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billvoss

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Everything posted by billvoss

  1. Turned out the park was not crowded at all. I had a very pleasant time with Phil.
  2. OK Phil. I'll target arriving closer to 5pm today.
  3. I'm thinking arrive around 4:30pm, off the water around 7:00pm, out of the park by 7:30pm. The weather if anything looks too good, so there is a chance Plan-B will be in effect.
  4. I hope/expect to arrive at Walden between 4:30pm and 5pm this week.
  5. Last week's weather was much better than forecast. I hope this week will repeat. Assuming we don't abort because of weather, I plan to get OFF the water a little bit before 7pm. So I would like to get ON the water sometime between 4pm and 5pm. Anyone want to join me this week? Any time preference?
  6. The weather turned wonderful, lots of blue sky with scattered clouds. The forecast scared off the crowds, and I had a wonderful time with Yong and Peter. Though Peter suffered his first attack from "The Walrus," I believe he survived without any permanent mental scars.
  7. Looks like a week to watch the forecast. Click on Wednesday for the latest, but as I post this the forecast is: I have a group lunch this Wednesday, so 4pm is the earliest I'm fairly confident I can arrive. Anyone else crazy enough to join me, or should we skip this week?
  8. I should make it in time to paddle this week! Though I'm not certain when I will arrive.
  9. According to twitter: The boat ramp closes half an hour before the park, we usually get off the water half an hour before the boat ramp closes. So this Wednesday we will be getting off the water around 6:30pm so that everyone is out of the boat ramp parking area before it closes at 7pm. After the long weekend, Walden will probably close at 8pm so we will start getting off the water at 7pm to be out before 7:30pm.
  10. It currently looks like I will be LATE on May 23rd, and there is a chance I won't make it at all. I have contractors starting work on Wednesday and I am not certain what time they will quit for the day. I will bring my drysuit Pru, though I might wear shorts and a T-shirt under it!
  11. I'm currently planning to be at the Seabrook parking area by 4pm on Friday, May 18th, 2018.
  12. Considering joining you. What time frame?
  13. Wednesdays at Walden is on the calendar for 2018 from May 23rd through August 29th, though it may keep going even longer. See the calendar entry for details. Unless the weather looks like Thunder, I currently plan to attend the May 23rd session. Are others interested in going to Comella’s after the first session?
  14. until
    Greenland rolling, euro-paddle rolling, goose-decoy rolling, norsaq rolling, hand rolling, rescue practice, standing up in a kayak and juggling, sitting in kayaks talking without ever getting wet, strokes practice, stupid kayak tricks, Walden Pond on Wednesday evenings has something for nearly every kayaker. Come join us. It is on the calendar for 2018 from May 23rd through August 29th, though it may keep going even longer. Two-person-minimum. Each week’s session is considered automatically canceled unless at least two people post in the “Trips / NSPN Events” forum that they plan to attend. This is mainly to handle thunderstorms in the forecast, but also to coordinate things like the occasional dinner plans (usually at Comella’s). Plan-B is White Pond. Walden is wonderful but sometimes closes. Find that and other information at https://twitter.com/waldenpondstate. Plan-B is if Walden tweets they are closed, even if they plan to reopen that day, or if you find yourself locked out of Walden when you arrive, head to White Pond. White Pond is an 8 minute (10 to 16 minutes at rush hour) drive from Walden. It has very limited parking, so generally we drop kayaks, but park at a nearby school. Google Maps describes the put-in as 5B Plainfield Rd, Concord, MA 01742, the school where we park is Willard Elementary. White Pond is rolling and rescue friendly. Practice takes place right at the put-in so it is very nice for late