Everything Awesome

Premier Outdoor Adventures, Coaching & Rehabilitation in the Peak District

Archives January 2026

The route to PaddleSport Coach

To become a qualified paddlesport coach, the primary route is through the British Canoeing (Paddle UK) pathway. This qualification allows you to coach specific disciplines (like Sea Kayak, White Water, or SUP) and environments.

Coach

The route is split into three main phases: Training, Consolidation, and Assessment.


1. Prerequisites (The Essentials)

Before you can formally begin the assessment phase, you must meet these foundational requirements:

  • National Association Membership: You must be a full member of Paddle UK (or Paddle Scotland, Paddle Wales, or Paddle Northern Ireland).
  • Safeguarding Training: An in-date (within 3 years) recognized safeguarding certificate.
  • First Aid Award: Usually a 1-day (8-hour) or 2-day (16-hour) certificate, depending on the environment you plan to coach in.
  • Personal Skills: While not always a formal prerequisite for training, you should be at a Paddle Explore Award level (or equivalent) to ensure you are comfortable on the water.

2. The Training Phase

The coaching qualification is “modular,” meaning you can take these two courses in any order, though most people start with Core.

Core Coach Training (2 Days)

This is a discipline-neutral course that focuses on the “How” and “Who” of coaching.

  • Content: Learning theory, different coaching styles, and how to structure a session to meet a learner’s needs.
  • Format: Can be taken as a 2-day practical course or an online modular version.

Discipline Specific Training (2 Days)

This focuses on the “What” and “Where.” You choose one of 20+ pathways (e.g., Sheltered Water Coach, White Water Kayak Coach, or SUP Open Water Coach).

  • Content: Technical and tactical skills specific to your chosen craft and environment.
  • Prerequisite: You should have the personal paddling skills and, for some moderate/advanced environments, the relevant Leadership Award.

3. Consolidation & Registration

Once training is complete, you enter a “development phase” to practice your skills.

  • Coaching Log: You are encouraged to log your coaching hours and reflective practice.
  • Registration: You must formally register for the Coach Award with your National Association (fee applies) to access the Coach Award eLearning.
  • Check-In: At least 2 weeks before your assessment, you must “Check-In” online to verify that all your prerequisites (First Aid, Safeguarding, Training, and eLearning) are on your record.

4. The Assessment (1 Day)

The final step is a practical assessment where an assessor observes you working with real students.

  • Assessment Task: You will likely be asked to plan and deliver a progressive coaching session.
  • Technical Check: You must demonstrate that your own personal paddling and rescue skills are at the required standard for that environment.

Summary Table: The Pathway at a Glance

StageComponentRequirement
StartPrerequisitesMembership, First Aid, Safeguarding
LearnCore Coach Training2 Days (Practical or Online)
SpecialiseDiscipline Training2 Days (e.g., Sea Kayak, White Water, SUP)
PrepareeLearning & LogbookComplete the Coach Award eLearning module
VerifyAssessment Check-InDone via National Association portal
FinalAssessment Day1 Day practical observation
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Working towards a MIAS qualification

If you have ambition to become a Mountain bike instructor/leader/coach then the MIAS pathway is idea.

We here at Everything Awesome have been running MIAS courses for many years with many hundreds of coaches around the UK enjoying employment due to the qualification gained with us.

MIAS

This syllabus is designed as a modular training program to take a rider from Level 1 (Fundamental) to Level 3 (Advanced/Elite) based on the provided Assessor Skill Level Sheet.


Course Title: Advanced MTB Skills & Technical Mastery

Duration: 3 Progressive Modules (Level 1, 2, and 3)

Objective: To develop proactive, technical, and safe mountain bike handling through the mastery of braking, balance, and obstacle clearance.


Module 1: Foundations of Control (Level 1)

Focus: Establishing safe habits and basic bike-body separation.

