The LBSB Expedition
...life with ~daniel~
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Sunday Paddle @ Becher Bay

Took the Sunday Paddler's out from Becher Bay today.

Big thanks to ~ML and ~L for a great paddle and great conversation. I really enjoyed the day. Interesting to learn more about upcoming projects with tidal hydro-electric generators.

Not exactly sure what species of cetacean we spotted but it was exciting! I'm tending to agree with ~ML that it might have been a small Minke whale. The whale had a definite curve to it's back as it surfaced then went back under.



Minke Whale - Wikipedia
Minke Whale Fact Sheet - American Cetacean Society

The second option would be a Harbour Porpoise as it was traveling solo and the size would be about right. Wish I had a better look at it.



Harbour Porpoise - American Cetacean Society


Time on water - 4 hours
Time guiding - 4 hours

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Esquimalt Lagoon to Witty's Lagoon

Went for a full-on, solo, sunset-run to Witty's Lagoon using my nine-foot paddle. Albert Head was calm and peaceful. I was lucky enough to see a very young orca being bumped to the surface by it's mother. A fat little dorsal fin and a short, stumpy little body gave it away as did the quick little puffs as it exhaled. Within a short few minutes it would surface again... and again... and again... at one point I think I glimpsed the black shiny head of Mum prodding baby from the side.

Seems that the place to see whales is off-shore and that's where I was, playing in the tide-lines far off of Albert Head.





An incredible experience... one I'll never forget.

THIS is a link to download the full photo catalog of Northern Resident Orcas in BC. It's a large file so please be patient.

Time on water - 6 hours

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Whitewater Canoe in Tillicum Rapids

First time in a canoe since I was a kid. I had the best stern-man in the business though so you know it made for a great time!

Everybody hold their paddles in the air and give me a WOOHOO!!!!

Thanks Peter!

Time on water - 3 hours
Time instructing - 3 hours

Monday, May 25, 2009

Brentwood Bay

A brief little jaunt.

Time on water - 1 hour

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Mayne Island to Saturna Island

.

Time on water - 7 hours
Time guiding - 7 hours
Time instructing - 4 hours

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Brentwood Bay & Pool Session

more to come...

Time on water - 8 hours (over two outings)
Time guiding - 5 hours (over two outings)

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Esquimalt Lagoon to Witty's Lagoon

Went for an evening paddle in 'Tassie', launching from Esquimalt Lagoon. Caught the sunset over Metchosin as I paddled(slid) into(onto) the sandy shallows of Witty's Lagoon. Beautiful area out here, interesting shorelines, big gentle swells, and wildlife everywhere.



Time on water - 3 hours

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The Wreck of the Robertson II

I'm sad to show these photos of what was - not at all long-ago - a beautiful sailing ship. This ship had over a square mile of sail to the wind!!!

The Robertson II in 2007


The Robertson II in 2009


More information HERE and HERE

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Robert's Bay to Dock Island



All days on the water, in a kayak, are beautiful days. Today was no exception. We took the Sunday paddler's out to Dock Island to play in the currents and explore the little islets off Robert's Bay near Sidney. It was a great warm-up for this coming Sunday's paddle to Mayne and Saturna Islands to play in boat Passage and explore the wreck of the Robertson II. I'm really excited about this one.

Had a chance to practise rescues, and team-work, as well as explore the many eddies. I paddled the Boreal Design's Labrador again today and really love the speed this thing is capable of. This may be my pick for guiding, and expeditions. Now can we knock two inches off the deck height and two off the beam please? I'll be wanting an ocean cockpit as well... heh heh heh.

A BIG thank-you to everyone for participating and being the fun group of people that you are! :O)

~d

Specs on the Labrador...

Length: 18' 4" (5,59 m) Cockpit: 16" x 30" (41 x 76 cm)
Beam: 21" (53,3 cm) Volume: 109 gal us (415 l)
Depth: 13 3/4" (34,9 cm) depth: 9" (20,3 cm)

Weight(fibreglass/kevlar/carbon) : Gouvernail/Rudder: 55/49/45 lb (25/22,3/20,5 kg) Dérive/Skeg: 52/47/43 lb (23,5/21,4/19,5 kg)
Bow compartment: dia : 9 1/2" : 25 gal us (24 cm : 97 l)
Stern compartment: 16 1/2" x 11 3/4" : 32 gal us (42 x 30 cm : 120 l)
Stern/Bow profile:


Time on water - 4 hours

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Heh heh heh... ;O)

From Qajaqusa...

