Once again I let my enthusiasm get me in over my head. You know how it is when you invite people to come to your area and paddle. You only talk about the best weather days, the best scenery, and the most wonderful wildlife encounters. It's great fun until someone accepts your invitation and then you have to deliver on your promises. Last February I met a couple from New England at the Sweetwater Kayak Symposium (Tampa Florida) and spoke eloquently of the great paddling here in South Texas. Now they were coming down and I was going to have to deliver on my promises. Everything was just as you would expect. It had been raining for 4 days and the high temp had not gotten above 55 degF and the lows were in the mid 30's. That is pretty good for Jan in New England but its not what they were coming all the way to Texas to see (or what I had described). I had not been paddling that much and had not had a chance to check out the places I normally take visiting paddlers. Things were looking a little bleak. But as they say, "It's always darkest just before the dawn". The day before their arrival a dry front arrived and stopped the rain. The forecast called for 3-4 days with no rain, lows in the 50's and highs in the low 70's, and light winds. At least I was going to be able to deliver on the weather. Ken, who was acting as host, and I decide to start with a short afternoon paddle around the downtown area. Bill and Anne had not paddled in a couple of months so this seemed a good starter trip. Bill really liked the idea of paddling in short sleeves in Jan. We paddled inside the breakwater toward the state aquarium. At the entrance to the port area we passed by one of the huge military cargo ships loading tanks, hummers and other large vehicles. We crossed the ship channel and paddled to the aircraft carrier Lexington (now a museum). After the obligatory pictures of little kayaks at the bow of the big carrier, we paddled along North Beach. Its one of our main public beaches with hotels and condo's just back of the beach. Anne was having some backband problems so we headed back after only about 45 min. Inside the marina we made a little detour and paddled over to the Nina. This is a replica of one of the Columbus ships. It was built in Spain and sailed across the Atlantic to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the original trip. The other two replica ships which made the trip are in dry dock at the museum just across the ship channel from the State Aquarium. A picture of kayaks in front of the Nina and then back to the launch. Not a spectacular trip but the weather, the parking 10 feet from the launch, the dry feet due to the floating dock, and the nearby bathroom at trip's end were all hits with our visitors. It was a good start, but tomorrow was the real test. I had promised dolphins. Not just ordinary dolphins seen at a distance. I had promised in your face, jump over your bow, talk to you like Flipper dolphins. Ok, I had not really promised Flipper, but I had made it sound really exciting. The day certainly did not start out with much promise. Ken's sewer backed up and he had to cancel on the trip. Bill and Anne needed to relocate their RV so we did not get to the launch site until noon. And once there we found we had to wade across 10 yards of slippery, ankle deep mud (with hidden waist deep holes) to get the kayaks to the beach. Guess how I know there were hidden waist deep holes. We launched, paddled about 1/4 mile east down the Aransas Shrimp Channel, turned north into Corpus Christi Bayou, and headed along Hog Island. Only 15 minutes into the trip and "Fin to Starboard". We had our first dolphin sighting. It was about 30 yards out in the channel and headed in the opposite direction. I turned around and moved a little further out in the channel and called for Bill and Anne to follow. I was not going to try to get close, but I knew that paddling parallel to the dolphins, even at a distance, will often get them to swim over to you. Sure enough it circled and came up behind me. Bill and Anne were slower to turn (Bill was getting the camera out) and the dolphin ended up swimming back and forth between us. Evidentially he liked Bill best because he made several very close passes to his kayak (less than kayak length away). I looked ahead to the intersection of the two channels that we had just left and saw what looked to be 3 more dolphins. We moved over to the edge of the channel (to give our single dolphin more room and to make sure we did not push him toward the shallows) and headed for the other dolphins. About 3/4 of the way over to them, they turned and came out to meet us. We stopped paddling and drifted over to shallows right at the intersection of the two channels. There were actually 5 or 6 dolphins. They would swim right towards us while keeping their eyes above the water for a better view. They would come within less than 10 ft and then turn away. Sometimes they came solo and sometimes in groups of 3 or 4. They would swim away, play with each other, and