Posts Tagged ‘guide training’

Introducing… The 2009 Raft Guide Trainees!

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Our trainees rock!  As of the beginning of June, the trainee raft guides have completed 8 weekends of guide training.  They began by having their trainer, Double D (Eddicar Ferguson III), guide them down the river a handful of times describing rapids and teaching them the basics of reading water.  Because that’s not usually enough for them to learn anything, we usually dump them into the river a bunch, too.

The next step is the trainees start steering the boat in flat water and practice turning to the right and to the left.  They slowly began taking turns guiding through the small rapids with Double D guiding the class 3-5 rapids.  He  would have them pull over above the big rapids and walk down to scout the whitewater.  He would describe water features and have them watch other rafts come through.  They spent time ferrying the raft from river bank to river bank, which is a skill raft guides need to learn in order to, um, rescue trainees.

So the day came when Double D bit the bullet and handed the guide paddle over for the class 4 and class 5 rapids.  This is like giving your car keys to a six year old and riding shotgun.  Things were ruff for the first couple trips after that.  I heard  a story of the boat flipping in the first wave of Double Z rapid, they climbed on the bottom, hit the next big wave (the reactionary wave) and the raft flipped again righting itself.  Don’t see that all too often!

So they progressed and gained more boat control and enough so that Double D cut them loose.  They have spent the last 2 weekends “Turkey Boating,” just trainees in the raft, no Double D.  That way they can practice on each other and crash & learn in a way.  No one is there to correct them before they make a mistake.  Well, the river is, which is nice- natural consequences rule!  This is also when some major bonding takes place as they gain more trust in one another, and start to earn ours.

Sam, Lewis, Matt & Chad are the four finalists in the 2009 “Who’s going to be the next Songer Raft Guide?”  In the weeks to follow we will  have them riding in commercial boats checking out the guest interaction, getting folks to do what we need them to do, and practicing how to remain calm under pressure.

I’ll keep you posted as the season continues for our finalists.  Each will need to complete a “Check Out Run” with a senior guide only observing.  And each first-year guide will need to continually train as the water levels drop in July and August.  It takes years to season a raft guide to just the right ripeness (but soaking them in water for long periods of time helps).

Every Spring there is “raft guide training,” bringing in the next round of raft guides.

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

This past weekend, April 4th & 5th, was Songer Whitewater’s first guide training weekend.  It was a chance to see who, out of those that emailed and calling about training, would really show up.  There were 4 trainees on Saturday with a New River training trip at 5ft (11,000 cfs) and they all had their first taste of the New River–literally.  With one swift “peel-out” at Lower Railroad rapid, they all slid out of the their seats and into the river.

Every spring Songer hosts a training class and provides all the necessary information needed to meet the state’s requirements to be a whitewater raft guide (we even go beyond these standards and help set the top bar for the industry).  Each raft company will do their own training and at some point in the summer season, all these trainees will be gathered together to network & practice universal skills.

The state of West Virginia requires that you have 15 training trips and 2 Evaluation trips but most people need close to 30 trips to see the river at all it’s water levels, gauge the momentum of a full size raft and then dance around the other boats on your trip so your always watching each other.

Songer Whitewater will also host the CPR for Professional Rescuer, Standard First Aid & the American Canoe Association: River Rescue course that is needed to be a certified guide.  There are multiple in-house instructors so these courses portray the full spectrum of the safety relevant to specific places on the two rivers, types of customers on certain trips & to review river history.

A point of emphasis at Songer Whitewater is educating everyone in your boat.  So just as soon as these new guides figure the river out for themselves, they will switch into teacher/coach mode.  They learn a great standard to go back to: a participant can not know how they will react in something they have never done before.  An example would be the wild and crazy rafters who want to flip the raft in the first rapid.  They have no idea what that can be like. If you think about our training theory, a slow  flat water flip will train and prepare the participant for running aggressive raft lines later in the day (and clue everyone in on whether they like that or not).

Molding young adults into raft guides is very fascinating and I will keep you posted as they go through the next 8 weeks of training.