An outrigger canoe paddle is a single-bladed paddle between 117 and 135 cm long, used in OC1 (solo), OC2 (double), and OC6 (six-person) outrigger canoes. It differs from dragon boat paddles in blade geometry: outrigger blades are narrower, longer, and set at a 10-degree bend angle where blade meets shaft. Choosing the right one depends on paddle length, blade size, shaft bend, material, and handle type.
Paddle Length: Sternum Height Standing
Stand flat-footed. Place the paddle upright beside you. The T-grip should reach your sternum. That measurement gives a starting point for OC6 racing.
General sizing by paddler height:
| Height | Paddle Length |
|---|---|
| 155-157 cm (5’0″-5’2″) | 117-119 cm |
| 160-165 cm (5’3″-5’5″) | 119-124 cm |
| 168-173 cm (5’6″-5’8″) | 122-127 cm |
| 175-180 cm (5’9″-5’11”) | 124-130 cm |
| 183-188 cm (6’0″-6’2″) | 127-132 cm |
| 190-196 cm (6’3″-6’5″) | 130-135 cm |
OC1 paddlers subtract 2-5 cm from their OC6 length. The solo canoe sits lower in the water, and a shorter paddle keeps the stroke vertical. OC6 paddlers in the front rows use shorter paddles than those in the rear, because the bow rides higher and the catch angle changes. A crew of six may carry 4-5 different paddle lengths.
Blade Size: OC1 Runs Smaller Than OC6
Blade area determines how much water each stroke catches. OC1 outrigger paddles use narrower blades (215-226 mm width) because the solo paddler maintains stroke cadence for long distances. OC6 paddles use wider blades (236-241 mm) because the six-person crew shares the load and needs maximum power per stroke.
Standard outrigger blade sizes:
| Size | Blade Area | Width | Weight | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | 748 cm² | 216 mm | ~415 g | OC1 distance racing, lighter paddlers |
| M | 786 cm² | 226 mm | ~425 g | OC1 sprint, versatile for OC6 |
| L | 821 cm² | 236 mm | ~450 g | OC6 racing, stronger paddlers |
| XL | 840 cm² | 241 mm | ~470 g | OC6 sprint crews, heavyweight athletes |
Start with M for OC1 or L for OC6, if you are unsure. Move down a size for marathon distances (20+ km), where sustainable cadence matters more than peak stroke power.
Carbon Fiber vs. Hybrid vs. Wood
Full carbon outrigger paddles weigh 415-470 g and transfer power without shaft flex. Hybrid paddles combine a wooden shaft with a carbon fiber blade, adding 50-100 g but absorbing more vibration. Wood paddles weigh 550-700 g and suit learn-to-paddle programs.
Hybrid paddles (wood shaft, carbon blade) are the most popular choice among competitive OC6 crews. The wood shaft dampens vibration over long races and weighs enough to stabilize the paddle in wind and surf. Full carbon paddles dominate OC1 racing, where every gram counts in solo boat speed.
One regulatory note: the Oahu Hawaiian Canoe Racing Association (OHCRA) bans full carbon paddles in six-person OC6 races in Hawaii. Hybrid or wood paddles are required. This rule does not apply outside Hawaii or in OC1 and OC2 events.
Single Bend vs. Double Bend Shaft
A single bend shaft angles 10 degrees where the blade meets the shaft. This is the standard outrigger shaft profile. The bend keeps the blade vertical during the power phase while the paddler maintains a natural wrist position.
A double bend adds a second angle (10-16.5 degrees) near the T-grip. The second bend reduces wrist and forearm fatigue during high-cadence paddling. Double bend works well for OC6 marathon crews covering 10+ km, where accumulated wrist strain limits performance.
Choose single bend for sprint racing and OC1. Choose double bend for OC6 distance races and paddlers with existing wrist issues.
Handle Type: T-Grip, Palm, or Ergo
The top hand wraps the handle on every stroke. Three handle shapes exist:
- T-Grip gives maximum control over blade angle. The crossbar locks the hand in position. Most OC6 racing crews standardize on T-grips for synchronized blade entry.
- Palm Grip is a rounded knob that sits in the palm. More comfortable over long sessions. Less precise blade angle control than a T-grip.
- Ergo Grip is contoured to the natural hand shape. Reduces pressure points during high-cadence paddling. Preferred by paddlers with hand or wrist injuries.
Match the handle your team uses. Consistent grip across the crew helps synchronize timing. Solo OC1 paddlers can choose freely based on comfort.
Shaft Stiffness: Hard vs. Medium
Hard shafts transfer force directly to the blade. Sprint OC6 crews racing 200-500 m distances choose hard shafts for maximum acceleration. Marathon paddlers covering 5-20 km prefer medium stiffness for vibration absorption and joint protection over sustained effort.
A 29 mm shaft diameter is standard across competitive outrigger paddles. The diameter matches sprint kayak and dragon boat shaft specifications.
Fixed vs. Adjustable (QNECT)
A fixed paddle is glued at one length. Lighter by 15-20 grams. No moving parts.
An adjustable QNECT connection changes length within a 10 cm range and blade angle from 0 to 85 degrees in 5-degree steps. Teams that rotate seat positions between regattas benefit from adjustable paddles. One paddle covers every crew configuration.
Two QNECT materials: aluminum (saltwater-resistant, built for ocean environments) and composite (lighter, zero corrosion). Outrigger paddlers who train in saltwater should use the aluminum variant. Browse the full outrigger paddle range from €178.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I size an outrigger canoe paddle?
Stand flat-footed. The T-grip should reach your sternum. That gives your OC6 length. For OC1 (solo), subtract 2-5 cm because the solo canoe sits lower in the water. OC6 crews carry 4-5 different paddle lengths to match each seat position in the canoe.
What blade size for OC1 vs OC6?
S or M (748-786 cm²) for OC1. L or XL (821-840 cm²) for OC6. Solo paddlers maintain high cadence over long distances and need smaller blades. Six-person crews share the load and benefit from maximum water catch per stroke.
Can I use a full carbon paddle in OC6 races?
Depends on the race location. OHCRA (Oahu Hawaiian Canoe Racing Association) bans full carbon paddles in OC6 events in Hawaii. Hybrid (wood shaft, carbon blade) or wood paddles are required. This rule does not apply outside Hawaii or in OC1 and OC2 events.
Single bend or double bend shaft?
Single bend for sprint racing and OC1. Double bend for OC6 marathon distances (10+ km). The double bend adds a second angle near the T-grip that reduces wrist fatigue during high-cadence paddling. Paddlers with existing wrist issues benefit from double bend regardless of race distance.