Canoeing Solo

By admin, January 6, 2009 7:06 pm

canoeing solo

The winter sports of luge and bobsleigh, have much in common. Both are prominent in the Winter Olympics. Both are extremely dangerous for the participants. Both are to fall feet first by the same slippery track at top speeds. Both sports require nerves of steel and lightning reflexes. However, there is great subtle difference between these two sports that test the limits of how humans relate to gravity.

Bobsledders work in groups of up to four people, while the sled runners either go solo or work in teams of two. Luger against the elements head on, while bobsledders enjoy some protection with their teams.

A sled is so as a kind of canoe with an extended opening. Although the drivers are more exposed to the elements, the front low and sides of a bobsled offer athletes a certain level of defense force, both the wind when the race and the possibility of serious injury accident. Himself sled is designed to absorb at least some of the impact of a collision, brokers provide a minimum of protection.

By contrast, a sled is a small piece of equipment about the size of a pair of skates. Riders hold on to this small area to protect the friction of the runway, but in the case of an accident the body of a sled runner is totally exposed and vulnerable.

Bobsleds accommodate two or four riders, and much of the training of athletes before a race sled for learning centers to work together as a team. With speeds of more than a superior race hundreds of miles per hour, it is absolutely essential that a bobsleigh team function, like many members attached to the same brain. While still a split-second timing in their movements can send a team of sled ride in a major crash instead of flying past the finish line. It can be very difficult for teams to do the type of group precise coordination they need to succeed on the track.

Luging is a sport practiced by individuals and teams of two. Without having to worry about coordinating four people to move as one, luge riders are free to focus their training on other aspects of downhill racing sled. Luger work to improve everything from its position on the sled to his unnerving ability to anticipate the hairpin turns of the track. Luge runners should be in better physical condition in order to be able to respond instantaneously to the twists.

Besides learning to handle the track, athletes seeking excellence in the world need to become Luging experts in protecting themselves in case of an accident. Sleds, because they go at speeds so fast, the difference between reacting immediately to a bump in the road and react a split second later you can be the difference between walking away from a spill and be carried in a stretcher.

About the Author:

Gray Rollins is a featured writer for Lugear.com. To learn more about ice luge and street luge, visit us.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comThe Differences Between Luge And Bobsledding

Solo Canoe /Duffek stroke



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