[Current] Teresa Portela, Madeira racing, Tokyo Drift and a wild-water mindset
May 04, 2026 11:10 am
Current: The Perspective from the Water
Each week Current brings you a clearer, more thoughtful read on what’s happening across paddle sport, even when you’re stuck at a desk.
In this issue:
- Teresa Portela on staying fast across six Olympics
- Madeira’s short-format ocean race: spectator win or identity shift?
- El Impenetrable: wilderness paddling meets local guide pathways
- A Tokyo 200m final worth rewatching
- Why real, hard things still matter in training (and in life)
Deep Water
Six Olympics, One Silver: Teresa Portela on Staying Fast
Spanish sprint kayaker María Teresa Portela Rivas, who won silver in K1 200m at Tokyo 2020 after six Olympic Games, shares insights on adapting to the 500m distance and her approach to qualifying Spain's first women's team boat in 16 years.
Why this matters:
- Her approach of short-term, season-by-season goals offers a practical model for athletes managing long careers
- With K1 200m dropped from the Olympic programme, her shift to 500m illustrates how sprint paddlers have needed to adapt
- Her push for Spanish women's team boats highlights the pathway challenges federations face in building depth
Key Takeaway: Portela credits never setting distant Olympic goals; each season stood alone, which kept motivation fresh across two decades of elite racing.
Argentina's El Impenetrable National Park Trains Local Kayak Guides
In northern Argentina's Chaco Province, El Impenetrable National Park has become an unlikely hub for paddling-based tourism. Local residents, including members of Indigenous Qom and Wichi communities, now work as kayak guides on the Teuco River.
Why this matters:
- A remote, seasonal-flood river system now supports guided kayak trips through dense wilderness
- Rewilding Argentina trains community members as paddling guides and wildlife spotters
- The park offers a model for how ecotourism can create local paddle-sport employment
The 1905 Canoe Expedition That Redrew the Map
Thought your last long session was hard work? Mina Hubbard paddled 600 miles across Labrador in 1905, mapping rivers her late husband had failed to chart. Her expedition beat a rival party and produced cartographic work used for three decades.
Why this matters:
- Hubbard hired local Cree guides and stuck to river routes, finishing weeks ahead of her land-based competitor
- Her maps of the Naskaupi and George Rivers remained the standard until aerial surveying arrived in the 1930s
- Her journal blended precise sextant readings with vivid on-water descriptions, reshaping exploration writing
The Counter-Current: Short Race Format Divides Ocean Racing Purists
The ICF's new 5km short race format at the Madeira World Cup opener has athletes excited about spectator appeal, but the debate simmers: is ocean racing about endurance or entertainment?
- Sprint kayak Olympian Emanuel Silva called the short race 'really fun' and urged more athletes to try it
- Bernardo Pereira praised the format for keeping spectators engaged: 'everyone can see what is happening during the whole race'
- Traditional ocean racing tests hours of open-water stamina, not beach-side sprints
The Bottom Line: The ICF is betting that shorter, spectator-friendly formats will grow ocean racing's audience, even if it shifts the sport's identity away from pure endurance.
Bester and Pereira master Madeira as paddlers praise short race format
Flow State
Tokyo 2020 K1 200m Final: A Sprint to Remember
Hungary's Sándor Tótka took gold in 35.035s after finishing fourth in Rio, with Italy's Manfredi Rizza (silver) and GB's Liam Heath (bronze) separated by just 0.167s in a razor-thin finish.
Why concrete skills beat clever hacks
Deadlifts, pottery, paddling: pursuits with unfakeable outcomes keep you grounded when results cannot be rationalised away by jargon or algorithms.
Parting thoughts
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