PaddleWise by thread

From: <Rcgibbert_at_aol.com>
subject: [Paddlewise] Costa Rica Sea Paddling Trip Report (kinda long)
Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2005 21:29:57 EDT
Brian arrived in the Southwestern town of Sierpe, Costa  Rica first with his
kit and needed a couple of  days to reconstruct his 14 foot SOF kayak. His
boat design appears to be a  hybrid Aleutian/Greenlander with a radical
swede-form, hard chines, upswept bow  and stern deck zipper. His design
prerogatives
were aimed at developing a kayak  that will excel in large surf and following
seas. Scott and I rolled into Sierpe  a few days later, spent an hour and a
half
putting the Feathercrafts together,  organizing the paddling equipment and
enjoying several cervezas under a very hot  sun.
We launched down the Sierpe River after discussing with the locals  what
river bar had the best conditions and best camping. As a Spanish speaker I  am
effectively a 3 year old child, just out of goo-goo-ga-ga and discovering the
difficulty of asking for the best camping locations, which river mouth was the
best for paddling conditions, what the best time was to time the mouth. I can
phrase something and ...bam...a staccato blast of words I cannot understand
comes back to me. Decidedly words not on my audio series of spanish
tutorials.
We chose Boca Guaramal, the middle mouth of the Sierpe River, mostly as it is
away from boat  traffic and offers greater wildlife scenery. It was suggested
to us that  Guaramal was not as rough as Boca Sierpe, but agreement in that
varied from  different sources. There were dozens of crocodile dens carved
into
the river  banks, including a live one that baled into the water about 30
yards from us.  Other wildlife sightings included Scarlet Macaws, Squirrel and
Howler Monkeys,  Green Parrots and Parakeets.
After 15-16 river miles studded with small farms, rainforest and  mangroves
we found the mouth of the river. We waited approximately 90 minutes  for the
incoming tide to dampen breaker size a bit before launch. The length of
breaker
field was highly deceptive. We felt it would be a fairly straightforward
200-300 yard surf zone, but in fact it lasted a very long time, at least 20
minutes. The Sierpe has 5 mouths within a few miles of each other in mostly
pristine mangroves. The shoal complex as a result of sediment outflow is
extensive
and difficult to find a line. bClose, but not too close,b is our
formation.
And we punch through the initial 2-4 footers quite easily. As we get  farther
out we notice a more gently spilling crests and they grow to 4-6 feet  and
relatively easy to surpass. A couple hundred yards further, things begin to
change.
Brian is first on the beating list. He is about 30 meters in front and as  he
nears the top of a large wave, maybe 7-8 feet, it steepens and breaks,
launching him into outer space where he lands with a decided pop, rolls up and
takes it again, rolls up again and hightails it out before anything else wants
to maul him. After several more minutes of high octane surf we paddle a few
miles down the coast to a cove on Isla Violin. In order to gain the advantage
of
 swell deflection at the cove we have to run a point break, each taking our
turn,  dodge a couple of boomers, then we can land one at a time where a tiny
creek  enters into the sea. We chop a bit of brush out of the jungle so we can
string  the hammocks up for the night. Every nocturnal creature in the forest
had a go  at us, as the woods came alive with their foot falls and debris
hailed upon our  rain canopies.
After returning the forest to as near original condition as we could, we
launch with Brian out first after instructing me to shoot photobs of him on
launching. However, Ibm next up on the beating list and it will not be
possible.
I would like to say it was a Mavericks sized wave that thrashed me but in
reality it was more like a 4 footer. The tide was high early in the morning
and
we waited too long for it before we got moving. I noticed the sandbars in the
area from the river bar a mile or two north of us firing off surf and it
would  be harder to get out. Brian launched first and cleared the first set of
dumping  waves. I launched and was set to do so when I hear Scott  yellb&b
Rob!...blanketyb&blankb I take my eye off the ball and look at him but
cannot hear
him very well and anyway, Ibm now struck hard, going backwards until  the
stern
sticks into the sand, where I turn over and get dragged upside down  until my
shoulders are pinned and the boat is still moving landward. Not wanting  to
stick around in that situation I yank the spraydeck off and crawl out. Alas,
Brianbs camera formerly ensconced in my sea sock is now free to wander the
oceans of the world and held under by the half pound carabiner he lashed to
the
housing.
