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OC6-LD

2022 Great Waikoloa Race

Over 50 crews raced on Saturday at Waikoloa’s six man race located in Anaeho’omalu Bay on a windy morning. Our only official canoe was a 40’s mix who took first in their division with the last minute addition of a 60+ novice paddler. We also had a scattering of paddlers that helped fill in other canoes and included Tyron, Grant, Paco who also did well.

The race results are a bit error prone and they didn’t include times. You can read them here and perhaps they will update and fix some of the places.

Beyond HCRA Long Distance

This will be the last Long Distance race in the HCRA series, but there are other races still planned. The Queen Lili’uokalani Race kicks off this week. Events are scaled back a bit due to Covid but you can find the schedule here along with the course maps here.

The big race on Saturday will have full coverage for those of you at home. In addition you can also use the live tracker to track your favorite team. There will be multiple teams in Jrs., women, mix and men races from our club and a few combo crews too and special good luck to our Novice B crew too!

Sunday’s Double Hull Race – Don’t get smashed!
LIVE FEED – Saturday Races

Races will be live on Facebook during Saturday races!

Be sure to follow us @QueenLiliuokalaniCanoeRaces or www.facebook.com/oceanpaddlertv

Our Live Feed team will begin streaming approximately 7:20 am, covering the start of the Wahine, and Mix 40+ and Mix 50+ divisions. The team will follow the south bound race and be at the finish line at Honaunau. 

There will be a break in the feed, approximately 30 minutes, and then back online just prior to the start of the Kane and Mix Open division start. Coverage of the north bound race live streams all the way back to Kailua Bay for the finish.

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OC6-LD

Calvin Kelekolio Long Distance 2022

This Saturday on the 20th we had 5 crews ready to compete out on the water at Hōnaunau for Keoua Canoe Club’s race. The kids, mixes and women teams went first with a five minute staggered start between the unlimiteds, open/mix and the keiki. The short course was 8 miles and the keiki did a 3 mile race.

Huki!

The morning weather was hot and muggy with a still ocean. The short course ran north from Hōnaunau to Kealakekua Bay and back.

Short Course

Congrats to all our mixed crews, even if some had to play bumper boats to clear the start line. Great job to the 2 Novice crews that turned up in Koholo and Lono to paddle! Keep it up!

The rough overall placings for 31 Koa/Fiberglass canoes follow (ignoring the unlimited canoes):

  • 1st Overall: 1st Pae’a – Open Mix 1:05.50
  • 2nd Overall: 2nd Kepuku – Open Mix 1:09.32
  • 5th Overall: 3rd Kuhaimoana – Open Mix 1:11.05
  • 9th Overall: 4th Auku’u – Open Mix 1:13.44
  • 16th Overall: 11th Kaholo – Open Mix 1:26.27
  • 18th Overall: 3rd Lono – Novice Women 1:27.23
Women and Mixed Short Course

Long Course

Following the first race, the men started at about 11:00 am as the breeze was starting to fill in and the ocean developed some texture. On their 11 mile course from Hōnaunau – Kealakekua Bay – Keawekāheka Point – Hōnaunau, there were bumps to find on the run back down from Keawekāheka Point and all the crews were looking for course advantages. A Puna unlimited flew too close to the sun trying to surf next to the reef entering Kealakekua Bay and met with an abrupt huli with paddlers scattered in the waves. This ended their chances of placing.

For Keaukaha though a big congrats 50s! Out of 17 koa/fiberglass canoes:

  • 8th Overall: 50’s Men (1st in the 50’s).
2022 Men’s results

Next Race 27th

Don’t forget to consider next Saturday’s race: Great Waikola

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News

2022 IVF World Sprints

About the time this gets published 12 very worn out paddlers and several exhausted adults are on their way back to Hawai’i from London, and they represented us like champs!

Keaukaha rolled up in force at the custom 2012 Olympic rowing venue in Windsor, England for the International Va’a Federation World Sprints 2022.

We had 5 paddlers qualify for individual V1 races: ‘Ehā, Cother, Ali’i, Tanoa, and Noah. And 6 Jr. men and 6 Jr. women in the V6 1000m and 500m events. The competition was Intense with a capital I.

