- Wavelength Magazine
Transcription
- Wavelength Magazine
June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 1 2 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 ONE WITH WATER C A R O L I N A THE DAY TOURER THAT PIONEERED THE CLASS BLAZES A NEW TRAIL. The Carolina Series became the world’s favorite by being what day tourers should be: stable, maneuverable, gear-friendly and a blast for beginner and veteran alike. And now they’re even better. Take the re-engineered 13.5, offering improved speed, increased comfort and easier entry/exit. That’s the thing about legends. They keep earning the title. Carolina 13.5 Carolina 14.5 Now featuring Zone Outfitting. Zone lets you tailor your connection to your kayak in an instant for a more comfortable, more satisfying on-water experience. Carolina 15.5 U N I T E D STAT E S A N D C A N A DA / K AYA K E R . C O M June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 06_07_2006_Wavelength_Perception.indd 1 3 3/24/2006 1:17:59 PM Editor Alan Wilson Alan@WaveLengthMagazine.com Assistant Editor Diana Mumford Diana@WaveLengthMagazine.com Sales Associate Diane Coussens Diane@WaveLengthMagazine.com Consulting Editor Laurie MacBride Accountant Chris Sherwood Webmaster Ted Leather Distribution Team All Sports (Pacific NW), CTM (Toronto) Adam Bolonsky (New England) DRM (North American bulk mail) Herb Clark, Rajé Harwood, Diane Coussens Associates Howard Stiff, Mercia Sixta ADS, SUBS,&BULK ORDERS ADVERTISING SUBSCRIPTIONS 1-800-799-5602 • 250-247-8858 • info@WaveLengthMagazine.com • www.WaveLengthMagazine.com www.WaveLengthMagazine.com GENERAL ENQUIRIES Printed in Vancouver, British Columbia Correspondence should be sent to: 2735 North Road, Gabriola Island British Columbia, Canada V0R 1X7 WAVELENGTH is an independent, bimonthly magazine available at over 500 print distribution sites (paddling shops, outdoor stores, fitness clubs, marinas, events, etc.) in North America, and globally on the web. Articles, photos, events, news are all welcome. DON’T MISS AN ISSUE! $18 $30 FOR FOR US$ FOR USA 1 2 YEAR Paddling Partners O ne of the great secrets of paddling is that it’s not just about ‘you and the ocean’, the sort of image often pictured of the solo adventurer on an isolated coastline (but who took the photo?). In fact, paddling is usually a far more social experience. The social process begins with instruction, usually in a group, and at some point you have your first paddling trip, usually a commercial group or club trip, or maybe a trip with family and friends. I remember well my first ten-day kayak expedition fifteen years ago, to legendary Haidi Gwaii, and what a social revelation it was for me. I realized along the way that the incredible beauty of our surroundings wasn’t the main focus at all, just part of the story. When trip leader Peter Marcus confided to me that probably 80% of a paddling trip is social, it clicked. That particular experience had its ups and downs on the social front. On the downside, someone went off their meds, flipped and had to be flown out. But then there were the more romantic developments, not to mention those group soaks on Hotspring Island, and the wonderful warmth and hospitality shown by the Haida people—evidence of an admirably attuned social culture. At WaveLength we always advise paddling with a partner for safety, but this doesn’t mention the fun involved in being with others. And that’s what this issue is all about. It begins with a focus on the minimum social unit—two people—from a piece on how to choose a reliable paddling partner, to the pros and cons of paddling doubles. Then we move on to group paddling, including the responsibility we have to communicate our whereabouts to our off-water companions. We also include examples of group paddling ‘for a cause’ and the fun of working together for something much bigger than ourselves. We encourage you to take a look at our Paddling Partners list (online at www.WaveLengthMagazine.com) where you can browse through over 500 people from around North America and beyond, to find paddling partners. Perhaps you’ll even be tempted to post your own name? We wish you happy and safe social paddling this summer. – 6 ISSUES – 12 ISSUES WaveLength Magazine is a member of the Trade Association of Paddlesports: www.gopaddle.org YEARS / CDN$ FOR CANADA (WE PAY GST) Volume 16 Number 1 INSIDE INCLUDES PRIZE ENTRY (pg.51) TO SUBSCRIBE: 1-800-799-5602 or www@WaveLengthMagazine.com ADVERTISING RATES AND WRITERS GUIDELINES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST DEADLINE JUN 20 AUG 20 OCT 20 DEC 20 FEB 20 APR 20 IN PRINT AUG 1 OCT 1 DEC 1 FEB 1 APR 1 JUN 1 ISSN 1188-5432 Canadian Publications Mail Agreement No. 40010666 GST# 887432276 SAFE PADDLING is an individual responsibility. We recommend that inexperienced paddlers seek expert instruction, advice about local conditions, have all the required gear and know how to use it. The publishers of this magazine and its contributors are not responsible for how the information in these pages is used by others. Published by Wave-Length Communications Inc. © 2006. Copyright is retained on all material, text and graphics, in this magazine. No reproduction is allowed of any material in any form, print or electronic, for any purpose, except with the expressed permission of Wave-Length Communications Inc. Printed on ancient rainforest-free paper. 4 Alan Wilson 5 Choosing a Paddling Partner AILEEN STALKER 8 Paddling Partners-for-Life DOUG LLOYD 10 My Paddling Partner DIAN WEIMER COVER PHOTO by Josh McCulloch Husband & wife team of Alex Matthews and Rochelle Relyea at Fisgard Lighthouse, Victoria, BC. 32 Off-Water Partners ADAM BOLONSKY—COLUMN 34 Sculling Draw ALEX MATTHEWS—COLUMN 37 Lasso Security ALEX MATTHEWS—COLUMN 12 Double the Romance? BRYAN NICHOLS—COLUMN 39 The Broughton is Alive ALEXANDRA MORTON—COLUMN 15 Partners With Hearing Loss 44 Together for Tapas DEBBIE LEACH—COLUMN PAULA JOHANSON 17 Rainbow Paddling DALLAS AND ARDITH HINTON 20 Paddling the Hudson ALAN FELDSTEIN 23 Can Paddlers Save the World? NEIL SCHULMAN 27 Paddling to Dinner ALAN WILSON—COLUMN 31 Paddle With Friends DAN LEWIS—COLUMN 46 GREAT GEAR 47 BOOKS DIANA MUMFORD—COLUMN 48 NEWS 51 WIN A KAYAK! 52 UNCLASSIFIED ADS 54 CALENDAR Also see our online ‘Doubles Directory’ www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Aileen Stalker Meaghan Hennessy photo. www.virgamedia.com Choosing a Paddling Partner T iming, weather, gear, skills—all are important to the success of any paddling trip. But don’t minimize the most important factor of all—selecting an appropriate paddling partner. Given sudden extreme water conditions, an unexpected capsize or an accident on the beach, your paddling partner may be the person who has to save your life. So let’s consider what makes a reliable, enjoyable paddling partner—one who remains your friend long after the trip and who you gladly include in plans for future adventures. To begin with, there are a number of safety and equipment issues associated with your potential partner: • Personal safety is the biggest consideration for any trip, even for a short, urban trip. Think about whether your potential partner owns or can help obtain the correct charts, current and tide tables, and is able to interpret them. While everyone needs to develop these skills, if you’re directionally challenged, make sure your paddling partner is not. • A good paddling partner is someone who is responsive to your needs. If you’re an inexperienced paddler, heavy seas, high winds or turbulence could be terrifying. It’s important that your paddling partner respects your anxieties. • Does one of you own or will you rent a VHF for longer trips to listen to weather reports? Does your partner even know what VHF means? • Even for a day trip, you are required to have an approved PFD, spare paddle, pump,whistle, buoyant heaving line, and a good flashlight if paddling after dark. Does your potential partner have all these bits and pieces? • Beware of potential partners who are so in love with blue jeans that they never part from them. Check if the words layering and waterproof have any meaning in their lives. Have you ever seen them actually wear proper outdoor clothing? June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com • Paddling is no time for bravado and macho behaviors. Wearing a PFD is not only mandatory, it’s crucial if you capsize. Check your potential partner’s resistance factor to this essential safety precaution, and while you’re at it, check out swimming skills, knowledge of CPR and basic first aid. And who is bringing the first aid kit? • Off for just a few hours? Who is going to develop the float plan? “For an afternoon paddle?!” might be the incredulous response. Well yes, either you or your partner needs to at least let someone know where you are going and when you expect to be back. Rejecting this can foreshadow problems for more complex decisions and safety issues in the future. é BEYOND TOFINO... with your paddling partners! Spectacular kayaking. Join your friends, join us in British Columbia, Canada. Ph/fax: 1-800-tofino-4 paddlers@island.net www.tofino-kayaking.com 5 Andrew Nolan photo Then there are the more ‘personal’ aspects of paddling partner selection. These are discovered by experience during the first trip together when you realize, too late, that the 6 amusing/unique/charming/off-beat/intense/Type-A/controlling characteristics of the person you saw on land are exaggerated or increased on a trip—even just a day trip. This can result in awkward moments as you later try to imply that you plan to give up paddling entirely, just so you will never have to go on a trip with that partner again. • Does your potential partner have a sense of humor— about themselves and others, and about life in general? One of my partners gamely dove into 12 feet of freezing water to retrieve the part from my kayak wheels I inadvertently dropped from the dock. He could have been furious but, hey, we had to catch the ferry and he had his diving ticket. On any trip there’s a lot to laugh about and often at least some stuff to get mad about—better to laugh. • Can your paddling partner listen and tell stories? Can you learn things from him/her? Communing with nature is one of the joys of paddling—the silence that allows you to hear a loon’s cry, identify the squeal of a seal, and peacefully watch the sun set. But sharing stories, natural history or the geography of the area is also fun and adds to the memories of your trip. • Who is the best packer? Not a pack rat, but someone capable of packing multiple drybags into small spaces. If one of you has good spatial awareness, kayaks do hold an amazing amount. A willingness to carry all those bags up the beach for every camp without whining or commenting is also important, especially if most of the contents were agreed upon together… right? • Strong also helps, but remember that it’s not fair for one person to have to carry everything all the time, even if it means multiple trips for the less strong person. • Can your partner hike? When exploring remote beaches or tangled trails, walking with company can help to keep the wild things away. Ensure that your partner is not one of the wild things. • Does your partner paddle at the same pace as you or is one of you going to have to go full speed all the time to keep up? This is not just a gender issue—there are lots of strong female paddlers who need to think about how fast and how long their male partners want to paddle. • How encouraging is your partner—especially when one of you is tired? A useful skill is to be able to reshape the truth into comments such as “The camp is just around a couple of more points” or “I can see a patch of blue behind those gray clouds,” etc. even if the result is just to laugh and respond, “Oh yeah, I’ve heard that one before!” • Does your potential partner know how to cook? When you’re both paddling, there is an equality that’s different from when one person does all the driving on a road trip and the other all the cooking. Since camp stove cooking takes little skill, anyone can make a good meal. Cooking also includes sharing the effort of making or buying the sandwiches for day trips—after all, that’s what delis are for. • How much does your partner drink? Excessive drinking and watersports obviously don’t mix, but also on a long, remote trip, once that wine supply is gone, it’s gone. The person who finishes off two bottles of wine at a dinner party may feel it’s his/her right to do that around the campfire. Check it out. On the other hand you want someone who www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 WOMEN’S ADVENTURES likes their beer or wine well enough to properly secure the refreshments cooling in the intertidal zone. Otherwise you may observe, as I did, an entire paddling group staring in horror as they realized their unanchored beer had floated away with a strong current. • Who’s in charge? Does the person you plan to spend time with always have to be ‘right’, the leader, the one in control? There should be opportunities for everyone to lead on any trip, and having a heavy-handed partner who always has to be in control can become oppressive. This will become especially apparent if you are in a double kayak where one of you could be subject to constant corrections and comments on your paddling technique, your strength and—eventually as the partnership deteriorates—the most miniscule of events or decisions. • Perhaps a pivotal consideration is this: does the person you’re thinking of paddling with ever say thanks? Thanks for all the work you did, thanks for reminding me, thanks for bringing that, thanks for your company, your good humor, for being you? That word alone tells a great deal about any person’s ability to engage in an equal and respectful relationship in or out of a kayak. With a well selected paddling partner, your relationship may develop into a lifelong friendship of support and shared adventure. © Aileen Stalker is co-author with her son Andrew Nolan (who she says is a great paddling partner) of their book Paddling Through History: Sea Kayak Vancouver and Victoria. Calling All Wild Women!!! Join us for an all-women Kayaking Adventure ‘ADVENTURESS’ Wilderness Adventures for Women No Kayaking Experience Necessary • All tours include instruction • Fun introductory lessons & certified courses • Day Trippin’ & Multi-Day Adventures Jan Kretz Certified Guide and Instructor Vancouver Island, BC 250 755-6702 Toll Free 866 955-6702 www.adventuress.ca Jan@Adventuress.ca OUTDOOR ODYSSEYS All Women’s Kayak Tours • Paddle the sunny San Juan Islands • Camping or ‘deluxe’ B&B Trips • Custom trips with friends • Naturalist/female guides • Gourmet food & fun! 800-647-4621 www.outdoorodysseys.com T O U R I N G TSUNAMI T R A N S I T I O N A L Tsunamis: shorter, lighter, quicker. Pick up one today. Kayaks don’t have to be long and skinny to have good speed. In the Tsunami 120 and 125, you have boats that are shorter and lighter and therefore easier to manage, lift and load. You also have boats whose ingenious hulls efficiently convert your stroke into acceleration. Make a date with your Wilderness Systems dealer and try one on. The Tsunami 120 and 125 available in Gen2, Duralite™ Duralite and composite. 