arrivals. AMC Boston’s White-Water paddlers have their pond social there on Wednesdays, and the leader knows White Pond is our Plan-B; Walden has been their Plan-B in the past. We put-in right next to a PRIVATE members only swim beach. Technically non-members are not supposed to use the beach restrooms. Though I have heard of people getting permission from life-guards in the past. You will need to sign an NSPN waiver ( https://www.nspn.org/waiver/ ). Walden Pond sessions do not include a beach briefing, and often have staggered launches. So to comply with NSPN policy, please print your own waiver copies and bring a signed copy to each pond session. If you forget to bring a waiver, please sign the waiver of someone who remembered. You will need a parking pass at Walden (White Pond is free). If you are 62 or older and a MA resident, get a Senior ParksPass for $10. If you live in MA and just want to try Walden the “borrow a ParksPass program” might work for you. If you plan to be a regular consider a season pass. Otherwise pay the daily Walden parking fee (there is a kiosk by the boat ramp accepting debit/credit cards). For those new to Walden, I played around with Google Maps and created this custom map showing the following places. Main Parking Entrance: We rarely park in the main parking lot unless we arrive late, or need the bathroom facilities in the main parking area. Boat Ramp Entrance: There is a gravel driveway on the other side of the road just a bit south of the main parking lot which leads to the boat ramp. We can now purchase parking passes from a machine at the Boat Ramp near the water. Boat Ramp: Only cars with boats or handicapped tags are supposed to use the limited boat ramp parking. Be nice to the rangers, most of whom will react by being quite nice. Though a few are very "by the book" grumpy types. The rangers announce the boat ramp will be closing usually 20 to 30 minutes before it closes. The rangers close both the boat ramp parking lot and the in-gate for main parking half an hour before the main parking lot's out-gate closes. Beach Bathhouse: There are also larger bathroom/changing facilities at the main beach, a short walk from the boat ramp, though with more limited days and hours. We usually practice here: An initial pod of kayaks usually launches between 5:00pm and 5:30pm. If you get there late, no problem, just paddle to the other end of the pond from the boat ramp where you will usually find us practicing out of sight from the boat ramp but within sight of “We usually practice here.” There is no leader, but I hope to be a Walden Pond regular again this year. I also hope to see lots of new and old faces this year! -Bill Voss Links: My custom Walden map. https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1u17Eky1Igua-v4LJRREH0pxbWM0&ll=42.439244671799266%2C-71.33892774999998&z=16 Latest Walden news including closings and time changes https://twitter.com/waldenpondstate Plan-B put-in 5B Plainfield Rd, Concord, MA 01742, park Willard Elementary School https://www.google.com/maps/dir/42.430538,-71.381973/42.429502,-71.3860339/@42.4296506,-71.3862034,861m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m2!4m1!3e0?hl=en When we eat out afterwards, it is usually at Comella’s https://www.google.com/maps/place/Comella's/@42.4598123,-71.3519268,17z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x405c6f6c775def23:0x19ed21bd8b0df94e!8m2!3d42.4598123!4d-71.3497381?hl=en AMC Boston Pond Socials and Pool Rolling http://amcbostonpaddlers.org/pondsocials-poolrolling Parking: Senior ParksPass https://www.mass.gov/how-to/get-a-senior-parkspass Borrow a ParksPass https://www.mass.gov/service-details/find-where-you-can-borrow-a-parkspass Annual ParksPasses https://www.reserveamerica.com/showPage.do?name=common&commonPath=/htm/MA_DCRParkPasses.html Walden Pond info, including day pass info. https://www.mass.gov/locations/walden-pond-state-reservation
  15. Added Sue to the 2019 waiting list. If everyone now on the my list actually uses their spot (unlikely but possible), I won't get to the next person I add to the list until 2020.