The Joy of Kayaking
By: Bill Samson
Date: Monday, 11 May 2009, 6:05 am

Two old guys were just getting set to launch their kayaks on an overnight paddle up the coast.
They were just about in the water when one looked up and saw a funeral cortege going by on the road fronting the beach. Lots of cars following the hearse.

So, the older guy turned to face the now disappearing procession at attention with his hat off, holding it over his heart in salute.

His friend said, "Well, that's impressive. I had no idea you had such a reverence for the dead!"

The other guy put his hat on and started to push his boat into the water, "Yes . . . as of Tuesday next, we would have been married for 45 years . . . "

Doh!

Measure twice...



Brentwood Bay

Took a very pleasant three hour tour around Brentwood and up Todd Inlet with a great young couple. Congratulations on your wedding anniversary my friends, I wish you many, many, many, more happy years together.

Had a chance to paddle the 'Labrador', really impressed by her. Was floored when I found out (after the fact) that she's 18'4" long, with a 21" beam. Felt like a much smaller boat. Nimble and quick, very nice hull on this girl ;O)

Moon Jellies all over the place, Swallows nesting and feeding their chicks on the pilings, a very patchy-feathered young eagle learning to fly, a lone California Sea-lion, and an up close and personal drift-by of a magnificent Great Blue Heron.

Time on water - 3 hours
Time guiding - 3 hours

Monday, May 11, 2009

This is a GREAT post on stability from the Paddlewise email list...

~d


Date: Sun, 10 May 2009 22:59:02 -0700
From: Robert Livingston
Subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Advice on boats

I will throw an arrow because I think that you are wrong.

I think that this argument that "stable" boats find themselves at 45
degrees on 45 degree wave faces to be wrong in the family of kayaks
24" or less.

First of all, I have paddled lots of kayaks including "stable" ones
and I do not detect the problem. This is a perceptual issue and other
may disagree.

The second point has to do with stability curves.

Many have seen stability curves of kayaks in Sea Kayaker or elsewhere.
These curves are interesting and valuable but subject to confusion.

First of all, most kayaks 24" or less are actually unstable. The
curves do not reflect this because they do not reflect the actual
height of the center of gravity of a typical kayak (which for this
conversation is a craft 20 - 23" wide) with an adult in it. But these
curves (which really are created for real ships that have immovable
centers of gravity) do not reflect reality for kayakers. Unlike ships,
kayaks have moveable centers of gravity.

Stability curves as classically calculated are EXTREMELY sensitive to
where you assume the center of gravity to be. Raise that center of
gravity up a bit an that "stable" looking curve goes away. Those
curves are based on an unrealistically low estimation of the center of
gravity.




The curves imply that you can lean such a boat out say 45 degrees and
you will bob back to the midline.

You won't. At least a dummy rigid paddler with the weight distribution
of a human will not. That kayak is going over. In fact, that kayak is
going over if it is leaned out 20 degrees etc. As an experiment, try
it in a warm pool. Sit rigidly in your kayak and have a friend lean
you out 15 degrees and then let go and see what happens if you do not
move a muscle but simply sit rigidly in your kayak. You are over.

The fact of the matter is that we bipeds are stability machines.
Imagine the stability curve of a human standing on one foot. Most of
us can do this. But this is HIGHLY unstable. People can stand
"rigidly" but they are not completely rigid. They make subtle
adjustments very early so as to stay upright. We are VERY sensitive to
starting to tilt and correct immediately.

We instinctively, and very successfully, keep are selves upright
whether while standing on land or sitting in a kayak. This is before
you have learned to use your paddle to brace. When the kayak starts to
tip you immediately shift your center of gravity to counteract this.
Sometimes you will see beginners shimmering in their kayak as they
compulsively remain completely vertical.

This behavior is so ingrained in us as bipeds that we do not give it
any conscious thought unless the kayak gets very unstable.

