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Five Top Weekend Kayak Trips

Photo: Parks Canada
Gulf Islands

These kayak trip destinations are excerpted from “Make Your Escape: Weekend Adventure Guide” in Adventure Kayak magazine. 

 

Alouette Lake, BC.

Fringed by the towering peaks of the Coast Range, 20-kilometer-long Alouette Lake has 
a distinctly alpine feel. Golden Ears Provincial Park features three lakeside backcountry campsites for overnight trips. env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/parkpgs/golden_ears/

 

Door County, WI.

The chain of islands that shelters Green Bay on Lake Michigan’s western shore offers a number
of options for sea kayaking. Newport and Rock Island state parks are solid choices for weekend trips. Guide to Sea Kayaking on Lakes Superior and Michigan (Globe Pequot, 1999) is your best bet for route descriptions.

 

Thousand Islands, 
ON.

In First Nations lore, the islands of Lake Ontario’s eastern end were the petals of heavenly flowers. Today, the Thousand Islands Water Trail highlights nine paddling routes from Kingston to Brockville. explorethearch.ca

 

Maine Island Trail, ME.

A weekend trip barely ripples
 the surface of options for sea kayaking along this vast 350-mile-long swath of the Eastern Seaboard. Weigh the countless options at mita.org.

 

Gulf Islands, BC.

Every day feels like a weekend in British Columbia’s Gulf Islands National Park. Route options
 are endless depending on your skill and objectives, with Parks Canada boat-only campsites located on Cabbage, D’Arcy, Portland, Prevost and Rum islands. pc.gc.ca/pn-np/bc/gulf/index_e.asp

 

This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak, Early Summer 2009. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Slow Adventuring

Photo: Jasper Winn
Slow Adventuring

Within two hours of paddling out from the sheltered waters of Castlehaven, the coastline of Cork was a distant scribble three miles to the north and I was further out at sea, alone, in a kayak than I’d ever been before. Everything around me was Atlantic or sky, or—where the spray was blowing off the wave tops—some combination of both.

Until setting off earlier that day to circumnavigate the thousand-mile coastline of Ireland, I hadn’t paddled a kayak for over a year.

Sure, I’m from the southwest of Ireland,
 and had sea kayaked a bit along this coast, but
 that only underlined how little I knew—really 
knew—of tidal streams and currents, of prevailing winds and headland races and the correct 
procedure for sending an SOS. I was using a 
landlubber’s units of furniture to measure the
 heights of the waves. Coffee- and dining table-
height were okay, breakfast counter not so much, and wardrobe-height was a horrifying specter.

Reading to this point, serious paddlers may be tempted to throw their flares, VHF radios and certifications of competence at me in frustration. I’m going to have to make a spirited defense of my position. It’s this: I was on a slow adventure.

Slow adventure is like slow food, slow travel, slow sex and all the other unhurried pleasures of the slow movement. It’s about taking as long as it takes to do something, rather than racing clocks and calendars. It’s about enjoying the actual doing, instead of worrying about achieving a goal. Time—rather than training or equipment—is my safety net.

Roald Amundsen, the pre-eminent Norwegian explorer who beat Scott to the South Pole in 1911, famously claimed, “Adventure is just bad planning.” I agree with him. But slow adventure is the result of just enough planning. In other words, it’s the opposite of an Amundsen-style, micro-managed expedition.

Heading round Ireland, I didn’t do much planning because I didn’t know what I was planning for. I had too little essential gear packed into my 16-foot, plastic Necky Narpa, but I was richly freighted with time.

Time enough to spend a fortnight in Dingle, playing guitar in Dick Mack’s pub whilst I waited for two weeks of high winds to blow through. Time to dawdle amongst pods of basking sharks, or spend three days camped between thousand-year-old stone huts on Inishmurray Island. And, this is especially important, time to postpone indefinitely if the trip proved really stupid.