Our next launch is entirely successful and after about 300yards we are  free
of the zone and enjoy the rocky islets and points of Isla Violin. In a few
miles we come to the outside of the mouth of Boca Sierpe. It has about 1/3 of
the breaker quantity as Boca Guaramal, but they are bigger. The path out has a
steeper cliff behind it on the beach requiring better timing from a paddler.
We  rafted up and watched a few boats with tourists in it run the bar, all
taking  the same line. I do believe we had a far better jungle camp than what
appeared  to be on the lower Violin shoreline so am happy with the path taken.
We shoot across Drake Bay with the occasional stop so Brian can  pump water
from his leaky boat. Brian went low bid on his stern deck zipper and  we pause
every half hour or so to pump out. Itbs nice to relax in the tropical
sunshine and muse of what my other paddling friends up in the good olb
sideways  rain
and low 40bs Pacific Northwest are doing.
The scenery picks up a few notches at the south end of Drake Bay and the
shoreline becomes more jagged  and filled with the roar of Howler Monkeys and
Scarlet Macaws. Eco lodges dot  the hill sides but the once above the coastal
belt
it becomes uninhabited  rainforest protected by the Osa forest Reserve or
Corcovado National Park. Reefs and boomers keep our  attention levels up but
the
mug of heat and humidity is flagging our energy  reserves. After 18 sweaty
miles we find the entrance to San Pedrillo Ranger  Station, Corcovado
National
Park, guarded by a  fairly froth cove studded with sharpy bits of rock. We
negotiate a rock garden  with wraparound surf and one at a time land and haul
the
boats up on the beach  berm. After that we set up the hammocks, practice my
bad spanish on Maria, the  head ranger, who takes our fees and tells us to
watch
out for her bpajarritob, a  small waif of a chicken ubiquitously under our
feet for the next 2 days. Cute  little chicken, as far as chickens go, I fear
for her though, as shebll age into  frying pan maturity soon, or wander too
close to the river bank, where a sign  states quite authoritatively that
bathing
in this river is absolutely  prohibited. Maria says a 10 foot crocodile lives
there, but has not been spotted  in the last few days. She expects it to
return any day now.
Smaller Caimanbs live further up in the freshwater we discover the next
day.
Troops of Spider Monkies tear through the canopy and colorful birds flit
from limb to limb. We bathe in a cool stream, sans large reptiles and skip
paddling for a day. Maria catches a large fish, a Droallo (?), and splits off
a
length of filet to us. We fry it up in oil with coconut chunks, salt and
pepper.
 It needs nothing else as it is a firm white fish with a wonderful flavor. We
 drink rum and sweet coconut milk, sometimes in the shell, sometimes in a
mug.
We evict the young chicken from its roost on top of our hammocks and  retire
for the evening. Being a savvy jungle traveler I note a slight but  continuous
drop in the barometer and make sure my rain fly is adjusted over my  canopy.
Scott and Brian choose to read by starlight and later I am awoken by the
thump of a down pour. Denial sets in hard among the weary, as it is a minute
or
two before they vault out of their beds to add the rain fly. I feel a trickle
coming in and exit to readjust. By the strobe of distant lightning I see
Brianb
s  big white moon reflected back, and now, having seen far too much, resume
my  slumber. It is possible to get teeth chattering cold when it is 80 degrees
and  raining. Neither of those gents slept very well.
The next stop, surf gods be willing, is Sirena, the heart of Corcovado. It is
along a12 mile beach drained by 4 rivers,  which promise to amp things up a
bit. We depart San Pedrillo and head south  along Punta Llorona. Sea stacks,
reefs and caves line its steep shores crowned  by thick foliage of primary
rain
forest. Swells from the northwest mix with  those from the south creating a
bit of bounce, but all easy stuff. There is a  decided current of about a knot
and a half easing our path. The backdrop to the  beach is low lying but hemmed
in the rear with hills up to 1500 feet. We are  close enough to shore to see
not a single soul, but hear the howlers and macaws  in their omnipresent
racket. Scott spots a sea snake. We pass 2 rivers and note  the general south
and
eastward drift of shoals from their mouth. The  3rd and largest river in the
area is the Sirena. It drains Laguna  Corcovado and posed a very serious
challenge to landing. Slightly to the east is  the mouth of the Rio  Claro,
which is
filled with rocks and reef.
Our best route to the landing zone is from the west just east of the  Sirena
river mouth. The breaker field is quite extensive but our approach from  the
west cut it down quite significantly. We bypassed the outer breakers
completely by sneaking into the inside, one at a time. We paddled through
small  to
midland reform waves until we were safely onshore. As a trip leader I run a
bit
on the conservative side and suggest bno surfingb to the guys. Time the
sets, time the period, run after the back of the waves and land as best you
can
one at a time, the first in helps haul the next one on touchdown.
