Monday, June 30, 2008

The First Day in the Front Country

Already this has been quite the first day back, and in a rather stressful way. Honestly its probably more stressful because of what happened on the last two days of this last trip. The trip was great, I had these three fabulous clients, that were so much fun to be out with. They were really relaxed, went with the flow and we all had a great time and had great weather, again.

The day before our pick-up however turned out to be slightly epic. We woke up and winds were building out of the south and so we hurried to get on the water to get across to the east side of the bay before the water got so big it wouldn't be safe to paddle. The crossing was a bit on the rowdy side, but we got across, and just in time, because by the time we landed the surf was building t0 3' waves. Thankfully there was a passing boat that I could call on the VHF for a weather report and the very friendly captain of the Kastine let me know that the winds would be dieing down in the evening. So we hunkered down just off the beach out of the wind and drank hot drinks and ate snacks and waited for the wind to die. Right around 4p we looked out at the water and didn't see any white caps so we jumped in the boats and headed south. We still had about 10 miles to go to our campsite, so we knew we were in for a late night. We would need to be on the beach for our pick- up at 7:30 the next morning, and we decided it would be better to paddle later into the night and sleep as close to the pickup as possible, just in case the winds picked back up again in the morning. Winds were on and off as we paddled south toward camp, and we arrived on Garforth Island at 10p, ate some oatmeal and went to bed. The next morning we had to be up at 6a to get to the Mt. Wright pick up. So by the time I got back to town after the trip I was excited about the great trip, but exhausted.

This morning, I got up to start cleaning gear and was checking my voicemail when I dropped my cell phone in the bleach water. It's totally dead and it took me 2 hours on the phone with Verizon to get a new phone. And just when I had that all figured out, I knocked tea onto my laptop and it shut down. Luckily a few hours later and some serious attention to drying it out and the laptop is back in service, but the phone is long gone.

As my dear friend Matt Allard said today: Rachel, You silly girl. You can handle an 16' 'yak in sea swell amongst floating chunks of glacier while humpback whales try to scratch their backs on your rudder, but you cant control a cell phone on flat pavement. What are we going to do with you?"

So true, what are they going to do with me? Turns out I'm a way more competent guide than I am technology owner. Such is life.



Thursday, June 19, 2008

Back from Glacier Bay!

Hey Everyone! I’m back from Glacier Bay and what a fabulous trip it was! This last group was one of the best groups of student’s I’ve had and were so much fun to work with. Plus we had beautiful weather and saw lots of great wildlife! Here’s a sampling of what we did from the trip report:

May 24th- Food prep in the morning and gear prep in the afternoon. Also went over general course outline and course expectations. Hauled gear and boats down to Bartlett Cove in the evening.

May 25th and 26th- Intro to paddling skills all day in Bartlett Cove with Brian McGorry. Continued paddling skills introduction as well as introduction to rescues.

May 27th- Bartlett Cove to N. Beardslee Islands (11 n. miles)

First day of paddling up toward the Beardslee Islands. Caught the 6:30 am high tide through the Lester Island cut into the Beardslees. Paddled north through the islands to the northern most island just west of BearTrack Cove. First backcountry camp, talked with students about all info pertaining to campsite selection in this environment. Also introduced TECs and Trip reports to add to the student journals.

May 30th- Garforth Island to Goose Cove (13.5 n. miles)

Got up early to arrive at the Mt. Wright pick up by 7:30 am and had breakfast on the beach there. The Fairweather picked up Kaylyn at 9:30 am and the rest of the group packed up and continued north along the east coast of the bay. Group stopped at Maquina Cove for lunch and then paddled north to Goose Cove. Rachel spotted a brown bear between camp and the water source just south of camp and alerted expedition members. Bear wandered back into the alder. Students spend some time in the evening preparing the itinerary for the next 5 days of the course.