Three decades of poorly planned, low-tech, comically inept but ultimately successful travel have kept things in perspective. Walking a thousand miles through North Africa’s Atlas Mountains, riding horses across Kyrgyzstan, or on saddle-’n’-paddle trips in Patagonia, I’ve only had to raise my eyes to see that whilst I was at play other people were at work. Pretty much everywhere I’ve looked, someone—a cowboy, a fisherman, a reindeer herder or, quite often, a child in poor shoes and inadequate clothing—is doing a tough job in extreme weather. Life, too, is a slow adventure.

The joy of the slow adventure is its random nature. Unexpected twists will make the trip different from—but just as good as—whatever you had intended. There’s no pressure to achieve something, so no failure if you don’t. A trip takes as long as it takes. Or you go as far as you can comfortably and safely go in a given time.

Anyone can have a slow adventure. It’s as easy as launching your boat on a whim. Adventure will follow. Just don’t plan on it.

Jasper Winn wrote about circumnavigating his home isle in Paddle: A Long Way Around Ireland, his first book, and is currently working on a new book about living and traveling for 10 months with a nomadic Berber clan in North Africa.

This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak, Spring 2013. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

River Alchemy: Swimming Rivers

Photo: Brian Huntington
River swimming subculture

When Alison Howard front-crawled into Port Edward, B.C., last August, she was completing not just her 28-day source-to-sea swim of northern British Columbia’s Skeena River, but the circle in a longstanding river tradition. In raising awareness of threats surrounding this beautiful and pristine watershed, Howard enthusiastically volunteered for what so many of us enthusiastically avoid—swimming.

Twenty years on, I still have a mark on my jaw from when it hit the bedrock ground beside the Ottawa River. After briefing us on our ultimately futile, high water Coliseum rookie attempt, our raft training guide simply jumped in. To us, the rapid was a mess of roaring white and certain death. He disappeared in the first wave and surfaced somewhere below, indignantly waving for us to get in the boat and get on with it. Later on in my rookie guide years, I would commonly come upon a senior guide, on a day off, swimming the river for fun.

For many paddlers, those who swim rivers— whether for a cause or for pleasure—defy reason. Kayakers view swimming with contempt (if they are good) or humiliation (if they are not), and canoeists are typically terrified of the very idea. Raft guides, always the realists, take swimming for what it is—insignificance while immersed in a tremendously powerful, uncaring force of water and gravity.

The swimming ethos can trace its roots back to 1955, when footloose former servicemen Bill Beer and John Daggett swam the Colorado’s Grand Canyon on a whim, more or less, and became daredevil media darlings. Dragging two 80-pound army surplus dry bags each, they swam the 200-plus miles in 26 days—with no plan, no backup, and no idea what they were doing.

Amazingly, they hauled a film camera with them, and for a time Beer made a living touring with his movie and telling his story. His memoirs are subtitled The True Story of a Cheap Vacation That Got a Little Out of Hand (We Swam the Grand Canyon, 1988, Mountaineers Books). These two single handedly shattered the certain death mentality that early river runners carried with them, and they likely also opened the door to public acceptance of whitewater rafting as a carefree means of having some fun on the river.

This river swimming subculture persisted for many years, and in many places, but came to an abrupt end in 1993 when Stan Hollister—the same guide who willingly swam Coliseum, scarring my jaw—died while swimming Colorado’s Cataract Canyon.

Among guides, Cataract is considered significantly more difficult than the Grand Canyon, and above 60,000 cubic feet per second (cfs) is the hardest commercially run big water in the world.

Hollister swam it at 110,000 cfs in 1983, covering the standard two-day whitewater section in one hour. In 1993, the flow was 65,000 cfs and Hollister was 52 years old. He saw some friends above the Big Drops—notorious for their massive pourovers, chaotic and churning flow and grip- ping speed—and was later found drowned below them. No one knows what happened.

Swimming fell out of favor, even though canoes still swamped and rafts still flipped. For a time, raft guides were even trained without intentional swimming.

Then in the early 2000s, during the heart of the kayaking boom, river rescue training—with its strong focus on swimming—finally gained acceptance among the rapidly expanding ranks of mainstream paddlers, knocking back the certain death mentality once more.

