Sunday, July 12, 2009

The Best Laid Plans....

We had planned to go to Portland Island for today's paddle but the winds would be up for the afternoon meaning a possible small craft warning. Instead we decided we'd go around Coal Island. The water heading out looked lovely, John, Tracy and I were the first to arrive and put our boats and gear down by the water while we waited for Bernie and Paula.

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We headed out with Paula and Tracy in the lead.

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While John, Bernie and I lagged behind taking photos.

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It was a really lovely day and the water wasn't too choppy so we decided to head out and see it Portland Island would be a possibility afterall. It wasn't and going around Coal Island was dismissed as well, so we headed down the channel instead and back to Robert's Bay.

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Tracy preceeded us down the channel

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and pointed out the wildlife I captured. I think I might be the one in our group to photograph raccoons! This is the second time I've been able to capture one, this time better than the last.

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It was the lightest coloured racoon I've seen, almost blonde.

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Unfortunately John missed him and I don't have a zoom that would have gotten a closer shot. It didn't seem perturbed about me taking photos of it and didn't rush away either.

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We continued down the channel enjoying the lovely weather and the wind hadn't picked up yet but Paula did point out clouds that indicated something was on the way. Paula and Tracy paddled ahead of me having a nice chat.

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While John lagged behind taking photos and Bernie played with his new video camera.

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Once we got out of the channel the water was full of Sunday boat traffic and we had to deal with wake from different directions. The wind picked up too making for an interesting ocean motion. At one point a large wave completely soaked the front of my PFD and trickled down into my kayak's cockpit. All the motion made me a bit green and I was concentrating on paddling so no photos.

Except when we arrived in calmer waters in Robert's Bay and I captured the last photo of today's paddle.

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Saturday, July 11, 2009

Spotting Twitter

If you've been following our Twitter updates today (and yes, Kayak Yak is now on Twitter, like I needed something else to keep me locked down in front of my computer), you'll know that I've spent the afternoon trying to get my SPOT to work. After some early frustration, success! The test "OK" check came through.

SPOT Check OK.
ESN:0-7432006
Latitude:48.4496
Longitude:-123.4035
Nearest Location:not known
Distance:not known
Time:07/12/2009 01:05:26 (GMT)
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=48.4496,-123.4035&ll=48.4496,-123.4035&ie=UTF8&z=12&om=1

Tomorrow we'll give it a try out in the real world.
(And if you're desperate to live vicariously through our SPOT checks, I've set up a blog just for you: KayakYakSpot, where we'll archive our SPOT checks in real time.)

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Local TV Covers Paddlefest and Ocean River

A little dated now, but back in May the Victoria A Channel station ran a two-part profile of local kayaking store Ocean River as a run-up to Vancouver Island Paddlefest. Here's the vid:

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

At Least They Didn't Use Dynamite

Followers of this blog will remember that we've had some pretty strange things wash up on shore in this part of the world the last few years, mostly severed human feet (seven so far).
But here's something you don't see everyday. Just over a week ago, a cow washed up on the beach near Clover Point. After two days, city work crews finally hauled the carcass away after sorting through the red tape. You see, the cow was located below the high-water line so the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans was contacted because below the high-tide line is under federal jurisdiction. But apparently a cow is not a fish, and the Department of Fisheries doesn't deal with beached bovines, so eventually the Canadian Food Inspection Agency assumed control. They arranged to take the cow over 700km away to Calgary to dispose of it. Your tax dollars at work.
No one knows where the cow came from. Was it from a local farm and somehow wandered through downtown without anyone seeing it, or did it fall off a passing ship?
The city crews responsible for clearing up Cuddles had never seen anything like it before in Victoria. They were not a-moo-sed.
At least they didn't use dynamite.

