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Catch a Gliding Kayak by Stever Jermanok
Pulling my paddle out of the water, I sat upright in my kayak, no
doubt looking like some Greek mythological figure: half-man, half boat. My legs
were hidden inside the hatch, comfortably stretched along the sides, where I
could push on two pedals to steer left or right. For the moment, I stopped
navigating to view a clamorous cormorant colony perched high atop rocky cliffs.
Their squawks reached a crescendo when two bald eagles flew overhead, perhaps
searching for eggs. Soon I was paddling propeller style in the waters of the
Gulf of Saint Lawrence, searching for another deserted beach on which to have
lunch. As I coasted onto the pink sands, a school of seals swam alongside,
popping their heads out of the water like periscopes to gawk at this modern-day
minotaur.
It was day two of a four-day inn-to-inn sea-kayaking tour of
Canadas Prince Edward Island, just northeast of Nova Scotia on the
Atlantic seaboard. The second-fastest-growing sport in America behind
snowboarding, sea kayaking has become more than just a leisure activity; it has
also spawned a whole new category of water-borne travel. While paddlers have
been taking overnight trips for years, theyve lugged their own gear and
toughed it out in tents along the shores of lakes and bays. More recently,
though, outfitters have created trips for the more genteel masses: multi-night
jaunts that afford solace at sea during the day and lodgings and gourmet meals
at luxury inns and small hotels. Guides, boats, and other gear are provided,
along with support crews who transport luggage to prearranged overnight stops
while paddlers spend much of the day on the water.
Such trips are proliferating across North America because people are
discovering that sea kayaks offer active travelers an important advantage:
These long, stringbean-shaped boats can get you to places you often cant
experience any other way- by bike or car, on foot, even in larger seafaring
vessels. Thats what got me hooked on the sport in the first place. When
my wife and I were vacationing in Maines Acadia National Park in 1995, we
quickly tired of Bar Harbors oppressive traffic. To escape the
midtown-Manhattanesque congestion, we ditched the car for an afternoon of
kayaking around the phalanx of small islands lining Frenchman Bay on the
parks outskirts. Within minutes, we were gliding casually along the
water, the highest mountains on the Atlantic north of Brazil as our backdrop.
In the three years that followed, I went on a handful of other
half-day paddles. But I still felt apprehensive when I signed on for this
much-longer journey along the shores of Prince Edward Island. It did not help
that on the first morning of the trip, the air was thick with fog and the
swells rose a good two feet. I was somewhat relieved to discover that Bill and
Kim, a North Carolina couple with whom Id paddle the next four days, had
never set foot into a kayak before. We were joined by an experienced local
paddler, Katherine, and Andrew, the guide supplied by Outside Expeditions, the
local outfitter who organized our trip.
Our orientation was brief: Andrew introduced us to spray skirts, disks
of nylon with doughnut holes that fit snugly around your waist and, once
youre seated in your boat, stretch over the mouth to seal you in and
water out, Tupperware-style. Then he showed us the basic kayak stroke: Holding
your two-headed paddle with both hands, you create a churning motion by pushing
one end of the paddle through the air while pulling the other through the
water. Adequately prepped and with life jackets on, we settled into our boats
and pushed off.
My spray skirt kept water from flooding into the hold, despite the
choppy seas, but it couldnt keep panic from seeping in. I had visions of
tipping over into the cool ocean waters and washing up onto the shore, a blue
Popsicle. But the sun beckoned from behind a cloud, the fog started to
dissipate, and I quickly found my balance and my stroke.
We edged along the cliffs that would be by our side for the better
part of the trip. For lunch, we coasted onto an uninhabited island and dined on
smoked salmon and oysters. Then we crossed several more bays to our resting
spot for the evening., a small inn called The Ark that juts out on a spit of
land into the Gulf. All in all, we had paddled four to five hours for a total
of eight miles- just enough to invigorate, not exhaust, and to stoke our
appetites. The Ark did not disappoint. I had my first taste of the
islands silver-dollar-size blue mussels, along with a lobster roll that
was bulging with meat.
After being on the water for most of the day, I could still feel the
rhythmic bobbing of the kayak from my king-size bed. I awoke the next morning
expecting my arms to be sore, but they were raring to go. In fact, the whole
group was eager to get back on the water, which, in contrast to the previous
morning, was glassy-calm and inviting. The next three days were a blissful blur
as the continuum of time seemed to flow with the current out to sea. We would
kayak seven to eight miles each day along the northeastern shores of the
island, past wild coastline with broad estuaries that cut into the red cliffs
to form finger-like bays and miles of empty beach. While daily sightings of
cormorants, eagles, and seals were common, Homo sapiens were not seen or heard
until we ventured out of our boats in the late afternoon to shower and dine.
Suspended halfway in the ocean, my head inches from the water line, my stroke
became fluid, graceful. I would drift into my own thoughts ad then be drawn
back into the group, usually by one of Bills jokes.
The sense of adventure, plying the ocean waters where few have gone
before, brought us closer. One late morning, the sky suddenly darkened and
looked ready to burst. Just as it started to pour, we ferried onto the shores
of a rocky beach, helping each other out of our bucking kayaks. Andrew took
four paddles and planted them in the sand to form a square. He produced a large
sheet of canvas from the belly of his kayak and tied it atop the paddles, and
soon we were enjoying another gourmet lunch under a makeshift tent as the rain
dimpled the sand around us.
By the time we reached our put-out point at a popular local beach,
wed become good friends who didnt want to say goodbye. So that
night, instead of going our separate ways, we went to Katherines house
for a home-cooked meal consisting solely of potatoes grown in the islands
rich burgundy soil. We talked of where the sea would take us next: perhaps
Baja, Nova Scotia, or Washingtons San Juan Islands. With water covering
three-fourths of the globe, paddlers have plenty of places to explore.