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DavidJohn said.. Kami said... Hello Seabreezers, a river kayaker who his a shorboarder as well saw me paddling on my little SUP, tell me to use wood shaft to paddle on my waveSUP to take more easy around my shoulders cuff and tendons pain.
Anyone does have infos about wooden shaft advantages
I would recomend not using wood paddles unless they're for OC use.. They are much shorter.. I'm sure that if brands like KIALOA could make a wood sup paddle they would.. (wood shaft)..
Most wood paddles that I've used and seen are too weak/flexy if they have a small diameter shaft and if the stiffness is ok they are too thick in the shaft.. and pretty heavy.. Wood is very unpredictable and inconsistent.. They can break sometimes with the first hard stroke.. One of the guys here had a thick shaft wood paddle with a long flexy blade to help with a shoulder problem.. I didn't like it.. You are much better to go with a shaft that is fiberglass or carbon/fiberglass mix if you want a more flexy paddle.. Even some of the big brand carbon paddles have a small diameter shaft and flex more than enough..
Normally I agree with most of things DJ writes hands down, but not on the wooden paddle.I have a several paddles from Kialoa (Shaka Puu,s), QuickBlade (Magic90, Trifecta96, Kanaha,s), a Werner and an Ke Nalu (Maliko) and tried lots of others, but none of them offers the feel of the Wooden Malama I have.Wood has a certain flex and rebound that is just easier on the body as everything else without feeling too soft like some cheap fiberglass shafts or the Naish wave LE shaft that I could almost fold together.Every proper carbon shaft bends nicely, but I think (more guessing) that the carbon is so quick returning to its normall position that it ads an slighty pull on the muscles where wood is slower.My paddles went shorter and shorther due the years, so I don,t use the Malama anymore in the waves and only on a rare occasion on my racer, so its now hanging above the couch, but the feel is still

.
Actually the only paddle that comes close in feel is the Ke Nalu with the Glass Xtuff-S shaft. The shaft is for me slightly too bendy for flatwaterracing, but I love it in the waves. For waves its stiff enough without putting too much presure on the tendons when you put full power on it but there is suddenly an bump in the water giving extra resistance.Only think to keep in mind Kami, is that i,m 188x92kg so a paddle that is supple enough for me, might be too stiff you, but I would serious considder looking after one of those Ke Nalu,s just for the sake of there glass shafts (although i,m not sure where to buy them in Europe)