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Canoe club glossary

The terms that matter to a canoe club — canoe boats and equipment, on-water safety, club roles and governance, and waterway navigation — explained in plain English for safety advisers, committees and captains.

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On the water & safety

The terms a club safety adviser lives by — knowing who is afloat, who is overdue, and keeping a proper record.

Sign-out sheet (boat log)

The record of who has taken which boat out and brought it back. Traditionally a clipboard or whiteboard by the door — easy to forget and impossible to check from anywhere else.

Boat sign-out system

On-water board

A live, glanceable display of who is currently on the water and when each boat is due back — the digital version of the whiteboard, visible from any phone or a screen on the boathouse wall.

On-water tracking

Overdue alert

An automatic notification raised when a boat passes its expected return time, so coaches and admins can act before a forgotten sign-in becomes a genuine emergency.

Club safety software

Water status (red flag)

The club’s go/no-go condition for the water — commonly green, amber, red or closed — set from stream, weather, temperature and light. A red or closed status suspends boating across the club.

Water status & red flags

Capsize

When a boat overturns and puts its crew in the water. The single event every on-water safety system is designed to prevent, detect and respond to quickly.

Near-miss

An incident that could have caused harm but didn’t — a close pass, a swamped boat, a snapped fitting. Logging near-misses is how clubs spot patterns before they become injuries.

Incident report

A written record of a capsize, collision, near-miss or equipment failure, kept for the safety committee, members and insurers, and reviewed and closed once acted on.

Club safety software

Duty of care

A club’s responsibility to take reasonable steps to keep its members safe on the water — risk assessments, clear rules, competent supervision and good records all form part of it.

Swim test

A check that a member can cope in the water — typically swimming a set distance in clothing — often required before they are allowed afloat. Clubs commonly record when each member last passed.

Competency tracking

Club roles, competency & governance

Who does what, who decides, and who is signed off to take which boat out — the committee’s and captain’s world.

Club captain

The member, usually elected, responsible for the club’s on-water activity and day-to-day running — squads, sessions, fleet use and the standards crews are held to.

Safety adviser (officer)

The member responsible for the club’s safety policy, risk assessments and incident records, and for making sure rules like swim tests and water status are actually followed.

Committee

The elected group that governs the club — setting policy, managing finances and accountable for safety. The people who ultimately approve a new system for the club.

Coach

Plans and runs sessions and is responsible for the crews out under their watch. Coaches usually need to see who is afloat and to manage boat assignments and permissions.

Roles & permissions

Who can do what in the club — typically admin, coach and member — and which boats each person is allowed to book or take out. Granular, per-boat permissions keep beginners off boats above their level.

Fleet management

Competency sign-off

Confirmation that a member is qualified for something specific — steering, single sculling, capsize recovery, a water grade — recorded so only signed-off members can take out the relevant boat.

Competency tracking

Learn-to-row / beginner course

An introductory course bringing newcomers into the sport. Clubs onboard whole intakes at once and restrict beginners to stable boats until they are signed off.

Steerer

The paddler responsible for steering and for the crew — in the back seat of an OC6 or a crewed canoe. In surf and open water, an experienced steerer is essential.

Boats & fleet

The boat classes across all four disciplines, plus the fittings and skills that decide who can take what out.

Boat class

The type of boat by crew size and configuration — an eight, a single scull, an OC6, a K1. The fleet is organised by class, and permissions are often set per class.

Fleet management

C1 / C2

Canoes for one or two paddlers, using a single-bladed paddle from a kneeling position. Used in sprint, slalom and general paddling.

Waterway & navigation

The water itself — its rules, hazards and the language of a session, so every member knows the stretch before they launch.

Circulation pattern

The agreed traffic flow on a stretch of water — which side to travel, where to turn, how to pass — that keeps crews from colliding. Publishing it is a basic duty on busy water.

Waterway navigation rules

Reach (stretch)

A section of river or water that a club uses. Many clubs have one reach; some use several, each with its own rules, hazards and access points.

Weir

A small dam or step across a river. A serious hazard — water above and below behaves dangerously — usually requiring a portage rather than passage.

Portage

Carrying a boat overland around an obstacle such as a weir, or between two waterways. Portage points are part of a stretch’s published navigation information.

Hazard

A fixed danger on the water — a weir, a bridge arch, a shipping lane, a surf line, a shallow. Clubs map and name hazards so every member knows them before boating.

Waterway navigation rules

River grade

The difficulty rating of moving or white water, from Grade 1 (easy) to Grade 6 (extreme). Clubs sign members off to a grade before they paddle harder water.

Outing

A single training session on the water, from boating to landing. The unit a sign-out, a booking and an on-water record are all built around.

Boating (launching)

Putting a boat onto the water at the start of an outing — and the moment a member should sign out so the club knows they are afloat.

Glossaries for other disciplines
Rowing glossaryOutrigger glossaryKayak glossary

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