1 June 06_tsunami_Wavelength.indd / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com UNITED STATES AND CANADA / www.wildernesssystems.com 3/24/2006 12:37:21 PM 7 Paddling Partners-for-Life Doug Lloyd T hey say opposites attract. In the case of my partner-for-life, who happens also to be my closest paddling partner, that may well be an understatement. Our differences were evident through the early days of dating and have only become more apparent as married years pass: she reads Jane Austen novels cuddled up in a warm blanket on stormy winter nights (trying not to worry about me) while I‘m out solo late-night storm paddling; she’s a penny-pincher content with a dilapidated May West lifejacket while I’ll buy a new PFD at the first sign of fading cordura; she loves weekend camping as long as a B&B is close by, while I like to spend weeks in the wild as far from the comforts of civilization as possible. It‘s only logical that two individuals so different in our expression of life find paddling together an exercise in compromise, with an ongoing need to clarify perceptions about safety, Yvonne and Doug, partners-for-life. paddling locations and anticipated conditions. To my credit there was a realization early on that to introduce one’s spouse to the life-long enjoyment of sea kayaking, the early experiences should probably be good ones. The stern visage of my mother-in-law warning me of how many relatives of my wife-to-be had perished due to small-boating/cold-water accidents left a lasting impression. For our honeymoon a decade and a half ago, Meares Island would have normally offered protection, privacy and a panorama of unspoiled beauty. But we arrived to atypical August weather with whitecaps and driving horizontal rain. The rental folks were very understanding about the sudden in-person cancellation. A wild, wet honeymoon wouldn’t have made a good first impression, so we settled into a cozy B&B for a few days of further acquaintance—though I cast secret, longing glances to the open Pacific. For the next few years we selected early September for our yearly husband/wife paddling excursion. We rented a double out of Sidney on southern Vancouver Island, our home base, and headed over to Rum Island. The summer crowds had dispersed, leaving unrestricted campsite selection. She’s always cold while I’m evidently hot-blooded, so a ‘morning sun/evening sun’ tent site was selected. Unlike at home, where my homemaker wife plays a traditional role, I provided cooking services, plus hot-chocolate treats and washing-up chores. And I’ve tried Celebrating 35 Years www.easyriderkayaks.com Sea Kayaks - Canoes Rowing Shells Catamarans Outriggers Sail Rigs Catalog Package & Video: $20 ppd. (see web site) Canoe & Kayak Co. since 1970 8 P.O. Box 88108 Seattle, WA 98138 425-228-3633 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 to maintain this on subsequent trips. I’m probably getting the better deal. The benefits of a double kayak can’t be overstated for a hesitant paddling partner. A double helps provide a safe, stable platform for a nervous partner when negotiating currents and boat wake, and certainly gives greater paddling efficiency for covering distance. And it promotes togetherness. But as the months and years ticked by, her skills and confidence grew incrementally until we finally took to single kayaks. Though my most vivid kayaking memories over the last 25 years seem to center on solo trips among the wind and waves of Vancouver Island’s wildest shorelines, the trips taken with my ever-cheerful and committed companion provide a counterpoint to these more self-indulgent times. Sharing crimson-edged sunsets, lying side-by-side under a canopy of a billion stars, listening quietly together beside lapping shorelines, gently talking at the hushed edge of ancient rainforests, and swimming in a light rain are sensuous, earthy experiences for couples, through which their relationship can deepen and strengthen. There have been other memorable moments too, when my planning and execution fell short of the ideal, like the time we headed out in narrow singles just at the end of the Labour Day weekend for the Flat Top Islands at the south end of Gabriola Island. Assurances were given that the conditions in Gabriola Passage were within the scope of our abilities, but missing slack tide and encountering large luxury yachts in the Pass translated into menacing conditions. With no time for a contact tow and increasing signs of fearful dread, I grabbed my naïve cohort around the waist, drawing the kayaks tightly into a raft, and locked lips in the splashing turbulence as we spun together before being spat out of the narrow waterway. At least I had fun with the improvised wet-kiss raft. There was one early fall trip to Cabbage Island when I discovered just how trusting my long-suffering spouse could be. As we continued the next day around the southern end of Tumbo Island and headed for East Point, we encountered the large back-eddy that circulates water, jetsam and all manner of unsuspecting paddlers into deeper waters past Boiling Reef. Flood or ebb, the effect at 5 knots is much the same. Though I’d spent many enjoyable solo hours out there on nasty winter days, I could see this wasn’t for her. Hooking up my medium-length towline, I stated matter-offactly, “Honey, relax, keep your hips loose. Your job for the next hour or so is to keep your kayak stabilized with slap supports and sculling as we make our way back in. Do not capsize, please. I’ll get us back to shore!” “Okay, I’ll try,” came the reply. We did eventually inch our way back safely, but not before locals put out in a Zodiac to offer assistance. I refused, claiming confidence with our progress, perhaps too embarrassed and delusional about our situation. As it turned out, the swirling waters closer to East Point only compounded our problems. I lengthened the line sufficiently to distance us further from each other, provoking a none-too enthusiastic response from behind. In the absence of available flowers, a full-course meal back at a nice restaurant washed away any bad memories as forgiveness flowed. June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com A fast, nimble, dynamically stable sea kayak was eventually acquired, a McNulty Huntsman designed in Scotland. No more borrowing or renting. Finally, Yvonne had her own kayak. One very blustery day we headed out for a very real rough water paddle. The backup plan included the availability of a coastal trail as a bailout and a lee shore with incoming tide. Out of the bay off the headland there was a lively sea in the freshening breeze. As our kayaks danced together, I looked at my wife’s face. Her beautiful brown eyes beamed excitement. There was a huge, if slightly nervous grin—a priceless moment together which shines out as a highlight of my paddling experience. © Doug Lloyd is a Victoria paddler and writer who enjoys exploring the waters of the Pacific Northwest. He’s happily married with two children, and they paddle as a family when they can. Adventures in the Kingdom of Tonga Whale Discoveries Kayak the Vava’u and Ha’apai Islands. Experience Polynesian culture, natural history, exquisite snorkelling, idyllic beach camps & fine cuisine. Whale watch aboard MV Tropic Bird! www.fikco.com • www.whalediscoveries.com 9 Lo My Paddling Partner H aving been born and raised in Vancouver, I’ve always loved the sea, but I was unprepared for the passion that has become part of my later life—adventure sea kayaking. Thirteen years ago, my family was invited to spend a weekend with my great friend Leslie and her family at their summer home on Bowen Island. Leslie suggested that we take our two older children for a kayak lesson at the rental shop. The proprietor was an amiable young man who inspired us with his passion for the sea’s flora and fauna, and taught us how to trust the kayaks by having us stand up in the boats, playing a racing game. We were hooked. The first few trips were taken with our daughters, but as we expanded our horizons, the two of us took subsequent trips on our own. Neither of our husbands has the slightest interest in either kayaking or camping. My husband is extremely nervous in small boats and actually has a reputation for capsizing canoes and skiffs. The only time I was ever able to entice him on a camping trip was with the promise of a tennis court and pub adjacent to the campsite. He likes his creature comforts. Nonetheless, he is very supportive of our adventures. MEET KAYAK ADVENTURER Hayley Shephard Hayley will entertain and enthrall with stories and images from her expeditions, sharing the joys, lessons and challenges of paddling in truly extraordinary places. Four presentations in Victoria and Nanaimo, BC sponsored by WaveLength Magazine. $10 at the door. Solo Circumnavigation of Haidi Gwaii / Queen Charlotte Islands Fundraisers for the Georgia Strait Alliance NANAIMO: June 7 at Malaspina University/College, Building 200 Room 203, 7:30 pm VICTORIA: June 8 at the University of Victoria, David Strong Building, C103, 7:30 pm For info on Haida Gwaii shows: 250-753-3459 / gsa@georgiastrait.org. Antarctica Adventure NANAIMO: June 22 at Malaspina University/College, Building 200, Room 203, 7:30 pm VICTORIA: September 28 at UVIC Human Resource and Social Development Building Room A240, 7:30 pm Dian Weimer Leslie’s husband, while supportive, thinks we’re slightly mad embarking on dangerous excursions. When we planned a paddle on the Squamish Estuary on an exceptionally cold but sunny day in January to see the hundreds of eagles congregated there, he made the comment that he should take out additional life insurance on Leslie. I think he was only half joking. The first thing Leslie always does at the end of a trip is call to assure him we are alive and well. Our journeys have taken us to coastal destinations where, thirteen years ago, we would never have expected to find ourselves. Gradually Leslie has taken charge of charts and tide tables while I have become the chef and meal planner. This division of labor has worked very well for us. The self-reliance and special ‘solitude’ experienced on our paddling adventures is treasured—no cell phones, emails, Blackberrys, TV or any of the other trappings of modern life intrude. We travel with Nature’s rhythm. Over the years we’ve met other women who’ve wanted to join us, but we’ve developed such a rhythm together that we don’t want to break that chemistry. A sense of humor, patience and trust in each other have been the most important components of our friendship as we’ve explored ever more challenging areas on the BC coast. One of my observations about kayaking is how many women participate, including female tour guides. I’ve considered why, and concluded it’s because paddling is necessarily a co-operative, non-competitive activity. Paddling companions have to work together to create all of the aspects of a ‘home’—pitch the tent, make meals, clean up and wash clothes. And on the water, Mother Nature prevails. Winds, tides, currents and weather take precedence over a paddler’s agenda, making co-operation a necessity. You can email Hayley at oceanmaid1@yahoo.com 10 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Leslie and Dian, adventuring together. Mark Churchland photo While kayak touring is non-competitive, I must admit that Leslie and I have twice participated in the ‘Round Bowen Kayak Race’ and have entered the race again this year, June 3rd. We are among the oldest of the competitors, but it’s a personal challenge and a lot of fun. © Dian Weimer is a self-employed accountant and ESL teacher. She is presently working on a cookbook for paddlers. June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Editor’s Note: To learn more about the Bowen Race, call 1-800-60 KAYAK or see www.roundbowenrace.org. 11 KNOW YOUR NEIGHBORS—Bryan Nichols Double the Romance? S o you’ve been thinking about getting a double kayak. Sure it’s a big commitment, but doubles are romantic, right? They can only improve your love life, like bicycles built for two. I’ve paddled plenty of doubles and I’ve seen numerous couples paddle them during my years of guiding. I’ve often thought couples in doubles would make a fascinating sociological study. Thus, in the social spirit of this issue, let’s try to decide if being joined at the hip to the one you love would be good or not-so-good, romantically speaking. Sea kayaking is romantic, isn’t it? Sure it is. Sunsets on the beach. A cozy little tent in the wilderness. Bottles of fine wine extracted from the bow of your kayak. It’s possible to squeeze a wide assortment of romantic accoutrements into the big hatches of a double kayak. Some have huge center hatches that might accommodate a cooler full of deli treats, a favorite pet or even a love child, though you’ll want to stick to protected waters for the last two. There are a lot of pros and cons to consider. For example, a lot of people don’t realize it, but doubles are usually faster than singles. I know, romantically speaking faster isn’t always better, but nearly everyone is more satisfied with a faster kayak. I’m talking about touring doubles here, ones with waterproof hatches large enough to store your tent and interlocking sleeping bags. There are plenty of pudgy recreational doubles that aren’t especially fast or even seaworthy, but let’s assume you want a kayak that can take you on overnight trips out to deserted beaches. That would be a touring double, and they’re usually longer and faster than singles. In many ways, bigger is better with boats, so doubles aren’t just faster. The added length, width and height usually make doubles drier, more stable and more seaworthy. Some kayak touring companies avoid singles altogether—inexperienced paddlers are much less likely to tip and go swimming if they’re in a double. If the object of your affection is wary of sea kayaking, a safe, solid double could be just the thing to win him/her over. How about comfort? Doubles often have bigger cockpits and more room for your butt and legs. There are some exceptions (depending on how the boat is configured), but plenty of people appreciate the extra space doubles usually offer. Those bigger cockpits make getting in and out easier as well, and because you’re always doing so at the same time, you’ll be able to help balance each other. www.automarine.ca info@automarine.ca Average time of assembly 12 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 and smooth forever.” If that sounds hopelessly romantic to you, the following list might help you decide whether to take the plunge. So how do things add up? If this list still leaves you wondering, try renting a double, or choosing a guided trip that uses them. You and your honey might find it’s just the thing—or maybe you’ll end whacking each other with paddles. Vive la romance! See pros and cons next page. BRITISH COLUMBIA KAYAK TOURS LOW COST, SELF-CATERED, 18 YEARS IN BUSINESS Trips to... 4-8 day trips for fit, selfsufficient adventurers. • Gulf Islands • Broken Group • Queen Charlottes • Broughton Archipelago • Nootka Island—Nuchatlitz © Al Harvey photo: www.slidefarm.com Finally, money can be an important issue. For couples, one double is typically less pricey than two singles of similar quality. Buying a double may be a way to get you both out on the water without breaking the bank, and finding one used double can be easier than tracking down two suitable secondhand singles. Believe me, paddling mismatched singles can cause all kinds of romantic problems. Are you musing marriage? Do you have concerns about commitment? Buying a double kayak is like buying the cow, instead of just renting it. On second thought, cows and kayaks don’t mix, even in analogies. Let’s say that buying a double is saying you have so much faith in the relationship you’re willing to put it in fiberglass. Diamonds aren’t really forever and a nine meter double sea kayak is a much more substantial commitment to togetherness than a little hunk of carbon. You don’t share an engagement ring, but you are linked, literally, by the boat. Nothing says “I love you and want to spend happy recreational time with you for the lengthy life span of fiberglass” like a double. A double kayak, after all, really is a commitment to togetherness. With most doubles you can’t go it alone because you won’t be able to lift it onto your vehicle. Even if you’re exceptionally strong, when paddled solo, most doubles don’t handle well in any kind of wind. Some of the smaller recreational doubles are exceptions to this, especially those that have open cockpits, but they aren’t as seaworthy and often don’t have enough dry storage to be suitable for touring. Are you optimistic? If the romantic thing works out, you won’t have to lift or paddle the boat alone anyway. Alas—for better or worse, fiberglass kayaks outlast the average human relationship. As a result, there are more than a few used doubles for sale. If you’re not superstitious, you might find a great deal. Will your love life benefit from sea kayaking togetherness, even if someone else’s didn’t? Buying a double for you and the object of your affection is like saying “I think our relationship is so strong that the occasional application of gel coat to the scratches will keep it shiny We paddle mostly single kayaks but we bring some doubles, and we share responsibility for meals. A DV E NT U R E info@gck.ca O UT F ITT E R S www.gck.ca 250-247-8277 $475–$1340 Cdn See itineraries: www.gck.ca s kids kayaking lesson mmes kids racing progra on instructi Awesome ! Safe ty pa ddli ng gear women’s workshops GEAR UP FOR SUMMER PADDLING! www.oceanriver.com www.performancepaddling.com (for Racers) 1824 Store Street Victoria BC Phone: 250. 