#1
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Captain and Crew do Memorial Day weekend - part uno
Preparations Saturday revealed a disappointing inventory discrepancy: the daggerboard for the Hobie Adventure was apparently stored in a place so secure that it could not be found. Clearly the daggerboard was received and placed into stores, but just as clearly it was not where it was expected to be nor did several diligent searches reveal its location. Crew (aka darn cat) supervised the searches and conducted in his own independent search based on his wiggling into every small space and climbing everything there was to climb in the search areas. (Crew: Captain’s storage system is a place for everything and everything all over the place.) Captain assumes Crew did not find the daggerboard though Crew’s reports were sketchy to nonexistent. Nonetheless Captain broke out the tuna for Saturday evening mess in recognition of Crew’s efforts. Sunday morning found Captain up at o-dark-thirty loading the Taurus personnel carrier. Crew inspects loading in, out, around, under, and on top of the transport. Kayak on top. Dive gear in the dive duffle. Kayak gear wherever in the trunk; towel and change of clothes in an inexpensive dry bag; and valuables in a dry box. Extra bungee cords and a relatively new tarp along just because. Crew claims a high priority secret mission and refuses to re-board for departure; Captain puts Crew on report but won’t hold up the schedule for any being. Met temporary personnel at an off the base eatery for a big breakfast and last minute planning. Reviewed scouts report of heavy Memorial weekend crowds, significant wind, and surface water temperatures in the back of coves of 75 degrees. Hit S-Mart for specialty items not carried by the base commissar (where is the turkey jerky?). Maneuvers begin with drive to Camanche Reservoir, North Shore day-use area. Kayak and divers in the water about 11 am, as planned. Kayak launched with dive flag on top of sail mast (sail furled around mast). Water surprisingly warm but also very murky – less than 2 foot visibility. Snorkeling and shallow diving maneuvers completed satisfactorily. Captain aborts planned deeper diving in the cove due to conditions and substitutes a conditioning surface swim around a point, taking turns pulling the kayak (with rations aboard), in hopes of finding clearer water. Swim complete but no joy on the conditions: murky water full of floating debris, wind- driven waves increasing in height, jet skiers and pleasure boats galore adding boat wakes. Return to day use area for kayak maneuvers. Hobie Adventure pedal drive effective in deep and shallow waters at all headings; turning radius acceptable, inability to reverse thrust disappointing. Temporary personnel report turn of speed surprised them. Captain pedals around several paddle kayaks working into the wind just for fun; their occupants look a bit stunned at the performance of the Adventure. (“Why didn’t you get us one of those, dear, look how easy he’s going three times faster than we are!”) Captain denies having smiled in quiet satisfaction – or that his legs were burning with the prolonged effort. Captain “plants” a speargun as target for future dives, triangulating its location, and declares the water maneuvers complete. (Crew: told you one bungee was not enough.) Recovery area now swarming with civilians, including dogs, children, water toys, jet skis, party boats, smoking barbeques, floating mattresses, more children, guys drinking beer, puppies, a few babes, more children – several crying and most running round - and more guys drinking beer, lots of laughing and shouting – some even in English! Captain is surprised to learn it is almost 4 p.m. All personnel are tired, but get the recovery job done with no further loss of equipment. (Captain: that speargun is there on purpose for future rescue and recovery training!) Return to base begins at about 4:45 p.m. Temporary personnel dozes off in the transport; roused to transship into their own vehicle in the restaurant parking lot. RTB by about 6 p.m.. Gear hung to dry with minimal cleaning. Shower later; hang kayak later. Captain rehydrates with scientifically selected solution of herbs, carbohydrates, glucose, and medicinal quantities of alcohol; followed by a calculated period of relaxation. (Crew: the Captain had a beer and took a nap. The dive gear had some interesting new smells - so did the Captain!) |
#2
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Re: Captain and Crew do Memorial Day weekend - part uno
SD,
I've been to Comanche Res, but it had to be 30yrs ago. I had relatives that lived in Stockton off Comanche Drive, and used to go up there fishing, pheasant hunting and frog gigging. I used to like fishing the delta alot. A few years back, Scott, Rickey and myself went to the striperfest up there which is held at the Sugar Barge in Franks Tract. We took the kayaks, but didn't realize that Franks Tract is pretty much as far as one can see with the naked eye. We hit a very tiny, and I mean tiny part of it but had fun. I gotta ask though, was the speargun for carp? PerryC.
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Work...The curse of the fishing class ====================== Cobra Mariner-XF kayak Outcast Super FatCat float tube Creek Company ODC 420 float tube |
#3
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Re: Captain and Crew do Memorial Day weekend - part uno
Carp - yes. Also just part of general shakedown, just didn't expect the speargun the shake off the kayak and go so far down! Hope to recover it a little later in the year when the water level goes down.
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