Categories
Sailor Bob

Driftwood roundup …


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Originally uploaded by Suffering the Benz

It was beautiful on Sunday, so we took the bowrider out for a while to motor around Fort Loudon Lake. After picking up Tom and Jenny, we spotted an amazing piece of driftwood on the inside corner of Park’s Bend.

Tom is an avid driftwood collector, and his efforts have resulted in one of the coolest railings I’ve ever seen. When he saw this piece floating in the lake, he knew he had to grab it. But there was an iceberg effect going on here, with only a small part of the wood poking above the surface. We couldn’t pull it aboard. So we lassoed it with a line and pulled it back to Tom’s dock at idle speed.

Once we got it ashore, we realized it was even larger than we’d thought. Can’t wait till it dries out and Tom incorporates it into his driftwood magnum opus …

Categories
Paddle Bob

My first paddle of 2009 …

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Wes gave me a funny look when I told him I wanted to get out on the lake and paddle in the next snowstorm that blew through. Then a stern warning. “I know you’re not a big risk taker. But that sounds kinda crazy. Be careful, dude …”

Yesterday, I got my chance. It was snowing and there wasn’t much wind. I told Lara I was going to take out the kayak, and while she wasn’t impressed with the idea, she seemed somewhat assured by my insistence that I would be out for only a short time.

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I suited up and went down to the dock, where I managed to get the kayak underway without taking a cold bath. I’m a newbie paddler but I’m pretty good at staying in the boat. I stuck the shoreline in case I did end up in the water. But once I got out of the cove, I knew my promise to Lara was a lie. I was going to paddle for a while. It felt really good to be paddling for the first time in 2009, and the snow made it amazing. I really wasn’t cold and headed upstream, paddled into the cove housing Choto Marina and when I came out, I decided to blast across the main channel and explore Prater Flats or a while.

As I approached the south shore while crossing the main channel, I heard someone hooting and shouting. I looked up to see a guy standing on the deck of a house. He clearly had just stepped out since he wasn’t wearing a coat, and he was pointing at me and jumping up and down.

“You’re my hero, dude,” he yelled. I grinned broadly and replied: “Until I fall out of this thing and drown.” I could hear him laughing as I paddled toward the entrance to Prater Flats. I started thinking about my heroes. The folks who are good enough in a sea kayak to get out on the open ocean and paddle through ice flows and sea lions. While I realized I’m a long way from that kind of skill, I still got a bit pumped to be a hero to one Knoxvillian watching a crazy kayaker paddle across Lake Loudon in a snowstorm …

Categories
Paddle Bob

Navigating a handheld GPS

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Holiday eating and drinking had me antsy to get out on the water and paddle, so I decided to oblige the urge today and take advantage of the opportunity to play with the handheld GPS Lara bought me for Christmas.

The weather was perfect — upper 50s, clear skies — but I stayed close to the shoreline anyway just in case I got dumped from my kayak. Water temperature was 47 degrees. Aside from gulls, herons and the occasional kingfisher, I was the only thing on the lake. It was good to plow through that open space after paddling the claustrophobic streams of Central Florida last week. I turned on the GPS, which recorded my 6.6 mile paddle. But I couldn’t figure out how to move the file to my computer in a format it would understand.

I’m using a Lowrance iFinder H20c, so I saved the MMC file to an SD card and moved the .usr file to my computer. Then I found GPS Babel, which coverted the Lowrance file to a Google Earth .kml file. From there it was simple to download Google Earth, view the route I took and then save it as a .jpg.

My favorite part of the file is you can see where I lingered at the entrance to Duck Cove on my way back to watch the sunset and snap this photo.