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From: Doug Lloyd <dlloyd_at_bc.sympatico.ca>
subject: [Paddlewise] My Own Deep Trouble - Part Two
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 1999 03:36:17 -0700
My Own Deep Trouble  (Part Two) - Doug LLoyd

Most of the melodramatic moments narrated in Part One (including some in
Parts Two and Three), might not prove too relevant: most paddlers are
fundamentally competent enough to avoid such extremes. Therefore, few will
ever understand these frightening episodes, nor the frustrations
encountered with faltering equipment. Yet, these situations are instructive
if only as a preventative, and are relayed here with a degree of hesitancy
and embarrassment.

I took a couple of years off following the winter trip of 1986 in Part One
(Sorry, my last post incorrectly said 1982 - not that it really matters),
while my Orthopaedic Surgeon attempted to alleviate six years of Cortisone
misuse and severe shoulder Impingement Syndrome (caused by subjection to
severe storms, steam-roller surf, and sadomasochistic tidal stream
sorties). My Synovial Fluid had dried up, while the left and right Bursa
had shriveled away to nothing. Why mention this? Because "adventure abuse"
takes its accumulative toll - something never mentioned in hard core videos
and books like the Tsunami Rangers produce!

Between the intervening three surgeries, my Nordkapp underwent its own two
year "corrective surgery", including remounting the bilge pump onto the
foredeck. I also relocated the forward bulkhead to prevent  submarining
inside the cockpit during pearl-dives (don't ask!), and updated the rudder.
With modifications completed the night before the trip, and with healed
shoulders and what I thought was an improved attitude toward safety,  I
finally set off for the Brooks Peninsula in August of 1988. Keith River was
the chosen launch site, Side Bay being relatively protected from  all but
South Easterly gales upon return. 

For the second week of August, the air mass was rather unstable.  The
emotional transition of finally being on the water again was profound. Not
being in shape, progress the first few days was so slow, and my back ached
terribly. I don't know why people set off on long trips where little
pre-conditioning has been done. A 2 meter swell was breaking heavily while
passing Mocina Point. Finding a fishing boat bouncing up and down near
Anchorage Island, my pace was further arrested by a thickly-accented old
salt, warning of a big gale over the next 48 hours. "You der, stay in
inlet. We noh like look'n for dead bodies!" My own local knowledge
suggested that most searches up here were for dead fisherfolks, not
kayakers...but it really didn't seem too appropriate to share that with the
old fellah and his concerned wife. The Brooks  beckoned ominously beyond;
the protuberance barely visible in the thickening mist. Later, I had a
close shave as a huge boomer exploded astern off Gould Rock. When you have
not been out on the open ocean for awhile, your awareness of the lurking
dangers dissipate. With preservation skills suddenly clicked on, I blurted
out to the sea gulls, "No, I don't like dead bodies either!" 

Passing the Donald Islets, the ground swell really started to intensify.
With the danger of more precipitation fog forming, a bearing was quickly
taken on Orchard Point. The damp sea-wind helped push the increasingly,
hellaciously fast, ruddered Nordkapp, toward the Brooks' north shore.
Though somewhat muffled by the cool drizzle, the unmistakable boom of
breakers bursting upon a leeward shore soon sent further shivers down my
spine. I had also forgotten how timid one becomes with the advent of the
sounds of heavy surf. As I drew closer, plainly distinct were the
"wooosshhhhhh...ssshhhhhh" of waves surging up long sandy ramparts, then
receding in widening washes of hissing foam. A nice sandy beach, probably,
but strewn with strategically placed rocks and small "reeflets". Ince, in
his book "Sea Kayaking Canada's West Coast" indicates that it is "almost
impossible to avoid surf, big surf." Even in August, apparently! (I've been
back a few times since, and have seen it fairly mild, too).

