travels and travails

Saturday, January 31, 2009

February 2009 minus one

It was 32° F when we arose this morning, but sunny. It was (accurately) forecast to reach nearly 48 °F. Today's kayak trip was a 'go', despite the 20 to 30 knot wind forecast; we would be sheltered in the Nanaimo River estuary. We were to meet at Southgate at 9:30 AM and then caravan to the launch site, the Living Forest RV Park. With this group, 15 minutes early is considered slightly tardy - really.

Eighteen of us in 17 kayaks launched at 10 AM. heading up river. The paddling became more difficult as the channel narrowed. Eventually, after a last set of upstream rapids, it became too shallow for maneuvering. Anyway, 4 of the group couldn't make that last sprint, leaving us with 13 kayaks. The 4 who left us decided to lunch soon, take a different route back, and call an early end to the day. It's somewhat disheartening to paddle so hard and just stay even with that stump on the shoreline. If you focus only on the water streaming past your hull, it looks like you are making great progress. Is this Einstein's Theory of Relativity?

Now going down river, we made great progress - emitting an occasional sonic boom. We took a different channel, ran occasional swift water, some of which scraped us over rocks, but produced no hull punctures.

On the upstream leg, we saw many eagles, golden eyes (one dead), geese, and various other waterfowl. Downstream was more of the same plus one dead sea lion, draped over a shore log. Was there a fight to the death between the golden eye diving duck and the sea lion? That would fit our discoveries. As we left the estuary and entered the turbulent ocean, we rousted up a flock of swans.

Once in the ocean, we battled swells and whitecaps to lunch at Jack Point, deep in the seafarer's wilderness, just over the spit from the Duke Point ferry terminal. On the way, 4 more kayaks peeled off from the main group, leaving us with 9 kayaks. After lunch we had a brisk wind at our back, making the kayaks wallow a bit. We caught the 4 kayaks who had most recently left the main group, and we were once more 9 kayaks, heading home.

Back in the estuary, the low tide left us short of water here and there, so some kayak dragging and carrying ensued, each helping the other. Eventually, we made it back to the launch site and began loading the kayaks onto and gear into our vehicles. About that time, the 4 paddlers seeking an early end to their day came paddling in. They had managed to choose a route which required a great amount of kayak dragging, carrying, and suffering.

Slightly more than half the group went to Miller's Pub, near the Brechin boat ramp, for debriefing.

Richard
2009.01.31

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Here we go again

This blog has been sitting idle for over 9 months. But I'm the only reader, so it matters naught. The last entry mentioned a (then) recent sea kayak day trip. Since then I've done exactly 50 more - 27 on Lake Pend Oreille (or its contiguous rivers) and 23 in the Georgia Strait. We brought only the tandem to Vancouver Island, so we have a stable craft in most weather conditions; certainly all conditions we choose. In addition to the twice weekly (weather permitting) day trips, we have another 3 or 4 days of paddling scheduled in March - based at Taku Resort, near Quadra Island's Rebecca Spit. We expect to leave our rented quarters on Vancouver Island in the late April. early May time frame. Then we'll be back in Sandpoint, ID, the current birthing place of the Abominable Bypass. Late next August, we'll return to the island, but just for the fall semester. We have various reasons for that limit; one being not wanting to miss two ski seasons in a row. So far, the one we're missing doesn't match that of the prior year, and we wish our skiing friends better. The Computer Science course I am teaching currently is called "Systems and Networks", where I am having the students use GNU/Linux in a virtualized environment. It is fun for me, maybe even for some of the students. I also have a directed study where the student is learning some GNU/Linux kernel mode programming. We start with system calls, whose programming interface has recently changed. Documentation for the change is between scarce and non existent - hence some scrambling, but we've passed that point now. Eli's art activities are somewhat frenzied, with classes on Tuesday and Wednesday nights and the other days filled with producing art. Our wee rental has been crammed full of art materials in various stages of creation. I have a rule, "Whatever art you create must fit into the Subaru for the trip back to Sandpoint". She pays no attention whatsoever, so I am searching for a used delivery van. Richard 2009.01.22