Canadian (canoe)

Touring canoe
Whitewater canoe
Racing canoe

Canadian is the byname used in some countries for the descendants of the birch bark canoe that was used by the indigenous peoples of Northern America as a convenient means of transportation in the densely forested and impassable areas of Northern America.

In the United Kingdom and several other European countries the kayak is considered to be a kind of canoe. (Technically this is understandable, as one can easily see when a whitewater kayak is converted into a decked whitewater canoe just by taking the seat out and paddle it kneeling with a single blade paddle.) To distinguish canoes from kayaks, a touring, whitewater and racing canoe are then often called 'Canadian canoe' or 'Canadian' for short[1] — e.g. Kanadier in German, Kanadensare in Swedish, Canadees in Dutch, et cetera.

  1. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Canoe" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 189–190.