Though not really "big" surf by winter standards, coming ashore in two and
a half meter swell can be intimidating on a wilderness beach, alone, in a
fully weighted boat where a bailout and possibly broken knee cap would be a
genuine emergency. During this part of the decade, few people frequented
North Brooks. I delayed landing for a inordinate amount of time, while
surveying the interminable surge of seas for some sign of weakness in the
shoreline. I sorely regretted stowing the detailed chart below deck (the
standard "X" patterned bungies of the Cape Horn deck layout I had was just
plain stupid -- apparently, the expedition Frank Goodman was on only had
tiny little maps of the southern continents headland, but that layout
became the standard import into North America because it looked good!)
Anyway, the bungies kept folding my chart in half, in wind and waves, so I
had taken it off deck. Well, my physician had requested a decreased "salt
intake" and I was also agreeing wholeheartedly. However, any irresolution
to land became a mute point when a deep water wave broke without warning,
causing a rapid shore ward broach. "Land ho!" I made it. What an inflated
feeling it is to be on soild ground again - nothing like it in the
universe! My shoulder was less than happy. Too high a brace. 

Once ashore, a quiet awe slowly befell me. I had arrived self-propelled,
seemingly through a portal into a river estuary that was as primitive in
its power and as pristine in its perfection  as that into which the First
Nation's people must have stepped. Evidence abounds that this peculiar area
jutting out into the Pacific missed the last ice age. The pelagic panorama
afforded by this profoundly ancient promontory, once the mist clears, with
its uncluttered vistas of sand, surf, sea, and sky, should  stir the soul
of anyone with a sensitive heart to express appreciation to the Master
Artist who painted the scene, or failing some sense of spirituality, at
least an honest contemplation of our vastly beautiful planet. 

Paddling further up the lagoon, it was truly one of those other worldly
occurrences in my otherwise dull life as a government worker normally stuck
behind a desk from 9 to 5. Mist hung heavily in the mountains while
droplets of wetness clung to the dense, strangely dwarfed trees. There was
a preponderance, something primordial and eerily evocative about this
Jurassic like world. It was a privilege to move unhurriedly amidst this
phenological significant ecosystem called "The Brooks". The unusual biota
of this untamed, untrodden, undisturbed, unfrequented, unmarked and
hopefully always unspoiled  wilderness deserve our full devotion.
    
The night was spent tossing and turning, almost to the point of tears, with
the reoccurrence of shoulder impingement and subsequent carry-over pain
into the night. I had been too eager, and had not regained shoulder
stability yet. Any encumbrance related to one's health, be it back
problems, serious wrist tendonitis, or the aforementioned shoulder
condition, should be enough to make the wise paddler boycott a trip, or
scale back to something more manageable, until the problem has resolved.
This was an intense lesson, indeed. Vitamin "I" pills were popped
continually. "Ibupfofen - don't leave home without it!" But the real
wrestle wasn't against flesh, but against the spirit of adventure. There
was insufficient time to allow the gale to blow itself out and still make
the trip to the Bunsby Islands on the other side and then back to Side Bay,
and get back to Victoria for work. The adventure politics of my mind
suggested I vote to keep going -- that my shoulder would improve, as would
the weather. Awakened by anxiety, the day almost half over at noon, a
still, small voice tried to veto the decision to go. Finally, the departure
could be postponed no longer, as the wind was picking up. It was now or
never. This pull to progress forward can be a powerful and persistent one,
particularly where there's no flexibility with a solo paddler's agenda. It
is particularly reprehensible when that trip agenda is an artificial one
that could be so easily modified to suite conditions. Solo paddlers often
can't sit still, as there is no one to pass the time with, so we keep moving.

Rounding the bold bluffs of Cape Cook, the predicted Westerlies were
blowing the briny blue into a boisterous, playful mess. And I was the play
toy! Solander Island stood stark and sentinel-like in the distance, waging
its battle with  the billion breakers of geological time. The offshore
reefs in the vicinity of Solander Island and the Cape can break up the
ground swell, which rebounds back into itself from the gray, battered
bases, where the tidal current further enhances the dastardly mix. It is
basic knowledge that headland topography intensifies existing wind speeds,
current and wave energies - steepening any ground swell. The Brooks
peninsula juts out ten nautical miles into the open pacific, ergo, extreme
danger. Passage should be attempted under favorable conditions, early in
the morning. "So much for my seafaring savvy!"