Heats

The World Sprints race progression is an elimination type of event rather than a single winner takes all. The progression of who advances depends on the number of heats for that category. All of the events for the kids were either 2 or 3 heats and this chart shows how paddlers can advance to the finals. It’s important to understand this flow as they were in many races.

Race Progressions Based on the Number of Heats for an Event

Start Sequence

For the World Sprints there are 2 start lines: a pre-start line with white buoys, and a real start line with colored lane flags.

Once the white flag goes up, crews can move up to the pre-start line. And then when the red flag is raised, crews can approach the start line. If someone is over a black flag is raised. There is no individual warning, crews have to figure it out and back up. As crews settle, a green flag is raised starting the race. If the black flag is still up when the green flag is raised those crews across the line are disqualified.

V1 500 meters

‘Ehā competed in Race 060 Jr. 16 Men. Heat 1 of 2, he paddled into a 4th place, qualifying him for finals. In the Race Jr. 16 finals he put up an amazing fight nearly even with the top paddlers until about midway when the others managed to pull ahead. ‘Ehā finished the final in an impressive 7th on Day 4 Race 147.

Race 147: A few races were archived individually. ‘Ehā’s V1 Final (starts 1:30).

Tanoa in heat two Race 061 Jr. 16 had a blazing start and paddled fiercely down the course. His fellow paddlers pulled slowly out ahead of him towards the mid-field of the course and at the final line placed in 7th and unfortunately not advancing to the finals.

Cother raced in Race 64 Jr. 19 Women, Heat 2 of 3 and padded into a strong 4th place, qualifying her to compete in the next round Race 125 Repechage where 3rds, 4ths and 2 fastest times compete again for the finals. Cother improved to a 3rd place position but with 3 heats, unfortunately only 1st and 2nd in the Repechage advance to the finals.

Noah and Ali’i raced in Race 69 Jr. 19 Men Day 3 heat 3 of 3. The Jr. 19 men moved fast through the water but Ali’i and Noah were a show of force pulling off a 3rd (Ali’i) and 4th (Noah). This qualified them for the Race 144 Repechage round on Day 4 where Ali’i placed 1st to advance to the finals and Noah placed 7th and with 3 heats you have to be 1st and 2nd to move on to the finals. In the Race 154 Jr. 19 Men finals, Ali’i pushed hard and pulled off 7th at the worlds finals!

Race 154 Jr. 19 Men Finals with Ali’i (starts at 1:30)

V6 1000 meters (1 turn)

The Junior 19 Women were the first of our team to do the 6 man race. The 1000 meters requires 1 turn and in these narrow unlimited the turns are very hard. It’s not something they get to practice often but they did well.

Jr. 19 Women

Race 180 Jr. 19 Women in their first race Heat 1 of 3 pulled off a blazing 1st place moving them into the semifinals where they battled it out in Race 202 and got 4th just shy of continuing to the finals.

Race 202 Jr. Women semi-finals (Starts at 1:30)

Race 193 Junior 19 Men raced the 1000m in heat 3 of 3 and the competition was fierce. It was a tight race and tough, they managed a 3rd place moving them into the semifinals.

Jr. 19 Men

Day 5 the Race 234 Jr. 19 men semi-finals was a tough heat with some fast crews. They paddled their way to a 3rd place which was just shy of qualifying for the finals by only 2 seconds.

Race 234 Semi Finals for Junior 19 Men (Race Starts 4:00)

Considering both these crews have never paddled at this level on the world stage, in these canoes and most are nowhere near the 19 year old age limit of some of their competitors, it’s amazing to see such a high level of competitive performance from them. Great racing!

Lanikai was short one paddler for their V6 entry so ‘Ehā jumped in and hammered with them. Race 223 Jr. 16 Men 1000m saw Lanikai accelerate into 3rd place propelling them to the semi-finals. Race 344 Final 1000m and Lanikai (powered also by ‘Ehā) brought the silver home!