That afternoon we photographed a pair of small, 2 meter long American
Crocodiles basking in the sun on the beach along the river mouth. Though they
are
not as aggressive as Indo Pacific Crocs, or Nile Crocs they are still crocs
and they have killed people here before. We exercise a lot of caution the
following morning as we paddled our boats out into the surf and up into the
river
for wildlife spotting. The canopy shades the river nicely and we head up
river until it becomes too shallow to paddle. Croc and caiman sightings
continue
throughout the day, in addition to a host of brilliant birds and monkeys. On
our  return to the river mouth I don my helmet, put away my camera and get
ready for  action. Too bad I put the camera away as a 6 foot croc slides off
the
bank and  into the water under my boat. The river channel at this tidal state
is quite  narrow and I wonder how it could contain the two of us. I wait for
Scott to  catch up, promoting my odds to 50-50.
The following morning we plan a short ten mile trip down to the final  ranger
station near Carate, on Playa Madrigal. Noting the tide state when we  plan
to leave I check it at its same height the day before. It seems like a  fairly
consistent window at 160 degrees magnetic stays open longest after a big  set,
usually just under a minute. The following morning we decide on that line
after seeing basically the same thing. A reef juts out across our path and
dampens much of the reform. We launch a nd a few minutes later meet at the
reef
and after the big set concludes a big wide window opens up for a while. Scott
and I stayed within150 feet of each other and hop over the reform and sprint
like hell out over the green water. The point of the next river mouth offers a
 slight shield along our route that we exploit to full advantage. Brian takes
a  different line and he is doing his own thing several hundred feet away. I
concentrate on the sea in front of me and climb up a large haystack and look
for  Brian. I do not like his line as 2 large breakers explode in front of
him. Scott  and I had very little to contend with other than a pair of
undeveloped haystacks  towering way overhead. The power of these breaks is
impressive
and demands a lot  of attention. We meet up out on the open water and debate
who
had the best line,  Scott and I outvote Brian 2 to 1, we have a laugh and
move south.
The shoreline is quite interesting east of Sirena. There are reefs and  rocks
and small points to navigate. Pelicans and brown boobybs inhabit the rocks
and we take photos of them as we ride the swell up the rock face. The beaches
get steeper and from here on out for the next 20 miles are some mean dumping
waves. 100 to 150 yard sections of steep wave faces close out and pop at once.
 There seems to be just large consistent sets with only a 30 second lull
after  the biggest. We hang out off shore for a while and when the biggest
waves
blow  out I look behind, find the lull and sprint the 60 yards to shore
without
issue.  Brian is halfway through the impact zone when my boat is pulled up
the beach,  surfs a bit on a small one, then lands perfectly.
Now, itbs Scottbs turn for a beating. He has drifted in too far to shore
to
escape the one rearing up behind him. It picks him up, rides him up the crest
 and then we lose Scott for a few seconds. He shoots out across the foam pile
 sometimes right side up, sometimes not and cannot roll the K1. A second wave
 finishes him off and now he is basically on the Beni Hana chopping block,
out of  his boat and trying to swim it in. Bam! another one. I rip my shirt
off
and dive  in, hoping to help him swim it in, but too late, as he cowboy
reenters the boat  sits down and paddles it in. A stunning bit of composure.
Itbs one thing to land on a beach like that but I think itbs harder to
launch from it. We walked down the beach a few minutes and ate dinner at a
small
eco lodge. Over a few beers we watched the surf and did a bit of agonizing.
Yet  in all the roar of imploding wave faces a familiar pattern emerged: 4-6
waves  with a uniform closeout for a minimum of 100 yards, 30 second lull. The
waves  were over the 6 foot mark and very close together. The foam piles
appeared to be  quite weak that we suspect is from deeper water just inshore
of the
break and  popping over them would not be too tough.
My spanglish firing on all cylinders, I spoke to the park ranger the next
morning and she said the waves were usually smaller on low tide. She crossed
herself and said Bueno Suerte, (good luck!) with a big smile. An hour after
low
tide we were assembled on the beach watching the waves. Scott looked green
and  Brian looked white. I was said to have morphed from tan to a dull yellow.
