Jump to content

Rob Hazard

Guest
  • Posts

    690
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Rob Hazard

  1. Goal #1: Spend more time paddling on real live salt water with all you jokers than I spend on Chebacco Lake doing Stupid Kayak Tricks.

    #2: Hone a few skills that have languished, like balance-brace my Romany, smooth out my offside rolls, or flip and empty a boat as gracefully as Scot Camlin.

    #3: Sit next to L. Beale when she uncorks the Scotch. (Bunnahabhain, Springbank, and Highland Park, in no particular order, Les...)

    #4: Have a second helping of Goal #1!

  2. The Warblers! I forgot about the Warblers! The brush, mostly Bayberry and Raspberry bushes, was alive with small birds, most of them Yellow-Rumped Warblers. Spider saw a Merlin shoot through, and we saw other small songbirds, hard to identify except for one very vocal Song Sparrow, but the majority were Yellow-rumps. We both wished we were better Fall Warbler experts, (a specialty among birders) so we could catch the other oddities mixed in. It was a good morning for birding!

  3. For the club's contribution to the MITA Casco Bay fall cleanup we had 6 NSPN volunteers who paddled out from Cousins Island around Great Chebeague to tiny Crow Island for cleanup, trail work, and an overnight stay. Most of the trip was on flat water, but seeing sailboats in the distance heeled over in the southwest breeze told us that last leg of the trip, from Chebeague Point to Crow would likely be an upwind slog, which it proved to be. Paddling into the teeth of wind and chop is great fun, but its wet fun.

    Nearing Crow Island we saw a small boat approaching the beach and feared it might be another MITA cleanup crew there to collect trash that was rightfully ours, but it proved to be just a family out for a picnic.

    We found Crow to be pretty clean; in fact, after Mitch made a first pass around the shoreline the rest of us were hard-pressed to find any trash there at all, so several of us turned to clipping back the brush that was encroaching on the trails.

    In mid-afternoon Mitch decided that he really needed to be back with his family for the rest of the weekend, so we watched him go and kept an eye on him until he turned the corner of Chebeague Island and disappeared from sight.

    The evening was passed in typical NSPN fashion, sharing food and swapping stories. A rain squall passed through around dusk, but those of us who were up in the middle of the night found a clear sky and a bright moon above.

    Sunday morning after a leisurely start we headed over to Bangs Island, where we found all the trash we could possibly ask for. With a crew of 5 we could only cover the northern half of the island and even then we had to leave behind large pieces of lumber from old floats and docks. We also left behind a couple stone monuments deemed too artistic to destroy.

    The trip back was uneventful, with just enough tailwind and following sea to allow for micro-surfing along the way.

    Thanks to Dee, Sal, Jeff, Spider, and Mitch for a pleasant and productive weekend!

    Rob

  4. Thanks Sal and Spider,

    I will bring bags, but I'm sure extra bags will come in handy. I will also bring some expendable rope in case we get carried away after the MITA skiff departs and have to secure some bags of trash for later pickup. I think a claw hammer and small pry bar might be handy in case we find any dangerously nail-studded driftwood. Brush clippers have come in handy in the past as well.

    Sunny skies would be welcome!

    Ed, have no fear about my (formerly Dee's) Romany. In six weeks it will begin its winter season dancing over the warm, salty waters of the Gulf of Mexico. No more chlorine for that baby! We appreciate your concern, though. ;^)

    So... tools, rope, trash bags, shoes for climbing around on wet rocks, what else? Food, drink, and gear for an overnight.

    As Chief Brodie so famously said, "I think we're gonna need a bigger boat!"

    Cheers,

    Rob

  5. OK, on further reflection I've realized that 9:00 would probably be too early for people who are driving up from MA. Let's try to launch by 10:00 instead.

    I checked the NOAA tidal current predictions for Casco Bay, Broad Sound, west of Eagle Island, which strikes me as the most useful site for our trip.

    On Saturday the ebb tide will go slack at 11:02, and the flood will peak at 13:10. If we launch at 10:00 we'll can ride the ebb out most of the way out.

    On Sunday the low slack will be at 11:51, so if we launch in early afternoon we can ride the flood tide back to Sandy Point.

    Maria at MITA tells me they'll try to arrange their trash pick-up as late in the day as they can, and if we do more work after that they can arrange to come back another day.

    A few other paddlers have contacted MITA about paddling out and they are being referred to me. I am happy to have them join us provided they are competent paddlers and are equipped for the conditions.

    The trip is mostly on protected water, with one crossing of about a mile, and there are plenty of spots to get ashore in emergencies. Having said that, if the weather is predicted to be windy (> 10kt) I'd rather cancel the trip. We have plenty of time to make that call, though.

  6. Attention MITA members and volunteers:

    On October 6th, the Saturday of Columbus Day weekend, MITA is holding its Casco Bay Fall Cleanup, and I'd like to get out there and pitch in with some trash picking on Bangs and Crow Islands, which we adopted as part of our club MITA membership. I think it would be a good opportunity to spend a fall weekend paddling on the bay as well.

    Is anyone interested in coming along?

    We could launch from Cousins Island in Yarmouth on Friday afternoon, Oct 5th, and paddle out around Great Chebeague.

    The distance out to the islands is about 5nm if we go around the east end, or about 7nm by way of the sandbar at the west end. The water is mostly sheltered and the longest crossing is about a mile. The tides look favorable for heading out Friday afternoon and returning Sunday afternoon.

    Most of the work consists of walking the shore line picking up summer trash, but there's often scrap lumber and occasionally some "beach art" to be dealt with. Fishing gear, of course, we leave unmolested!

    I bet we could get a lot done and still get to take a field trip or two in the bargain.

    I will bring a roll of contractor's trash bags along, as well as expendable rope, a claw hammer, and work gloves. Good shoes are handy as well.

    We can tighten up the details as we see how much interest there is.

    So, who's up for it?

×
×
  • Create New...