Today, it is not uncommon to again see rookies bobbing down the main lines of commercial rafting rivers. Sometimes just for fun.

Jeff Jackson is a professor of Outdoor Adventure at Algonquin College in Pembroke, Ontario.

This article originally appeared in Rapid, Early Summer 2010. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Daily Photo: Hammock Time

Photo:Virginia Marshall
Daily Photo: Hammock Time

Cockpit, camp chair, mattress or hammock—the view from just sittin’ on your bottom can be a magical thing. No, your sofa doesn’t count (unless it’s strapped to barrels and floating down the river).

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

KeelEazy Gear Review

Photo: KeelEazy
KeelEazy Gear Review

This gear review was originally published in Adventure Kayak magazine. 

Installing a composite keel strip on a 
kayak requires patience, knowhow and some compromising—gel coat can be finicky and reinforcement adds noticeable weight. KeelEazy offers a simpler alternative in the form of an easy to install, peel and stick PVC strip that is far more durable than glass or Kevlar strips, weighs significantly
 less and slides easily across other boats during rescues. KeelEazy’s Kayak Kits
 come in 16- and 18-foot lengths, and are available in black or white. The strip will adhere to composite, polyethylene and ABS. Tips: Separating the backing from
 the adhesive is best done when the strip has been cooled, so throw it in the freezer before installation. Use a heat gun to contour the PVC around curved surfaces. Also, rounding the strip’s corners during installation will lengthen lifespan.

www.keeleazy.com • $70–78

 

This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak, Spring 2012. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here. 

Daily Photo: Quiet Morning

Photo: Bill Mart
Daily Photo: Quiet Morning
“A quiet morning paddle on Johnson Lake in Banff National Park, Canada,” says Bill Mart. “Karyn, my wife, was keeping a watchful eye on our two kids as the paddled the lake in their kayaks.”
 
This photo was taken by Bill Mart. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Photo Contest: Kayakers Wanted

Photo: courtesy Red Bull
Photo Contest: Kayakers Wanted

The deadline to enter the world’s largest action and adventure sports photography contest is rapidly approaching – all submissions must be uploaded to redbullillume.com by April 30th — and as you can see from the entries so far, we sea kayakers need to step up and represent!  Of the thousands of images already submitted, we haven’t seen any of our favorite sport. 

Photographers can enter as many as five images in each of the 10 categories, whether they’re action, portrait, lifestyle or sequence shots. See the full list of categories at www.redbullillume.com/contest/categories.html.

Contest entry is free and anyone can enter. Whether you’re a published pro or an aspiring amateur, upload your best sea kayaking shots to the Red Bull Illume Image Quest. The images are judged by an international panel of 50 photo editors from prominent media outlets whose task is to select the 50 best shots, including 10 category winners and one overall winner. The finalist images will then be unveiled in Hong Kong at the end of August before traveling the world as a nighttime exhibition that is seen by thousands across the globe. Tour stops in the U.S. include Houston, Charleston, Miami and Denver.

More information, including rules and entry details, can be found online at http://www.redbullillume.com/contest/rules.html.

Weekly Whitewater News, April 26, 2013

Photo courtesy of Sky Fest
Kayaker at Sky Fest

This week in whitewater news: Three awesome events to get you excited this spring, including Level Six’s Capital Cup, Hell or High Water and Sky Fest. 

Level Six’s Capital Cup Competition Kicks Off

cup-300x199Level Six’s Capital Cup, a freestyle kayak competition, takes place on Saturday, April 27th at the Champlain Rapids, Bate Island, Ottawa. Canada’s top amateur and pro kayakers will be competing on the Ottawa River and hanging out at the festival. 
Led by Ottawa’s own Sydney Olympian, Tyler Lawlor, and his clothing and gear company ‘Level Six’ and partnered with MEC, Wilderness Tours, Ottawa Kayak School, Owl Rafting, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Trailhead Paddle Shack and a dedicated group of local kayakers, the Level Six Capital Cup will be exciting for participants and a thrilling display of athleticism and sport for spectators. Via www.levelsix.com.

