Living on the most eastern of the San Juan archipelago islands, Fidalgo island, the variety of trip & training paddle routes from here are endless. While strong currents do exist in nearly every channel surrounding our island shores, learning how to use these currents to travel in the back eddies, the mid-channel-river-like 'green tongue', along with harnessing the strength of the winds (with kayak sails), is what paddling the San Juans is all about to us... Efficiency. Speed. Using what Nature offers to help us achieve our paddling (distance travelling & racing speed) goals. Which sometimes mandates a combination of styles & skills from river and sea kayaking mixed in with occasional surfing and sailing. Adreline rushes. Personal Speed Records. Risk-taking. Innovation. ~Paddle the Islands and let Nature Inspire.~

Friday, October 2, 2009

Expedition Training...

With less than a year to go before we plan to attempt our lofty goal of paddling the Inside Passage from Alaska back home to Anacortes in one month, we went for one of our most adventurous overnighters in the San Juan islands yet!!52 miles roundtrip from Anacortes to Patos Island, a marathon 26 miles a day, in 11 hours total paddling time between Sat & Sun mornings- including taking all breaks in boat, while occassionally fighting strong currents, winds & 6 foot wave walls...Launched Sat morning from Guemes Channel into absolutely dead calm waters. No wind in the morning until about 20 miles in, when just after leaving the shorelines of Orcas island while crossing over to Sucia, we were hit by a rapidly-approaching-from-the-north dark wall of wind across the channel as the marine forecast predicting NW 10-20 finally caught up to us, with gusts escalating into blasts as strong as 20-30+mph...
Even at this muscle-burning stage of the days long paddle, we were both still thinking "It's all good" as we knew we were just a few miles from our final destination. Then as we began rounding the NW side of Sucia and caught sight of the Massive Solid White Wall of Waves just ahead, reality hit. So we zigged & zagged as best we could through a tiny island passageway as we attempted to avoid 'the wall', but still ended up having to paddle through 6 foot swells, w/ 4- 6 ft breaking waves -a surprise rude awakening thanks to a tide rip off a reef on Sucia combined w/ the strong, funneling headwinds creating insane wave walls to get past in the final stretch, the last 2 miles from Sucia to Patos... Once on Patos, we happily we set up camp, went for a nice walk, made dinner (all while still dizzy from the wave beatings), hiked back out to watch the sunset at the lighthouse, saw some incredible Canadian Coast Guard helicopter action and trekked back to our tent in the dark, to go to bed by 8:30pm-only to be kept awake most the night by wicked gales blowin' throughout the night, crashing waves pounding so loud the ground shook each time they broke on shore, 100 yards from the tent... Rose early Sunday to much calmer seas (thank goodness!), with the ebbing currents, we thoroughly enjoyed near perfect conditions to surf and downwind sail most of the way home on Sunday! Passed by lots of up close wildlife encounters which I didn't capture with the cameras- including a huge stella sea lion, baby seals & numerous pairs & pods of porpoises...

more photos @ http://picasaweb.google.com/expeditionpaddlers/Paddle2Patos#

Kayak-sailing down Belingham Channel- without paddling- at speeds over 5mph!

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