  • Braking Fundamentals: Correct sequencing (rear before front); achieving 75% front/25% rear distribution without skidding.
  • Drivetrain Management: Basic gear selection for varying terrain; eliminating cross-chaining.
  • Static Balance: Introduction to the “Track Stand” (5-second hold) and weight movement around the bike.
  • Vertical Mobility: * Basic pedal kicks and front wheel lifts over 10cm objects.
    • Introduction to hopping and bunny hop principles.
  • Terrain Navigation: * Descending slopes up to 30degree and climbing up to 20.
    • Handling small drop-offs (up to 15cm).
    • Clearing roots and logs under 12cm.
  • Cornering Basics: Body positioning (inside pedal up, weight on outside foot, knee tracking).

Module 2: Proactive Handling (Level 2)

Focus: Increasing height, steepness, and shifting from reactive to proactive riding.

  • Advanced Braking: Complete use of both brakes to full potential; demonstrating individual modulation to avoid lock-ups.
  • Proactive Shifting: Smooth gear transitions and an understanding of cadence and gear ratios relative to terrain.
  • Balance & Air: * Extending Track Stands (5–10 seconds).
    • Front wheel lifts to 30cm; clearing 15cm obstacles.
    • Executing a stationary two-wheel hop and speed jumps (7.5cm).
  • Technical Descents & Climbs: * Handling 30 degree – 45 descents and 20 – 30 climbs.
    • Drop-offs between 15cm and 50cm.
  • Advanced Cornering: Applying cornering fundamentals through switchbacks.
  • Trail Obstacles: Clearing medium logs and ruts (12–15cm).

Module 3: Technical Mastery (Level 3)

Focus: Elite-level maneuvers, extreme terrain, and fluid movement.

  • Precision Control: Maximum power braking with full modulation; “instinctive” proactive shifting.
  • Extreme Balance: * Comfortable 10-second+ Track Stands.
    • Extreme weight shifts (e.g., body behind rear axle for steep descents).
    • Stationary hops with lateral (side) movement or rotation.
  • High-Level Maneuvers:
    • Front wheel lifts to 50cm; clearing 20cm+ objects.
    • Effortless bunny hops over 7.5cm+ objects.
    • Speed jumps over 10cm+ objects.
  • Elite Terrain:
    • Steep descents 45 and climbs over 30
    • Drop-offs exceeding 50cm.
    • Clearing large obstacles (logs/roots over 15cm and complex ruts).
  • Dynamic Cornering: Maintaining speed and technique through complex, linked series of turns (hitting apexes and accelerating out).

Assessment Methodology

Each module concludes with a practical evaluation. Students must demonstrate:

  1. Consistency: Performing the skill correctly 3 out of 3 times.
  2. Safety: No loss of control or “sketchy” landings.
  3. Fluidity: In Level 3, the assessor looks for “flow”—the seamless transition between different skills.
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Burnt out

The Man on Fire: Why We Must Stop Smiling Through the Smoke

The video provided serves as a startlingly perfect metaphor for modern professional burnout. We see a man standing in a serene, beautiful landscape—rolling green hills, a bright blue sky, the picture of tranquility. Yet, his head is engulfed in a roaring, animated fire. The most disturbing part? He is smiling. He looks calm, pleasant, and completely unbothered by the combustion happening atop his shoulders.

This is the face of high-functioning burnout. It is the dangerous ability to maintain a facade of “business as usual” while internally incinerating our own reserves of energy, patience, and creativity.

The Illusion of “Fine”

The primary benefit of resting is that it allows us to drop the mask we see in this video. When we are burning out, we often dissociate from the stress to survive it. We tell ourselves, “I’m fine, this is normal,” just as the man in the video blinks casually through the flames.

Taking a deliberate rest breaks this cycle of denial. It forces us to acknowledge that we are, in fact, getting too hot. Stepping away from the heat source prevents the “fire” from becoming our baseline state. Rest provides the necessary distance to recognize that living with a constant, low-level alarm bell ringing in our heads is not sustainable.

Protecting Your Cognitive Landscape

Notice the background of the video: a stunning, expansive view of nature. Yet, because the man is on fire, the viewer barely notices the hills. The fire demands all the attention.

