[Paddlewise] Trip Report: Flathead Lake, MT USA (long)

From: Shawn W. Baker <baker_at_montana.com>
Date: Mon, 18 Oct 1999 12:26:17 -0600
Trip Report:
Saturday, October 16, 1999

Got to the put-in at 2:00pm.  My "little" brother, Dan (6'-8", age 22)
just returned from a 5-month working/touring trip in Europe.  He hadn't
been paddling since July in Finland, so he was missing his boat, and I
helped him cure his withdrawal symptoms.

We loaded up all our drybags with emergency sleeping bag, cooking gear,
and spare clothes, and packed the boats 250 yards down a steep hill to
the putin.  Launching a loaded boat from a dock 2.5' above the water's
surface in waves proved tricky.  In hindsight, I'd probably launch from
shore next time, although the new experience was good.

Moving across the waves at 2:30 and paddled out from Wolf Point across
Stone Quarry Bay.  We had originally planned to cross to Finley Point
(4.5 miles) but Dan's arms were too out of shape for that proposition. 
We paddled just north of King's Point, which is actually an island, but
a riprap jetty has been built to connect the point to the rest of the
Rocky Point peninsula.  We were greeted by 4 rafts totaling close to
2000 canvasback ducks!  We tried to thread between the rafts, two to the
east, and two to the west, and disturb them as little as possible, but
2-300 still took to the air in their mad flapping/running/skimming
fashion.  We ducked under the low bridge in the jetty and saw another
raft of 3-400 ducks.  Wow!  

Out past the flashing lights and flags guarding the shallows and rocks
in The Narrows from drunken speedboaters.  You'd have to be insane to
run into one of them in a kayak; of course, you'd have to try pretty
hard to hit one with a motorboat too!   Around the south end of Little
Bull Island, seeing a few more ducks.  The fetch is close to 4 miles
here, so there are some good rolling wind waves but nothing large enough
to surf on.  We cross to the southeast corner of Big Bull Island in
search of a beach to land and cook lunch on.  Signs every 30-40' all
along shore proclaim that this is Private Land, No Trespassing, Keep
Out!  Dan's arms are tiring, and he needs to get out and stretch and
replenish some calories.  We paddle to a beach on an undisclosed island,
not sure of our legality, but we stay below the high water marks.  Set
up the stove in a gravelly spot and cook some good spaghetti with
roasted garlic.  French bread, hot apple cider, and a bottle of scotch
ale homebrew make a great meal.  I scrounge around the beach and pick up
spent firework casings and a pop bottle  Not sure if the fireworks are
from legal occupants of the island or otherwise, or if they've floated
here, but whether or not I've legally landed, I'll still leave the place
cleaner than I found it.

We rest 45 minutes and absorb the panoramic view of the Mission Range
and the south shore of the lake.  We can just see Polson, 4 miles
distant in the haze off the lake.

I want to paddle on to Finley Point, 1.5 miles distant, but Dan feels
he's just got enough to make it back to the take-out.  I don't want to
piss off my paddling partner, now that he's finally back in the country,
so I relent.  Load up the boats and off around the north end of Big
Bull.  We paddle through the narrow channel between the islands and
around the south end of Little Bull.  We can make out the bridge to
King's Point, and Dan protests that he's getting tired quickly.  The
waves are picking up slightly, and I'm just starting to have fun.  I
show him how to paddle with his upper arm straight and to turn his torso
more.  He's still paddling with a push/pull, and not listening, as he's
probably more comfortable with how his instincts tell him to stroke.

Back through Stone Quarry.  This time 85% of the ducks are west of us,
and we stay away from them.  The remaining ducks quack and paddle right
in front of our course.  We stop to let them by, but they seem
unconcerned with our presence.  We continue paddling and they take off
anyway.  After a short arc around the perimeter of the bay, they land
amidst the larger raft.  Ducks are packed so tightly together, swimming,
that random ducks jump up and seemingly run across the backs of their
companions to take off, and fly to a less crowded spot in the raft.

We make it back to the dock around 6:00pm.  All in all, an enjoyable
day, and I didn't wear him out so bad that he'll still paddle with me
again!


Shawn W. Baker          0                                46°53'N
© 1999            ____©/______                          114°06'W
~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^\  ,/      /~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^
baker_at_montana.com    0        http://www.missoulaconcrete/shawn/
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Received on Mon Oct 18 1999 - 11:27:31 PDT

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