  16. I'm offering a few individuals rolling instruction through the AMC again this year. At the moment I have one slot available for one student. Meeting weekly Tuesdays at 4pm in Hudson, NH starting July 3rd and going through the end of August. First person to contact the registrar via the official AMC list at https://activities.outdoors.org/search/index.cfm/action/details/id/105323&act=13 gets the slot. -Bill Voss
  17. I really like it. Especially the key point that the Wet One stays essentially stationary in the water. However, I agree with past posters that it definitely requires an active well practiced "Wet One/rescu-ee." With the approach I learned in NSPN "on the water" sessions, I can rescue someone who has never seen a T-rescue before. Though I definitely prefer this 30-sec approach for rescuing in conditions where hopefully everyone involved has practiced a T-rescue. The main differences I saw from what I think of as NSPN's default technique: 30-sec: Wet One rights kayak, moves kayak so they are at bow, indicates they want to be rescued, moves kayak so they are on side away from rescuer, presents rescuer with their bow. (Based on narration, presumably Wet One would push kayak bow to rescuer if rescuer has poor aim.) NSPN: Rescuer notices someone is over, paddles over and grabs kayak where ever they can. Rescuer INSTRUCTS Wet One to surrender their paddle, right their kayak (optional), and go to rescuer's bow. Next step same for both 30-sec and NSPN: Standard dump water from flooded kayak using edging instead of lifting flooded kayak (assumes kayak has bulkhead or sock). 30-sec: Kayak is moved around Wet One, rescuer says "GO," then Wet One gets on the back deck much like the start of a Cowboy re-entry but then puts their feet into the cockpit without the Cowboy's straddle. NSPN: Rescuer INSTRUCTS Wet One to move around kayak, and usually to do a heel-hook re-entry. (Note: both 30-sec/NSPN Wet Ones may grab other kayak's deck lines.) Both: Attach skirt. NSPN: Return Wet One's paddle. Both (not shown): Confirm Wet One OK, separate with Rescuer pushing Wet One's kayak toward Rescuer's bow. Comment about Wet One keeping their paddle: I routinely begin my pool session with a solo Cowboy re-entry. So hanging onto my paddle is natural. The only change from my solo Cowboy is the 30-sec initially holds the paddle in the stern hand across both kayaks, while my solo Cowboy initially holds the paddle in the bow hand paddle extended over the water. I don't think I have ever done a heel-hook re-entry while holding my paddle. I suspect that heel-hook holding paddle might be awkward. Comment about Rescuer giving up their paddle: In the 30-sec video both rescuers briefly set their paddle on their skirt while using both hands to flip the Wet One's kayak using both hands. Especially in conditions, not all rescuers will be comfortable with zero hands on their paddle however briefly. Though usually I see the rescuer taking the Wet One's paddle, not the other way around.
  18. Nice. Just did it on December 14th, 2017. Then I wondered if the waiver I just electronically signed expires on December 31st, 2017, in a year on December 13th, 2018, or on December 16th, 2018 when my current ACA membership expires. Anyone know?
  19. Darn, I won't be able to make that date. Have fun without me.
  20. If you have been on an NSPN trip where someone was paddling a skin-on-frame, it was probably me. While a number of NSPNers own and/or have built skin-on-frame kayaks, I believe I'm the only currently active member who still always uses their skin-on-frame kayak when they sea kayak. I've sent you a PM with my phone number if that is more suitable to you needs. I'm also happy to discuss skin-on-frame kayaks here. (If you haven't found it already, you should also checkout the http://www.qajaqusa.org/ forum.) Someone who has built and paddled a skin-on-frame but now uses a factory kayak would be a better resource if you want to be talked out of building your own. In my opinion, the main downside of a skin-on-frame is the lack of a rear bulkhead if you need to be rescued. Though a sea-sock can address that issue if you don't have confidence in your roll, and with a little patience rescuing a skin-on-frame without a sock is very similar to rescuing a Cleopatra's Needle situation. The main upside is the psychic joy of paddling a kayak you built yourself without having to commit as many hours as you would need for a strip built kayak. There is also something neat about paddling a skin kayak instead of a hard shell that makes you feel more connected to the water. I should also note that skin-on-frame does not mean Greenland Kayak, though all true Greenland Kayaks are skin-on-frame kayaks. Personally I love my modern F1, and have high hopes for my not yet launched Baidarka. Because I'm big and inflexible, I'm far less interested in Greenland style Kayaks. -Bill P.S. While I have carved two Greenland paddles and have three unfinished in my basement, I currently use a Gearlab Paddle as my primary sea kayaking paddle.
  21. Walden Wednesdays are coming to an end for 2017. Weather permitting I believe the consensus is that September 27th will be the last Walden Wednesday for the year. I currently hope to arrive around 4pm. Note that as of September 20th the water temperature was 71 degrees, and the park was closing at 6:30pm meaning we get off the water around 6pm.
  22. We missed you Peter. While it was overcast, it was also practically deserted which gives Walden a very pleasant relaxed vibe. The Walrus reports the water temperature was 71 degrees.
  23. Anyone want to come out and play this Wednesday? I would like to arrive around 4pm. Note that Walden is closing at 6:30pm these days, which means getting off the water around 6pm. The National Weather Service is also currently predicting "Showers likely, mainly before 2pm," but is NOT predicting thunder. Since I expect to get wet anyway, I consider the chance of showers to be a minor inconvenience.
  24. Get better Jane. We will miss you.
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