Monday, July 06, 2009

Paddling with an accent (Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles)


On Sunday morning, admittedly quite a bit later than I had originally intended, I tossed a bunch of stuff including a pack lunch and a water bottle into my mesh MEC bag, and headed for Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles in Laval, an hour away by bus and Metro. Quite a straightforward trip, out to the Cartier Metro station, and transfer to the STL bus number 73, only hitch being that since it was Sunday morning, the service was hourly. Made the transfer, with room to spare. Fortunately when I saw two different entrances to the Parc, one for summer, one for winter, I had the wit to check with the bus driver, which was just as well, because the bus was on a detour and hung a left about 5 minutes walk before the Parc. So I hopped off the bus, climbed between the concrete bollards and across the stretch of denuded road and continued as directed, and found the Parc, the Interpretation centre, and signs to the rental centre, all right beside the road.

Skipped through the Interpretation centre, already seeing water and many boats of various colours and morphologies, joined the rental queue and managed, between my basic French and the agent's basic English, to acquire a paddle, a life jacket, and a slip of paper that I was to take down to the water side. Slip of paper was shortly exchanged for a Boreal Kasko, orange plastic, at which I admit I looked a little askance, as it looked like it had been rode hard and put away wet, and I had doubts about the grey putty on the tip of the keel and the bulge aft of the seat. But the seat was comfortable, the foot rests needed no adjustment, and hey, it was a kayak and it was mine, all mine (at least for the next few hours). Once on the water, it felt not unlike my much-missed Kestrel.

Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-ÎlesParc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles

I launched off a nubby dirt, stone and root patch no longer than the Kasko. There was a dock for the larger kayaks, multi-person canoes, and pedal-boats. I was offshore before I realized I couldn't feather my paddle - it wasn't going to twist that way - but I didn't have any trouble adjusting. The launch was in a kind of lagoon [1] - looked as though a gap between two islands filled in at one end, so first I had to work my way out of the lagoon, around the corner, into the bay. It was already near lunchtime, and a bit breezy, so I paddled into the lee of an island, and parked in the shade of a willow tree to eat [2], periodically adjusting against the slight current and watching other craft go by. From the perspective of the single kayaker, there is something unintentionally hilarious about the sight of one canoe with 9 paddles all wagging at different rates and different angles. The high was forecast to be 23 C, the sky was piled up with big plump clouds, the sun was unfiltered by smog or moisture, and - only hitch - there was a breeze of up to 40 km/h forecast.

After lunch, I followed the route that all the other boats had taken, through a narrow gap between islands and then across through a channel between islands [3]. Dragonflies aplenty, from modest sized black ones, to the large metallic blue ones, all as impossible as ever to photograph. Went all the way through, decided I didn't want to wind up back at the start quite yet, so doubled back. As I came around the side of that island, I met the strongest gust of the stiff wind that had been forecast, and for about 10 minutes made very little headway, but the wind gave up before I did , and I crossed over and worked my way up the side of Ile Lefebre, hugging the edge and watching the reeds. At one point I noticed some reeds almost at the shore twitching and thrashing as though there were a fight going on between a couple of somethings in there. Couldn't see what, so hung around, watching the twitches getting closer to the water, thinking must be a water-bird but surprised, as it got closer to the water, that I was still seeing virtually nothing. Then just at the edge of the reeds, the water suddenly heaved and a curve of grey scale briefly appeared as the fish slithered over an underground obstruction. It was a large carp, at least a foot long, with a long orange-rimmed maw. Tried for some photos, but you'd need imagination to believe that smear was a fish's spine, and I wasn't going to sink the camera into these waters. Remember those carp. They're going to come up again.

Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles panorama

Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles panorama

So I kept paddling along, up a stretch that was reminiscent of the stretch of the Gorge above Selkirk Trestle, with houses and docks along the water's edge, up and around a rather posher-looking stretch [5], and one of my two panoramas, and into the area marked 6, which is shallow waters, reeds and wetlands, site of the second panorama.

Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-ÎlesParc de la Rivière-des-Mille-ÎlesParc de la Rivière-des-Mille-ÎlesParc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles, Red winged blackbird

The first part of the paddle had proceeded to the constant accompaniment of heavy traffic over the bridge, but in the wetlands the traffic noise had faded to a subliminal hum, and the main sound was birdsong, especially the red winged blackbird. It was possible to nudge the kayak gently through the reeds, deeper into the marshlands. I caught periodic glimpses of waving paddles above the reeds, encouraging me to keep going. I found my way into a small clear area, full of lily pads, and was so intent on the few lilies that I nearly missed seeing the heron, by which point the heron had assumed that stretched-neck on-point posture that told me it was disturbed. I shipped the paddle and drifted, trying to look like a (friendly, big, orange) lily pad, but the big bird had had enough of my ill-manners and flew off in its slow, stately manner. So I started working my way back towards where I'd seen the paddles, following the voices, and screeches and squeals of fright. I met the group coming back through the reeds and the first thing the lead paddler asked me was had I seen the carp. Yes, I said, a little bewildered, but not here. I soon found out what she meant, and why the shrieks. I'd be innocently paddling along, and from the side there'd be a watery thunk and a great swirl as a bolt of fishy muscle turned on its tail and plunged into the reeds. Oh yes, it would make a great opening scene, under a bright blue sky with big fluffy clouds, what could be more innocent, kayaker paddling peacefully through the reeds, glancing curiously at swirl in the water, sudden truncated scream, shot of empty kayak drifting away ...

Parc de la Rivière-des-Mille-Îles, Heron

Well, nothing et me, since I'm here to report. I followed some channels through the reeds, hoping to work my way round the island in the centre, but reached a point where the channels disappeared and the reeds continued. At which point I spotted something white flickering deep in the reeds which I made out as the head of a heron. While staring at that one, I initially missed seeing the second, more visible, heron off to the right of me, long neck extended, showing the white stripes up its neck and white flash above the eyes. I was determined to show some manners this time, and very carefully turned the kayak around in the reed channel, and tiptoed, kayak-style, away through the reeds and small trees, out into the main waterway. Then I wandered off down a channel that I thought should take me back in the direction I wanted to go, only to meet a bridge that I was sure I had not come under: it was far too narrow, and people were fishing off it, and I have a horror of fish hooks getting stuck in any part of me [7]. So I turned around and slogged back, meeting the breeze, reassuring myself I still had over 2 hours to find my way back before the rentals closed, found the floating lookout station, and worked my way around to the channel I knew I had come up and the bridge I had come under. The open waters were much busier now, with power-boats and jet-skis doing their thing, and a bit of wake to bob around in. By then my shoulders had quit merely grumbling and were threatening concerted industrial action, and I had been out on the water over 3 hours, so I paddled my way back to the lagoon, and turned in my boat. I'd been out long enough to graduate from the $11/hr to the $37/day rental. I had to pass through the Interpretation Centre at a gallop, only long enough to murmur appreciatively towards a grass snake that one of the attendants was showing off, to make my (hourly, remember) bus. Which was a shame, because I would like to have checked up and been able to put names to what I'm seeing. But I am most definitely going back.

Here's the site for the Parc, en Francais. I tried hacking around the URL to see if I could find an English version, but there doesn't seem to be one.

In The News

The local newspaper printed a bunch of kayaking stories over the past weekend that are worth checking out while you wait for your next kayaking trip.
First off is this interesting travelogue (featuring this photo by Donald Mallon) about a kayak tour group on the Johnstone Strait looking for orcas.
Next, this story is by a beginner paddler who signed up with a group for a full moon paddle.
And finally, there's this story about humpback whales in the Inside Passage.

Sunday, July 05, 2009

There and Back. Again.

We've had a bit of a small heatwave over the last few days, but it looks to finally break today. Although still warm and humid, thin clouds rolled in overnight, a foreshadowing of the rain and cooler temperatures to come over the next few days before the sun and hot summer weather returns later in the week.
2009-07-05 Caddy Bay Pano

