Sunday, February 26, 2012

Golden Gate Sea Kayak Symposium 2012

I'd heard great things about the Golden Gate Sea Kayak Symposium for the past few years. And since I live here now that makes it pretty convenient to participate. And I really wanted to see a number of my friends from the Pacific NW would be coming down here for it. I was thrilled that so many of them would be in San Francisco at one time.

GGSKS_2012

The symposium was Feb 17-19 this year and the weather was great. I do miss the Pacific NW, but a guy could get used to this weather!

I took part on Saturday and Sunday. Since it had been awhile since I'd been paddling in dynamic water I decided to take this opportunity to get back in that saddle. On Saturday I took a tides and currents class. I wanted to do some paddling with Gordon Brown while he was over here so on Sunday I did the Bay Tour that he and Steve Scherrer were leading.

I got to Horseshoe Bay and the Presidio Yacht Club bright and early on Saturday morning. People were already getting gear together and hauling boats down to the beach. It was great to see so many kayakers in one place again. And lots of very attractive boats.

One of the first people I met was Johnny from Bay Area Sea Kayakers (BASK). He was very welcoming and over the course of the weekend would introduce me to quite a number of people. Thus far I've done all my outdoor adventures here in California on my own. Since kayaking can be dangerous I've basically done very safe trips. I had heard that BASK is a good club, but hadn't reached out to them yet. Well, within minutes of showing up at GGSKS I was meeting them. And yes, one of them helped me carry my boat to the beach. Nice start to the day.

GGSKS is very organized. At the time stated on our registration they did a safety talk, introduced the leaders of the classes and got us all into our class groups to start the day. Well done.

My class started off in Horseshoe Bay with the coaches just wanting us to warm up, do some edging, low-brace turns, etc. Good - checking to see what our skill levels were. We then headed out into San Francisco Bay. My first time in the Bay. It was morning with pretty much no wind and near slack tide so the water was calm. We headed east around Yellow Bluff and stopped at a beach just south of Sausalito for the lecture part of the class. I was thrilled to find that I remembered all of it from previous classes with Shawna, Leon, Paul Kuthe, Karl Anderson and Gordon Brown. Though I remembered the theory, I was under no illusion that I could still paddle effectively in current.

We headed across calm waters of Richardson Bay to Belvedere Point. Our goal was to get to Angel Island for lunch. The tide was ebbing by now and the channel between Belvedere Point and Angel Island would provide a good place to practice paddling in current. The ebb turned out to be not that strong yet, so it was both easy and not much of a learning situation. But hey, I was out of practice enough that easing into it was just fine.

I'd seen Angel Island many times since I moved here, but had not yet been there. It's both larger and has more historical interest than I knew. It also has a number of great beaches for landing your kayak. We had lunch at Camp Reynolds, which has not only a nice beach but picnic tables, historic buildings, and even nice restrooms! I was glad to have finally kayaked there. It also has lots of trails, so I'll have to go back there sometime just to hike around.

As we had lunch the ebb grew stronger. We should get more current practice on the trip back to Horseshoe Bay. And we did. There was an appr. 2.5 kt ebb with a 12 - 15 kt west wind against it kicking up some 2 foot waves. Ok, I hadn't done this in a few years. But I felt good. Things were coming back. It felt great to be out there with the bow of my kayak slicing through waves, a moderate breeze in my face.

It was also a good bit of work. There were definitely people in the class who were working pretty hard to get back to Yellow Bluff from Angel Island. And I noticed something. I was near the front of the group the entire day. In the past I have often struggled on kayaking trips. I enjoyed kayaking, but just wasn't in good enough physical shape to keep up on the kinds of kayak trips I wanted to do (and foolishly signed up for). Like this trip for example. The time working at Microsoft when I basically got no exercise didn't help. So when I moved to San Francisco I decided to do something about it. I joined a gym and started working out with a personal trainer. I told him that I wanted to improve my endurance for kayaking, hiking and climbing and also lose some weight. I told him about the various outdoor activities that I love, but for far too many years I just haven't been in shape enough to truly enjoy. He came up with a plan and we've been executing on it. He started off just getting my body used to exercise and working on good form for various exercises. We do lots of weight training and training with TRX (webbing straps that you use for various rowing and push-up exercises). Over the past few months he's been working me pretty hard. Much harder than I would have ever pushed myself. With workouts alternating between ones where we focus on technique and form and ones where we focus on endurance. I'm certainly feeling better. But I didn't know if my conditioning had improved enough to help my paddling in wind and waves. Well, it did. I felt great.