An experienced kayaker knows that he can lean out at 45 degrees
without difficulty and become upright again using his paddle. But if
you have no paddle, when you lean your boat, you will lean your body
the other way to compensate. You can only lean your body laterally at
the waist so far. If you go beyond this limit, you are over.

My contentions are that kayaks as most of us know them on this list,
are "unstable". We will exclude the rubber ducky 30" wide kayak
category. We will exclude 34 inch canoes. So we are talking about sea
kayaks which as we commonly use the word are "18 - 24" wide. These are
all unstable. You might think of a 24" kayak as a fat stable dog boat
but it is really not all that stable. It is stable for a human because
of our skills, honed by evolution, at keeping ourselves upright. We
can sit in those boats and take photo etc without difficulty. But
remember we can do that standing up also. Stick a frozen sitting
corpse in that boat and it is not going to take much of a wave or a
tilt to get it to flip over.

And I would argue that it is not hard in that 24" boat to get it to
tilt 45 degrees if the water surface becomes tilted 45 degrees. It is
easy. You lean a bit (which is instinctive) and the boat will tilt.

I do think that there are "shapes" of kayak cross-sections that can be
desirable or undesirable in terms of feelings of "comfort" when it
comes to being sideways in heavy seas. But I think that the
explanation that we frequently see in publications with the kayak so
"stable" that it cannot be leaned into a wave so as to remain in the
"upright" position is fiction.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Oak Bay to Discovery Island

Went for a wonderful sunday paddle today through the low-tide exposed Great Chain Islets. Harbour seals, jellyfish, sea-birds and bait-balls. Had lunch on Discovery Island and paddled back home the same way.

The Aleut long-paddle propels me through the water at an incredible clip!

Time on water - 4 hours
Time guiding - 4 hours

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Pool Session

Had a good pool session tonight. Figured out how to roll both sides with a single hand on the paddle. Very exciting for me, as I'm wanting to learn the hand-roll that ~G kindly showed me, and I can see a progression toward it now.

Tried out my $20 aleut paddle and was impressed by it's versatility and performance. Funny how nine feet of paddle can make Pawlata rolls slow and graceful ;O)

Time on water - 3.5 hours
Time instructing - 1 hour

Friday, May 8, 2009

Full Moon Paddle



Paddled from Six Mile to Albert Head, and back, under a beautiful, glowing-white full moon.... sprinted as much and for as long as I could endure on the way out, and took my own sweet time coming home.

Ahhhhhhhhhh... feeling much more balanced now... :)



Time on water - 6 hours

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Sigh...

I've been inches from the water all day, all week, and haven't had a paddle in it... must be almost time for a full moon paddle...

~d

Monday, May 4, 2009

Watchful Child

This incredible photo was posted by the owner of Point 65 kayaks on his personal blog...

Pool Session

Spent three hours balancing 'Humble Pie' at the pool. Amazing the difference that wobbling around the pool in the K1 has made in my paddling...








Time on water - 3.5 hours

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Sunday Paddle to Bentinck Island & Pool Session

Group paddle out from Weirs Beach to Bentinck Island. Launched at 1100 and returned at 1530. Once again ~P predicted a perfect window of opportunity between weather changes. Beautiful, sunny, serene and warm. Great company, great conversation.

Tides made for good paddling with only a slight current to paddle against on the way home. Not a breeze to be felt until we rounded William Head for the last leg of the paddle. I dragged a balloon off my stern all the way out to toughen things up for myself. Want to take full advantage of any training opportunities I can. Still seriously considering paddling down to the Columbia River in August. Read somewhere about tieing a rope around the kayak to create drag, much the same effect I imagine.

Highlight for me was a massive Sea Lion that breached, belly-up, about ten feet off my bow. Was a big one, head the size of a big pumpkin, and a belly that could hold three of me.

...and
Two hours volunteer instructing in the pool.

Time on water (two outings)- 6.5 hours
Time volunteer instructing (two outings) - 4 hours
Time volunteer guiding - 4.5 hours

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Pool Session

Took 'Humble Pie', the K1 kayak, to the pool tonight for three hours of balancing and bracing. Amazing how my comfort in my sea kayak 'Tassie' has improved because of weekly sessions in the red devil.

Time on water - 3.5 hours