Race 344: Jr. 16 Final with ‘Ehā in with Lanikai Canoe Club from Oahu

V6 500 meters

This event is going to be a little more competitive for our crews because of the lack of a turn which they did not have the advantage of being able to practice in an ARE “Matahina” style canoe that’s very hard to turn.

Race 335 Junior 19 women heat 1 of 2 started off fast with some fast paddling all the way down the course. The team battled hard and found themselves just shy of the semi-finals in 5th place.

Race 332 Junior 19 men Heat 2/2 saw Keaukaha paddle to a 4th place finish moving them into the finals. Race 372 Junior 19 Men finals was a fast race. #53 didn’t disappoint as they blazed down the course to a 5th place in the final race a mere 2.73 seconds behind the podium in 3rd. Great job to all of them!

Once again Lanikai needed some help and ‘Ehā stepped up to the plate to help their Junior V6 team again.

Race 372 Jr. 19 Men finals

Race 380 Junior 16 men with ‘Ehā in the va’a with Lanikai found them paddling like pros dueling it out for a shot at first place against New Zealand. These kids were moving out there on the water and almost caught New Zealand taking 2nd making this ‘Eha and Lanikai’s second silver at Worlds.

Race 380: Junior 16 Men V6 500m with ‘Ehā and Lanikai

Live Stream Archive and Results

If you want to watch more of the action as there are almost 400 races, you can find the daily video archives here:

https://ivf.ignitestudios.org/

And for all the race results and times, you can go to their result page:

https://www.liveresults.co.nz/competition/438

To Be Continued In 2023….

Categories
News

Da Hui & Miloli’i Races

Saturday was a day for racing on Big Island. Hilo hosted the popular Da Hui OC1/2/6/Keiki/SupSquatch race with 2 courses. And Miloli’i hosted a OC6 long distance race on the Kona side.

Da Hui Long Course Results

With calm waters and light variable winds, this race was a push for everyone.

For OC1’s Tyler, Kama and Moku all finished inside a second of each other, with Tyler taking home a new paddle as 1st place prize. Congrats to all 3 of them. That’s some intense racing! Good job Tyler, Kama, Kawena, Brandi!

Da Hui 8/13/2022 long course results

Da Hui Short Course Results

The short course had almost twice as many entries and some Keaukaha hammers. Awesome paddling to Grant, TR, Loren, and Clem!

Short Course Results

If you want the keiki and Supsquatch results you can see all the results here: https://pseresults.com/events/1247/results

Yup. I said Supsquatch.

Miloli’i Long Distance

This race is known as good heat training for the Queen Liliuokalani race and it didn’t disappoint. Our 40’s mix crew hammered it out in the current and hot weather on Saturday.

40’s Mix churning and burning the course – They can also testify to the new iPhone’s water resistance. For that story, ask them, haha.

Good job 40’s crew as the 5th place mix and 7th overall!

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News

First in State AA

Congratulations to the 12 crews that represented Keaukaha at the State’s Regatta on Oahu this year. We took all our #1 ranked crews from the Big Island Moku series and they did well. Our club placed #11 out of 58 clubs and #1 in our Division AA.

It was Keaukaha Smiles all day long.

Our First Place Trophy – Hawai’i Printed Plaque

How it stacked up

The big clubs like Lanikai and Hawaiian Canoe club had lots of crews and did well getting them to the podium with Lanikai getting 64% of their crews to a 1st, 2nd or 3rd.

Likewise in the AAA division Puna and Kai ‘Opua got a 3rd and 4th.

And in the AA division we had a large gap to 2nd place Kawahae and Healani Clubs. We had all 12 of our crews make points with about 1/3 getting to the podium.

