50 Years of Umko 1966 - 2016 1966 - 2016 | Page 41
scared - we thought we were bullet proof! It was down the middle every
rapid!”
Richie Finlay replies: “Robbie says he can’t remember being scared. Me,
I’ve never been so scared in my life. In my early days of paddling Umko
Doug Tatham and I approached Whirlpool in our Sabre K1’s. He went first
and .... disappeared. Holy shit! I thought Wrong line! I tried to steer away
from the wall. I disappeared too. It was so fast you just didn’t have time
to react. One second you were paddling furiously the next you were being
tossed around like a rag doll.
“Those few seconds were the most terrifying of my life. Being hurled
along under the rock face, lungs bursting was not a pleasant experience.
Thankfully both of us were spat out at the bottom but not before I lost my
canoe, paddle, one shoe and sock, juice bottle and my nerve. My helmet had
a rather large crack right through the plastic. Could have been my head!
Recovering my canoe a few hundred meters downstream, I had lost my seat
(pin sheared clean off), all my buoyancy and my paddle was broken in half.
I still finished though. I miss the sheer adrenalin rush of all those awesome
rapids on the most feared river of all.”
accommodation. “All Andre needed to do was to get there and see if he
could remember the river after twenty years of absence. My father Mike
Hawarden who was now listening in, had a major attack of FOMO and
signed himself up as our second, even though he would have to fly out from
New Zealand for the occasion!
“If there is one thing I learned during the race, it’s that true old river dogs
A novice gets shepherded
At a Hawarden family reunion Hugh Hawarden got chatting to Dusi
and Umko legend Andre about paddling. A self-confessed fish and chips
paddler, Hugh was keenly interested to hear Andre’s war stories about the
sharp end of races with Pope and Co. back in the day. In amongst the telling
of these tales and the appreciative audience he held in thrall, Andre “must
have gotten carried away and was foolish enough to say to me, “We should
do a race together sometime”.
“Sign here,” said Hugh, and they agreed to paddle an Umko together.
“It’s tough as a fish and chips paddler to break into the Umko. There
Some regarded even a t-shirt as too much... This vest went for a
big swim that day: “I actually ran out of air” said Paul
Despite Mason and Stewart’s sensible example in 1972, for many it was still
T-shirt and tousled hair for years afterwards.
are a limited number of generous souls willing to drive novices down the
river” says Hugh, who enthusiastically promised to supply the boat and
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don’t need to remember the river. They can read it afresh. Like returning
to an old favourite novel, it all comes flooding back, so to speak. We’d
approach a rapid, Andre would slow his paddling, crane his neck a bit to
decide his line, and down we’d go.
“The first day from Josephine’s was fantastic, starting gently to settle the
UMKO 50 Years