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From: Ira Adams <iadams_at_earthlink.net>
subject: [Paddlewise] Paddling report
Date: Fri, 15 Oct 1999 18:14:13 -0500
It didn't seem right to call this a "trip" report since we didn't go far 
or stay long.
_________________________________________________________________________

Many weeks have gone by without getting into a kayak -- too busy at work, 
too tired when I get home, son needs help with homework.... This 
afternoon I'm leaving work on time, loading the little kayak in the 
pickup, and paddling Legion Lake 'til dark.

Out back, I unwrap the tarp from the Prijon and discover that it's 
half-filled with cold, slimey rainwater. I guess it's time for a new 
tarp. Kinda hard to get a 600 pound kayak off the rack! I open the drain 
plug and manage to get the stern lowered enough to begin to drain it. 
After 20 minutes or so, the hull is empty but there's still a solid 
stream of water pouring out of a drainhole in the plastic seat. It takes 
another 5 or 10 minutes before the seat is drained. Who knew the seat 
held so much water? Anyway, now I can carry it to the truck, towel the 
seat dry, get the dog into the truck, check that I've got our PFDs, a 
paddle, and a dry bag. Forgot the cell phone, but it's getting late and 
I'm not going back for it.

At the lake, I stand waiting patiently while the Park Ranger chats on the 
telephone and the sun gets closer to the horizon. Finally he hangs up and 
takes my $3. Back to the truck and down to the lakefront. Hmmm, my 
favorite little launching cove now has a big blue trash dumpster situated 
in front of it. I guess that's progress.

Sasha explores the area while I get the gear out of the truck. A group of 
elderly men and women are packing up fishing gear to leave. They slow 
down as they drive past, pointing and giggling at Sasha in her bright 
orange PFD. I smile and wave -- Sasha ignores them coyly. The sun is just 
above the treetops.

Kayak in the water, I mount the paint-roller tray she sits in in the deck 
rigging behind the cockpit. On previous trips I had been putting it on 
the foredeck, but having her weight forward makes the Prijon bow-heavy. 
It's a wide, blunt-bowed, retired whitewater kayak, and it's slow enough 
without being bow-down, so I want to try letting her sit behind me. She 
takes her position. I get in carefully so as not to rock the kayak. As 
I'm settling into the cockpit, I hear a loud commotion behind me, with 
the sound of little claws scrabbling on plastic -- then a big splash. I 
turn to find her in the lake, trying to climb back onto the after deck. 
Using the handle on her PFD, I lift her out of the lake and put her in my 
lap. Now I'm soaking wet too. She has a grim expression on her face and 
won't look at me. I think she's embarassed. I fish her perch out of the 
lake and mount it in the foreward deck rigging. We head out into the lake.

The water is glassy calm, and the shadows of the trees are lengthening 
out over the water. No-one else is on the lake. Everything is still. The 
wet little dog in my lap is still not looking at me or responding to me 
when I speak to her. I put her up in her tray on the foc'sle so I can 
paddle better.

We're already across the widest part of the lake. The kayak glides 
quickly over the still water. I practice long, low, wide strokes, turning 
my torso and reaching out a little to each side as I paddle. I have no 
idea whether it's any kind of stroke a purist would recognize -- I guess 
I'll never earn a black belt in "Greenland Style" or whatever. It feels 
good and it moves my kayak well. That's enough for me.

Sasha seems happier now, eyeing the bow wave folding back alongside her, 
glancing at the big grey heron that launches skyward off the bank in 
front of us and at the little floating birds that dive one by one as we 
pass by, and pop up a few feet away a minute or so later. She startles 
and "laughs" when a fish jumps right in front of us. But she's still not 
looking at me.

I decide to paddle on up to the beaver lodge in the stream that feeds the 
lake, at the far end. The banks of the lake are deep in shadow, and I 
look carefully for the gators that usually begin cruising about this time 
of day. We pass a pair of big white birds sitting in a tree on the south 
bank. We glide rapidly between the stumps and trees that are scattered 
across the mouth of the stream. Hundreds of little water bugs weave 
complicated patterns ahead of and all around us -- Sasha tries to follow 
them all with her eyes, fascinated.

