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emilie

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  1. Thanks for posting. Splendid trip report and photos! I especially liked the photos of Emilie trying to put more holes in her hull.

    I did a trip with two paddlers in an Anas acuta and a Romany and they had all the stuff they needed and more. It made me think about using more brains and lightweight, compact gear when loading my boat.

    There weren't that many waves, so I had limited opportunities for hull damage.

  2. I went and looked up the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge. Under visitor oportunities, there is a link to the canoe and kayak regulations.

    Amongst other things, it says

    Landing anywhere in the refuge marsh or on the refuge beach is strictly prohibited.

    That being said, I have seen regulations change over time at other wild life refuges, so it is probably worth checking back occasionally.

    Emilie

  3. Ok, I redid the plots all in EDT.

    Wind speeds at Isles Of Shoals from noon to 6pm: 7Kts to 24Kts

    Wind speeds at Western Maine Shelf from noon to 6pm: 9Kts to 15 Kts

    post-101128-1285100831_thumb.png

    post-101128-1285100722_thumb.png

    Wave height at Western Maine Shelf from noon to 6pm: 1ft rising to 3ft

    (see EEL's above note about this being an average)

    post-101128-1285100706_thumb.png

    Wave period at Western Maine Shelf noon to 6pm: 2 seconds rising to 4seconds

    post-101128-1285100713_thumb.png

  4. I went back and looked at the buoy data for Sept 16th. All the buoys are available from http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/ I used Isles of Shoals for wind. To get wave data I used the Western Maine Shelf buoy which is half way between Isles of Shoals and Kennebunkport. Since that isn't quite where you guys were paddling, I got wind from that buoy too as a consistency check. What I found is that on the afternoon of the 16th:

    Isles of Shoals wind was between 5kts and 20kts.

    Western Maine Shelf wind was between 3kts and 15kts with a similar profile. So things may have been a little calmer at the western Maine shelf buoy, but not by that much. See the two graphs.

    post-101128-1285091262_thumb.png

    post-101128-1285091401_thumb.png

    The ticks on the x axis of the Western Maine Shelf plot correspond to hours. Midnight is on the left, noon in the middle, and midnight on the right.

    The Western Maine Shelf buoy reported that from noon to 4pm the waves were variable 1~1.5 ft high. And from 4pm onward they steadily increased in strength such that by 8pm they were at 2ft. (Since you guys said nothing about getting back after dark, I'm assuming you weren't out past 8pm.) These are average wave heights, so the higher ones will be slightly higher than 2ft.

    post-101128-1285091479_thumb.png

    The Western Maine Shelf buoy report for period has enough noise between noon and 4pm that I'm guessing there was not enough consistent wave to measure the period. From 4pm to 8pm the period went from 2s to 3s.

    post-101128-1285091573_thumb.png

    Based on all that data it looks like local wind blown chop.

    For those who want to recreate my data here is the Isles of Shoals weather station and the Western Maine Shelf buoy. For Isles of Shoals, go to the link at the bottom for "Real Time Data" and then "Real time continuous winds data". For the Western Maine Shelf buoy use the "Search historical meteorological data for observations that meet your threshhold[sic] conditions" widget to plot data from sept 16th.

  5. If we hadn't still been a couple of miles out it would've felt safer to experiment.*

    This is part of why the length of open water crossings on a trip matters for the level. Things that can be fun near safety, can be harrowing farther out. Add to that the fact that the sea and weather change over time. Longer crossing just lead to higher risk probability.

  6. Paddle from Pavilion Beach, along Crane Beach, to Essex bay, wander around for a little bit, and then come back. There isn't much surf forecast, but if we have time, we might play in a little bit of bump.

    Note that this trip starts early and ends early because I have an afternoon commitment

    Butts in boats: 8AM

    Return: 2PM

    Put in: Ipswich -Pavilion Beach

    Distance: ~14 miles or so depending on how much wandering we do in the bay.

    Level 3 trip on account of distance.

    The forecast is for 1.5 feet of surf, 5kts or less of wind, and no rain. High of 74F. High tide is 10AM so we'll have plenty of water in Essex Bay.

    RSVP on the board.

  7. <...I now have a Greenland stick and am not afraid to use it>

    Lorrie, I think a sharp-edged "Euro" paddle might be the more potent weapon -- if that <is> what you are implying? En garde! To horse, D'Artagnan! (Oh, am I mixing my scenes? Is this not scene II?) :rolleyes:

    Euro blades don't make as good of javelins. She might get you before you close for melee.

    Emilie

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