Nottingham hosted a successful wild water weekend with wild water racing, freestyle and raft racing all coming together to showcase their disciplines at Holme Pierrepont.
With rafting and freestyle hosting fun competitions that offered an introduction into the disciplines, the weekend also saw the return of international wild water kayak racing in the UK.
The ECA Cup ran on the Saturday evening and was the first international event in UK waters since 2005, with about 60 entries on the start-line.
Two-time World Champion Hannah Brown took the win in the women's kayak event, crossing the line 0.99 seconds ahead of top U23 paddler Molly Sandercock, with U23 World Champion Kerry Christie winning the bronze.
Sandercock topped the women's canoe on a successful day for the Break Out paddler, with Cleo Pticher-Farrell coming second and Chloe Bracewell taking third place.
Kerry Christie also enjoyed the Nottingham waters, joining forces with sister Emma to add to their U23 world title, by winning the women's C2.
Maggie Dilai and Laura Milne were the closest challengers, half a second behind.
Alex Sheppy was top of the table in the men's kayak event, with very little separating himself and Freddie Brown for first place. Huw Singleton finished third.
A fantastic time set by Andrew Crowhurst saw him win the men's canoe ahead of Ryan Mallon, with 3.8 second between the duo. Callum McDonald placed third.
Crowhurst then combined with Phil Dean to the win men's C2 event ahead of Robert Jefferies and Jacob Holmes.
You can view all the results from the weekend here.
The results from the weekend sees Great Britain top the rankings in all senior classes, with a number of junior rankings also topped by Britain after two races.
Event organiser Jamie Christie said: “It was great to see four competitions take place in one venue over the weekend, with a beginners wild water race, the wild water European Cup, the rafting and the freestyle.
“The conditions were tricky with the wind, but the atmosphere at the course was brilliant. All the disciplines worked great together so it was certainly a successful two days.
“The standard of racing was strong. The ECA Cup was tight at the top, both in the men's and the women's sprint which was good to see.
“It's certainly the most numbers we've had for selection for a long time, which is a positive sign.
“It was great to have all the disciplines taking place at one time, so I would love to see more of that as the bigger you can make events, there's more encouragement for paddlers to give different disciplines a go.
“We had a few paddlers from slalom, sprint, freestyle all take part in the wild water so I'd love to see more of that.
“I would also love to say thanks to all the volunteers who helped run the event as it wouldn't have happened without them giving up their time and expertise for free.”