381.4233 or 800.909.4233 •Sales •Instruction •Rentals July.indd 1 JuneWavelength / July 2006Junewww.WaveLengthMagazine.com •Repairs 3/27/06 6:03:41 PM 13 Some Pros and Cons of Double Kayak Romance But... that forced togetherness means you can never escape for some time alone. As you might have noticed, not every relationship benefits from the couple always being within paddle-whacking distance of each other. If you’re in a relationship where ‘time out’ is crucial to maintaining the peace, think carefully about a double. Couples in doubles stay close enough to converse the entire trip. Communication is the key to a successful relationship, right? If you have a problem or see something cool, you don’t have to call the love of your life over to talk. They’re right there with you the whole time. But... a lot of the time, the person in the back can’t really hear the person in the bow, who has to twist mightily to point their mouth in the right direction. This is especially true in any sort of wind. This can occasionally be a blessing, but most of the time it’s frustrating. In a double your bodies are connected by the boat itself, the very thing that’s keeping you afloat and alive. This is a unique physical connection, and can help bring you together, especially if you’re both busy and rarely get to feel connected. But... in many doubles you’re not actually close enough to touch each other. The solid deck between you creates an odd sort of barrier, especially as it points one person away from the other. In singles, one kayaker can pull up beside the other, lean over and smooch away. You’d need exceptional balance and contortionist skills to smooch in most doubles. Doubles tend to have larger hatches and spaces for coolers, wine bottles, bulky double sleeping bags, etc. All that is good news for shorter, luxurious trips that lend themselves to romantic interludes. But... two singles might end up having more overall storage room than one double, which is probably only important if you’re planning longer expeditions. Working together to pilot your own vessel built-for-two across the mighty ocean brings you together in a way that dinner and a movie just can’t. But... the person in the front usually has little control over where the kayak goes. This can trigger a frustrating feeling of helplessness and/or complaints about incompetent steering. If you’re a control freak, you’re probably not going to like the front of a double. Hey—you’re not dating a control freak are you? When you’re paddling in synch, your rhythmic strokes look and feel very ‘together’. It’s great to physically experience what it’s like to be a coordinated, connected couple. But... when you’re not paddling in synch, you keep bashing your paddles together, a jarring reminder of… well, you decide the appropriate symbolism for your relationship here. Meaghan Hennessy photo, www.virgamedia.com In a double, the stronger paddler can’t get too far ahead, which can nip many a potential conflict in the bud. Also, the weaker paddler will never have to feel bad about keeping up. This pair of benefits is especially helpful for couples that include one impatient, aggressive paddler, and one ‘stop and fish or photograph’ sort of paddler. © Biologist Bryan Nichols has owned at least four singles over the years but is seriously considering a folding double, all the better to mix romance and travel. Be sure and visit our hotlinked Doubles Directory at www.WaveLengthMagazine.com. 14 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Partners With Hearing Loss Paula Johanson H John Wilcox Herbert photo ave you ever capsized on a calm day, for no obvious reason? The quirks of my inner ears make me stumble on linoleum, fall off a bicycle or tilt a kayak past the tipping point. So now I wear non-skid shoes, own a second-hand three-wheel bike, and take precautions when paddling. I’ve been canoeing for years, but I took up kayaking since losing almost half my hearing seven years ago. My boat is a rotomolded plastic kayak with an extra-large cockpit. Since I have little or no sense of balance, I want easy entry and exit, especially if the kayak flips over. It’s short and wide, but then, so am I. Never met a deaf paddler? Guess again. If you see three grey-haired people out in boats this Sunday, odds are at least one has age-related or work-related hearing loss. The friend who paddles off from your group may not be grumpy, just hard of hearing. Get your own ears tested. If you live long enough, you too will probably have some hearing loss. Communication is always important with a group of paddlers and even more so if some of them don’t hear well. Voices carry well over calm water, but in moving water, like surf or river currents, the background noise can mask voices. On moving water, don’t count on a hard-of-hearing paddler to hear anything other than “Hey!”—if that. My partner hollers across the bay to get my attention, but that doesn’t always work. A small air-horn works better, and é My husband dripping water down my neck! It’s unlikely your children w i l l e v e r s a y, “Remember when we mowed the yard together?” www.pygmyboats.com P YGMY rugged top rated versatile ultra-light P r o d u c e d b y N o r t h A m e r i c a ’s l e a d i n g w o o d e n b o a t k i t m a n u f a c t u r e r. Designed by veteran wilderness paddler John Lockwood, built by you. P y g m y B o a t s I n c . , P. O . B o x 1 5 2 9 , D e p t . 4 , P o r t T o w n s e n d , W A 9 8 3 6 8 • 3 6 0 . 3 8 5 . 6 1 4 3 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 15 fits in a life jacket pocket. We have whistles on our life jackets as well. Remember that conversation usually happens when people see each other’s faces. You’d be surprised how much lip-reading everyone does. Turning your face away from people who are hard of hearing not only aims your voice away, it means they can’t see if you just said you’re ready to “go far” or “go to the bar”—and whether you’re laughing or scared. When paddling double, someone who is hard of hearing will want to be bow paddler, so the stern paddler’s voice will carry forward. But someone who is deaf and uses sign language may prefer to be stern paddler, to see what the bow paddler is signing. My partner prefers to put me in the bow, and assures me that he’ll smack me with his paddle to get my attention. The first time we rented a double kayak, my partner received special instructions from the clerk. It was only later that I found out these were not safety instructions, but a detailed explanation of how to scoop up a few drops of water on a paddle blade and carefully tip them down the bow paddler’s neck—and then to get the paddle back in the water before being caught in the act. People who use sign language will definitely need a paddle tether, even in calm water, to avoid losing their paddle. I’ve never actually used more than minimal signs when kayaking, as paddling gloves definitely limit the expressiveness of your fingers! As for rough water, check out the conditions and make sure everyone knows the plan—and how to change it if necessary. This is especially important when relying on sign language. In rivers, paddlers usually go single file through the best path, but when at sea or on a rough lake, paddlers should go side-by-side or two-by-two so they can see each other. Communication is the biggest issue, but awareness of conditions is also important, especially for solo paddlers. What if the weather changes? What if the fog rolls in? Not being able to hear a foghorn is bad enough, but in suddenly reduced visibility, a paddler who can’t hear echoes off a cliff may wander down a fjord or out to sea. Plan ahead, casually but consistently: where would you pull ashore? And make a study of weather in general. In some places, traffic is the major concern and you need to be aware of boat movements. Don’t count on other boats, large or small, to avoid you. Balance issues can provoke nausea. Since my hearing loss, I can’t handle rollercoasters (or even watch a video taken with a hand-held camera), so I was very careful the first few times sea kayaking. To my delight, swells and a little chop didn’t make me seasick or dizzy. Perhaps the full-body sensation of muscle movement helps my brain cope with the inner-ear signals. Now my partner wants to go kayak surfing on the exposed west coast. But first I think I’ll sign up for a Surf Kayaking course at the local paddling store. If I’m going outside my comfort zone, I want some training from an expert! © Paula Johanson is a Victoria, BC freelance writer of books and articles. This summer her paddle group is touring waterside marina pubs. Northern Wave Kayak RENTALS INSTRUCTION KAYAK SALES 250 655-7192 2071 Malaview Ave. West Sidney, BC www.northernwavekayak.com 16 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Rainbow Paddling Photos and story by Dallas and Ardith Hinton O ur daughter Nora, born with Down’s Syndrome, has for some years been known as Rainbow—she chose that name because she loves nature and it seemed to suit her. At the end of Grade 10 she had a hemiplegic stroke leaving one side paralyzed. Since then she’s been working hard to regain the ability to walk and to carry out many other daily tasks. We’ve discovered many sports activities we might never have tried before and find that most can be adapted quite well to accommodate people with special needs. Kayaking is one of the adapted sports Rainbow has enjoyed the most and has had the most success with. A couple of years ago we heard about the Vancouver Parks Board Access Services Outdoor Adapted Program which offers disabled people opportunities to experience a number of sports, including kayaking. We signed up on the theory that Rainbow might like some of the activities and, in any case, it was all good experience. When it came time for the kayaking segment we were a bit uncertain as to how she could ever be safe, let alone enjoy herself. We were certainly surprised! We discovered that some of the kayaks had been modified with pontoons or outriggers to prevent them from tipping over. That was a great relief for us, since we knew if she did tip over she’d be in a lot of trouble. For her first time out she went in a double with her companion. This was only partially successful, since she really couldn’t paddle herself and said she felt like a passenger. She had a short excursion and then came back to shore. A little while later she was offered a chance to try a solo ride in a kayak that was fitted with an OAR as well as pontoons. “An OAR,” I wondered. “How is she going to use that?” It seems that an OAR is actually a One Armed Rig, wonderfully designed and built by Nanaimo’s Bruce Fuoco, himself a hemiplegic kayaker. This attempt was a complete success—Rainbow paddled for a long time, getting coaching from both Bruce and Mercia Sixta (with boats generJune / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Rainbow paddling her adapted kayak. ously donated by Western Canoeing & Kayaking of Abbotsford, BC). The whole time she was out on the water she was grinning from ear to ear, and eventually was so exhausted she had to be towed back to shore. For the rest of the summer all we heard was “when can I go paddling again?” After some discussion (read, “pressure from Rainbow”), we decided to take her and her companion to Mercia’s adapted kayaking weekend in September. She had some pool training and then went to nearby Alice Lake where Bruce gave Rainbow more coaching. The weather cooperated and the people were marvelous—Rainbow had a wonderful time and my wife and I were becoming increasingly jealous of all the fun she was having. We were particularly impressed with the incredibly supportive atmosphere, with everyone sharing ideas and helping when needed—a rare treat for us! The weekend was marvelous and we went back to Vancouver thinking and talking about possibilities. Over the winter we did a lot of reading (WaveLength inspired us) and I took a course at one of our local pools, eventually achieving the lofty title of ‘Flatwater Kayaker’ and being declared capable of rescuing myself (‘Solo Capsize Recovery’)—the hardest part of the course was getting up the courage to capsize! We decided to get our own boats, so we talked to Mercia who recommended the Necky Santa Cruze (with which we’re very happy). Bruce not only supplied the parts for pontoons and an OAR, but also came over to the house and fitted them. We modified our old motor home so we could carry the kayaks on the roof (we couldn’t pull a trailer because of the wheelchair lift on the back) and although it was a bit of a challenge, it’s worked well.é 17 Leading her mom and dad. Sunshine Kayaking Rentals Lessons Sales Tours Helping you discover the Sunshine Coast since 1991 Check out our HUGE ‘Spring Into Paddling Sale’ Since then, we’ve been twice to Hayward Lake as well as Trout Lake, and twice to kayaking camps in Squamish. Now we’re increasingly able to go out independently as a family. Each time Rainbow’s skills and confidence have improved and she stays out for longer and longer. You’ve only to look at her face to see the joy she’s experiencing! We’ve discovered a new hobby with great new friends who understand disabilities and can see the person behind them. We’ve discovered a new way to enjoy the outdoors as well as an activity that will help our daughter with her mobility, increase her independence, and help her develop her social skills. If you’d like to know more about the community of paddlers with disabilities, here are a couple of links to get you started: • Bonnie Friesen c/o Vancouver Parks Board: http://vancouver.ca/parks/rec/access/adapted. htm#outdoor • CORK (Creative Options for Recreational Kayaking), c/o www.pikakayak.com/ Featuring © Dallas and Ardith are retired teachers. They have been avid RVers for many years and are becoming more confident kayakers following in the wake of their daughter Rainbow. A beautiful 40 min. ferry ride from Vancouver to the Gateway of the Sunshine Coast Molly’s Lane, Gibsons, BC Tel: 604-886-9760 www.sunshinekayaking.com Editor’s Note: Mercia Sixta won a Volunteer of the Year award in 1998 from the Vancouver Parks Board for her work with disabled paddlers. In May this year she was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Vancouver Island Paddlefest in Ladysmith. See News, page 48. 54559_Salus_BijouxAd 3/2/06 8:15 AM Page 1 The SALUS bijoux B ab y VesPFD t pint-sized The Salus Bijoux baby vest offers unprecedented security, safety and comfort for babies 9 to 25 lbs. Our onepiece front design will turn your baby face up from a face forward position, while a 3-piece collar cradles the head when floating. Mesh harness and a short front mean your baby will be comfortable sitting upright, lying down, or while positioned in a baby carrier. The Bijoux, winner of the Canadian Safe Boating Award (CASBA) for Best New Safety Product. customer service: 1.877.418.9998 • tel: 519.579.3131 www.salusmarine.com 18 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 19 Paddling the Hudson Story and photos by Alan Feldstein I am in Manhattan and I arrived by kayak—how many people can say that? Probably not many, except those like me, who have participated in the annual Great Hudson River Paddle (GHRP). The GHRP is a group experience like no other, a 10-day, 150-mile kayak trip down the Hudson, from Albany to downtown Manhattan, to promote the Hudson River Valley Greenway as a scenic waterway. In the 70s and 80s the Hudson was a virtual sewer with toxins, industrial waste and other polluting substances dumped untreated from its banks. Over the years, great efforts have been made to clean up the river, and in April 2001, Governor George E. Pataki provided a $1 million grant to establish a Hudson River Greenway Water Trail. While the GHRP is not a beginner’s paddle, with daily paddles averaging about 16 miles, it can be enjoyed by just about everyone who has reasonable skills, endurance and a commitment to have a good time with a diverse group of people—in our case 27 paddlers plus six guides. We had teachers, doctors, computer programmers, one lawyer (by day I am a Los Angeles attorney), a professional 20 Our group at the George Washington Bridge. photographer and one father/son team who made the trip in a double kayak. Prior to my arrival in Albany, the organizers sent me a large red duffle bag which I was told I could fill with whatever I wanted. Our basic camping and paddling gear would go in the boats but Johnny Miller and his team would take all the red duffle bags, our snacks and any tired kayakers who needed a day off from paddling, and drive down the NY thruway to the next stop. Johnny is the classic New York organizer whose favorite phrase is “I can hook you up with that.” When we arrived, there would be cold drinks, fruit, snacks and music, with Mark the DJ playing everything from the Beatles to Marley to Miles. Each night, we would be taken by van, first to a school, army base, YMCA, hockey rink, wherever there was hot water to shower, and then off to dinner. Dinners were often at the homes of gracious people, and in some cases the entire community came out to feed us barbecued chicken, homemade ice cream and all sorts of other delicacies. What all this means is that although we camped for 10 days, you couldn’t say we were roughing it! The first day, we pulled out of Albany under threatening skies, but it didn’t rain till we got to our campsite at New Baltimore. The next day we arose at 6, and under gray skies and light rain, ate, packed up, did some yoga and were on the water by 8, which was the schedule most days. Known as ‘the river that flows both ways’, the Hudson’s early morning tide was flowing toward Manhattan so we left early to paddle with the current. We had a few days of rain and only one bad day of wind. When it got really hot, we took off our hats, filled them with water and poured them over our heads. And if that was not sufficient, any one of our fellow paddlers was happy to give us a blast of the Hudson www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Saugerties • • Wappinger Falls • Cold Spring • Annsville • Yonkers New York underestimate a pod of water tested, hungry, tired kayakers. Despite some serious firepower from their cleverly rigged fire extinguisher, we vanquished the locals and paddled to camp victori-é Georgia Strait Alliance’s 2006 KAYAK-KRAZY RAFFLE! 