GLSKA Spring Rendezvous 2011

by Nancy Morgan
Photographs by Gerry Felsky

rend11-1.jpgUndaunted by rain, lush poison ivy or the distance travelled, kayakers gathered at Cape Croker Park, on Sydney Bay, on the Bruce Peninsula near Wiarton, to socialize and reminisce about past trips, plan new ones, and for new members, to get acquainted with our club. We were welcomed by a representative of the Chippewas of Nawash First Nation who registered each group and assigned a campsite. Tents were set up in this location of immense beauty, with the jagged battlement of the Niagara Escarpment at our back on the crystal clear water of Georgian Bay.

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Beausoleil Island Trip

by Jennifer Kilbourne
Photographs by Gerry Croney

beaus1.jpgThe spring of 2011 was a wet one. It was a rare stretch of two or three days in April and May that didn’t see a few showers, if not heavy rains. Gerry, the trip organizer, wisely changed the destination of this mid-May kayaking and camping adventure from Franklin Island to Beausoleil Island due to the presence of a very good cooking shelter at the north end of Beausoleil.

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The Pinery

Wendy Killoran

The Ausable River emerged at Lake Huron’s shoreline with a wide, beckoning gap enticing us to paddle the Great Lake for the first paddle of the season in late March.

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7th Annual Flowerpot Island Expedition

by Susan Sutherland
Photographs by Rob Muylwyk and Scott Innes

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Our trip started out May 27 with 6 enthusiastic paddlers – Bert, Kaz, Rob M., Rob W., Scott, Susan and Trish. After meeting on a sunny Friday at Dunks Bay near Tobormory, quick hellos and packing our kayaks, we headed off. Our first obstacle was getting though the high and quick surf. We all did eventually. Our crossing to Flowerpot Island took an hour and 20 minutes with 2-metre waves and 20-knot winds but everyone had smiles on their faces while surfing.

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Staying Alive on the Water

by Tim Dyer
(White Squall Paddling Centre)

I’ve been thinking a lot about rescues. Maybe it’s because every time I open a paddling magazine or view the list of topics for symposia, sea kayak rescue in all its guts and glory is dissected ad nauseum. To add to the nausea, I thought I would weigh in. Here are some thoughts about that most humbling piece of paddling – saving a life.

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