A
more  sickly crew of mariners could not be found. Drawing down further of our
 pigmentation reserves, a crowd of park rangers, biologists and backpackers
gathered to watch the carnage. Great, now we are being watched. The ranger
said  she never saw or heard of anyone paddling the Osa Peninsula by kayak,
but I
knew it had been  done before by Joanne Turner and after that by some guys
from the CASKE 2000  Central American Expedition. One of them blew his
shoulder
out from the surf  west of Sirena and couldnbt continue. Ibm sure others
will
again, I know Ibll  return one day if this day is a success.
Each of us paddles offshore a bit and and keep a couple dozen paces  apart.
So far so good. A set comes in and they are much bigger here on the  street
than the view from the eco lodge with a cold beer cradled in my palm. We  test
the foam pile and it is quite weak allowing us to get right up to the  impact
zone. The pop of air is really quite stunning right in front and my
adrenaline
is redlined. After the biggest bang of them all we pop over the foam  and see
a clean green window. Run! I yell. We sprinted hard for 30 seconds, pop  over
the start of the new set and are safe in blue, blue water.
The beach is similar for the next dozen miles. Low lying, coconut palm
studded and dumpy waves. A reef juts out after a few miles making some fun
paddling for a bit. Playa Pirobs shoreline rises more steeply and the jungle
takes
on a more ancient look. Cabo Matapalo rises high up into the clouds  beyond.
It
is the sentinel to Golfo Dulce, one of the few tropical fjords on  earth.
Manta Raybs launch into the  air beside us but photographing them is an
insurmountable challenge. The odd sea  turtle pokes its snout out of the water
here
and there to have a  look.
Cabo Matapalo is one of the best breaks in Costa Rica for  board surfers. It
sits across the gulf from Pavones, a frequent site for  championships of board
and kayak surfing. There are arches and rocks to run and  the swell wrapping
around the cape is quite fun to play in. The arches are  filling up to the
ceiling so we stay out of them, but enjoy the play of swell on  cliff face. At
Playa Matapalito, just around the corner, we land in a slightly  more
protected
place, up the beach from a gaggle of surfers. Another fine  evening of
Capuchin Monkeys and Macaws and room temperature scotch. Brian hacks  open
another
coconut.
Brian leaves us the following morning as he wants to head to Puerto  Jimenez
to buy a bus ticket to San Jose for the following Monday. It is Semana  Santa,
holy week, and the larger than normal crowds this week necessitate his
forward planning in order to get back to the airport on time. He will then use
his
remaining time to explore the beautiful Golfo Dulce and generally chill  out.
Scott and I head a mere 8 or 9 miles away to Puntarenitas. Just when we
thought we were in permanently flat water Punta Tigrito comes alive with some
really nice spilling waves and wraparound swells well offshore. We enjoy
ourselves for 15 or 20 minutes before moving on. Puntarenitas is close to the
tourism bepicenterb of Puerto Jimenez but we still manage to find a lonely
beach
to string the hammocks, not too tough here. A thunderstorm descends and we hit
the hammocks for an hour until it plays out. The bolts and claps come
together,  too close for comfort and I wonder aloud how smart it is to be
strung up
between  two trees in the midst of it. The rain is an impenetrable sheet and
the woods  come alive with frogs and insects. The moment is loud and beautiful
and pricks  all the senses at once.
Scott and I decide on a fitness paddling pace for the 8.5 mile crossing  to
Golfito. We make the crossing in under 2 hours and after a cooling dip in the
water, paddle another 2 miles to our take out in this sleepy, humid little
town.  Ibd love another week, or another year or two here. Ibve seen
lonelier
beaches  in Alaska or British Columbia but could really care less.  Take 10
steps off the trail here, or go a mile up river and you will be quite  alone,
just
you the monkeys, snakes and crocodiles.
***************************************************************************
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/
***************************************************************************
From: Duane Strosaker <strosaker_at_yahoo.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Costa Rica Sea Paddling Trip Report
Date: Thu, 7 Apr 2005 08:29:39 -0700 (PDT)
Rob,
 
Nice trip report! It sounds like you guys had a lot of adventures, saw a lot of cool things, and had fun. Good job surviving the surf. I checked out your photos too.
 
By the way, all the BCU 5 star training photos are at: http://duane.smugmug.com/ . There are some nice photos of you in there that you may want to check out, including some more of you landing with Nigel on that rock.
 
Duane
***************************************************************************
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/
***************************************************************************

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Thu Aug 21 2025 - 16:33:41 PDT