So I want to thank my trainer, Ash, at Crunch Gym in San Francisco. I highly recommend him.

When we got back to Yellow Bluff the ebb was still strong enough that there was a tide race there. Being a class on currents, it would have been a letdown not to finally get the chance to practice in that tide race. (It was far from being as big as it could be.) Well, I got out there and did not have a Zen experience. I was a little gripped being out in bigger waves than I'd been in in years. The muscles were not moving gracefully. But I did manage to get on a couple waves and surf them. A nice way to wrapup my first day back in dynamic water.

It wasn't far from there back to the beach in Horseshoe Bay. Got my boat strapped onto my car, got out of my drysuit into hiking shorts (yes, it was that nice in February) and Johnny of BASK caught me and invited me up to hang out with the BASK folks at Presidio Yacht Club's bar. I'd never been there. Turns out to be one of San Francisco's hidden gems. I would have never found it. It's a comfy place with nice people and great local beers. And it was full of happy kayakers who'd had a great day on the water. Johnny introduced me to more BASK folks, we had a couple beers, and they invited me to go to dinner with them. Found a nice Chinese restaurant in Sausalito.

We didn't linger long over dinner because we didn't want to miss the GGSKS Saturday night festivities. The main feature was a talk by Jon Turk, who did a presentation on his expedition kayaking around Ellesmere Island. Yowza. It was an excellent talk. I will likely never go there. I also had a chance to hang out and talk with Paul Kuthe and Kate, which made me happy.

On Sunday I was signed up to do a trip with Gordon Brown. I'd taken some classes with him when I visited Scotland in 2006 and got a lot out of them and very much liked him. I was looking forward to the opportunity to paddle with him again. Gordon Brown's style (at least for intermediate kayakers) is to do a tour and insert lots of learning opportunities in it. He and Steve Scherrer were leading just such a Bay Tour on Sunday. Interestingly the basic plan was to circumnavigate Angel Island and gain various lessons when we hit interesting current.

Which is just what we did. Again, most of the time we were out the tide was ebbing (near slack when we started). Like the day before we had lunch on Angel Island. Again it was a beautiful day with a west wind. After lunch we paddled counter-clockwise around Angel Island. By the time we got to the SE tip of Angel Island the tide was ebbing strongly. The tide rips there were impressive (to me). You know, with waves that looked about six feet high but in actuality were probably just three feet. Most of us did not have the skill yet to navigate that. Steve Scherrer led us through some rocks that gave us a little rock garden experience, which was definitely fun. We paused for a break at the old Immigration Center on the NE side of Angel Island. Once we got round into Racoon Strait we knew we'd be going with the strong ebb current against an appr 12-15 kt west wind. So we knew there'd be waves. And just as predicted there were. It was excellent practice paddling in much larger waves than yesterday. And yesterday's practice made it easier. Once again I was paddling near the front of the group and feeling strong. I was pretty happy.

We got to Yellow Bluff and the waves in the tide race were much bigger than any of the students were up for. Turned out Paul Kuthe was coaching a more advanced class there so we stopped, chatted, and watched his students work on getting onto the waves. Educational and great fun watching. I'm looking forward to gaining the skill to do that.

We then headed back to the Horseshoe Bay and got boats strapped onto cars, got out of drysuits, and headed for the bar. I had the chance to connect with a number of people from the Pacific NW. I was pretty happy. And again I was also hanging out with the BASK folks. They invited me on a paddling trip the next weekend that was focused on new club members, which sounded like a great idea. All in all, a very good weekend.

For a richer perspective on the Golden Gate Sea Kayak Symposium, and some great photos, see Paul Kuthe's blog post on it.

No comments:

Post a Comment