1st 16.5 ft. WaV Kayak a fibreglass, ocean kayak. Donated by Atlantis Kayaks www.atlantiskayaks.com. Value $3,614.95 2nd Kayak Trip for Two (all-inclusive multiday trip, fall 2006 or 2007, based on availability). Donated by Pacific Northwest Expeditions www.seakayakbc.com. Value $1,000 NEW KIT! 17' x 22" x 42 lbs. Just one of 32 beautiful CLC boats. Albany New Baltimore • Athens • Shearwater 17. One of our new series designed by Eric Schade. River with a large water cannon. After New Baltimore we were off to Athens, where our landing coincided with their community festival. In the evening we were treated to fireworks, but for me the fireflies were an even more amazing sight—something you don’t see in California. They were better than any fireworks show. The next day we were off to Saugerties, which has a beautiful lighthouse that is now a bed and breakfast. It was there that we honed our water fighting skills. I learned that women tend to stick together and aquit themselves well when it comes to water fights. The next two days were the long ones: 17 miles to beautiful Norrie Point State Park and then 21 miles to Wappinger Falls. While the sites along the river are beautiful, including the old ruins of Bannerman’s Arsenal, those days with wind, heat, humidity, delayed jet lag and paddling against the current wiped me out. Just before arriving at Cold Spring we were met by a group of local kayakers, and a great water battle ensued. Never 3rd ‘Skedaddle’. Two person inflatable kayak. Donated by West Marine www.westmarine.com. Value $367.99 3,600 tickets printed: 3 for $15 or $6 each DRAW: Sept. 12, 2006. GSA does not sell or trade names with any other party. Winners consent to the release of their names by the licensee. All proceeds to marine conservation efforts. For tickets and complete rules of play • 250-753-3459 • raffle@GeorgiaStrait.org • www.GeorgiaStrait.org BC Gaming Event Licence #TR-RG26133 “Know your limit, play within it.” June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Our precision-cut kits are complete. And easy. The best boats you can build! CLCboats.com 1805 George Avenue, Annapolis, MD 21401 410 267.0137 21 Never underestimate a pod of kayakers at the end of the day! ous. Cold Spring is a delightful town where we showered at Hudson Valley Outfitters, a major sponsor who were kind enough to supply me with a boat, and we were treated to an incredible dinner as the guest of John Cronin, the original River Keeper who patrolled the Hudson and helped stop the continued pollution of the river. The next day took us to Annsville, where we received a history lesson from Colonel (Ret) James Johnson, who used to teach revolutionary war history at West Point. Arriving in full Revolutionary Army uniform replete with musket, the Colonel gave a lecture on the Hudson, West Point, and their impact on the revolutionary war. Annsville was the end of the Highlands part of the Hudson and we headed into the home stretch and more urbanization, including passing a nuclear power plant (cameras in your pocket please or draw an armed response, we were warned), Croton Point and then Yonkers—home to the Yonkers Paddling and Rowing Club which has been in existence since 1886. From Yonkers it is about 17 miles to the Downtown Boathouse in Manhattan. Normally that kind of trip could take five to six hours, but because of the fast current we made it under four. The early-morning rush of navigating a small, one-person craft past the island of Manhattan and all of its landmarks seen anew from water level—the George Washington Bridge, Grant’s Tomb, the Empire State Building, churches, skyscrapers and apartment buildings galore—is a feeling not to be missed. We were escorted by a police boat through the large-boat traffic of massive oil barges and elegant yachts, and even past the QE2, with the Statue of Liberty raising her torch in the distance, and finally the Downtown Boathouse where we received a heroes’ welcome. That night it felt great to have a private shower, and to set up my tent in my hotel room to dry (causing some confused looks from the hotel staff). But it was not more than a day or two before I yearned to be back on the water with my fellow paddlers. As everyone knows, kayakers are a friendly, welcoming, fun-loving group. That was especially true of the paddlers on the Great Hudson River Paddle. © Alan Feldstein lives in Southern California where he is a board member of the Adventures’ Club of Los Angeles and serves as a sea kayak instructor through the UCLA Aquatic Center. He has paddled extensively from Baja to BC, and on Lake Tanganika in Africa. He recently climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro. See www.in-lifeadventures.com. Editor’s Note: Thanks to the GHRP organizer Scott Keller for help with the map of the route. A more detailed map with all the sites on the Greenway Water Trail is available from him: scott.keller@hudsongreenway.state.ny.us. This year’s event will be held July 13-22. See www. hrwa.org. Amanda Marksteiner in New York tells us that the Downtown Boathouse provides FREE paddling opportunities to New Yorkers to help build support for public access on the Hudson. www.downtownboathouse.org (646) 613-0375. 22 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Can Paddlers Save the World? Story and photos by Neil Schulman A bill in the Oregon State Legislature woke a sleeping giant. Now I just hope the giant stays awake. The giant was Oregon’s community of paddlers. Last summer, emails started flying around about Senate Bill 1028. When I saw the fine print, I realized the bill did two things. First, it charged a $20 registration fee for every kayak, canoe, rowing shell or other humanpowered craft. Second—hidden in legalese, but more insidious—it named some Oregon waterways as “non-navigable” and for all intents and purposes privatized and closed to fishing, boating and recreation. The bill was on the fast track. It was sponsored by the leadership of both Republican and Democratic parties, and the Governor was hedging. It looked like a hard train to stop. In the States, river access laws are obscure and date back to the 19th century, so they’re tough targets around which to rally people. But the proponents made a mistake by throwing in the boatregistration fee—an easy way to get paddlers riled up. The email flurries began, joined by fishermen, a group with a similar interest but who were much more organized. Soon the ire shifted from the boat registration issue to an understanding of the greater threat to our right to float rivers. A few weeks later, the Senate held its first committee hearing on the bill. The paddlers’ email network became a strategy session, listing which commit- June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Wetlands may lack popular appeal, but paddlers are a natural constituency. tee members to target and supplying examples of emails sent to legislators. At the hearing, 30 people spoke about the bill—one in favor, 29 against. The bill never got out of committee. As I write this, the Oregon public still has the right to float the state’s waterways, regardless of who owns the shoreline. Like our beaches, the rivers still belong to the people. Inspiring as that story is, it can be relatively rare for sea kayakers to become such a force. Other groups have a much stronger history of environmental activism. Much of American river conservation dates from the transformation of whitewater boaters like Martin Litton and Tim Palmer into environmental activists. Among their many wins were the National Wild and Scenic River System and stopping the damming of the Grand Canyon. Likewise, recreational and commercial fishing have strong lobbying and activist networks working to protect wild salmon from dam operations and fish farms. But sea kayakers, for some reason I can’t pin down, seem to be more reluctant to get involved, at least in the States. When the topic of conservation comes up, folks will nod, and then the conversation shifts back to how to initiate a bow rudder. But the tide is turning. Here’s what you can do to be part of the growing conservation movement among sea kayakers. GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY There’s a lot of work to be done, and one way you can help is by rolling up your sleeves. Trees need to be planted, noxious weeds pulled, water quality samples collected, stream habitat restored—and that’s all work done by volunteers. Wherever you live, there’s a group that can use your help. é 23 Do environmentally active paddlers have more fun? Ask Jodi and Gabriel. USE YOUR VOICE But on-the-ground volunteering isn’t going to be enough. We all know that environmental health also depends on laws—until fish farms are properly regulated and streams are protected, our environment will be at risk. And the only way to make that happen is to affect the ways our governments make decisions. The fact is, the folks who hold the reins and the purse strings—elected officials, agency staff—respond to pressure. Even if they want to do the right thing, the other side is pressuring them too. So paddlers need to talk and write 24 letters and emails to the folks who make the decisions, speak up at hearings and make their voices heard. This can be intimidating. Like many reading this magazine, I’m more comfortable in a paddle jacket than a suit jacket. And I’m happier in a boat than a meeting room. But as you’ll see, it doesn’t need to be hard or scary. And more importantly, it works. VOTE Obviously, who makes the laws is a big issue. In all probability, everyone reading this votes, but do you know how your elected officials vote on www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 environmental topics? And not everyone votes in the small local elections, like for the City Council, or the bond measure that will acquire new parks. In the US, most elections are decided not in the general election but in the primary, where sometimes as little as 30% of the electorate even bothers to vote. Take the few minutes to find out how your local representatives are voting on environmental issues. PUT YOUR MONEY WHERE YOUR PADDLE IS We’ve all taken on a gear-intensive sport. A carbon fiber paddle costs $375 US. A Goretex drysuit costs about $850. And that doesn’t even include the kayak. On the other hand, calling 2,000 voters before a local election costs about $780 here in Oregon in phone costs, voter lists, and staff time. Make regular contributions—even if it’s a small amount—to some conservation groups that you value. SO THAT’S WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE But it’s an intimidating mix, right? We all have day jobs, kids to pick up at school, and we’re not independently wealthy. And some of this stuff is hideously complex. How we can pull this off? Well the fact is, we can pull it off—and we can have a heck of a good time in the process. 1. Have buddies. This issue is about paddling partners—and the same buddies you paddle with can be your buddies when it comes time to protecting your favorite natural places. Even though ‘environmental advocacy’ may not sound as much June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com fun as paddling, it can be a blast when you’re doing it with good folks. 2. Get Local. We’re bombarded daily by messages about ‘the global environmental crisis’. Global Warming, melting of the ice caps, the ozone hole, dying coral reefs. Forget about that for now—think about your neighborhood, and what’s going on where you live and paddle. Don’t give into the gloom. Focus on the areas you love. 3. You don’t have to be an expert. To be effective at pushing a good decision through the local city council or state or provincial legislature, you don’t need to be an expert on ‘Total Maximum Daily Loads’ or ‘Township-Range-Section of Pesticide Use Reporting’. There are plenty of conservation groups that will happily contact you when a key issue is coming up, boil the issues down to common English, and tell you who to call or email. Most conservation groups have activists’ networks you can join. 4. Numbers Matter. No elected official or key agency staffer will listen to one person. They listen to numbers. No one letter, no matter how well-written, will matter as much as 25 or 50. The goal is to let folks know that a lot of people want them to do something—vote this way on that bill, make sure parks are funded in the budget cycle, and so forth. We win when a lot us do a tiny bit, at the right time—we lose when a handful of us try to do everything. Your best move is to get in the habit of adding your voice regularly. é 25 5. Don’t be intimidated. Sure, talking to public officials can be intimidating. Sometimes they’ll ignore what you say anyway. On the other hand, I live in a city of 1.6 million people, but I still run into the head of the local parks department and my Metro Councilor at the coffee shop. Don’t let the intimidation factor stop you. It’s simply your right as a citizen in a democracy. 