Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Winter Paddle Around Orcas...... almost



















Up at 2:30 am Sunday morning 12/28 and on the road by 3:15 to pick up my paddling partner Rob for our planned three day, two night paddle around Orcas Island. Took 10 minutes to get out of my subdivision due to the 10-15 inches on snow/slush on the roads, I-405 is clear so it's easy driving to Anacortes to catch the 5:30am ferry to Orcas Island, WA. We launch the boats at 7:50am from North Beach, what a beautiful, clear, crisp morning which is very unexpected. Due to a constant progression of snow storms over the past many weeks, I can't remember the last time I saw the sun actually shine in this part of the world. Our plan this morning is to paddle west, cross Presidents Channel and travel counter clockwise around Waldron Island. The island has few year round inhabitants, no stores, no electricity, yeah kind of remote. Paddling along the north side of the island in bright sunlight we saw several river otter's playing in the shallow crystal clear cold water, otters always look like they are having a blast. The snow covered hills of the Canadian islands to our northwest look pristine in the distance. We stopped and streched briefly on the south end of the island which is a nature preserve. There we saw seals, a couple of sea lions, a bunch of eagles and loads of wintering birds and best of all, bright sunlight !! We paddled about a 1/4 way around the east side of Waldron Island to check out the remains of limestone loading docks last used in the early 1900's. The island has beautiful rock formations and it is well worth the visit. From there we headed south to Jones Island State Park. The wind (15- 20K range) was out of the SW and opposed the current, so there where a few bumpy spots on the ride down to Jones which is our first day's destination. We stopped to stretch on the north end of the island which was protected from the wind but decided to paddle around and camp on the south side of the island just to take advantage of the one shelter on the island. A good plan, as by 2:00pm our tents where up and a light rain started to fall. No surprise that we had the entire island to ourselves. With a couple of hours of daylight we hiked all over the island, which still had some snow on hills and dense woods. Other than the raven's call and the eagles squawking above in the trees it was a wonderfully peaceful setting.

Last night the wind howled through the trees enough to wake me several times. As dawn broke it appeared the wind which was forecaster to be out of the southwest for our whole trip was more from the east southeast. The weather person did caution a fast moving low pressure system was heading towards the interior today with a good deal of associated rain.


Monday morning we are packed up and on the water at 9:00 am. We paddled towards Pole Pass on our way east towards Doe Bay, our second nights planned camp site. The slog across Westsound was energy consuming and took longer than we had planned due to the strong 15-20k winds and some pretty good sized wind waves hitting us head on . Stopped at the Orcas ferry landing and loaded our bellies with coffee, a great sandwich, apple and gator-aid from the grocery store. The temperature dropped noticeably during our 20 minute stay, just an hour before it was 46 degrees now it was 38 degrees. Left the ferry dock at 11:30am heading towards Doe Bay. The heavy rain with occasional hail is now coming down sideways as we near Foster Point. By the time we got to Diamond Point the wind was howling and we are fully exposed and totally committed, as there are few obvious places to bail out along the 20-30 foot high solid rock faced shoreline. The water is really jumping as the wind whipped up really big crazy wind waves. Crossing East Sound was definitely not possible so we decided the City of Eastsound was our destination this day. With the wind to our backs, it was brace left, brace right, stern rudder, stroke, brace, brace, brace, brace and more bracing for the next 3 1/2 to four miles with lots of looking over the shoulder just to see how big the next wave to contend with was going to be. Latter we discovered our timing was just right (?), we where in 40-45 mph winds with higher gusts that blew off the tops of the waves. I'm betting there was more than one Orcas resident ready to call the Coast Guard. Once safely tucked in East Sound and out of the wind's fury we finished our paddle landing at the city park near the Outlook Inn at 2:30ish. Even got a FREE ride from the Body Boat Blade Transportation Company to North Beach to pick up my truck. The other third of the 'round Orcas' trip will be scheduled in spring.. Trip covered about 33 miles.

