

Page 36

Slacklining has arrived A “SKINNY TRAMPOLINE” TO WOBBLE YOUR WAY TO A NEW KIND OF FITNESS By Leslie Foster

in Canada. After a 30-kilometre drive up Highway 28 northeast of Peterborough, we oriented ourselves at the Interpretive Centre and joined a tour led by a Curve Lake guide half a kilometre to a building designed to protect the petroglyphs. Inside, a raised platform extends around a 55-metre by 20-metre dome of limestone that was originally exposed to the elements. On its surface more than 700 images carved between a thousand and 1,500 years ago depict shamans, snakes, and other symbols whose meanings are lost in time. It’s a fantastical site deserving protection. What’s special? The Learning Place Interpretive Centre explains how the petroglyphs were discovered, relates their stories, and links them to First Nations culture.

CANADIAN CANOE MUSEUM This is the world’s largest collection of paddled watercraft. It’s on Monahan Road in Peterborough and worth half a day at least to take in its array of canoes and kayaks. Former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau’s fringed buckskin jacket and Bill Mason’s red canoe are part of the collection – as is a folding canoe, which came as a complete surprise to me. What’s special? Years ago, Eric and I built our own cedar-strip canoe and discovered the museum’s paddle-carving weekend. Three volunteers walked about a dozen of us through the techniques of fashioning our own custom-built paddles. Eric and I now have two paddles ideal for flat-water paddling with Windigo, our canoe. Check out the range of other workshops offered by the museum. More information is a click away at Peterborough & Kawartha’s Tourism and the Trent-Severn Waterway National Historic Site of Canada.  36 I ottawaoutdoors

Maxym Langlois, a fit, competitive 20-year-old has been a climber (gyms, rock faces) since childhood. But it was a kid who shamed him into slacklining. One day at the gym, he saw his first slackline and tried it out. “I couldn’t even walk a metre,” he recalled. “And there was this little 10-year-old kid that walked the entire length! My ego was bruised,” he said with a laugh, “and I spent the next four hours practising. I couldn’t walk the next day.” These days, “I like to install my own line in parks or behind the Parliament [Hill]. I even competed in Boston. Now I do it mostly just for fun in parks,” Langlois said. If you want to see slacklining in action, Altitude Gym on Boulevard SaintRaymond in Gatineau is one place to go. The real pros like Langlois have long since gone beyond just getting from one end to the other of a flexible piece of webbing strung between trees or anchors. It’s like a trampoline, stretchy and bouncy, with ratchets to adjust the tension at each end. It’s a bit like breakdancing. Experienced slackliners do flips, get two people onto the line at once, even practise yoga. I watched Langlois balance on his hands with his body parallel to the ground. Impressive! A slacklining performer is anywhere from a few centimetres to a couple of metres in the air doing these tricks, so there are safety mats below to prevent cracked heads from hard landings in indoor settings. The sport originated in the climbing world, so a climbing gym like Altitude is a predictable location. Unlike a tightrope’s round rigid wire or rope, slacklines are flat so your foot doesn’t roll, and more dynamic – stretching and bouncing like a long narrow trampoline. The flat surface

is easier to learn on, and beginner versions have a rubberized texture for added friction and grip. When you get the hang of slacklining, count on improved core balance, mental concentration, fluidity of motion, agility and strength. Langlois says when he’s on the line, “I’m only thinking of my steps, my stomach, my arms … about what I’m doing in that moment.” Slacklines are polyester or nylon. Polyester is more rigid, easier for beginners and adaptable for “longlining,” hooking up several slacklines for distances longer than 15 metres. Nylon is more flexible and best for those spectacular tricks by the pros. A three-centimetre-wide line is best for beginners, but skilled slackliners often use one half as wide for “highlining” and traversing longer distances. Kits for all range of skill cost from around $80 and you can spend up to $300. They’re on sale at Mountain Equipment Co-op, Altitude Gym, Play Value Toys, Mastermind Toys and Amazon. ca. Here’s some for beginners: Slackline Industries Play Line is a wide design with a rubberized texture for added grip. It comes with a bonus “help line” so you can hang on, kind of like training wheels on a kid’s bike. Slackers Wave Walker also has a help line. Gibbon X13 Funline is made from tightly woven polyester. It’s a little more rigid, but its rubberized surface provides added grip. If you buy one, think “safety first,” starting with location. Set it up in www.ottawaoutdoors.ca


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Articles inside

Ottawa’s Ultraman Canada champion: Kevin Willis

10min
pages 60-64

Exploring world flavours in your backyard

3min
page 57

Add a spa and hot tub to your backyard staycation

1min
page 58

Deck out your outdoors for spring

5min
pages 53-56

Golf putting basics

1min
pages 48-49

Adventure Travel: Sea kayaking Thailand’s coast

4min
pages 46-47

Outdoor Adventure Clubs

3min
pages 38-39

Biking for bass

6min
pages 40-43

Adventure Travel: Manitoba’s “big five

5min
pages 44-45

Slacklining has arrived

5min
pages 36-37

Peterborough & the Kawarthas for a different world

2min
page 35

Cool Gear Hot Clothing

5min
pages 32-33

Ottawa Outdoors Music Festivals

1min
page 34

Temagami wilderness

4min
page 31

The lost art of outdoor whittling

2min
page 25

Making molehills out of mountains

2min
page 24

Riding to the hounds – not

5min
pages 22-23

Gravel bikes circle back

8min
pages 20-21

How to get rid of leeches

3min
page 19

Dust off your boat for the season

2min
page 17

Ottawa’s natural environment

3min
page 16

Survival 101

3min
page 18

Ottawa Valley spring adventures

4min
pages 14-15

Local races

3min
pages 12-13

No trace camping includes the campfire

1min
page 11

How to bike for weight loss

2min
page 10

How to buy a bicycle

3min
page 9

To rent or to buy outdoor gear?

2min
page 6

In early spring, leave the woods to the animals

2min
page 5

Eat local and buy a “share” from the farm

3min
pages 7-8

Publisher’s Letter

3min
page 4
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