[Paddlewise] why we paddle

From: Rev. Bob Carter <revkayak_at_ptialaska.net>
Date: Sat, 17 Mar 2001 00:51:06 -0900
    Today was one of those days which remind me of why I started sea kayaking
in the first place.


    Here in the waters of Southeast Alaska the herring are beginning to show
up by the millions for their annual spawn. With the herring comes all sorts of
wild life and for us the beginning of the herring spawn is the sign that the
long wet and cold winter is waning and spring is soon to come.


     Today under the watchful eye of about a dozen bald eagles I launched my
kayak from a place we call Halibut Point. I set out to circumnavigate Middle
Island, a trip of about 8-10 miles . Within in 50 yards I encounted a pod of
sealions feeding on a school of herring . I guessed there was about 15-20 in
this group. A couple lay on the surface with one flipper high in the air. I
have seen sealions do this before and I am told they do this to radiate heat
from their bodies. As I passed them they bunched up and spy hopped up out of
the water to stared at me. 


    Throughtout the day this gathering of eagles and sealions was common
place. At just about any point of land I would see a dozen or two eagles
sitting in the trees and find a dozen or so sealions fishing for herring.
Sometimes the sealions would get curious and swim close and at other times
ignore my presence. A few chose to bark or burp at me but none proved
aggressive. I tend to call the big males "Bubba" because their manners
sometimes remind me of southern rednecks.


    The Eagles would take to flight and circle above the herring waiting for
the right moment, then swope down and pluck a herring from the sea with their
talons. On Bieli Island, basically a big prominent rock, several memorial
crosses have been set up over the years to remembers fishermen from our
community who were lost at sea. Two eagle were perched upon the arms of the
crosses as if to say even in the midst of loss and sorrow that life continues.

    Between two islands I spotted two Harbor Porpoise their dark forms
swimming amid the herring and eating their fill. I remembered the story a
friend told me about a time when he was a little boy and he and his father
became lost in the forest near their Tlingit village of Angoon


    The boy was ready to panic as the darkness and cold began to come upon
them. But his father raised in the old native ways told his son to be calm and
to sit and just listen. It took a while but the boy eventually did as his
father bid him to do. As he listened harder than he had ever done before in
his life he heard in the distance a distant 'whoosh' sound. He recognized it
as the sound of Harbor porpoise surfacing to breathe as they fished the
backwater passages. Without a word his father rose and walked through the
woods to the waters edge, then followed the shore line home. 


    As I approached the end of the day I rounded the southern point of Middle
Island and headed back to Halibut Point. Now even more Eagles perched in the
trees to watch me paddle in. Almost to shore I saw something strange looking
in the water. In front of me was swimming a long furry shape with a head of
many horns. It took a few moments before I realized what I was seeing. It was
a mink swimming with a sea urchin in it's mouth. I had seen mink swim before
but from a distance the sea urchin gave it the look of a baby sea monster. 


    All in all it was one of those days for which  I will long remember and be
thankful. The weather? The temperature was in the low forties with the clouds
hanging gray and low. A light cold rain fell most of the day. Alas on such a
day with all there was to see, the weather could not dampen the spirit of the
day or the joy of the paddle


    It is days like these for which we paddle amid the wind and waves of the
sea.


 


Bob


In  Sitka-by -the -sea 





***************************************************************************
PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List - Any opinions or suggestions expressed
here are solely those of the writer(s). You must assume the entire
responsibility for reliance upon them. All postings copyright the author.
Submissions:     PaddleWise_at_PaddleWise.net
Subscriptions:   PaddleWise-request_at_PaddleWise.net
Website:         http://www.paddlewise.net/
***************************************************************************
Received on Sat Mar 17 2001 - 01:51:47 PST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Thu Aug 21 2025 - 16:30:39 PDT