Like some kind of adrenaline junkie, I pushed on regardless, immune to
further fear and pain. Some of the most technical paddling of my life was
executed. Unlike shooting short Class 4 river rapids, the sustained
commitment of paddling a fast, narrow sea kayak through such hazardous
marine hydraulics can be mentally exhausting. (Certainly a word of caution
is due here for impressionable novices: Don't try to emulate such headland
adventures. Conditions change rapidly, and there is usually no chance to go
scouting beforehand and no margin for error). As I began the five mile
jaunt along the tip of Brooks, hugh forests of kelp moderated the swell.
However, that same kelp  was  fast becoming the worst of my problems.

Environment Canada's publication "Marine Weather Hazards Manual" states
that wind speeds can be 15 knots higher around the Brooks headland, than
those just a few miles offshore, due to the friction effects of corner
winds. The wind-stirred sea state extends just outside the shore break
along Brooks, about a mile wide or more, and four miles long. The intensity
being encountered that afternoon was unknown. Memory can be selective with
time, but I distinctly remember shouting, only to have my voice deadened by
the deafening roar of howling winds rushing by. I retained some confidence,
even while being drawn into the terrifying vortex. With rudder down, at
least a 1 knot current in my favor, and an easily 40 knot-plus tail wind
(probably a bit lower in between the actual waves, I'm sure, Clerke Point
should have been a fast 25 minutes, right?

Wrong! The kelp fronds flapped and fluttered wildly, as each one rose
upwards in the troughs. With each passing swell, the rudder blade would
ride up over the kelp and stay out of the water, necessitating  a free hand
to haul it back down again - a difficult task when one can barely hang on
to the paddle shaft with even two hands, and I'm not a pussy either.
Between kelp beds, the stern would lift in the following seas, rendering
the rudder completely ineffectual. Then, as the stern would suddenly
reassert into the water, the boat would do a "thump-bump-gonna-dump"
routine. The resulting broaching buffoonery was beyond belief. "Damn, back
to the drawing board!" I vowed to set up a bungy corded haul-down line that
would ensure that the rudder would stay down yet ride over any obstruction.
And, I would also add a few inches to the typically inadequate rudder
lengths being sold. 

The racing white caps finally spit me out just past Clerk Pt. reefs.
Thinking my troubles were now all behind, I got ready to veer toward the
South Brooks shoreline. Something was awfully wrong. Turning a full 180
degrees, I paddled with all my might, but to no avail. A strong tide
combined with gusty lee winds avalanching over the peninsula pushed me
backwards out to sea. An overwhelming wave of utter helplessness swept over
me. How disingenuous to think I had the deference required to traverse
these dangerous costal waters. All I had to really do was get up earlier in
the day, and all would have been fine. All that could be done was to turn
again and keep veering beyond Checleset Bay." Well, the Bunsbys are my
destination anyway". Slowly, a modicum of control was regained. A huge
offshore yacht pulled up beside me and asked if I needed help. I indicated
with loud shouts that I was doing okay, just very frightened. There were
some Zodiac boaters camped in the Bunsby Islands when I finally arrived,
who had been waiting days for the right conditions to round the Brooks on
their westward trek, finally changing plans. "Hmmm, altering plans, what a
concept" I said to myself. Two days later, I made passage back around the
Brooks -- at 6:00 a.m. in the calm morning. "Hey, you're learning, Doug,
slowly, but learning!"

BC'in Ya
Doug Lloyd




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From: <Sandykayak_at_aol.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] My Own Deep Trouble - Part Two
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 1999 11:33:46 EDT
In a message dated 8/31/99 9:42:53 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
dlloyd_at_bc.sympatico.ca writes:

<< Once ashore, a quiet awe slowly befell me. I had arrived self-propelled,
 seemingly through a portal into a river estuary that was as primitive in
 its power and as pristine in its perfection  as that into which the First
 Nation's people must have stepped.  >>

WOW! Riveting and beautiful.  Thank you.

Sandy Kramer
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