6. It’s fun. If you think conservation is a lonely business, think again. You’ll meet some great comrades-in-arms. Chances are a bunch of them are paddlers, too. ONE HOUR A PADDLE Every time I go paddling, I’m thankful—for blue water, birds soaring overhead, wild places, and wild things that have adapted to living side by side with us. I figure I owe something—specifically, an hour. For every day I paddle, I figure I should give an hour back somehow—helping plant trees, restoring habitat, and advocating for wild places. It’s an easy promise to keep. WE CAN WIN After I finish this article, I’m going to paddle around Ross Island in the Willamette River. In the middle of urban Portland, I’ll paddle under active Bald Eagle and Great Blue Heron nests. Upstream of the island is Oaks Bottom wetlands, the first Wildlife Refuge created in Portland. It was going to be paved to make a racetrack until a bunch of citizens banded together and told the city they wanted wildlife and trails instead. The city listened. Now they’re trying to acquire Ross Island and add it to the refuge. And the chances are good that it will happen. Maybe even before this article goes to print. © Neil Schulman is the training coordinator for an environmental leadership development program, and is a steering committee member for the Oregon League of Conservation Voters. He works and plays in Portland, Oregon. SOME GROUPS TO CONTACT OREGON Oregon League of Conservation Voters: www.olcv.org Portland Audubon Society: www.audubonportland.org WASHINGTON People for Puget Sound: www.pugetsound.org BRITISH COLUMBIA Georgia Strait Alliance: www.georgiastrait.org Friends of Clayoquot Sound: www.focs.ca 26 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 MOTHERSHIP MEANDERING—Alan Wilson Paddling to Dinner y favorite paddling partner is my wife Laurie, and our kayaks of choice are usually our twin Necky Gannets—hers blue, mine yellow. These 11’-6” kayaks were acquired especially for our mothership, the 1927 fishboat I featured in my Mothership Meanderings column until we sold her last year after eight seasons. We were able to enjoy great paddling up and down the coast from our boat, using her as a mobile launching platform, seeking out isolated spots to anchor away from the madding crowd. We still have the Gannets but I think they miss their mother. They missing us too, these days, as we’re finding so little time to get on the water. In the years we were taking monthlong cruising holidays, we would almost always spend our first and last night in Nanaimo harbor. Nanaimo is a sprawling city of about 75,000 lying on the east coast of Vancouver Island, some 25 kilometers across Georgia Strait from the metropolis of Greater Vancouver on the continental mainland. It’s an old coal mining town (older than Vancouver) that grew up into a very livable little city with a fantastic waterfront and an incredible view across the Strait to the snowcapped mountains of the mainland. It’s from Nanaimo that we catch the ferry for the 20 minute ride to our home island, Gabriola, and Nanaimo is where many Gabriolans work or study or shop. From the slopes of Mt. Benson, you can look down from Malaspina University-College to the harbor created by Newcastle and Protection Islands, a shallow basin studded with boats of all descriptions anchored between them. Here yachters wait for rough conditions on Georgia Strait to subside before heading across to the mainland and points north. Either that or they’re waiting for the tidal turn at nearby Dodd Narrows so they can pass into the inner waterway created by the chain of Gulf Islands. Starting with Gabriola, the chain of June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Terry Patterson photos M Nanaimo’s waterfront. elongated islands stretches south to the US border and Washington’s San Juan Islands. This is part of the protected pathway most US boaters employ to head north to Desolation Sound, Johnstone Strait and, for some, all the way to Alaska! Newcastle Island is one of BC’s renowned Marine Parks—750 acres of forest, trails and beaches, boasting a good dock, foot ferry access, and of course, prime anchorage for a lot of boats. The Park is run by Sney-neymukw First Nation, whose ancestors lived in the vicinity for thousands of years. It’s a great place for a picnic or hike, and there are campsites available with an easy landing for paddlers. The protected harbor created by the two islands helps to make Nanaimo a major stop for boaters, with supplies and repairs available from waterfront shops and marine yards. Recreational marinas line Newcastle Channel, full é 27 Newcastle Island Marine Park Protection Island Departure Bay Thanks to Primal Communications Vancouver Island Nanaimo • Victoria • USA of power and sailing yachts. Just beyond is Departure Bay and the ferry terminal for mainland traffic. Nanaimo has a lovely waterfront promenade which runs several kilometers along the harbor—perfect for stretching out those ‘boating legs’. For boaters returning from a long holiday up the coast, the city is also one of the first chances to choose from an array of good restaurants, many no more than a few blocks from the waterfront, including some floating ones and Canada’s only floating pub, the Dinghy Dock Pub anchored at Protection Island. On the last night of one of our trips, anchored just off Newcastle, we sat bathed in evening sun on the back deck of our boat, reviewing the choices for dinner out—perhaps our perennial favorite, sushi at the Sake House, or maybe GEAR UP FOR SUMMER NOW TAKING ORDERS! INTRODUCING THE ‘FUSION’ 12’5” x 28” Only 39 lbs Advanced Thermalform materials Only $1295!! world cuisine at the Glow, or Mexican at Gina’s, Greek at Katerina’s, Italian at New York Style Pizza & Pasta, Thai at Amazing Thai... Undecided, we geared up and launched ourselves into the bustling waters of the harbor. For the past month we’d been keeping an eye out for whales, bears, dolphins, eagles... but here we dodged little ferries running passengers back and forth, local runabouts, seaplanes and expensive yachts. One seaplane wooshed in low overhead and landed just beyond us, giving us quite a thrill. We made our way towards Maffeo-Sutton Park and then began to paddle parallel to the promenade, enjoying this sudden proximity to people and all the activity. Having been all by ourselves for the past month, it was kind of fun to watch and be watched. (“Hey mom, look at the kayaks!”) We paddled along, chatting through the dinner options again, assessing our preferences as we slipped inside of the seaplane base at the Lighthouse Bistro, under the ramp and the overhanging shops beyond. It’s one of the joys of kayaking to be able to float right into the heart of a place, into shallows and narrows that even dinghies can’t navigate. And I admit, it’s also a bit of fun to give someone on the docks a start as you glide silently past. Reaching the floats of Nanaimo’s Boat Basin, we found a spot no other boat could inhabit, hoisted ourselves out of our kayaks and tied them up securely. We stripped off our paddling gear and patted down our ‘town’ clothes which had been sitting in our clothes locker for a month. Then we joined hands and strolled off along the dock, feeling like tourists in our own town. This was our last night before we would plug back into the ‘real’ world for another year of electronically mediated intensity. But for the moment, what we had in mind was a plate of great food and a glass of good wine to celebrate a successful voyage. FOR MORE INFOMATION: www.kayak.tourismnanaimo.com www.nanaimodowntown.com © Alan Wilson and Laurie MacBride are currently mothership-less but expect that to change in the next few years. uillemot ayaks Package deals available Kayaks 9’7” TO 22’5”, starting at $895 FACTORY OUTLET STORE #1 Hilliers Plaza, Alberni Hwy. 28 KAYAKS & WATERCRAFT LTD. www.extremeinterface.com Toll free: 866-757-8432 250-752-8432 Smooth Boats for Rough Water Build Your Own www.KayakPlans.com/L www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 For lunch and dinner. Call for hours. We’re as passionate about flying as you are about kayaking. Vancouver to Nanaimo in under 20 minutes. Specializing in seafood, plus a full menu. Safe ‘fishing hole’ for the kids! YOUR SEAPLANE PROFESSIONALS 604.274.1277 w w w. h a r b o u r a i r. c a 250-753-2373 www.dinghydockpub.com OUR NEWEST LOCATION: Fairwinds Schooner Cove Marina www.fairwinds.ca Fairwinds is Vancouver Island’s most spectacular residential development community where you can buy your dream home, golf at the award winning 18-hole course, enjoy the oceanfront Schooner Cove Hotel & Marina, or paddle out to the many islands off the Nanoose Peninsula. 250 468 1859 TOLL FREE 866 468 1859 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 29 ��������� ��������� ���������������� ������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������� ���������������������� Stay Play ���������������� ���������� ��������������������� Ask for one of the for the packages ����������� ���������� � Discover the NEW Chemainus Festival Inn, just a short stroll from the Chemainus Theatre and the famous Murals in the town centre. Toll Free 1 877 246 4181 www.festivalinn.ca ����� ������� ������� ����� ������������������������ ���� ����� ������������������������������� ��������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ����������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ���������������������� ������������������ ������������������������ ������������������������������ ������������������������������ �������������������������� ����������������� ������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������������������� ���������������� � ���������������������������������� ���������������������� 30 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 FROM THE RAINFOREST—Dan Lewis Paddle With Friends June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com A group of environmental supporters pauses for a photo during a paddle around Newcastle Island off Nanaimo. ferent needs and incorporates members’ individual strengths. Don’t we all love that stealthy pre-dawn riser who delights in making wicked coffee? Good paddling partners are like gold. You may even luck out and find people to paddle with who become your friends, people you love to hang out with even when you’re not paddling! © Dan Lewis and Bonny Glambeck operate Rainforest Kayak Adventures in Clayoquot Sound: 1-877-422-WILD. www.rainforestkayak.com. © Mark Hobson photo tend to do a lot of solo paddling but not always by design. When I first started paddling, I was new to the west coast, and didn’t have a lot of friends. The people I did know were certainly not paddlers. Fortunately a club had just formed in Vancouver, and provided a great avenue for me to begin meeting other paddlers. There are many advantages to group paddling over solo adventures. There are more people to help carry gear, and the load per person can be lighter. Many hands make light work when setting up or breaking camp. From my perspective, you can never have too many cooks in a kitchen. And cooking-type people always seem to think of such scrumptious stuff to bring along (my menu planning short-circuits somewhere around ‘peanut butter and crackers’). Paddling slows us down. There is lots of time to think. And time to talk. Touring kayakers tend to be a well-travelled, well-read bunch. On trips, away from the information overload of our wired society, conversations tend to flow to the most amazing places. Who needs television? Just go paddling with friends! Paddling partners share a special bond. Long nights driving to distant put-ins and extended periods in remote locations tend to be times of deep personal sharing. Life stories are told, hopes and dreams discussed. One sees incredible things while paddling, whether on a week-long expedition or just out for the evening. I’ve had some pretty amazing experiences while solo paddling, but there is often a background sense of ‘I wish so-and-so could see this!’ When you’re with other people, you share the joy of witnessing such wonders as an orca breaking the surface out of nowhere, a gang of sea lions hauled out on the rocks, or an eagle snatching a salmon from an osprey in mid-air. And there is nothing better than the feeling of getting in the groove together, when the group begins to flow. Words are not needed when everyone knows what to do. Obviously, the larger the group, the harder this becomes. As group size increases, so does the need for co-ordination and leadership. Paddling in groups does increase the potential for conflicts. A lot of us tend to be individualists (why else choose a boat of which you are the skipper, crew and only passenger?). People have different styles, whether the topic is safety, camp ettiquette, menu planning, paddling speed, wake-up or bed-time. Many conflicts can be prevented by getting to know your paddling partners before heading out on a big trip together. Take the time to talk about what you want to get out of the trip, what you most want to do, and what you absolutely do not want from the trip. Pay attention to what people are saying. Go for some shorter paddles together—start with evening or day-trips, then head out camping for a couple of days. Over time, groups can develop a touring style that blends dif- Alan Wilson photo I Portable Performance Seaker 15-minute setup innovakayak.com 31 EYE ON THE EAST—Adam Bolonsky Off-Water Partners When we shove offshore, we take it as given that we paddle with people who are actually there. But there are others with us besides the ones wearing wetsuits—the ones we’ve left at home. O ur goal is Muskeget, the low sand island held together by Rosa rugosa and beach grass, which clings to the outer edges of Nantucket Sound like a pale medallion. In the brilliance of summer, Muskeget reflects a bright and piercing glare that suggests less landmass than glowing presence. Less than a mile long and half a mile wide, Muskeget lies twenty-odd miles offshore of Cape Cod, surrounded by vast sandbars and wide, fast-moving currents that keep at bay any but the shallowest-draft boats. The overspread of shallows and shoals are miles wide, and encircle the island like submerged hills. The desolate seclusion is compelling. It’s a day before the paddle to Muskeget with my buddy Mark. Yvonne and I are at my sister’s. “I’m pretty worried about the fog,” I say. “The island’s far away, easy to miss, nothing around it but currents.” “So if the fog comes in?” my sister asks. “We turn back if we don’t get a visual on the island halfway across, because that’s where we’ll lose our back ranges. We’ve got a GPS, but only to radio our coordinates. The tides run so hard that GPS won’t help. It’ll tell us where we are but it won’t get us across the currents.” “The fog,” says Yvonne. “I’ve seen how it buries the Sound. Everything disappears.” “We miss the island, things get difficult. We can’t just turn on the GPS and ‘find’ it. That’s the fun, I guess” My sister: “So that no one has to worry, why don’t you cellphone when you land —“ “Too far offshore.” Several years ago I took a solo offshore trip to a barrier island off North Carolina. I was camped in a waterpine copse minding my own business when a furious ranger on an ATV pulled up to tell me that Yvonne, 500 miles away and watching television, had heard about an approaching storm and insisted that the Park Service track me down. It was very unnecessary all around. I knew full well about the storm. It had already made landfall and I was looking forward to hunkering down in my tent. “We’ll radio the Coast Guard,” I add, remembering that incident. “At least they’ll have us logged. Beats them looking for us when Yvonne does what she usually does, which is call every coastal rescue installation in the western hemisphere the moment she hears that the wind has piped up half a knot.” So after Mark and I reach Muskeget I climb its highest dune and turn on his radio. “Sécurité, sécurité. This is sea kayak at Muskeget Island requesting communications assistance.” Coast Guard Woods Hole picks up my broadcast in an instant. “Sea Kayak, Coast Guard Group Woods Hole. Switch to channel two-two alpha.” “Roger that, sea kayak two-two alpha.” I click up and ask if they’ll phone Yvonne to tell her we’ve arrived safe and sound. They agree to. “Get it done?” Mark asks when I return to water’s edge. “Yup.” “Then let’s do what we came for.” We rig the fishing gear. The sun drops. We light cigars. An hour later, under the moon, Mark lands what Muskeget is known for: a hungry striped bass nosing around near shore. I saved that message from the Coast Guard on our answering machine and listen to it every once in a while—if only to remind myself that even if on the ocean I feel free and liberated, responsible only for myself, there are others inland about whom I need to think... primarily Yvonne, the most cautious trip monitor I know, who is prone to making hasty search and rescue calls. Had SAR flown past Muskeget, they would have seen nothing more dramatic than two guys, shrouded in cigar smoke, trying to enjoy the illusion that they were out on a remote island all by themselves. © Adam Bolonsky is based near Gloucester, Massachusetts. 32 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 dragonflye Kayaking in Comfort Enjoy the hospitality and great paddling at the sit! If you’d like your B&B or Resort listed on this page in future issues, email info@WaveLengthMagazine.com B&B Hostel, Quadra Island, BC Kayak tours & rentals: 250-285-2823 www.CoastMountainExpeditions.com “far from the maddening crowd” Three cottages available near northern Vancouver Island. Kayak rental and water taxi transport available. www.VancouverIslandDive.com hideaway@vancouverislanddive.com Discovery Lodge Thors Cove Cottage Browning Pass HideAway Great paddling from novice to expert! Discovery Islands Lodge Two cozy waterfront cabins near the mouth of Ucluelet Harbour, each with queen bed, fireplace, outdoor soaker tub, kitchenette, easy beach launch. Close to the Broken Group Islands. www.anchorsinn.com / 250-726-8255 Discover this charming 3 bdrm waterfront cottage beside Desolation Sound Marine Park. All inclusive for self-catering, with wharf, bikes, hiking. info@thorscovecottage.com www.thorscovecottage.com 604-483-6870 Explore the Western Edge of Vancouver Island! Mason’s Lodge—Haven for Paddlers Rooms & Restaurant www.masonslodge.zeballos.bc.ca Kayak Nuchatlitz & Kyuquot • Rentals • Transport • Water Taxi www.zeballoskayaks.com Toll Free: 866-222-2235 Nuchatlitz Island Rental 4 bdrm cabin in the Nuchatlitz Provincial Park area of Nootka Island, BC. Waterfront Tent & Breakfast Accommodations Lodge Accommodations • Kayak/Yoga Retreats Wildlife & Bird Watching • Holidays•Clubs•Meetings Perfect as a base for up to 8 people. Accessible by water only. Protected dock, minutes from the open Pacific. Large open plan on the main floor with 4 bdrms above. 