Monday, December 8, 2008

2008 Deception Pass Dash


The third annual DASH, has grown dramatically since it's inception. This year 144 kayakers signed up for the event and 137 participated in the race. Management of the DASH was assumed by Redmond, WA's Outdoor Adventures who did a fabulous job hosting the event. It has become an international event, with paddlers from Canada and Europe participating. A French paddler won the event, how cool. The DASH started a half hour before ebb at 10:00 sharp with a fairly strong breeze hitting the paddlers in the face. A 4+ft swell coming down the Straight of Juan DeFuca made for an exciting start. Lot's of swimmers before we rounded Deception Island ! With big waves and the water converging from several directions made for an interesting first mile or so. Glad to have Deception Island behind me, the current now was a great help assisting the paddlers eastward towards the bridge. By the time I got to Pass Island the paddlers were quite spread out ( the real athletes were long gone) so unlike last year I just hugged the side of Pass Island taking full advantage of the back eddie's and only deposited a small amount of gel coat along the way, another improvement over my effort from last year. Once past Pass Island a big eddie again tries to grab my boat but persistence and a dozen hard strokes and I'm on my way to Strawberry Island, the half way point. By this time the ebb current is building. As I head back on the north side of Pass Island and back under the bridge ( lot's of folks way up there cheering us on, very cool) there where a half dozen standing waves to greet us. A couple of good sized whirlpools form then just as quickly disappear, they always get a lot of my attention. The wind is straight out of the west so with the ebbing current heading into the wind, the waves are starting to REALLY stand up at Lighthouse Point, really stand up. The police on their wave runners reported 8 to 10 ft waves off the point, from my vantage point they sure seemed that big. The area between Lighthouse Point and Deception Island was the end of the line for many paddlers who decided they had had enough. The swirling water here was big, confused as swell, current and wind waves battled each other. I headed back around Deception Island and again through the choppy water off the west end of the island. I saw lots of boats heading straight for Bowman Bay after coming around the island but experience has taught me that is not the way to go. You have to go all the way back to the east point of Deception Island and then jump out into the current which is rougher water but if you make it through that quarter mile of bumpy water the current will assist you all the way back to Bowman Bay and the finish line with a lot less effort. Despite the conditions ( weather man reported there were wind gusts up to 26 mph during the race) I covered the 6.2 st mile race in 83:16 minutes, five minutes faster than last year. YEAH!
Here are a bunch of links to videos and pictures, I thank the content owners...
Brian Boatman's stern deck video (OC2) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uUsmXaKk5I
Michael Lampi's 388 pics (he was the guy in the green pedal boat, snapping pics of you while he raced. Thanks Michael!) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uUsmXaKk5I
Stina Larson's pics - http://tinyurl.com/dpd2008
Steve Weilman's blog has some cool pics and his 2008 DPD video. - http://www.xexplore.com/journal/index.php/2008/12/deception-dash-movie-release/
Michael Cline's images on Flickr - http://www.flickr.com/photos/61825503@N00/sets/72157610978742216/

Sunday, December 7, 2008

The Slough Slog

November 30th, downtown Woodinville WA of all places to find a kayak race. The good folks at Paddler Magazine got together and decided to put on a 'tune-up' race for next weekends Deception Pass Dash. Twenty six paddlers showed up for this impromptu race. There were sea boats, whitewater boats, creek boats and a couple of other designs I didn't recognize. With the boats in the Sammamish River promptly at 10:00 AM the whitewater boats took off down river, followed 5 minutes latter by all but the sea boats who left last 10 minutes after the first wave of boats. Racing 1 1/4 miles down river, turn around a buoy and return. Simple !! There was one problem, you had to navigate thru the rapids and very strong current of Little Bear Creek. Since the river is shallow here I made the most of my neoprene covered knuckles and walked my boat following three failed attempts to paddle up stream in the strong current. Heck we even had a few swimmers, much to the delight of the many bickers who stopped to watch ( laugh)..
Results:1. Tom Wier, C1 Wildwater: 28:592. Rich Romer, K1 Wildwater: 30:033. Jennie Goldberg, K1 Wildwater: 31:194. Tao Berman, sea kayak (Eddyline Falcon): 31:335. Rufus Knapp, K1 Wildwater: 33:206. Christian Knight, Long boat, Green Boat: 33:357. Greg Barden, sea kayak (wood): 34:178. Darren Albright, Long boat (Response): 34:409. JP, sea kayak (Tempest 170), 34:50 *corrected10. Rob McKibbin, 9 and under (Nomad) 35:0811. Philip Sparr, sea kayak (Vokhv): 35:5712. Joe Jackson, 9 and under (Remix): 36:0513. Josh Knight, sea kayak (Necky Looksha): 36:2214. Dave Hablewitz, longboat (Hydra): 36:3215. Mike Kord, 9 and under (Dagger RPM): 36:3616. Ben Hawthorne, long boat (Crossfire): 37:5417. Chris Rogers, sea kayak (Wilderness Systems 170): 38:2618. Joel Martin, long boat (slalom): 44:43 (swam)19. Bernie Swanson, sea kayak (Nordkapp): 46:3320. Scott Waidelich, 9 and under (Jackson): 46:39 (late for race)21. Cathy Haggerty, sea kayak (Valley): 46:4122. Bill Porter, sea kayak (Romney): 46:5023. Henry Romer, sea kayak (Acadia?): 48:0824. Steve Murphy, sea kayak (NA): 50:5125. Mark Baron, sea kayak (P&H Quest): 52:4026. Bill Walker, sea kayak (P&H Capella): 53:19