Our State Champion Crews:

  • 3. 1/2 mile Men (65 years). Lane 3 (Jeff Clemenson, Warren Dela Cruz, Eric Hagiwara, Greg Kane, Clem Kawai’ae’a, Mike Shintaku)
  • 14. 1/2 mile Girls 15 & under. Lane 3 (ZOE AOKI, Serenity Cordero, Tati Dunhour, Waiolu Publico, Malia Lani Simram, Kaliko Uyeshiro)
  • 15. 1/2 mile Boys 15 & under. Lane 4 (Eha Kiyuna, Kai’olino Kualii, Malakai Laititi, Tanoa Laititi, Chanstin Uahinui-Vagai, Ulu Yung)
  • 17. 1/2 mile Boys 16 & under. Lane 5 (Eha Kiyuna, Malakai Laititi, Kahalia Masaoka, Niau Paulos, Ali’i Youderian, Umi Yung)
  • 18. 1/2 mile Girls 18 & under. Lane 3 (JAYDEE AH SING, Pakela Ka’au’a, Nahiena Kekuawela, Cother Laa, Dalilah Martin, ADELAIDE STEBBINS)
  • 19. 1/2 mile Boys 18 & under. Lane 6 (Nauhikapakea Liwis, Tyler OBrien, Niau Paulos, Walea PE’A-WHITNEY, Noah Pila, Ali’i Youderian)
  • 20. 1/2 mile Mixed 18 & under. Lane 5 (Jezney Chang, Makaya Kipapa, Cother Laa, Walea PE’A-WHITNEY, Noah Pila, Kamu Rapoza)
  • 24. 1 mile Men Freshmen. Lane 3 (Kama Leeloy, Jose Lizardi, Tyler Makaiwi, MARIO MAUSIO, Christopher Olayen, Spencer Kamauoha Smith)
  • 25. 1 mile Women Sophomore. Lane 5 (Kahoane Aiona, Mona Durkan, Amy McBride, Brianna Ninomoto, Alexia-Marie Osburn, Liana Prudholm)
  • 38. 1/2 mile Men Open Four. Lane 5 (Brawn Albino, Pati Koehnen-Sua, Lance Oliveira, Jeremy Padayao)
  • 41. 1/2 mile Mixed Men/Women Open. Lane 3 (Kawena Brooks, Anna Kaaua, Keao Kiyuna, Loren Pabila, Brandi Rapozo, ROBERT WHITNEY JR.)
  • 43. 1/2 mile Men Masters (40 yrs.). Lane 4 (Niklas Dahm, T.R. Ireland, Grant Ka’au’a, Kyle Keamo, Kawika Kekuawela, Tyron Nicolas)

London Bound! Races Aug. 10 – 16

The keiki competing at Dorney Lake in Windsor UK (~25 miles west of London) at the IVF World Sprints departed the same day to get ready for their events. Have fun and good luck to everyone!

IVF Youtube Channel for Information and Updates

Also information on the 2022 Facebook Page.

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News

We Are The Big Island Champions

It’s been a long time coming but we scrapped for every point in every race and came home with the Moku’s championship! Congratulations to everyone for their hard work. We had some tight 2nd places and battles all season long and to pull of a victory at Moku’s is amazing.

We had a great turnout from all our crews from the kids to the 70’s. One of our fellow paddlers made a nice video that sort of captures the feel from Mokus this year.

Now the Hard Work Starts – Keep Training

We have 12 crews going to States on Ohau, all first seated teams from our season of racing. And following that race, the kids are off to London for the IVF World Sprints!

For a lot of paddlers the end of the Regatta season signals the start of the most anticipated part of paddling: LONG DISTANCE!

Even if you’re not planning on doing long distance, it’s great to stay in shape by coming out to paddle and definitely jump in your one-man canoes! Training never stops. Let’s come back for the 2023 season ready to break some records! Crews typically start gearing up and going long after States which is next weekend.

Long Distance Paddling Events

Check our Event’s Schedule for a complete list, but the biggies are Queen Liliu’okalani in Kona and Henry Ayau on Oahu this year. Also note there are some one-man races starting.

2022 Gorge Downwind Championships

Congratulations to Keola, Tyran, Grant and Eric for competing in the Gorge Downwind race in Hood River on the mainland July 16. Over 500 canoes were on the water and it was an exciting event. Here’s a small taste from the race organizer.

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News

Puna Regatta 2022

Saturday’s regatta started out blustery and windy but the keiki managed to hammer though it pulling off some good race times even though there were a lot of pukas and crew shuffling to fill their events.