2 bdrms with queen beds. 2 with twin beds. Propane stove, fridge and hot water. Non-smoking. $1200 per week. 250-337-5180 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com doscott2000@hotmail.com 33 SKILLSET—Alex Matthews Sculling Draw D raw strokes help you move your kayak sideway in the water, to pull up to a dock or raft to another kayak. They’re great when you want to cuddle up with your paddling partner, and they’re a key maneuver in almost every assisted rescue technique. The sculling draw is a particularly powerful stroke. The sculling draw is set up with your upper body rotated to the side, your paddle shaft positioned as vertically as possible, and your blade fully planted in the water at 90 degrees from your hip. To draw your boat sideways, you’ll use something called a ‘sculling motion’. This sculling motion lets you pull steadily on your paddle, and bypasses any recovery phase, because your blade remains in the water and under load throughout the stroke. The key to sculling is keeping your paddle blade moving along a short path forward and backward about a foot or two out to the side of your kayak, with a blade angle that opens your power face to the oncoming water and pulls your paddle away from your kayak. This application of blade angle is commonly referred to as a ‘climbing angle’. Climbing angle means that the leading edge of your paddle blade is higher than the trailing edge. It’s the same as spreading jam on toast: picture the knife’s angle as it glides over the bread’s surface, leading edge higher than the trailing edge. To maintain a climbing angle on your blade while performing the sculling draw you’ll cock your wrists slightly Sea Kayak Association of BC Trips, training, monthly meetings, newsletters, paddling contacts www.skabc.org membership@skabc.org 604-290-9653 Box 751, Stn. A, Vancouver, BC V6C 2N6 34 back as you slice your blade forward. You’ll then make a quick transition and curl your wrists slightly forward as you slice your blade backward. Keep in mind that the change in blade angle is subtle. If you open the power face of your blade too much, you’ll be pushing your kayak forward and backward rather than drawing it sideways. Likewise, if you find that your boat is turning when you use the sculling draw, it means that your draw is pulling from a point too far forward or too far back. If your draw is too far forward, you’ll pull your bow towards your paddle. If your draw is too far back, you’ll pull your stern towards your paddle. Using this sculling technique, you can apply steady drawing pressure with your paddle blade and move your boat laterally at a surprising speed. Don’t forget that just like any other stroke, the power for your sculling draw comes from your torso rotation. This is why it’s so important that you turn your body aggressively into the stroke. The forward and backward movement of your paddle can then be driven by your torso rotation, while your arms will stay in a relatively fixed position. © Alex Matthews is our Boat, Gear & Skills Editor. © Photos by Alex’s wife, Rochelle Relyea. Recreational Kayaking: The Essential Skills and Safety by Alex Matthews and Ken Whiting The Heliconia Press, 2006 ISBN 1-896980-23-6 $14.95 US / $16.95 Cdn 86 pp, color photos, glossary www.helipress.com This guide by WaveLength’s Alex Matthews and world champion paddler Ken Whiting will introduce you to the sport of recreational kayaking, providing basic information about paddling equipment, skills, strokes and safety. Small recreational kayaks are relatively inexpensive and ideal on a mothership or at the cottage. But you still have to know what you’re doing and this guide will help you paddle safely. www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Info Station o Sales o Instruction o Repairs o Used Gear o Tours Comox Valley & Campbell River Kayaks, Vancouver Island 1-888-545-5595 .COM kaYAKutopia 10 11 14 15 17 14 11 11 15 15 9 9 4 12 7 14 6 17 16 10 12 5 5 6 3 14 11 11 23 16 7 7 5 15 6 7 3 4 5 8 9 2 1 7 3 6 16 3 9 The Prize If entering into the draw send to 2020 Cliffe Ave. Courtenay, BC V9N 2L3, or info@comoxvalleykayaks.com The Game Place a number from 1 to 9 in each square. Use each number only once in each column, row and 3 X 3 square. The squares are colored, forming areas of same-colored squares. The sum of the numbers you place in each colored area must equal the number printed in that area (e.g. the numbers in the 4 pink squares at the top of the puzzle must add up to 10). We’ve given you a head start by filling in some of the squares for you. Good Luck! Those who submit the correct answer to this puzzle are put into a draw for a new padded paddlebag from North Water: www.northwater.com. Congratulations Denise Dawson of Edmonton, for winning the “Motion” PFD from Stohlquist. If you’re looking for West Coast kayak adventures COME AND CHECK US OUT! • Kayak water taxi transport • Kayak and boat rentals • Guided day trips • RV Park & Marina • Cabins and chalets • Tour planning assistance Home of the “Tyee Kayak Surfing Derby” & the Conuma Bears June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 35 Haida Gwaii / Queen Charlotte Islands Mount Moresby Adventure Camp “...connecting wilderness and human well being” First class wilderness facility for groups up to 40 at the gateway to Your Personal Sea Kayak Mothership Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site ? Explore the Western Edge of Vancouver Island! Kayak Nuchatlitz & Kyuquot • Rentals • Transport Water Taxi to Nootka Trail www.zeballoskayaks.com Mason’s Lodge A Haven for Paddlers Rooms & Restaurant www.masonslodge.zeballos.bc.ca Toll Free: 866-222-2235 Sea Kayak Expeditions in Northern Europe Guided by some of Scotland’s Foremost Sea Kayakers ALASKA © Suzanne Steel photo Program design and staffing available See www.adventurecamp.ca Contact: 250-626-3494 or info@adventurecamp.ca www.homeshore.com info@homeshore.com 1-800-287-7063 (01) Aboriginal Heritage and Eco Tours www.nalaadventures.com nalaadventures@shaw.ca 250-245-2015 • Aboriginal canoe eco tours available on Vancouver Island • Kayak campground, water taxi, Aboriginal arts & crafts and traditional salmon BBQ at Bella Bella on BC’s Central Coast Sea Kayak Mothership Ursa Major Explore in Comfort and Safety CUSTOM TRIPS: • Southeast Alaska • Pacific Northwest • and Baja! Explore the St Kilda Archipelago, Sub Arctic Sweden, and the Outer Hebrides. Contact Tim@CanoeHebrides.com Watch www.CanoeHebrides.com for 2006 trips www.myursamajor.com 206-310-2309 Go Undercover Protect your investment! SEMI-CUSTOM KAYAK COVERS Various color options available www.toughduckmarine.com info@toughduckmarine.com 1.888.246.3850 36 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 GEAR LOCKER—Alex Matthews Lasso Security I n an issue dedicated to ‘Paddling Partners’, I thought that I should consider the safety of my most constant paddling companion—my kayak! The thought of a thief making off with my boat is enough to make my blood run cold. Enter the Lasso security cable, a clever locking system specifically designed for securing kayaks. The Lasso is made from ¼” vinyl-coated galvanized steel aircraft cable. Each end of the Lasso incorporates a fixed loop of cable, and an integrated lock sits at the midpoint of the system. Two lock options are available: either a keyed lock, or the newer, 4-digit combination lock. My sample was the combination version, which I prefer, as it precludes the need to keep track of (or carry) a key. And since users can set the combination of the barrel lock to any four numbers of their choice (like their bank card PIN number for instance), it’s very easy to remember the combination. The combination can also be reset at any time. The Lasso comes in a nylon stuff sack for convenient storage. Locking a kayak to the roof of your car with the Lasso is a quick and easy operation. With the lock open and the lasso system in two halves, slide one of the Lasso’s looped ends around the bow of your boat, and the other loop around the stern, making sure that the cable is running under the rack. Next, wrap the Lasso around the rack to tighten the cable. Be sure to pull the large loops down your boat as far as pos- é June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com BORÉALDESIGN • DAGGER • IMPEX LIGHTSPEED • NIMBUS • PERCEPTION Middleton’s Specialty Boats New Kayak & Canoe Sales & Rentals Short, plastic recreational kayaks for day-tripping. Try out our Nimbus & BoréalDesign touring sea kayaks. Open 8 am Saturdays, June to August PHONE 604-240-0503 1851 WELCH STREET, NORTH VANCOUVER, BC david@middletonsboats.com www.middletonsboats.com 37 sible before taking up the slack around the bars of your roof rack. Secure the lock, and your kayak is now locked to your roof. est.1985 GALIANO ISLAND KAYAKING Obviously, if you are locking your boat to your rack, you’ll need a rack that in turn locks to your roof, or is permanently attached. It’s also worth noting that no lock can repel all thieves every time, but the Lasso Security Cable is an excellent deterrent. Unlike my other cable, which can only be locked to a single point on my boat (like its U-bolt), the Lasso cable captures the whole boat. I used the Lasso exclusively to lock my boat to my car’s roof rack, but it would be equally effective when used with other anchors like fences, docks, or trees. The Lasso’s cable is surprisingly supple, making it very easy to work with, and its heavy vinyl coating protects a kayak from abrasion. It’s easy to deploy, works with an extremely wide variety of kayaks, and represents a real deterrent to any potential thief. It also takes up minimal space when stored. All in all, the Lasso Security Cable is a well thought-out product that offers good anti-theft insurance at a reasonable price. Price: $48.95 US Lasso Security Cables P.O. Box 5135 Arcata, CA 95518 (707) 444-8814 www.lassosecuritycables.com © Alex Matthews. Summer Kayaking! • Instructional/ Wildlife Tours in sheltered waters • Challenging Current Paddles in Active Pass & Porlier Pass • Available all year • Economical camping tours in Gulf Islands, Clayoqout and Barkley Sounds • Only 1 hr from the Mainland Also Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula Weekly, December–April Since 1988 Rentals—all year Used Kayaks For Sale Daily Guided Tours 250-539-2442 www.seakayak.ca kayak@gulfislands.com 38 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 The Broughton is Alive Alexandra Morton T he Broughton is a living organism. It breathes. It moves. It lives. A circulatory system transports food, waste, oxygen, salt, water... the things of life. The sheer beauty of this life catches my breath at unexpected intervals. But no time in the Broughton is more divinely perfect than spring. Spring is spawned here in the violent indecision of March. The long dominant southeasters do not want to back down to the fresh young westerlies and so they pummel us on this coast, but the westerlies always win. For me, however, spring begins when my oars cause tumbling light in a myriad of sizes and intensities that look like galaxies. At first these new plankton are not visible during daylight, only through their phosphoresence at night. In early March this year, before the plankton bloom, the water of the Broughton was exceptionally clear. As I traveled the coastline taking its vital signs, I saw deep, deep down, over 15 meters in some places. It was a world revealed. There were walls of the diaphanous white Plumose Anemone. There were congregations of translucent, pale-hooded nudibranchs swaying in unison. Starfish standing on their tip toes spawning. In one bay a red rock crab was at the bottom of a Broughton Archipelago Vancouver Island cone-shaped pit. He lowered one claw and pushed it uphill through the sand. As he crested the rim he flung the sand over and started again. The Kingcome herring are always a revelation and that day was no exception. One moment I was gazing 15 meters down at rocks edged in sand and then I saw a tumult of life so great it concealed the landscape. Each fish was blue-silver and spinning in pursuit of shrimp. The arching fish created the effect of flickering fire in the sea. Such congregations often press against the leading edge of the last of the ebb tide. Where the ebb meets the flood and the two currents bend and slide along each other, the water dimples with whirlpools and boils. These tide lines are the banquet table. If you want to get a quick look at what is happening in Broughton, check her tide lines. All our garbage is there, as well as the spawn and spore of the forest and ocean. I caught a few of the shrimp that escaped from the herring and put one under the microscope when I got home. As the animal glided into view I whispered “wow” in awe. The beauty of this little fellow was hard to take in. There were huge midnight silver-edged eyes, covered over in a multifaceted lens as brilliant as diamonds. His legs were beating frantically, he looked desperate, and I realized he must be very hot. I ran him down the rocks, dipped the microscope slide into the water and breathed relief. Why is one thing beautiful and one thing not? I have thought about this a lot. Perhaps it has something to do with a brainstem level of recognition of life, or more precisely a recognition of something that works. Like wine é North Island Kayak Rentals & Tours Two Locations in British Columbia: Telegraph Cove and the Port Hardy Adventure Center 1-6 day Guided Trips & Rentals Toll Free 877-949-7707 nikayak@island.net www.KayakBC.ca June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 39 SKI & SURF SHOP Over 50 kayaks in stock, ton of paddles, pfds, paddling jackets, and other gear as well as DEMOS and LESSONS. Necky Elaho www.skiandsurfshop.ca 333 5th Street Courtenay, BC 250-338-8844 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK POPEYE’S Marine & Kayak Center 814 13th Street, Everett WA On the Waterfront at Everett Marina 425-339-9479 www.popeyesmarine.com kingsmarine1929@hotmail.com Maine’s Premier Paddling Shop and Manufacturer of High Performance Canoes and Kayaks Ideal kayaks for women paddlers! Quoddy Lite: 25 lbs in Kevlar, 12’ 6” Isle au Haut: 38 lbs in Kevlar, 17’ 2” Freeport, Maine 207-865-0455 www@lincolncanoe.com 40 Raising Stitch-and-Glue construction to a new level of excellence Two new Plywood Kayak Kits by Ted Moores, boat builder and author of Kayaks You Can Build, Kayakcraft, and Canoecraft. Bear Mountain Boat Shop Inc. Peterborough, ON Canada Books • Plywood Kits • Woodstrip Canoe & Kayak Plans • Classes www.bearmountainboats.com Toll free 877-392-8880 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 tasting, appreciation of beauty can surely be refined, but I am talking about the gut sense of awe that the natural world causes. We can’t know energy intimately, but I think we know it when we see it. The crystal clear waters of Broughton are tinder. When touched by the spring sun, the plankton ignites. Like a spark on a wire this pulse of energy streaks through every creature connected. The salmon takes the power of the sun through its tiny prey, and the rest is the stuff of legends. The salmon feeds its world: the trees, the amphibians, the whales, us. A smile plays across my lips just thinking of the little pink and chum salmon fry I track for my research. The center of the Broughton is the hub of a wheel with four spokes, the four long channels leading out from here to the sea. My life is spent watching the salmon trickle down the legs of the wheel to the center and seeing which door they use to get out. The first little fish are alone. They are the pioneers. The crystal clear waters of Broughton are tinder. When