Howling Moon Paddle..
October 22, 2010
Marks Kayak Log
Just a few notes and photos of Kayaking trips and local runs I take and with whome.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Night Paddle by Me
Night Paddle.
Serene
Calming
Darkness
*
*
Silently
Waiting
Beneath
*
*
Brings
Dangerous
Surprise
*
*
Unwary
Unwise
Paddlers
Solitude by; M. Workman
The Platte River |
Solitude
The state of being alone.
Solitude
Is only a state of mind.
Sometimes you can be as
alone
in a crowded room as you are on a empty river.
To become one with the natural world around you.
To become one with your kayak and the river.
To feel the power of the river’s current and the calm of it’s eddies.
To fly with so little effort over the river’s surface.
Gliding quietly by as the world stands still, for just a moment or two.
One only needs a little solitude.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
The Beginning; (A Love Blooms)
My Love for the paddle sports began back when we were going to Strawberry Lake when I was but a child. My brother-in-law Richard had a fiberglass and wood canoe that he built by hand to become an Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts of America. Which is the highest level you can attain in the Scouts. You could not only paddle that canoe but you could sail it as well. Richard set it up and built all the different components needed.
Strawberry Lake was a no motors allowed lake, small, spring fed, super clean lake that had great fishing which my dad loved and swimming which we all loved. Richard would take my sister's and I out for short trips around the lake. Where we might see a deer maybe a Eagle or a hawk and of course all kinds of fish and other different critters on these trips. That is what hooked me.
One of my favorite place's to camp and paddle as a kid was at Ludington State Park, in Michigan. You have a huge inland lake (Hamlin Lake) that has a number of little islands to paddle around. A short section of river that connects Hamlin lake to Lake Michigan. Of course you have to portage around a dam that made the lake but no problem. Endless paddling possibilities
As I grew older we did different river's and lakes. We did a couple of runs on the Looking Glass and the Maple rivers the Grand river as well as the Flat river. In my teens I found girls and motorcycles and paddling fell to the wayside.
After my tour of duty in the Army I got back into paddling with a friend of mine named Randy. He had a two man rubber raft we would do different parts of the Grand River with. Randy was a fisherman so he would fish while I paddled. Then we got the cleaver idea to buy a cheap used canoe. Which we did for $25.00 and of course it leaked from every seam. Once we found and stopped all the leaks we made our plans to paddle the whole Grand River from east of the city of Jackson to Lake Michigan in one summer. We made it as far as Lansing in a week. Cold, wet, tired and hungry with half of our gear either missing or damaged and a canoe that leaked worse then it did when we bought it. We called Randy's wife to come get us and that's where that story ends. For now.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Wabasis Lake with GRASP October, 17 2010
Wabasis Lake and creek in Kent Co, Michigan is one of my favorite local area paddle's. It is the largest lake in Kent county and over half of it is wild. The entire north shore is free of development and completely wild. The launch is open to the public and a part of a very nice county park.
This day I am going on my first run with the Grand Rapids Area Sport Paddlers group or GRASP for short. A very nice group of people who I met for the first time today. Out of eight of us who came today there where five sea-kayak's, three of which were hand made and three recreational kayaks. Mine being one of the rec boats. Today I had my 12' Dagger Blackwater kayak. A good boat for inland lakes, rivers and larger streams.
For October 17th we had excellent weather. Only partly cloudy skies and at the start of the paddle temps were in the high fifties getting to the low sixties with a wind of five to seven miles an hour out of the west north west. Which did aid us in our crossing of Wabasis lake to get to Wabasis creek. Coming back against the wind was a different story.
Wabasis creek starts at the North East end of Wabsis lake any where from six feet wide to as much as thirty feet wide in spots. Many sections of the creek are passable to both paddle boats and small power boats. Seven lakes make up the creek system before it drains into the Flat River between Greenville and Belding. Wabasis lake, Little Wabasis lake and the five lakes that make up Chain Lakes.
Today was about the Fall colors and spending time with people who share my love for Kayaking. And a fine group it was indeed.
This day I am going on my first run with the Grand Rapids Area Sport Paddlers group or GRASP for short. A very nice group of people who I met for the first time today. Out of eight of us who came today there where five sea-kayak's, three of which were hand made and three recreational kayaks. Mine being one of the rec boats. Today I had my 12' Dagger Blackwater kayak. A good boat for inland lakes, rivers and larger streams.
For October 17th we had excellent weather. Only partly cloudy skies and at the start of the paddle temps were in the high fifties getting to the low sixties with a wind of five to seven miles an hour out of the west north west. Which did aid us in our crossing of Wabasis lake to get to Wabasis creek. Coming back against the wind was a different story.
Wabasis creek starts at the North East end of Wabsis lake any where from six feet wide to as much as thirty feet wide in spots. Many sections of the creek are passable to both paddle boats and small power boats. Seven lakes make up the creek system before it drains into the Flat River between Greenville and Belding. Wabasis lake, Little Wabasis lake and the five lakes that make up Chain Lakes.
Today was about the Fall colors and spending time with people who share my love for Kayaking. And a fine group it was indeed.
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