I let our speed bleed off as we coast up the stream, threading our way 
between the trees and logs. I try to steer very quietly so we won't 
disturb the beavers if they're out. No good -- as soon as our bow rounds 
the bend in front of the lodge, a dark furry head disappers under the 
water.

We drift quietly up to the lodge. As always, we can hear little ones 
gurgling, suckling, and mewing inside. Beavers must be really prolific! 
Sasha strains forward to listen intently. I think the tender sounds of 
baby beavers awaken her mothering instincts. The big grey heron arrives 
overhead and makes a full-flaps steep descent into a tree nearby, 
knocking off several small dry branches on the way in. It sits watching 
us. Frogs begin to sing bass notes in the weeds nearby. The baby beavers 
continue to babble. We seem to have been accepted as a part of something 
precious and magical.

Too soon it's time to go. The evening is darkening here under the trees 
and it will soon be time to be off the lake. We back slowly away from the 
beaver lodge, into wider water, trying to make no disturbing noise, 
but... BOOM! -- from around the bend behind us comes the loud warning 
sound of a beaver who must have been watching us.

We turn about in the wider portion of the stream and head toward the lake 
in rapidly gathering darkness. As we pass under overhanging branches, 
large spiders in their webs are sillohuetted against a bright crescent 
moon in a blue-black sky. Sasha watches the water beetles again, glancing 
from port to starboard and back as they weave their patterns on the 
surface ahead and alongside. Entering the lake, we spot a small 'gator 
cruising on a parallel course at "periscope depth". As we come abreast of 
it, about 40 or 50 yards away, it submerges entirely and moments later 
the water boils suddenly where a fish had just jumped -- maybe the 'gator 
found its dinner.

I lift Sasha from her foc'sle perch and put her in my lap, but she 
immediately climbs back up for'ard into her paint tray. On this outing 
she doesn't want to be the little lap dog she normally is. Maybe it's the 
magic of being out here in the non-human world with all the wild things.

Halfway back to our starting point, we meet a long series of low waves 
telling me that a power boat was still on the lake somewhere. Probably 
some fishermen headed back home like us. As we get within sight of the 
boat ramp, I can see the taillights of a vehicle backing down the ramp, 
and a small white boat waiting to be trailered and hauled out. It's 
almost dark now. A sodium light is mounted on a tall pole near the little 
cove where we put in. We head in at cruising speed, our bow sliding 
smartly up onto the little bit of sandy beach there. Sasha stands up in 
her foc'sle perch and looks back at me expectantly.

Carefully climbing out of the kayak, I pick her up and put her ashore 
where she trots off to sniff at the trees and things. The lake is very 
dark now. This is the time of evening when the 'gators often cruise along 
the shoreline, stalking cats, dogs, and ducks that come along. As a 
matter of fact, there are hardly any ducks left. I keep an eye on Sasha 
as I put the kayak and gear in the back of the pickup. I call her when 
she begins to wander back toward the water. I shine a pocket light on the 
nearby water, fully expecting to see the usual twin coals of 'gator eyes 
glowing back at us, but this time we seem to be alone. When I remove her 
PFD, Sasha shakes off her unusual mood with the last few drops of water 
on her coat, and resumes her normal role of 15-year old puppy. We climb 
into the truck. The cabin light gives us a cheery welcome as we start up 
and head home. I think maybe I can cope with one more day of work 
tomorrow after all.

Ira  Adams
on the frontier in Mississippi
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From: <Sandykayak_at_aol.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Paddling report
Date: Fri, 15 Oct 1999 21:04:10 EDT
In a message dated 10/15/1999 8:01:52 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
iadams_at_earthlink.net writes:

<< They slow down as they drive past, pointing and giggling at Sasha in her 
bright 
 orange PFD. I smile and wave  >>

Just in case non-dog lovers are not impressed....I get lots of waves as I 
paddle the lake (now growing by the minute!!) with my two little doggies in 
their orange PFDs.  

Charley the 5-year old, black, long-haired Chihuahua/Pomeranian mix is ever 
so good.  Not so rambunctious Canela (Spanish for cinammon) who, at 2 years 
old, loves to dip her nose in the water and continuously manages to slide out 
or even take a flying leap at ducks.  Not for her the gator infested rivers.

Choosing boats now involves checking to see if I can fit two doggies in the 
"cockpit" area of a SOT - the Hobie Pursuit is great.

Sandy Kramer
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