By mid-day the weather cleared up and the water flattened out with a slight swell rolling in. As the weather heated up so did the competition as Puna came out with a lot of crews.

In spite of 2 clubs running more races than us, we took home more gold and tied Kai Opua thanks in part to the crews in the last 4 races pulling off 1’s and 2’s in races with a lot of canoes. Those first places were the deciding factor in ranking Keaukaha 2nd over Kai Opua as we racked up 12 gold, more than any other club.

Etched Tile for 2nd

Great paddling out there! Crabbie paddle has uploaded several videos so far and the rest should be up soon. In the meantime, here’s the overall summary by club.

Puna 2022 Regatta

Puna and Kai Opua both completed more events than us with Puna getting into the top 3 about 67% to our 62% of the time. The fact we squeezed out Kai Opua (see how many 2nd’s they got?) was due to every crew pushing hard and getting ahead of them when it counted.

Great paddling! Only 2 more regattas before the Big Island Championship and State competition on Ohau in August.

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News

Keaukaha Regatta 2022

Congratulations to all the hard working volunteers, paddlers and supporters (family and friends) who made our regatta a great success! We saw a lot of great paddling out there and team work. Even this morning we have paddlers down at bay front working to help clean up anything over looked from last night.

We had a really great set of races taking home the most gold. Just check out the overall race summary of each clubs’ totals.

Keaukaha 2022 Place Totals

That’s 11 golds to Puna’s 8 and Kai Opua’s 7. In fact we had the same number of 1st, 2nd and 3rds as Kai Opua making us tied at 65% of our crews getting a podium place. We came within 4 points of Kai Opua in 1st. which means the overall results were decided by small technicalities of how many crews were in the races and even as little as the difference between a couple 4th or a 5th in a race. Everyone’s efforts added up and we scrapped for every point. It was a great day for Waimāpuna and all the paddlers she carried.

After Race Action

For those who stuck around to help cleanup were given a great treat from the Kekuawela Ohana and their dancers from Merahi Productions. They banged out some great Tahitian style rhythms while the dancers in full costume put on an amazing show. This included pulling up unsuspecting audience members to try the high speed Tahitian moves with them. Keahi fled their efforts to recruit him to the stage faster than anyone has ever seen him paddle.

There was also a group of 4 men who answered the call with several of their own well practiced Polynesian dances.

And for those who hung around long enough to learn about Jose’s newest potential sponsor and try some samples…well you might have been among the luckiest!

Return of Crabbie Paddle

More exciting news is we managed to get Crabbie Paddle the world famous youtuber, Mike, out of retirement. He busted out the gear and painstakingly recorded all of our crews. Big Mahalo!

You can see your event on his channel and here is the Keaukaha 2022 Playlist.

Watch your crews and your competition. With youtube you can also slow down playback for better slow motion analysis. Click on the “gear” symbol and select a playback speed.

Return of Lost Steering Blade in Kona?

Back in the last Kona regatta a Kialoa paddle was left behind. It has a unique sticker that the owner can identify. Please contact the Kaaua’s or use the website’s contact page if you know anything about the steering paddle. Mahalo.

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News

2022 Kai Opua Regatta

The rumors of a canceled regatta and unofficial status proved to be false. At 8am on 6/11 Saturday HCRA marked the start of the 2nd official points regatta. Partly overcast skies kept the Kailua-Kona temperatures on the pier down and the swell was low. A slight northerly breeze and boat wakes generated some chop with a north flowing current that made the far turn slow and challenging. Most crews ran about 15-20 seconds slower per half mile than the previous regatta.

Waimāpuna ready to race

About 11 clubs came out to race with 3 of them in our Division A group. Kai Opua had the most crews paddling with 37 entries with an amazing 76% of them making a podium, which is a big improvement from previous regattas for them giving them 150 points for 1st.

Kawaihae managed to fill 32 races with a 69% podium rate for their crews which was a 5 point decrease from their last regatta. But this was enough to push them into 2nd place.