touched by the spring sun, the plankton ignites. Like a spark on a wire this pulse of energy streaks through every creature connected. The salmon takes the power of the sun through its tiny prey, and the rest is the stuff of legends. The salmon feeds its world: the trees, the amphibians, I never touch these fish. They are the most vulnerable and precious. They are outliers, an ace in some hole their race might fall into. The only thing on their side is that the predators have not yet assembled. This year, it began with sighting of five to ten fry, then hundreds, then thousands, until my deckhands, Oline and Amy, and I came across a school that snafued our computational abilities. The fish were half-hidden by darkening waters and glinting sunset, but wherever we caught a glimpse, we could see tiny fish streaming like a river, with thousands more following. We stopped, turned off the engine and tried to take it in. Baby fish have no experience yet and they trust me much more than they should. I have dipped up thousands in small nets over the years. One strike is all they give me—if I miss, I will never get close to them again. But these fish at Glacier Falls did not know me and they surfaced and began to pirouette in tiny half circles. I knew they are eating something in the plankton. This big school of salmon had been progressing west through the spoke of the wheel called Tribune Channel. Because this school had few sea lice, I guessed it was the Ahta’s fish. Ahta is a river whose name means ‘grandmother’, arising in the waters of the most southerly virgin forest on this coast. These fish were her babies. The Kakweikan River’s life was in Tribune too. I suspected her fish were the ones with lice a week or more old. The lice were markers. When wild salmon go by a salmon farm, that school becomes marked, and doomed. é ������������������������������ ���������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������� � June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 41 Both Ahta’s fish and Kakwiekan’s must pass the Burdwood Islands where young lice were already sprinkled over the pioneers. In a few weeks they would start picking a door to sea, towards a place we have named “Bay of the Damned”. There, young salmon can be picked up easily from the surface, overwhelmed by too many parasites at too young an age. If beauty is the energy which is life, what do we call the thing that inter- rupts life, causing the spark to tumble chaotically off track, dimming all the lights further down the line? We should name this force because we humans wield it. The scent, the warmth, the emotions that are spring come from a working, living system. We can decide to sabotage that system, throw a wooden shoe into its gears, or we can embrace it and become part of it. If we are as smart as we think we are, we should be able to do this. And if not, then how dare we mess with perfection? © Alexandra Morton, R.P.Bio., is a marine mammal researcher and author: www.raincoastresearch.org. Ride the Wave! BROKEN GROUP ISLANDS AND BARKLEY SOUND Up to 8 scheduled trips per week from Port Alberni. KAYAK RENTALS $35 per day Singles $50 per day Doubles ACCOMMODATIONS SECHART WHALING STATION LODGE Rooms & Meals from $70 / person / day based on 2 night minimum RATES SUBJECT TO CHANGE Water Taxi Service from Toquart Bay For pickup ph: 250-720-7358 Used Kayaks For Sale Phone: 250-723-8313 Fax: 250-723-8314 M.V. Lady Rose & M.V. Frances Barkley located at Argyle Pier, 5425 Argyle St., Port Alberni, BC CANADA V9Y 1T6 TOLL FREE RESERVATIONS (April-Sept.) 1-800-663-7192 www.ladyrosemarine.com 42 V10 Surf Ski Ocean River Sports 1824 Store St. Victoria, BC 250-381-4233 www.oceanriver.com Deep Cove Canoe & Kayak 2156 Banbury Rd. N. Vancouver, BC 604-987-2202 www.deepcovekayak.com Kelowna Kayak & Outdoor 2079 Enterprise Way Kelowna, BC 250-860-3361 www.kelownakayak.com www.epickayaks.com www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 ANOTHER AWARD FOR ALEX! This spring, Alexandra Morton was awarded the prestigious Murray Newman Award for Excellence in Aquatic Conservation, bestowed annually by the Vancouver Aquarium to recognize the outstanding efforts of scientists in furthering research and conservation of ocean ecosystems. In this case the award was given for her tireless efforts to study, publicize and act to protect the health of wild salmon. “This award is well-deserved,” said Dr. Daniel Pauly of the University of BC Fisheries Centre. “Alexandra’s work to document the impacts of sea lice on wild salmon populations has helped to focus public, media and political attention on this critical issue. I’m delighted she is being recognized for her dedication to good science, integrity and resolve.” Kayak Repair & Refit Structural Repairs Vancouver Island South Keel Line Rebuilds Gel Coat Refinishing Component Replacements 2072 Henry Ave. West, Sidney BC. (250) 654-0052 Bowen Island Sea Kayaking • TOURS • RENTALS • LESSONS CALL TO RESERVE 1-800-60-KAYAK bowenislandkayaking.com Advanced Designs + Great Fit = Ultimate Paddle Performance Werner Paddles offers more than light weight paddles. We design every aspect of our paddles to work as a whole. Advanced designs with more features and selection allow every kayaker to individually fit their paddle and experience all the benefits of a great fitting paddle. Advanced Designs + Great Fit = Ultimate Paddle Performance. It means you have more fun on the water. Log on to our web site to view our assortment of paddle models and options. Be sure to check out our NEW Interactive Guide to a Good Fitting Paddle! 3085 Harwood Blvd. St. Lazare, Quebec J7T 2H7 www.absolutekayaks.com Ultimate Paddle Performance www.wernerpaddles.com 800-275-3311 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 43 PADDLE MEALS—Debbie Leach Together for Tapas T apas (Spanish for ‘tops’) are said to have originated as a bread or flat card set on top of a drink to protect it from fruit flies. Today’s trendy snacks are served on small plates and are perfect for camping and sharing at happy hour. Here’s a sampling. OLIVE OLÉ Serve pitted green olives with chunks of olive bread. This goes nicely with a plate of thinly sliced chorizo (spicy pork sausage) and salad leaves. ALMOND TAPAS Heat about a cup of whole almonds in a frypan with a bit of olive oil. Dust with paprika. STICKS OF HAM WITH HONEY 1 packet of bread sticks 3 ounces honey (orange-blossom is best) 4 ounces thinly sliced ham (Ibérico or Serrano are traditional) 44 Cut the ham slices into strips about one inch wide. Dip the tips of the bread sticks into the honey (about two inches deep) and drain. Wrap the ham around the sticks beginning at the tip, overlapping it like a bandage. TORTILLA ESPANOLA 4 potatoes—red or gold skinned 1 yellow onion olive oil for frying 6 eggs sea salt Chop potatoes and onion into ½ inch cubes. Pour enough oil into an 8 or 10 inch frying pan to just coat the bottom and heat over a low flame. Fry the onions and potatoes until spuds are just tender when poked with a fork. Crack eggs into a mixing bowl and whisk or stir with a fork until well mixed. Pour the eggs into the pan with the onions and potatoes. Cook over low to medium heat until the edges www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 and top are no longer liquid. To flip the tortilla—place a lightly oiled plate face down on top of the omelet and turn the pan upside down. Slide the tortilla—uncooked side down into the pan and cook 3-5 minutes longer. Serve hot or cooled—cut into wedges or large cubes skewered with toothpicks. GARLIC SHRIMP 8 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped ½ cup olive oil 1 kg prawns with shells on chopped parsley for garnish (optional) garlic mayonnaise for dipping (1 clove garlic minced and mixed into 1 cup mayo) Yes, I do own a dog... why do you ask? In a small bowl, marinate garlic and oil for at least 30 minutes. Heat a frypan over medium-high heat. Add as many shrimp as will fit in one layer. Sprinkle garlic/oil over shrimp and cook for two minutes. Turn shrimp and drizzle with more garlic/oil and cook two minutes more. Repeat until shrimp are cooked. Sprinkle with chopped parley. Serve with garlic mayo. © Debbie Leach is a nutritionist working to encourage healthy eating among school children. Right now she’s off pedaling with the pilgrims in the Pyrenees to taste tapas. Excellence in cedar strip kayak design and construction Custom-made cedar strips are formed into hard chine and multi-chine kayaks of outstanding quality Stapleless construction including full thickness inlays 250 722 3349 chet@3dolphinkayaks.com www.3dolphinkayaks.com June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 45 GREAT GEAR PRIJON UPDATES THE KODIAK Prijon has just updated the expedition-proven Kodiak with several functional details, including expanded knee room for larger paddlers, a deck box (day hatch), and spare paddle fastening loops. The deck box features a large, stretchable neoprene sock below a convenient 8” hatch cover located directly in front of the cockpit. This provides paddlers easy access to small items while on the water without lifting the spraydeck. For more information see www.wildnet.com. Prijon Kodiak Granville Island English Bay Jericho Since 1980 ���������������������� � 604-689-7575 ecomarine.com ������������������� REFLECTIVE LINES BORÉALDESIGN has upgraded to new reflective deck lines to assist your visibility. The addition of reflective tape and name decals on the bow and stern of all composite models will provide a reflective profile outlining the shape of the kayak. www.borealdesign.com PAGE’S RESORT MARINA Silva Bay—Gabriola Island, BC Cottages, Campground, Fuel, Moorage, Laundromat, Showers, Artwork, Charts, Books and PRIME PADDLING! Flat Top Islands and Drumbeg Provincial Park. Established 1943 Call 250-247-8931 www.pagesresort.com 46 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 BOOKS—Diana Mumford Kayaking the Broken Group Islands by JF Marleau, Pacific Rim Informative Adventures, 2006 ISBN 0-9739877-0-7 $17.99 US, $19.99 Cdn, 128 pp, b/w photos, www.priaoutback.com “The Broken Group Islands is one of the most famous sea kayaking destinations in the world. Its spectacular beauty and abundant diversity of wildlife offer a unique wilderness adventure.” The introduction to Kayaking the Broken Group Islands begins with this declaration and goes on to prove it by providing a wealth of information for those who wish to experience this famous place. An all-in-one guide, it outlines camping and access regulations, provides travel and accommodation information, discusses paddling routes, tells the history of the area, and describes flora and fauna that you are likely to encounter. This is an indispensable guide for paddlers who plan to visit the Broken Group. Paddling the Yukon River and its Tributaries by Dan Maclean, self-published, 2005 ISBN 1-59433-027-1, $19.95 US / $25.95 Cdn 192 pp, b/w photos & maps, bibliography, glossary, index www.publicationconsultants.com/paddle.htm This is a very practical guide to paddling the five longest rivers of Alaska from their headwaters in the Yukon Territory to the Bering Sea. The author speaks from experience, having paddled all these routes solo. This country is not for the faint of heart, and Maclean suggests that people prepare themselves for the isolation and lack of amenities en route, and that they paddle shorter segments before attempting a headwaters-todelta expedition. General considerations are frankly discussed in the introductory chapters, followed by specific guides to the Yukon, Tanana, Porcupine, Koyukuk and Kuskokwim Rivers. If you have excellent outdoor skills, this book could be your guide to one of your greatest lifetime adventures. June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com Tears, Fear & Adventure by James Michael Dorsey, self-published, 2006 ISBN 1-59113-893-0, $21 US, 308 pp b/w photos, www.jamesdorsey.com James Michael Dorsey has been traveling off the beaten track for decades—not as a tourist looking for rest and relaxation on vacation, but to see and learn something new and to meet new people. In this volume he participates in the age-old storytelling tradition as he recounts adventures from his travels all over the world. Loosely organized by the points of the compass, the stories tell of unique experiences with wildlife, people and the elements (including versions of the paddling stories previously published in WaveLength). Dorsey takes his reader from Alaska to the Baja and South America, to Europe, to Japan and Cambodia and other Asian destinations, relating each adventure and the lessons he learned in a casual style as if you were a close friend. Armchair and active travelers will be entertained and inspired by this collection of stories. Greenland Paddles: Step by Step by Brian Nystrom self-published, 2005 $19.95 US, 54 pp, b/w photos Order at: greenlandpaddlebook@verizon.net After catching the “GP” bug, Brian Nystrom wrote this detailed, illustrated manual for creating Greenland paddles. It lists the tools and supplies you will need (and some extras you might want), discusses the selection of wood suitable for paddle building, clarifies the characteristics and variations of Greenland paddles, and clearly outlines a step-by-step construction process. If you too have a soft spot for GPs, this manual will help you create your own beautiful, functional paddle. To have your book or video reviewed, please contact Diana@WaveLengthMagazine.com 47 Laurie MacBride photo NEWS Alan presenting award to Mercia Sixta. 48 LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Veteran paddler Mercia Sixta was presented the Lifetime Achievement Award at this year’s Vancouver Island Paddlefest in May. Last year’s winner, Alan Wilson, made the presentation to Mercia on behalf of the Paddlefest for her outstanding volunteer efforts over many years to promote safe paddling within the recreational and commercial paddling communities. Mercia was one of the founders of the Sea Kayak Association of BC where she served as president for 14 years, before founding the Pacific International Kayak Association, involving BC and Washington paddlers, as well as working tirelessly to promote training for physically challenged paddlers (see article page 17). For 20 years she was the key organizer of the Coast Kayak Symposium on Thetis Island, BC, and she is undoubtedly the person most responsible for BC’s excellent record of paddling safety. OCEAN RIVER SPORTS OFFER All those buying kayaks at Ocean River Sports in Victoria are now offered a choice of a free subscription to WaveLength, a free membership in the Victoria Canoe and Kayak Club, or a $25 service gift certificate to use at ORS for a course, tour, rental or workshop. See www.oceanriver.com. AROUND AMERICA ADVENTURE A young Swedish woman, Renata Chlumska, is paddling and biking around the continental US. See www.aroundamericaadventure.com. For the paddling portion, she’s using a Prijon kayak. PADDLING PROJECT IN BRAZIL Rodrigo Cavasini has written from Brazil to tell us about the Sail Project, a federal government initiative to develop citizenship and social involvement in physical and outdoor recreation, including kayaking, for underprivileged students aged 12 to 15. Since 2003 he’s been helping with the project through the Rio Grande do Sul University. Classes include flatwater kayaking skills, rescues, risk assessment and environmental education. He says the results show that social problems among the students have decreased and grades have increased (rcavasini@yahoo.com.br). Boys in Brazil are better with paddling! www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 NEW TAPS BOARD New Board Members for the Trade Association of Paddlesports: Representing Manufacturers—Joan Barrett of Bear Mountain Boat Shop Inc., Josh Hoopes of Confluence Watersports. Representing Retailers—Tom Kimmet of REI, Glenn Lush of Cowichan Bay Kayak & Paddle-sports. Representing Outfitters—Raymond Fusco of Hudson Valley Outfitters, Mike Savario of Amphibious Horizons. At Large—Mark Hall of Delta Kayaks,Tim Rosenhan of Innova Kayaks, Robin Thacker of Atlantis Kayaks, Bill Walker of Seattle Raft & Kayak. WHALE WISE GUIDELINES This year the Be Whale Wise Marine Wildlife Viewing Guidelines have been revised. In summary: • Be observant approaching areas of known or suspected marine wildlife activity • Keep your speed down (less than 7 knots for boaters) when in the presence of animals • Keep