Louise, Paula and I put in at Cadboro Bay under those thin clouds to kayak out to Chatham Island.
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We weren't the only folks hitting the water this morning. Down the beach we saw Mike Jackson and a couple of friends launching. Mike's heading out in a new Tahe Greenland that he's been raving about on his blog.
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There wasn't much wildlife out as we kayaked down Ten Mile Point except for lots of geese and they really weren't doing anything particularly interesting, although we occasionally saw quick glimpses of stealthy otters.
The water was dead flat at the start of our paddle, just perfect conditions for the crossing to Chatham.
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There wasn't much wildlife at Chatham either. Only a small ᐃᓄᒃᓱᒃ (inukshuk), silently staring out to sea.
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From Chatham, we decided to go for the grand tour and crossed over to the Chain Islands, keeping our eyes out for seals. As we approached, we saw that the rocks and islets were bereft of seals, with one exception. For some reason a large group were congregating on this rock. From our angle of approach, these were the only seals we could see and we were quite baffled as to why they would all be crowded here.
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We soon found others, of course, and most were lazily enjoying their Sunday morning.
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The current carried us towards a rock with a couple of baby seals on it. We paddled wide to give them plenty of clearance, but as we drifted by I took out my camera to try to get a shot. I wasn't getting a good angle for a picture, so I lowered my camera for a moment. Suddenly a seal's head popped up right behind Louise. I quickly turned to take a picture but only got the "plop" of the water as he went back under.
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I turned back to the baby seals, and that's when Louise's seal popped up again, this time right in front of me as I pressed the shutter! What a ham!
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2009-07-05 The Grand Tour

Trip length: 11.53 km
YTD: 158.89
My pictures are here.
The Google Earth kmz is here.

Basking in Glory

Rupert Kirkwood from Holsworthy in the UK does a lot of sea kayaking. He has been paddling along the South West coast for a number of years, but he may have just had the kayaking highlight of his life.
On a recent paddle off the Cornish coast, he was surrounded by five sharks, each some 20 ft in length circling his kayak.
He recognized them as basking sharks, harmless to humans, and he held his waterproof camera underwater and started snapping. The results are astonishing photographs like this one.
Check out his blog here for his story and more pictures. They are amazing.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Canada Day on the Gorge

Happy Birthday to us -- we're a spry 142 years young today!
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Paula, Louise and I put in at the Victoria Canoe and Kayak Club to enjoy a leisurely kayak down the Gorge. Every Canada Day, this section of Gorge Road is closed to traffic for the annual Gorge Canada Day Picnic and the street turns into a 1.5 km long block party.
We put in just as the small parade passed us to start the day's festivities. First Nations drummers were followed by bag pipers, a few small floats, and a couple of fire trucks blasting their horns and setting off their sirens brought up the rear.
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All of the noise didn't bother this heron, who was much more intent on finding some breakfast.
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I paddled over to look at Iron Man, a sculpture watching over The Gorge on a nearby dock. He's dressed up in Christmas lights and he's lit up every night.
I wonder the if the artist is a Dan Simmons fan. The Shrike, from Hyperion...?
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As we headed up The Gorge, we could see from the crowds that the party was in full swing. Thousands of people had descended on the area, and they all seemed to be trying to park in front of my house.
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At the far end of The Gorge, small stages were set up for musical acts. Food vendors, artists and artisans were also displaying and selling their wares like a giant one-day farmer's market.
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Even the geese were enjoying the day, although they are under the mistaken impression that the holiday is called Canada Goose Day.
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We ducked under the bridge into Portage Inlet where we finally saw these year's batch of baby swans.
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We puttered around the Inlet for a while...
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...then headed back and passed the swans again.
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As we kayaked back down The Gorge, some unseen force was tempting me, urging me to get out of my kayak and walk among the crowds.
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And so we did.
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After all, what could be more Canadian than catching a little hockey?
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2009-07-01 Canada Day Paddle

Trip length: 7.22 km
YTD: 147.36
More pictures are here.
The Google Earth kmz is here.

Canada Day Paddle 2009

John and I got up at our usual kayaking time of 7am to partake of a Canada Day paddle with Paula on the Gorge Waterway.

As we were preparing to launch John spotted a heron and was the first on the water to capture photos. I followed with Paula and got one with the Canada Day parade in the background.

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Besides having a Canada Day paddle, John wanted to show his patriotic streak by displaying his Canadian kayak and flag

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Here's Paula checking out the Canada Day celebration along the Gorge which we took in on foot after our paddle.

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I captured my own patriotic photo -- Canada geese parading past a Canadian flag.

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John in his Canadian (B.C.) made Delta kayak with his Canadian flag.

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HAPPY CANADA DAY EVERYONE FROM THE FOLKS AT KAYAKYAK!!

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