Film Fest at Hell or High Water

HoHWAs part Hell or High Water, the Town of Petawawa invites everyone to celebrate Canada’s rivers and recreation opportunities they provide us by attending the Reel Paddling Film Festival. Much more than just whitewater action, the films are divided into 10 categories and showcase the world’s best paddling films to audiences worldwide, inspiring more people to explore rivers, lakes and oceans, push physical and emotional extremes, embrace the lifestyle and appreciate the heritage of the wild places we paddle. The festival will take place on Friday, May 10 at 7:00 pm at the Petawawa Civic Centre.  All proceeds from the Film Festival go back into the community to help support new paddlesports activities and programming. Via www.HOHW.ca

 Multi-sport Sky Fest

ef68d7 6c83a1f18f4b958a1f06208aea5b0ea7.jpg crp 0 0 4000 3000 1920 1440 crpWhet your appetite, no matter what your favorite sport. Washington’s Sky Fest features whitewater kayaking and canoeing, mountain biking, climbing, fishing and activities just for the kids. When your arms and legs give out, take in some of the presentations, including talks on water survival, conservation, boat pins, beer brewing and Dutch Oven cooking. The fun runs from July 4-7th. Via www.skyfest.org.

 

Daily Photo: Just Ducky

Photo: Allison Donohue
Daily Photo: Just Ducky
Liam Donohue’s first birthday was celebrated with his first canoe trip onto Little Bay in Dover, New Hampshire. “He thought it was just ducky,” says proud mom, Allison. 
 
This photo was taken by Sean Donohue. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Kayak Review: Pygmy Boats Murrelet

woman paddles a wooden Pygmy Murrelet kayak
The Pygmy Murrelet looks and performs like the culmination of 26 years of design experience and refinement. | Feature photo: Vince Paquot
Pygmy Murrelet Specs
Length: 17’
Width: 22”
Weight: 36 lbs
MSRP: $1,089 USD
pygmyboats.com

“I think people who’ve never worked with wood are intimidated,” Dan Jones tells me when we rendezvous in the border city of Buffalo. He leans forward conspiratorially, as if sharing a secret, “But you don’t need any skill to build these boats, just patience. If I can do it, anyone can.”

Pygmy Boats Murrelet is a build-it-yourself beauty

Jones is referring to the gleaming Pygmy Murrelet that we’ve just transferred from his roof rack to mine. In the interest of expediency, I was only too happy to leave the laborious side of this review to Jones—a veteran Pygmy paddler and builder—but now the seed is germinating: “Hey, I could build a kayak….”

It’s this spirit of self-reliance that inspired Pygmy Boats founder John Lockwood to build his first stitch-and-glue kayak in 1971. A fall at a construction site three years earlier had destroyed Lockwood’s hip and left him on crutches, but the lightweight, drag-anywhere durability of his homebuilt boat gave him the freedom to explore British Columbia’s remote Queen Charlotte Islands for months at a time.

woman paddles a wooden Pygmy Murrelet kayak
The Pygmy Murrelet looks and performs like the culmination of 26 years of design experience and refinement. | Feature photo: Vince Paquot

Trained at Cambridge and Harvard as a computer scientist and anthropologist—admiring of the peaceful Mbuti people of Africa, Lockwood’s college friends nicknamed him “Pygmy”—he designed cutting-edge naval architecture software before selling the world’s first computer-designed, precision-cut wood panel kayak kit out of his Seattle workshop in 1986.

Given the growth and popularity of Pygmy boats since then, the Murrelet looks and performs exactly as it should—like the culmination of 26 years of design experience and refinement.

Video review of the Pygmy Murrelet sea kayak:

Cover of Adventure Kayak Magazine, Spring 2013 issueThis article was first published in the Spring 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.


The Pygmy Murrelet looks and performs like the culmination of 26 years of design experience and refinement. | Feature photo: Vince Paquot