Imagine you are at the edge of the sea on a day when it is difficult to say where the land ends and the sea begins and where the sea ends and the sky begins. Sea kayaking lets you explore these and your own boundaries and broadens your horizons. Sea kayaking is the new mountaineering.
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Friday, February 02, 2007
A close encounter of the cetecean kind.
Rob said "you haven't lived until the 6 foot dorsal of a big bull knifes it's way toward you and disappears under your keel, the golden glow of a big yellow eye still visible." Rob I would be scared out of my wits! However, in a small way I have known something akin to your amazing experience.
Almost exactly 3 years ago we were paddling round the islands of Luing and Shuna in the Firth of Lorne. As we crossed the Sound of Shuna the wind dropped to nothing, then behind us came a thrashing noise like the paddle steamer Waverley. It was a group of about 30 to 45 bottlenose dolphins. They seemed to be feeding right on the surface as they came round Rubh Aird Luing. We stopped paddling and drifted in the tide. We were lying about 200 metres off their track but as soon as they saw us, all three pods came over for a closer look.
We were surrounded. The females and calves circled round on the outside, then the adolescents, then two large alpha males ignored my daughter Jennifer and came for me at high speed on the surface. Mature males weigh about 650kg and can travel at up to 30km/hr! They barrel rolled just under my kayak and one after the other, I saw the eye looking up at me then the pale belly and finally the tail. The second just flicked the bottom of the kayak ever so gently with its tail. The pair then exploded from the water before crashing back with a huge splash. They repeated this several times. Awesome. I have since seen the big one with the lateral bend to its dorsal fin 65 km to the south near Cara.
Only after what seemed like an age did the dolphins stop showing off and resume their fishing trip. Stunned, we were left on our own in the silence of a winter sunset in the Sound of Shuna.
Wonderful pictures! That you had the presence of mind to take them as they charged is incredible. I think I would have frozen solid. I've yet to see whales or dophins that close to my kayak. Usually they are specks in the distance or noises in the fog. Perhaps I'll get lucky this summer...
ReplyDeleteMichael, Thank you! I hope you do not have to wait too long to see one, I have been lucky. I was a bit nervous, the camera was a non waterproof model!
ReplyDeleteI did wonder about heading east through to the Firth of Forth this weekend to see the Orca pod. However I reckoned everyone with a speed boat/jet ski would also be there.
We went west instead to the Firth of Clyde and had it to ourselves, no orcas, minkes, pilots, dolphins or porpoises but plenty of birds.