Bass Rock and Roll

December 6, 2009

Sea Kayak strapped to top of car and everything necessary inside and setting off in the dark Saturday morning, missing Gutbusters but ready for a paddle in the Forth. A few snow flakes were worryingly falling the night before now replaced with an icy wind. This really didn’t sounds a good idea so I did it.

We all assembled at North Berwick in the wrong car park which necessitated a longer portage of the kayaks down to the edge of the sea. This is the North Sea meets River Forth and both are very chilly. Spectators are wrapped up warm as we clamber into our kayaks in bright dry suit, stuck spraydecks on and hit the surf and in my case the first rock that I could. With my paddle the wrong way round I battled through the surf and out into the swell sitting deploying rudder, which got stuck but fortunately a lady in shining dry suit flipped it for me and got my paddle the right way round. Ok Bass Rock that way – it was a clear navigational point sticking out of the Forth. Around the clashing rocks with surf everywhere tempted one of the braver ladies and she was paddling like furious through it – I was just trying to keep upright in the swell as huge waves crashed over my bow. Then all was calmish and we floated over the waves – it was like cycling over and down small hills as you disappear into the trough looking up at the next one with all the other paddlers disappearing into their own troughs. Great fun.

My folding Feathercraft K1 kayak flexes in the waves and it is a strange sensation and other paddlers would paddle up and ask questions about it. The weather wasn’t as cold as expected and constant paddling kept us warm anyway and we reached the Bass Rock where there is a cave through it – however seals were in pup jut now so it wouldn’t make sense to go breaking up seal families – one popped up in between us and kept a weather eye out on us. The rock was free of gannets at this time of year and you could make out its rocky features – normally covered with birds. it is apparently illegal to step to it so we didn’t. It is named after the Latin name for the gannet (Sula Bassanus) – there are also the island of Sula with a similar gannet colony and the tourist boat tot he Bass Rock is called Sula.

One of the girls was moaning for lunch and Ollie gave her a bounty bar so she would happily make Seacliff (omitting to mention they were out of date). On the way to seacliff the waves were huge and at one point I could look up and see a complete row of 6 other paddlers to my right and above me! I hit the seacliff surf forgetting how to do surf kayaking and was flipped over and walked ashore to be reunited with my kayak. My paddle still in hand as waves would hit me from behind. Lunch was a case of finding a level piece of seaweed and with my wet shoes I managed to do a passable imitation of a fitting lunatic – but still managed to keep my roll in hand as I flumped down onto a seaweed covered rock.

Ollie told us tales of Robson Green and their time when he swam to Holy Island in swimming shorts (on TV soon) where Robson goes into shock and it took 40 minutes to get him back to recognising things. This was after being rescued by the lifeboat in the Tyne – wait till he tries the Scottish rivers…
Brian who hails from Coldstream, down the river from me, and is a painter of seascapes and landscapes, passed around his home made Fruit Leather – a sort of Beef Jerky made with rosehips and honey – delicious to chew on.

Ollie and Brian went in to see if Seacliff harbour was possible – but the waves were high and the entrance was one large foamy surface so it was decided to press on. It was going to be a night trip to Fidra (previously noted on Ollies calendar as Flada with the phrase challenging kayak – which would be since Flada is on the West Coat) and a long trek so we put back in to North Berwick in sunset – it was glorious paddling into the beach with the Berwick Law crowned with sunlight and the water an orange colour. The surf this time didn’t capsize me and I did well to get into the beach upright – apart from running Ollie over – it was kind of him to provide my buffer zone as I careered into the beach.

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Oldest Swinger in Town

December 2, 2009

It seemed a straight forward plan – visit GoApe in the Lake District to go swinging through the trees. Even better Kim had procured a free Gorilla with every purchase (we weren’t too sure where we were going to keep it though) as long as we visited before the end of November (Gorillas must hibernate after that I guess).

Then the Lake District decided to burst its banks, with 19 bridges down or threatening to collapse GoApe called off as its access roads were now more Venetian than tropical jungle tracks. A week of drying out – the Lake District and not me – and we were assembling at the GoApe hut constructed from sustainable timber to see if a standard harness will fit Mike’s groin – I was proud when my heaving pouch was proving troublesome and he had to get the ‘porn star’ harness with bikini top to make sure I didn’t do the zip line upside down.

With Stuart and Steph keen as mustard to see me fall off with a side bet on Kim – we went through the intensive training checks that we had listened to the safety briefing (don’t fall off seemed to be the gist of it). Ali was spending his time at home babysitting the leaking stove which needed emptied every few hours – it would be typical bad luck to get flooded on the top of a 600 foot hill. So to the start – hook on and clamber up the rope ladder, unhook blue and hook onto the roller, unhook the red and and hook onto the cable and over the roller and edge gently along the tightrope to the zip line start. More hooking and unhooking and weeee down the zip line to land surprisingly on my feet in the bark – this was the first and last time such an elegant landing would be achieved.

Tests done we were now abandoned to our fate (although I suspect we were being closely monitored for insurance reasons). Enter the secret code then hook on and up the longer rope ladder this time. Stuart up, followed quickly by Steph. Followed by me – not so fast and now oscillating on a rope ladder in 3 dimensions whilst Kim is corpsing and giggling below. Quick fart to restore balance and one leg at a time – the other one being caught up in the safety line and I made the top thinking this was a particularly bad idea as that was the first step of a long scary journey through another 4 obstacle courses up in the trees.

The tarzan swing is a particular joy as you end up in a net and have to scrabble up and across the eternal moving ropes to reach a platform. I almost gave up with that one – it was only ridicule that kept me going.

The obstacles got more and more taxing – I passed on the monkey rings one where a girl had already got stuck half way across and went across the greased log instead – half way over the log I was beginning to regret that decision. My porn star harness had also slipped a little which meant hooking and unhooking from the cable relied on me standing on tip toes or balancing on a tight rope to unhook myself which struck me as more dangerous than not being hooked on at all.

Screams came from the trees beyond and longer and higher zip lines revealed themselves. I set off in a stright line which quickly turned into a balletic spiral and ended with me facing back to a waving Kim as I hit the wet and insect friendly bark with my bottom.

We made it all through in a standard pattern of me getting stuck, reverse zip landings and a bosuns chair that was going to see a rescue required if I didn’t have that last fart to propel me to the platform on the tree. Certificates signed pint sunk and it was off to Keswick to catch a glimpse of the stars Prince Chuck turning the lights on whilst Julia Bradbury turns the middle aged men on – neither of which we actually saw.

Sore arms and legs was the result and it was fun. Reading their Health and Safety reports after going is much better than before swinging. Adventure Fun with safety – good combination.

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