May 31st- Goose Cove to McBride Bay (6 n. miles)

Rode the am rising tide from Goose Cove up to McBride Bay and set up camp. The arctic turns are nesting significantly closer to the terminal moraine this year and made finding camping that would accommodate the turns difficult but doable. (If you get too close to their nests they will scream and start dive bombing at peoples’ heads) At 2:30p a lone wolf wandered in near camp and spent about half an hour around the camp, but was more interested in the turn eggs that on getting close to camp. Then at 3:15p nine members of the group went on a hike up the shore to check out the glacier closer. Rachel and Staci stayed behind to work on repairing the kayaks that were needing patching. After the Rachel and Staci finished patching the boats they got up and found that there was a brown bear that had wandered into camp. Rachel instructed Staci stay with her as she moved toward the bear spray and after some whistle blowing the bear moved away from camp after ripping a dry bag. Meanwhile the rest of the group heard the noise back and camp and started working their way back. The bear momentarily was between the two groups but both groups of people moved toward the water and the bear toward the alder and then wandered out away from camp. Group debriefed the experience over dinner.

June 3rd- Maquina Cove to Garforth Island (5 n. miles)

Another short paddle day. Arrived at Garforth Island by noon. Students spent the early afternoon doing peer midcourse evals. After evals were complete, Brian and Rachel had one-on-one meetings with each of the students to check in with them about how their course was going and giving feedback to them to take into their next section. Students worked on preparing for departure and resupply while they were not in their interview. After dinner the group sat down together and had a midcourse debrief regarding the first 12 days of the course.

June 4th- Garforth Island to Mt. Wright Drop Off to Tidal Inlet (15.5 n. miles)

Group got up early to pack boats and be at the Mt. Wright drop off by 7:30a. Group cooked breakfast on the beach at Mt. Wright and waited for the Fairweather. Boat arrived and the 12 day participants departed. Remaining group members received re-supply and packed boats to head to the West Arm. Smooth crossing to Tlingit Point and then paddled up the shoreline to campsite in the bay just north of Tidal Inlet.

June 6th- Composite Island to E. Tarr Inlet (13.5 n. miles)

Started the morning with a crossing to the west side of the Rendu Inlet from Composite Island. Throughout the crossing wave conditions continued to increase from the south and by the time we were finishing the crossing waves were consistently at 2-3 feet swelling to 4 feet. Ricky and Rachel started looking for a beach to exit onto, but the shoreline was too rocky to be landed on, and the one beach that would have been suitable for landing was tested by Ricky and turned out to be too steep to surf land without soaking everyone. (Ricky got wet to his waist while testing the landing.) It was determined that it would just be safer to stay on the water than try and land and the group paddled north with caution. Winds subsided as the group neared Russell Island and due to the tailwind and rising tide it was decided by Ricky to continue into the Tarr Inlet and take advantage of the conditions rather than stopping at Russell as planned. Group camped on the east side of the Tarr Inlet just north of the prominent alluvial fan. (LOD: Ricky)

June 9th- Ried Inlet to Skidmore Bay (10 n. miles)

Had a late and long breakfast and paddled south to catch the high tide at the cut into Skidmore Bay. Arrived at the cut at 4:00p with a high tide that wasn’t going to be in until 7:00p. Group stopped and made hot drinks at the cut and waited for the water to rise. Water never rose high enough to paddle all the way through. (13.5ft high tide on the Bartlett Cove tide chart). Group decided that they had already invested enough time there that they should finish the cut and lift the boats over the sections that weren’t floatable. Finished paddling/floating/lifting boats through the cut by 7:30p and started paddling up Skidmore Bay. Arrived at a campsite on the eastern side of Skidmore Bay around 9:00p.

June 14th- Rush Point to Young Island (3 n. miles)

Crossing of Sitakaday Narrows. Left the morning open for students to work on final projects and assessments and then prepared for the crossing in the afternoon. Caught the 5:15p low tide slack for the crossing. Started crossing from Rush Point at 4:30p. Crossed to the channel marker. Tide was still pushing at about 1knot through the 1st half on the 6th hour going toward low tide. About the middle of the crossing the tide mellowed out and crossing was completed without complications. Camped on the west side of Young Island.

June 15th- Young Island to Bartlett Cove (5 miles)

Spent the morning doing peer feedback for students and working on rescues with students who wanted more time on the water. In the afternoon the instructors worked on final paperwork as well as final interviews with each of the students. After an early dinner the group paddled into Bartlett Cove and spent the night in the Bartlett Cove campground. Had the group final debrief on the beach at Bartlett Cove.

Pictures to follow soon!!!!