Sunday, April 22, 2007

Sunday Morning Quicky

Combine the stress of buying a house, a week of deluge, and a few sunny days and you've got an Eric itching to get on the water. There was a paddle scheduled for Sakonnet Pt. that sounded fun, but there was also a lot of personal things that also needed to get done -- those pesky things like cleaning, laundry, banking, putting together wedding invitations, plans with non-kayaking friends... So as a compromise, and to get H on the water too, I decided that a quick spin on the Lake District portion of the Charles River would suffice.
The Lake District is the portion of the Charles river between the Charles River Canoe and Kayak boat house in Newton and the dam on Moody Street in Waltham. In this section the river is wide and slow moving, even when there has been a lot of rain. It is also pretty clean-for the Charles. It makes a great place to do a leisurely paddle, with some distance, or to do a spot of practice. Unlike the portion of the Charles that runs through Boston, or the section that runs through Watertown, this part of the river is suburban. The banks are lined by large houses and parks. You can hear the road, but it is not intrusive. You can also see plenty of birds, fishers, dogs, canoeists, and kayakers. You even run into the occasional sculler.
The launch for this paddle is a five minute drive from our current digs (10 minutes from the new digs), so we didn't rush to get moving. We pulled out H's gear from its long slumber and relearned how her kayak sits in the egg's hooks. It is surprising how different her kayak sits in the hooks than the Q. Despite its diminutive size, her kayak fills the hooks, where as the Q leaves plenty of space.
It was nice too not have to rush or fumble around, half asleep at some crazy hour in the morning to get our kayaks on the water for 10am. We pulled out of the driveway at 9:45 and had everything unpacked and ready to go by 10am. Even with a quick drive to a restroom and a drawn out debate about what to wear, we were on the water and paddling by 10:05. Now I know how TM and CC can paddle so often - does the green tint show?
I decided, despite the sun and 70 degree temp to wear the drysuit. The water temp was still only in the 40's and I figured better safe than sorry. As a bit of rebellion, I did decide to forgo the fleece under layer. I just wore a t-shirt and a pair of swim trunks. H, since she lacks a drysuit, wore a paddle top and a two layers of warm stuff. She also decided that she would not try anything that may land her in the drink. I know myself too well to think I could stick with that decision for long....
The paddle was pleasant. H took time readjusting to being in the kayak and freshening her forward stroke. I took the opportunity to work on hanging draws and high-stern rudders. It was relaxing and just enough work.
The thing that sort of threw both of us off was the slight current. It was not strong enough to make paddling up river hard, but it was strong enough to effect the directional stability of the kayaks. H kept saying how she was veering to the left and initially attributed it solely to being out of practice, but if she stopped applying forward motion to the kayak the current peeled her bow to the left. I was having a hard time getting a hanging draw to work on my right side. It would start off working great and the kayak would drift right. However, as the kayak lost speed, the kayak would stop moving to the right and slowly begin peeling to the left.
Good practice for handling a kayak in adverse conditions.
We saw swans (one was very aggressive), the ubiquitous geese, a cardinal, and an oriel. It was great to see the birds. I cannot remember the last time I saw an oriel or a cardinal.
We were back at the put-in by noon and home by 12:30. The other great thing about paddling on the Lake District is that it is fresh water. We had no clean-up save for hanging out the wet stuff.
If only ocean paddling were so close or so easy.....

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