Burnout does the same to our cognitive focus. It creates a tunnel vision where all we can see is the immediate crisis or the next deadline. We lose the ability to see the “bigger picture”—strategic thinking, creative problem-solving, and long-term planning all vanish in the smoke.

Rest extinguishes the immediate threat, allowing the smoke to clear. When we step back, our peripheral vision returns. We regain the ability to appreciate the landscape of our work and lives, spotting opportunities and solutions that were previously obscured by our own exhaustion. Neural pathways associated with creativity and innovation require downtime to regenerate; without it, we are simply burning fuel without moving forward.

From Ash to Sustainability

Finally, the most critical benefit of rest is physical and emotional longevity. If the man in the video were to stay on fire indefinitely, eventually, there would be nothing left but ash. The stoic smile would eventually falter.

Rest is not merely the absence of work; it is an active state of repair. It lowers cortisol levels, repairs cellular damage caused by stress, and resets our emotional baseline. By prioritizing rest before we reach the point of total ignition, we switch from a strategy of “survival” to a strategy of “sustainability.”

Conclusion

We must stop admiring the ability to smile while burning. The goal of a healthy work-life balance is not to become fireproof so we can endure more flames; the goal is to know when to step out of the fire entirely.

True resilience isn’t about how long you can withstand the heat; it’s about having the wisdom to grab a fire extinguisher—in the form of rest, boundaries, and recovery—before the fire becomes the only thing people see when they look at you.

Night navigation

Night nav

Learning to navigate at night is one of the most empowering skills an outdoorsperson can master. It transforms a terrifying wall of darkness into a manageable puzzle. Without visual landmarks to guide you, you must rely entirely on trust in your tools and disciplined technique.

Here is a guide to building this skill safely and effectively.

1. The Golden Rule: Micro-Navigation

In daylight, you might walk 2km aiming for a large hill. At night, that hill is invisible. You must break your route down into tiny, manageable “legs” (e.g., 100m–500m).

  • Shorten your legs: Never aim for a distant destination. Aim for the next immediate feature you can find (a stream junction, a wall corner).
  • Attack Points: If your target is small (like a campsite), find a large, obvious feature nearby (like a lake edge) to navigate to first. This is your “attack point.” Once there, use a precise bearing for the short final distance.

2. Trust Your Compass

At night, your senses will lie to you. You may feel like you are walking straight while actually circling. You must trust the compass needle over your instinct.

  • Walk on a Bearing: Take a bearing from your map. Hold the compass flat against your chest and turn your body until the needle lines up. Pick a distinct object in your torch beam (a specific rock or tree), walk to it, then stop and repeat. This “leapfrog” method ensures you walk in a straight line.

3. Count Your Steps (Pacing)

Since you cannot see how far you have travelled, you must measure it.

  • Know your count: In daylight, measure how many double paces (every time your right foot hits the ground) it takes you to walk 100 meters. For most people, it is between 60 and 65.
  • Beads: Use “pace beads” (or toggles on a lanyard) to count off every 100m. If you need to walk 450m, count 4.5 sets of your 100m pace.

4. Use “Handrails” and “Catching Features”

Make the terrain work for you so you don’t have to be perfect.

  • Handrailing: Instead of walking a straight line through a void, follow a linear feature (a “handrail”) like a fence, a stream, or a forest edge. It acts as a guide in the dark.
  • Catching Features: Before you start walking, identify a feature beyond your target that will “catch” you if you overshoot. For example, “If I cross the paved road, I have gone too far.”

5. Night Vision and Equipment

  • Red Light: Use a headlamp with a red light mode. White light destroys your night vision, blinding you to the subtle shapes of the land. Red light allows you to read the map while still seeing the silhouette of the horizon.
  • Luminous Gear: A compass with luminescent markings is essential. Charge it with your torch for a few seconds before checking a bearing.

How to Practice Safely

Start on a familiar path at twilight. As it gets darker, try to locate exactly where you are on the map every 5 minutes. As you gain confidence, try moving offpath in a safe, enclosed area (like a park with clear boundaries) before heading into the wilderness.

We run some awesome introduction to Night navigation evenings

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