Our first Rendezvous

OUR FIRST RENDEZVOUS

On the beach - Photo by Len Disenhouse
On the beach – Photo by Len Disenhouse

by Beth and Simon Mielniczuk

Spring 2004. Two semi-experienced paddlers become members of a group called GLSKA and join them at Rendezvous, their kick-off to another paddling season celebrated on Georgian Bay. Neither of us really knew what to expect – other than we’d be camping with a lot of people, most of them complete strangers to us. In all honesty, that made me a little bit nervous, but I have to say that GLSKA has a lot of wonderful, friendly and helpful members and that made for a fabulous weekend.

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Southeast Shore of Georgian Bay

Remains of lumber barge on Musquash River
Remains of lumber barge on Musquash River

Howard Williams & Rudi Rauch

The southeast corner of Georgian Bay is a place of water, rocks of the Canadian Shield and bush, which in many instances, clings to minute rock crevices, obtaining nurture from small amounts of soil. Yet part of Beausoleil Island, the largest island in Georgian Bay Islands National Park (GBINP), has a different geological nature and indeed different vegetation.

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The McRae Lake Trip

(With apologies to Songs of the Great Lakes – “On the Schooner Hercules”)

Hart Haessler

In the spring of O and four,
The first of May it’s true,
Seven kayaks set their blades.
We were a GLSKA crew.

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Sea Kayaking – The Who, What, Where, Why, When and How of the Sport

by Wendy Killoran

WHAT IS SEA KAYAKING?

Sea kayaking is a water sport that opens up a lifetime of endless possibilities of exploration and recreation. A sea kayak, life jacket, double bladed paddle and spray skirt are the bare essentials needed to be able to paddle as well as feeling comfortable on the water. Sea kayaking is an enchanting method of exploring one’s surroundings, giving access to inaccessible shoreline. It is a great way to occupy oneself, spending quality time with friends and family.

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Kayaking into the stillness of Grafton Pond

This Pond is Your Pond
This Pond is Your Pond

by Richard E. Winslow III

As something of a stranger to western New Hampshire I discovered that Grafton Pond was no easy destination. Getting there became an ordeal of hit-and-mostly-missed dirt roads. A tucked-away 235-acre body of water in the Canaan-Enfield region, the Grafton Pond Reservation was donated to, and has been administered since 1984 by, the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests (SPNHF). Finally I found it, and my dusty car and I emerged at a dam. Beyond lay the blue sheen of Grafton Pond, lovely in July’s midmorning sun.

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