then come by for another checkout pass. Sometimes they swam close enough into the shallows that they created little bow waves ahead of their progress. They even did several jumps. One was a spectacular 3 dolphin combo with all 3 in the air at the same time. They jumped so close to each other that they appeared to be touching as they came out of the water. This went on for 20-30 min. Bill was running down his camera battery from all the pictures he was taking. Finally we decided that we should actually do some paddling and turned back north along Corpus Christi Bayou. We may have been finished watching the dolphins, but they were not finished watching us. They began to follow us down the channel. At least 3 of them followed us for the next 3 miles. They would generally stay out in the middle of the channel and slightly behind us but repeatedly they would swim over next to us for a few minutes and then head off again. In one section they took great pleasure in swimming right up behind me just where I could hear them, but not see them. Anne, who was a little behind me and more towards the channel edge, kept giving me a running commentary on the passes they were making at me. We finally lost them just before we came to our beach rest stop. After getting hydrated and taking a few pictures we decided to head back while we still had a following wind and a favorable current. It is amazing that you do not notice paddling into the wind and against the current when you are playing with dolphins, but now we realized the paddling was much easier. About a mile back up the channel we ran into the dolphins again. They followed us for about another mile. Suddenly a pair went into hide speed mode and headed right toward the shallow flats (0.5-1.5 ft deep). As they crossed into the shallows water sprayed in the air like rooster tails off hydroplanes. I thought for sure they were going to get stuck but they quickly moved 100-200 yards off into the flats. Then we noticed the pelicans diving right where the dolphins had gone. Amazing that the dolphins could locate fish like that. As we got up to the point where the dolphins crossed into the flats I realized this was the same place that some of the shallow draft fishing boats use to cross. It's still really shallow but its about a foot deeper than any other place. We finished the trip back without company. We did see one other dolphin, but he was not very interested in us and it was getting late so we just pressed on. Besides the dolphins we saw great blue herons, spoonbills, curlews, and great egrets. Back at the launch Anne discovered another of those hidden mud holes as she was carrying the kayak back to the cars. She was not pleased, but agreed that it was a small price to pay for such a dolphin encounter. I was pleased that I had kept my promise. That should be the end of the story, but I guess I have to tell the whole truth. The next day as we paddled out to an island bird sanctuary Anne told me how much she had enjoyed the dolphins. She told me it was just like one of their trips to Newfoundland. Of course on that trip they were not surrounded by dolphins, just humpback whales. There are some stories even a Texan can't top. As always, this is my version of the story and my not reflect the experiences of other participants or even the actual events. However as a great philosopher said, "That's my story and I am sticking to it." Mark J. Arnold--- mjamja_at_earthlink.net--- *************************************************************************** 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/ ***************************************************************************
Just a gentle reminder - you might try breaking up your long posts into paragraphs. Formatted as you set it up, it was almost too much trouble to read. -----Original Message----- To: Paddlewise_at_paddlewise.net; Mark J. Arnold Subject: [Paddlewise] A Promise (Trip Report) Once again I let my enthusiasm get me in over my head. Mark J. Arnold--- mjamja_at_earthlink.net--- *************************************************************************** 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/ ***************************************************************************
On Mon, 3 Feb 2003 20:17:48 -0800, "Donald Schoengold" <schoengold_at_earthlink.net> said: > Just a gentle reminder - you might try breaking up your long posts into > paragraphs. Formatted as you set it up, it was almost too much trouble > to > read. The mailing list software removes all html formatting, and attachments. Mark's post was "beautified" using html. My guess is there were no blank lines in the html that was created, resulting in no blank lines in what came out of demime. kirk paddlewise admin -- Kirk Olsen kork4_at_cluemail.com *************************************************************************** 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/ ***************************************************************************
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