clear of the whales’ path • Do not approach whales from the front or behind, always travel parallel to their direction of travel • Do not approach or position your vessel closer than 100 meters to any whale • Stay on the offshore side of the whales when they are traveling close to shore For the complete guidelines visit: www. straitwatch.org or www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/ species/marinemammals/view_e.htm Brochures can be downloaded at the Straitwatch website, or requested in print. THE TRUTH ABOUT OIL SPILLS The Oil Free Coast coalition in Vancouver, BC recently hosted Dr. Riki Ott author of Sound Truth and Corporate Myth$: The Legacy of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill. Ott said that oil cannot be cleaned from beaches and that it has lasting impacts. She reported that the ‘cleanup’ from the Exxon Valdez damaged the health of thousands of workers and may have made the ecosystem impacts worse. The only solution, she said, is prevention of spills. The killer ingredient in oil, the PAHs, are getting into all of us, from burning oil for electricity and from our car exhausts, yet another reason to end the Oil Age. Visit www.oilfreecoast.org. GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE Recognizing that global warming is fast approaching the point of no return and that the world cannot wait for the US government to act, hundreds of US city mayors have pledged to cut emissions of greenhouse gases. By signing the US Mayors Climate Protection Agreement, these mayors—representing some 44 million Americans—have committed their cities é ������������������������������������������� ���������������������� �������������������������� ������������������������ ������� ������������������������ �������������������������� ������ ������������������ ������������ ����������������������� ��������������������� ������������������ ��������������� ������������������� ������������ ������������������� ������������������� ��������������� �������������������� June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 49 NEWS continued to meet or beat the US emissions reduction target in the Kyoto Protocol, despite the federal government’s refusal to ratify that treaty. States and businesses also are taking part. The challenge now is to multiply these initiatives and take them further. With the US making up 5 percent of the global population but responsible for 25% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, there is no substitute for leadership from the top. Thanks to Earth Policy Institute: www. earthpolicy.org. FIRST NATIONS PARKS AGREEMENT Parks Canada reports that the Gulf Islands National Park Reserve in the southern Strait of Georgia—BC’s newest federal Park—is going to be co-managed with the six First Nations of the Hul’qumi’num Treaty Group based in Ladysmith on Vancouver Island. The Gulf Islands National Park Reserve consists of areas of land on fifteen islands plus adjacent waters. This is part of an historic agreement to involve First Nations in park management in areas of their traditional territories, including the Namgis people of Alert Bay who will have a say in management of several federal parks on northern Vancouver Island. OSPREY TOURS Sea Kayak Tours... with a difference Paddle a Replica of 2000 year old Umiak Located at Orcas Ferry Landing, Washington Mothership & Kayak Shuttle www.ospreytours.com NEW LOCATION: Schooner Cove Marina 250 468 1859 TOLL FREE 866 468 1859 50 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 Our Next Issue... Aug/Sep In print: Aug. 1st ‘PADDLING PLUS...’ Featuring KAYAK FISHING, kayak sailing and more. Deadline: Jun. 20th Photo Contest... WIN A GREAT PENTAX WATERPROOF DIGITAL CAMERA Be sure to click on ‘Photo Contest’ at www.WaveLengthMagazine.com for the REVISED RULES. Let’s go paddling! Subscribe or Renew your subscription for a chance to win a MANITOU 14 prize package from Necky Kayaks The Manitou 14—a longer, full-on touring version of the popular recreational Manitou—is generous with its stability and comfort. Its user-friendly attributes are reassuring for entry-level and intermediate paddlers, yet sophisticated enough to handle the demands of hardcore enthusiasts. The cockpit size remains accommodating for entry and exit, and the boat’s modest weight makes transporting easy. Plus there’s a retractable skeg for enhanced tracking and trim. The prize package includes a PFD, paddle and free delivery to your nearest Necky dealer—courtesy of Necky Kayaks! Weight: 49 lbs Length: 14’ 4” Width: 24” WWW.NECKY.COM 1 yr sub: 1 entry 2 yr sub: 2 entries PRIZE DRAW: October 1st, 2006 To start your subscription today call 1-800-799-5602 or subscribe online Subscribe online with a credit card via PayPal at www.WaveLengthMagazine.com, or clip or photocopy this form and mail it with your payment to: 2735 North Road, Gabriola Island, BC, Canada V0R 1X7. All subscription information is Privacy Protected. NAME_________________________________________________________ PHONE_____________________________ ADDRESS______________________________________________________ CITY_______________________________ PROV / STATE_______________________________________ POSTAL / ZIP CODE ______________________________ DON’T MISS AN ISSUE! $18 / 1 YEAR – 6 ISSUES US$ FOR USA June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com / $30 / 2 CDN$ FOR CANADA (WE PAY THE GST) YEARS – 12 ISSUES JJ 06 51 BED & BREAKFAST ON THE BEACH Gabriola’s south coast paradise. Beachfront. Wildlife. Hot tub. Gabriola Island, BC • KAYAK RENTALS • Ph/Fax: 250/247-9824 www.island.net/~casablan Large, KEVLAR double touring kayak, NIMBUS SKANA—3 hatches, 2 cockpits, and adpated for mast and sail. Extremely comfortable and seaworthy. Includes kayak, mast, sail, cockpit covers, one spray skirt, bilge pump, padded wooden floor storage rack. This is the Mercedes of kayaks! In excellent condition: $4500. Contact mariettewest@shaw.ca, 604-228-8079. Ph: 250-539-5553 RENTALS, TOURS, LESSONS robertbruce@telus.net 121 Boot Cove Rd. Saturna Island, BC V0N 2Y0 SOUTHEAST EXPOSURE Ketchikan, Alaska 6 Day Guided Trips Misty Fjords National Monument 907-225-8829 www.southeastexposure.com VARGAS ISLAND INN Affordable Wilderness Resort accommodation in Clayoquot Sound on Vargas Island beachfront. • 5k N.W. Tofino • Ideal for kayakers • Inn & cabins • All self-catering • Passenger & kayak transport from Tofino available • Lots to do! CALL 250-725-3309 Sechelt Inlet on the Sunshine Coast Free wilderness camping at 9 Marine Parks. Only 2 hours from downtown Vancouver. www.pedalspaddles.com 1-866-885-6440 Providing quality equipment and excellent service since 1991. Certified Guides. Fully Insured. SALTSPRING KAYAK & CYCLE • Tours • Rentals • Sales Located on the wharf at Fulford Harbour next to the ferry terminal. Walk off the ferry and step into a kayak or rental bike! Toll Free: 866-341-0007 “Gateway to the Southern Marine Parks” sskayak@saltspring.com www.saltspringkayaking.com SeaScape Resort Quadra Island, BC. Oceanfront cabins. Kitchenette & BBQ facilities. Boat, bike & kayak rentals. Pet friendly. Fishing & adventure tours available. Moorage. Toll Free: 888-893-1626 www.seascapewaterfrontresort.com 2006 is WaveLength’s 16th year serving the paddlesports community! Our loyal advertisers provide the resources that allow us to bring you this magazine, so please be sure to check out the great products and services they have to offer. The web’s best source for alternative menstrual products Eco-friendly essentials for women on the go! Free catalogue 1.888.590.2299 or shop online at www.lunapads.com Your home base for Exceptional GULF ISLANDS Paddling! Mayne Island, BC Kayak Rentals, Lessons and Guided Tours. Accommodation/Kayaking packages available. www.bluevistaresort.com 1-877-535-2424 MAYNE ISLAND KAYAK & CANOE RENTALS INC. KAYAKING AT ITS BEST! Rentals / Guided Tours / Lessons Sales / Bicycles / Scooters. Complimentary Ferry pick-up. Variety of accommodations available. 250 539-5599 www.maynekayak.com guide courses 2006 in tofino with dan lewis and bonny glambeck assistant guide: april 29-may 7, may 13-21, sept 9-1 7 day guide: may 26-29 call toll free 1-877-422-WILD www.rainforestkayak.com Whitewater Kayaking Chilliwack River Rafting No experience necessary. Inflatable kayaks on class 2 to 3. Easy skills transfer from Ocean kayaking. Daily departures. Call 1-800-410-7238 www.chilliwackrafting.com FOR SALE 15.1 acres of treed waterfront near Echo Bay (school, fuel, post office) in the Broughton Archipelago, BC, with dock, deep water moorage, two homes, two cabins, workshop, fruit trees, chicken coop, good sun exposure and lovely view. wildorca@island.net. 52 ISLAND BUSINESS FOR SALE Harvest Thyme Whole Foods Popular, bustling, Gabriola Island health food store and restaurant. Warm, colourful decor, well situated on the main road, with outdoor patio and great parking. Original owner. Call Joyanne at 250-247-8824. Never lift those boats again! www.tonystrailers.com www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 NORTH ISLAND KAYAK Port Hardy & Telegraph Cove Rentals & 1–6 Day Guided Trips PRIME ECOTOURISM BUSINESS FOR SALE Sea Kayak Guides Alliance of BC Toll Free 1-877-949-7707 www.KayakBC.ca nikayak@island.net BLACKFISH SEA KAYAKING ON THE NORTH COAST Tired of the crowds? Try the North Coast this year. 5 day trips to outer, sandy islands, total isolation, catch your own salmon & crab for dinner. Paddle in Humpback Whale feeding grounds. Visit the most amazing archaeological site in BC. Small groups. Prince Rupert. www.blackfish.ca Call Paul and Gina toll-free: 1-877-638-1887. Fall 2006 Guides Exchange Oct. 6–8 23rd annual West Coast Sea Kayak Symposium The SKGABC AGM will be held Oct. 8th LOCATION: HOST: CONTACT: See our website for details www.skgabc.com September 15-17 at Ft. Worden Port Townsend, WA. www.wcsks.org NOVA SCOTIA Inn-to-Inn or Island Camping Adventures Sailboat Supported & Multisport Trips Guides, Lessons, Outfitting Freewheeling Adventures www.freewheeling.ca 800-672-0775 “Downtown By The Fishing Pier” 4 Star Accommodations 571 Island Highway Campbell River, BC V9W 2B9 www.oceanfrontbb.com Hostess: Patty Johnson Phone (250) 286-8385 Toll Free 1-877-604-4938 patty@oceanfrontbb.com KAYAK & DIVING New Log Cabin Accommodation Next to Drumbeg Park Gabriola Island, BC www.HighTestDive.com Explore the Western Edge of Vancouver Island! Kayak Nuchatlitz & Kyuquot: Rentals, Tours, Transport, Water taxi to Nootka Trail. www.zeballoskayaks.com Mason’s Lodge, a haven for paddlers. Rooms & Restaurant. www.masonslodge.zeballos.bc.ca Toll free: 866-222-2235 Ph/Fax: 250-539-2442 kayak@gulfislands.com www.seakayak.ca Island Home & Business for Sale ‘Downtown’ Gabriola retail fish store location and equipment, with provincially licensed fish plant and three bedroom house on 3.65 acres. $385,000 Cdn. 250-247-8093. By appointment only. June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com The Sea Kayak Guides Alliance of BC is a non-profit society which upholds high standards for professional sea kayak guides and operators in BC. Through on-going professional development and certification, the Alliance strives to ensure safe practices on an industry-wide basis. SKGABC EXECUTIVE PRESIDENT Blake Johnson: blake@skgabc.com VICE PRESIDENTS Piper Harris: piper@skgabc.com J F MarleauL jf@skgabc.com SECRETARY Sue Glenn: sue@skgabc.com TREASURER Chris Nagle: chris@skgabc.com MEMBERS AT LARGE Tina Walker: tina@skgabc.com Matt Kellow: matt@skgabc.com COORDINATING DIRECTOR Dusty Silvester: dusty@skgabc.com SKGABC Membership www.queencharlottekayaking.com ANDALE KAYAKING GALIANO ISLAND, BC KAYAKING YEAR ROUND COSTA RICA—OSA PENINSULA 7 days in paradise, weekly Dec–Apr since 1987 Gabriola Island, BC Peter Marcus Gabriola Cycle & Kayak kerry@skgabc.com Salt Spring Island’s north end Kayaking Connection. Sales, rentals, lessons, tours, kids’ boats. Wallace Island Marine Park Tours. A variety of drop-off and pick-up sites. We make kayaking fun and safe! 250-537-0700 (Apr–Oct) allanmather@hotmail.com http://saltspring.gulfislands.com/allanmather • Kayak Day Tours • Camping Expeditions • Youth Camps & School Programmming • Accommodation and Kayaking Packages Unique Outdoor Gear & Clothing Store www.islandescapades.com 1 888 529-2567 escapades@saltspring.com To become a member of the Alliance, mail this form and a cheque to the address below. ___ Company Membership—$100/year ___ Individual Membership—$35/year ___ Associate Membership—$25/year Name__________________________ Address________________________ ______________________________ Phone_________________________ Email__________________________ Sea Kayak Guides Alliance of BC P.O. Box 1005, Station A, Nanaimo BC, V9R 5Z2 info@skgabc.com 53 CALENDAR TYEE KAYAK FISHING DERBY September 2–4, 2006 MOUTCHA BAY RESORT ‘NOOTKA SOUND’ Visit our website for more info, to register, or view video of Derby www.moutchabay.com Call Jim Davis 250-923-2908 54 June 2-4, South Sound Traditional Inuit Kayaking Symposium, Twanoh Park, WA. www.qajaqpnw.org June 3, 17th Paddle Sports Expo, Newport Beach, CA. www.southwindkayaks.com June 3, 7th Round Bowen Race, Bowen Island, BC. www.roundbowenrace.org June 7, Hayley Shephard’s Haida Gwaii slideshow, Nanaimo, BC. gsa@georgiastrait.org June 8, Hayley Shephard’s Haida Gwaii slideshow, Victoria, BC. gsa@georgiastrait.org June 10-11, Atlantic Canada Sea Kayaker Meeting, Tangier, NS. www.coastaladventures.com June 17-18, Sea Kayak Symposium, Steady Brook, NL. www.explorenewfoundland.com/symposium.htm June 17-18, CRCA Level I Course, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Barry’s Bay, ON. www.mkc.ca June 22, Hayley Shephard’s Antarctica Adventure slideshow, Nanaimo, BC. oceanmaid1@yahoo.com June 23-25, 3rd DemoFest, Deerfield River, MA. www.zoaroutdoor.com July 7-9, 8th Howe Sound Outrigger Race, Gibsons, BC. www.clippercanoes.com July 7-9, Door County Sea Kayak Symposium, Rowleys Bay, WI. www.rutabaga.com July 9, BCMTA 16th Marathon, Jericho Beach, Vancouver, BC. www.ecomarine.com July 8-9, CRCA Level I Course, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Barry’s Bay, ON. www.mkc.ca July 9-15, Build Your Own Kayak, www.clcboats. com/events/chesapeakeltclasswb.php July 13-15, Assembly of Wooden Canoe Heritage Association, Keuka Park, NY. www.wcha.org July 13-16, 22nd Great Lakes Sea Kayak Symposium, Grand Marais, MI. www.glsks.org July 13-22, Great Hudson River Paddle, Albany, NY. www.hrwa.org July 15, Tour de Indian Arm, Deep Cove, BC. www.deepcovekayak.com July 16-22, Build Your Own Canoe, www. clcboats.com/events July 22-23, Guide Essentials Workshop with Wayne Horodowich, Kalispell, MT. www. silvermoonkayak.com July 22-23, CRCA Level I Course, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Barry’s Bay, ON. www.mkc.ca July 30, NLPA Canoe & Kayak Instructor’s Clinic, St. John’s, NL. ifong@nf.sympatico.ca Aug 4-6, West Coast Wooden Kayak Rendezvous, Port Townsend, WA. joe@redfishkayak.com Aug 5-6, Paddle the Mississippi River Challenge. www.mississippiriverchallenge.org Aug 12-13, CRCA Level I Course, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Barry’s Bay, ON. www.mkc.ca Aug 17-20, Canadian Whitewater Championships, Madawaska Kanu Centre, ON. www.mkc.ca Aug 17-20, Ladies of the Lake Sea Kayak Symposium, St. Ignace, MI. gear@downwindsports.com Aug 19-20, Small Craft Builders Rendezvous, Peterborough, ON. www.bearmountainboats.com Aug 20-26, Rideau Canal Folding Kayak Flotilla II, Chaffeys Lock. mlomas@magma.ca Aug 26-27, CRCA Level I Course, Madawaska Kanu Centre, Barry’s Bay, ON. www.mkc.ca Sep 2-4, Tyee Kayak Fishing Derby, Moutcha Bay Resort, BC. www.moutchabay.com Sep 8-9, 10th Newfound Rendezvous, Wellington State Park, Bristol, NH. www. newfoundrendezvous.org Sep 15-17, West Coast Sea Kayak Symposium, Port Townsend, WA. www.wcsks.org Sep 17, GoZero Kayak Race, Beacon, NY. www. gozero.info Sep 28, Hayley Shephard’s Antarctica Adventure slideshow, Victoria, BC. oceanmaid1@yahoo.com Sep 29-Oct 1, Delmarva Paddlers Retreat. www. qajaqusa.org Sep 30-Oct 1, Bay Area Paddlefest, San Mateo, CA. www.bayareapaddlefest.com Oct 13-15, Traditional Kayak Rendezvous, Fish Creek, WI. www.superiorkayaks.com www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006 � � � � � � © Rick Matthews photo Thermoformed Kayak Specialists www.deltakayaks.com 604-460-6544 June / July 2006 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com 55 56 www.WaveLengthMagazine.com June / July 2006