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From: Shawn W. Baker <baker_at_montana.com>
subject: [Paddlewise] Part I: Cold water, warm spaghetti, and a different pace
Date: Wed, 08 Mar 2000 12:04:28 -0700
Trip Report: Saturday, March 4, 2000 Flathead Lake, Montana 

I took my friend Ryan, who also does "freelance" work for our local
paddle shop, the Canoe Rack, out for his first big water experience in
Montana. The owner of the Canoe Rack, Matt, is a dedicated kayak and
canoe racer, and Ryan has been training with him in the evenings "Go,
Go, GO!!"; I figured I could expose Ryan to the more spiritual side of
kayaking. 

I picked Ryan up at his house at 7:30am, and we drove out to the Canoe
Rack to pick up a Carbonlite Eddyline Merlin XT for Ryan to paddle on
Flathead. Matt was loading up a bunch of his other sea kayaks for a
triathlon race that was also scheduled for Saturday. Matt said,"I can't
figure out why you guys aren't racing," I just smiled and said nothing.
I had much bigger plans in store. 

We hit the put-in at the county park about 9:40 and were on the water by
10. We paddled much the same route that my brother Dan and I paddled in
October, but we paddled south of King's Point, rather than north,
through the bridge in the jetty. We paddled around Little Bull, and
south of Big Bull. The day was overcast, and occasional showers would
spit lightly on us. There was a line of encroaching sunlight in the
cloud ceiling south of us, we privately and openly hoped that it would
creep over us and bask us in the warm rays. The peaks to the south were
bathed in sunlight and the sky was a sunny blue, but it was gray
overhead until the last leg of our trip. 

Crossing past the islets east of Big Bull, we saw several pairs of
Canada Geese, honking loudly to each other. In a few months we'll see
fuzzy goslings waddling about. I'm reading Michener's Chesapeake right
now, and it's caused me to see geese in a light I hadn't seen them in
before. 

Crossing the last mile to Finley Point, we landed in a small gravel cove
that is under water during full summer pool.  Ryan dined on cold
spaghetti while I busily set up my stove and pumped the fuel tank. I
told him,"Momma always said that a hot lunch is good for you!" to which
he replied,"Cold spaghetti is just fine, thanks". 

About 15 minutes later, I had more than enough hot pasta for myself, so
I offered him a big serving--he quickly agreed that my Mom is right!
After stuffing my belly with semolina and tomato squeezings, I lay on
the rocks waiting for the sun to creep northward. Ryan still seemed
impatient; used to his paddling trips with Matt, he was ready to "Go,
Go, GO!", but I knew that he would come around. 

Loaded up the boats and took a few scenery and candid shots with my new
camera. I finally broke down and purchased the Pentax WR-105, a
water-resistant zoom point-and-shoot for constant use while kayaking.
Aside from fumbling around trying to find a secure place for it to
travel tucked inside my PFD, it performed admirably, and wasn't even
affected by a roll, and a few waves breaking over the cockpit and
dousing me in my snug yellow PFD. We paddled over to the first islet
with a better view of the peaks now behind us so Ryan could pull his
good camera from the drybag and catch the Mission range in the midday
light. I lay on the rocks again, listening to the gentle honking of the
geese and feeling the first few direct rays of the sun. Ryan said, "This
is pretty cool, I could get used to this, as he sat down on the beach
and reveled in the panorama. I knew that I'd succeeded in pushing the
"Go, Go, GO!" instinct to
the back recesses of his mind. 

We paddled North of Big Bull and caught a few waves that had rolled 23
miles south from the head of the lake. Ryan also hadn't had much
experience in rougher water, but he does have good bracing skills, so he
loved riding the wave "roller coaster".  

Paddling back through the Narrows, we planned to cut in behind Kings
Point island and paddle under the bridge in the jetty. Once we got into
the bay, we found that there was a pretty significant mud flat, and a
200' portage to the bridge. We tromped through the mud, concentrating on
keeping our footwear on our feet, when a nearby cabin owner hailed us.
"Hey, you might want to come up here and take a look at this!" We walked
up on his lawn and found that Stone Quarry Bay featured a mud flat over
1/4 mile long. With "Thanks!" to the cabin guy, we slogged the 200' back
to the water, and paddled south around Kings Point, the way we came out. 

Back to the put-in by 3:00, did a little roll practice, and into some
warm, dry clothes. Ryan confided that this was definitely the way to
enjoy kayaking. 

Shawn
-- 
Shawn W. Baker          0                                    46°53'N
© 2000            ____©/______                              114°06'W
~~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^\  ,/      /~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^
baker_at_montana.com    0        http://www.missoulaconcrete.com/shawn/

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