Keaukaha raced 33 races with about a 64% podium rate and that’s 4 points higher than previous regattas. The final race tally put us only 3 points behind Kawaihae for 3rd.

One of the surprise performers was Hui Wa’a O Waiakea who only raced 5 races but pulled off second places for 4 of them giving them an 80% podium rate.

We were short on paddlers and several had to do back to back races. Some even just stayed in the boat to go one more time. And a lot of crews were paddling together for the first time. Even with all that we collected 10 golds (more than any other club), 4 Silvers and 7 Bronze medals.

Next weekend we bring the action back to Hilo for Kailana’s Regatta which will be a good warm up for the weekend of 6/25: The Keaukaha Regatta!

Side Note to OC1 Stall Holders

Please turn the hoses off at the spigot. We had a hose burst and leak a significant amount of water last week.

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News

The Regatta Number Game

Now that we’ve had our first regatta, it might be a good time to discuss the mechanics. Winning a regatta by points is a fine balance between participation and placing. The points system is broken up into divisions which are based on how many races your club enters. This helps smaller clubs compete with similar sized clubs.

For example if a club enters 23 or less events, they go into Division B. Larger clubs entering more than 23 events go into Division A. Our club is a little in between and we try to run as many races in Division A as possible. This also allows the best chance for all our members to get an opportunity to paddle. Another complexity is how points are awarded which is also based on participation.

Points

One point is awarded per canoe in an event and an extra 1 point for first place. So before the race starts each canoe gets 1 point. If they get disqualified (DQ), they lose this point. If they come in last, they keep their 1 point. If they beat 1 boat (2nd to last) they get an additional point. So you get a point for every boat you manage to beat to the finish. Let’s say there’s 10 boats. First place would get 1 + 9 + 1 (11), second place 1 + 8 (9), all the way to last palace which is 1 + 0 (1).

If you don’t have enough paddlers for the event, then you have to Scratch. You get 0 points for a scratch, and your point does not get added to any of the other canoes. It’s like you never entered that race.

Classes

Naturally there’s some limitations that make crew selections difficult. There’s experience classes (Novice B, Novice A) and age classes (open, 40, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70). Then each paddler is limited to 2 races per day (1 race per day at the State Championships).

This limits how many times each paddler can race. This is why sometimes we move paddlers down a class to help fill canoes. For example, say we don’t have enough 55 paddlers so if we have extra 60’s paddlers who are only doing 1 other event, we can move them down into 55 to help fill the canoe for that race.

Putting it Together

The challenge of course is placing crews in to the highest possible position (most points) AND racing races with the most canoes (higher points scored). Ideally all the clubs would run all the races, but it’s just not possible.

This points system can have some unexpected results if you look a the raw numbers. This last regatta shows how. Our club tied for total number 1st places and we had many 2nd and 3rds, however we got last in Division A. It seems counter intuitive, but in the races where we dominated, there were less entries, so we got less points. Part of this is due to this being the first regatta so clubs are still getting up to speed (like the problems we had getting everyone’s paperwork approved causing crews to be ineligible to race). In terms of margins, though we were not far behind the other clubs.

This table nicely summarizes our performance against other clubs disregarding the number of canoes in each race (total points).

Race Totals May 21, 2022

The yellow highlights are the top number in each column. We entered 40 events, scratched 10, DQ’d in 3 making the number raced 30 (40 – 10 scratched). You’ll see our club was on the podium 60% of the time, which was only beaten by Puna and Laka. Despite having such good performances from us and others, the factor of collecting points meant Kawaihae at 57.1% won Division A, and Keauhou at 33% won division B.

Next Weekend

This is an amazing start to our season with great results, even if the points didn’t work out for us. This coming weekend should see more of our crews paddling and as we settle into the blend together we should see some quicker speeds.

Let’s get ’em! Kahi! Lua! Kolu! Keaukaha!

Also check out our new events calendar which you can sync up with your electronic calendars too. Also you can RSVP for regattas if you can make it or let us know if you can’t go.

Round 2 of jersey orders is closing soon! Get them now. The sizes run just a little on the large size.