Willow HarvestCo

Canoeing & Kayaking Basics

Paddling fundamentals for Canadian waterways.

Willow Harvest Co is an independent reference covering the core skills of flatwater and moving-water paddling: how a stroke moves a boat, which safety equipment is required by law in Canada, and how to share busy lakes and rivers.

Focus Flatwater & entry-level moving water
Region Canada
Updated June 13, 2026
A canoe on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario
Canoe Lake, Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

A reference, not a replacement for instruction

Canoeing and kayaking reward a small number of well-practised habits. The material here explains those habits in plain language and points to the Canadian organisations that set the rules and teach the certified courses.

Skill

Strokes that steer

Most directional control comes from a handful of strokes — forward, sweep, draw, and the J-stroke for solo canoeists — not from brute force.

Paddle techniques

Safety

Gear the law requires

Transport Canada sets the minimum equipment for every small vessel, including an approved flotation device for each person aboard.

Safety gear

Etiquette

Sharing the water

Lakes and rivers are shared with anglers, motorboats, and other paddlers. A few conventions keep launches and narrows calm.

Waterway etiquette
A wooden double bent-shaft paddle
Technique

Paddle Techniques

Grip, catch, and the difference between a canoe single-blade and a kayak double-blade — with the corrective strokes that keep a boat tracking straight.

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A buoyancy aid (personal flotation device) for paddling
Safety

Safety Gear

The legally required equipment for canoes and kayaks in Canada, how a PFD should fit, and the cold-water reality of Canadian seasons.

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People paddling on the Bow River in Calgary
Etiquette

Waterway Etiquette

Right-of-way at launches, passing anglers, leave-no-trace on portages, and how to read a busy narrows without crowding other boats.

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Why fundamentals first

Small habits prevent most problems

The recurring themes in Canadian boating safety education are simple: wear a flotation device rather than stowing it, dress for the water temperature rather than the air, and tell someone your route before you launch.

  • Wear an approved PFD or lifejacket on the water, not in the hatch.
  • Dress for immersion — Canadian water stays cold well into summer.
  • Leave a trip plan with a reliable contact before you set out.
  • Check the marine forecast and water conditions for your route.
A paddler on the Bow River

Contact

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Reference desk

Willow Harvest Co summarises publicly available guidance from Canadian authorities and paddling organisations. For binding rules and certified training, consult the sources directly.

Email
editor@willowharvestco.org
Authoritative sources
Transport Canada — Safe Boating Guide
Paddle Canada