[Paddlewise] Best / Worst Campsite Ever

From: Dave Kruger <kdruger_at_pacifier.com>
Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2003 12:44:36 -0700
Seems like it might be interesting to hear about the best (and worst) of
campsites.  I've got a couple in mind.  Here is one of my worst experiences
that was also a good one.

--------------------

Three days to cover ten miles?  Well, it might be expected when the wind
is in your face and two of the boats are doubles paddled singly, with a kid
up front.  Great company, but difficult to make miles.  And, on top of it
all, here came the rains, after a week of sunny, fine weather.

The east side of Nootka Island (Vancouver Island, BC) is a narrow waterway
easy to thread, but bereft of good places to camp.  However, Kirby's map
promised one on Nootka, just north of Bodega Island, a few miles from Plumper
Harbour.  Alas, it was not to be.  The site was nonexistent, or only usable
during neap tide phases, and we had maximum tides, with a big one at 2 am.
So, we moved our cumbersome entourage down-bay, along the west side of
Bodega, shifting and searching, eyes and ears on the oncoming front.

Rich and Bill spotted a slight, flat bulge in a cove on Bodega that might be
above the tide, studded with two-inch alders on two-foot centers.  Nobody
liked it, so they sent me around the corner to see if Plumper was a
possibility.  Fifteen knots of headwind and increasing drizzle nixed that, so
we were stuck.

An hour of brush thrashing and rude sawing on the alders formed enough area
for three tents, and as the rains intensified we got them up, and erected a
double tarp over the fronts.  Now the rain was gushing, and Rich and the kids
took baths on tarp dumps, all laughing.  The adults grinned determinedly.
Dinner was impromptu, emptying our larders of everything -- our ride out was
due the next morning.  As the rain increased and the wind reached gale force,
whipping us, the tarp, and slicing rain onto us, we dined magnificently.
Eleen was stunned I had a few scraps of dry paper towel to assist cleanup,
and we cackled like demented crones at our "fortune."

Asleep.

And, then, awake at 2 am, to the sounds of adult groans and kidweeping next
door, the outcomes of a horrible inside-the-tent bathroom accident (no, not
number 1 -- number 2) at the highest tide stage.  We were squeezed onto
small, isolated islets barely three inches above the water, hoping it did not
lap onto us.  Our only resort would be scrambling up the bank behind us and
grabbing trees.  The boats banged and drifted, afloat and tied off to a big
stump.

An hour later, the tide began to recede, and all of us crashed again, to
awake at first light, for cleanup of the number 2 accident, and a gargantuan
breakfast.  Two hours later, our shuttle arrived, and we shifted the gear to
the boat, boats folded or strapped on, the rain still pounding down.  We were
wet, wet, wet.

On the way back to Zeballos, Bill and I got the stern, cleaning ourselves
with the lash of wet, and howling at the gonzo experience we had just had.
Memorable and horrible.  Is this existential camping?

--
Dave Kruger
Astoria, OR
***************************************************************************
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 Tue Jul 15 2003 - 13:12:59 PDT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Thu Aug 21 2025 - 16:31:08 PDT