Posts Tagged ‘wales’
Accidentally Flavorless Ordinary Life

What has happened to it all?
Crazy, some are saying
Where is the life that I recognize?
– duran duran
I was walking out of the Tescos in Holyhead, Wales. There was a police car in front of me, one of those tiny ones with the Cheap Trick paint jobs. I walked by it to the right hand drivers side of my rented white Vauxhall Astra. Adjusting my grocery bag in one hand I got the keys out of my pocket and hit the clicker. The Astra beeped back. I put the keys back in my pocket to free up my hand and open the door. I tossed my bag filled with sausage rolls & mars bars (see: The Penrhyn Mawr diet) in the back seat, and sat down behind the wheel. There with the door open, just sitting, surrounded by the muddle of traffic, voices and banging carts of an ordinary day and I thought… “How great is this!?”.
Party in Anglesey

The Big Gig Starts This Weekend – Anglesey Symposium
Welsh Whiskey

You don’t have to say that you love / if you don’t mean it
You’d better believe / If you need me
or you just wanna bleed me
you’d better stickin’ your dagger in someone else
So I can leave
Set me free
- Hendrix
Oh man! There has got to be something wrong with listening to Jimmy Hendrix before 10am! So the plan today is to get out and put my kayak in real water. Either I’ll run our river which is very high at the moment or I may just be silly and try to see how much room I can find out at our local lake which is still pretty frozen. I have to admit there was a bit of spoiling going on last year when I got to spend a good amount of time on a dynamic sea. All this inland flat water is a bit too laid back. . . Oh, and speaking of which I finally got a permanent gallery of paddle shots from Anglesey last year. That symposium is coming up again pretty quick. Ah, Welsh Whiskey? Sure there is!
paddle anyone?

Surfs Up! More Storm Pics From The Daily Mail.
So where’s everyone meeting for a paddle in the morning?
The humility of the Ninja

Oh the boat was wildly dancing
To the whistling of the wind
– storm front by Jack J. Burns
I’ve got lots to share, but I think on this first day back what roams through my fuzzy brain is the question, “Am I a better kayaker now??” Well, that’s what we do these trips for right?! My first sort of “off the cuff” answer is, “No”. I can’t say I spent much time on skill work, with so much else going on. I didn’t take navigation courses or work on proper surf skills. In fact, other than my L2 Coach training I really didn’t do anything “officious”. I just paddled.
As much as Justine wants to avoid the issue, she is a good coach. At least for the way I learn. Which means she coached very little unless something obvious was wrong with what I was doing. Like sitting over a big rock waiting to get killed my incoming waves because I was too stupid to see where I was sitting. I certainly made my share of mistakes in understanding the coastal environment. Luckily I was not abruptly punished for those mistakes.
I experienced tidal races in “real time”. I managed. My personal point of pride is that I was not rolled by the sea. Not that it did not try once or twice. Each time I managed to brace correctly or re-balance on the fly with a lift of a knee or the flick of a hip. In the end I did roll in Penrhwn Mawr. . But on my terms just to say I did it. Of course in all fairness I did not go surf the nasty front wave when the race was getting really active. Otherwise things may had been different.
I managed to paddle in some big soup and land on a beach that was considered too messy for the class that was out at the same time. With a mix of surfing and back paddling I kept my boat under control as the sea tried to rocket me into the beach.
I wrestled with fear on more than one occasion. Most of the time I could work myself down with the simple question, “What’s the worst thing that’s going to happen?”. Fear would say, “What If I got knocked over??”. “I can roll.” I would answer. “What if I don’t roll?”. . “Well, then I would swim!” Fear would ask, “What if you swim??”. My rational would answer, “I am with my friends and they have my back.”. I trust my friends. I know my abilities. Thinking those things though helped me deal with those little moments when fear would creep forward.
In the end, I’m I a better kayaker? I don’t know the answer. I think I’m more confident. I better understand what I can, and can’t do on the water. Maybe confidence and understanding make you better. I’m not sure. One thing is sure however, I got a heavy dose of humility.
photo of derrick & justine by Axel Schoevers – thank you!!
eye of terror

It’s the terror of knowing
What the world is about
Watching some good friends
Screaming ‘Let me out’
– bowie
Oh, did you see the kayak in the picture?

