Today we give a formal goodbye to our friend, Trish. We'll drive through the fresh snow and ice to get to upper Maryland where she lived. I remember right after James and I moved into our new house that Drew and Trish moved into their new house. James drove through another big snow storm to help them move. And now we will say goodbye.
I know, from losing Pat, that there is no final goodbye; that one says goodbye to their lost one over and over. I still think of him often and hug his memory.
![]() |
I changed my club's header and background. They now reflect Florida. This makes me happy.
|
Life has moved on. It's strange how the little things become routine, and routines give life texture. My connections to my friends, our boats and the water help pull me through; dragging me along when I am down and lifting me high when life is good.
I had my first week-day club paddle on March 4th. Only Deke and I showed up. That's okay, it's real early in the season and a lot of the paddlers don't own even a wet suit. We found ice on the Occoquan Reservoir. I tried to break through with my "war horse", the Sirocco, but eventually the ice started growing too thick for even that boat's weight combined with mine to break. Plus my carbon paddle was skipping and I didn't want to chip it. Pansy.
selfie 3-12-14 |
Camera still giving me fits but I finally decided to attach it on a shorter lanyard so it doesn't chance a dip in the drink. I am also storing it up high on paddles, tucking it into my bra area of my Astral Bella vest. So far, so good.
Last Saturday I talked some club members into trying a launch we've never done before. I didn't have to do much convincing. New water, new bird reserve...OMG. This is my new favorite launch for the next few months until the southbound beach traffic makes it impossible to get there.
We launched from a sandy beach into Aquia Creek, headed out into the Potomac around Marlborough Point and then into Accokeek Creek. The whole trip out was a series of rights, about 6.25 miles. We found hundreds of tundra swans resting in the back reaches of the creek. Bald eagles, returning Osprey, many water birds.
![]() |
credit Darrick 2014 |
![]() |
credit Darrick 2014 |
The Eli is always my choice for new water that might get big, and sh*t yeah the big P can jump up and roar, plus I never worry about squeezing the Eli into tight spaces or pulling "him" over branches that block some of the tighter creeks we wander into.
The trip out the water was sweet and relatively smooth. The day was as bright and warm as a late winter day can be here in NoVa.
Baldies! So many I joked you "can't throw a rock without hitting one!"
Dennis and the swans taking flight |
On the trip back the wind was blowing a steady 15 mph or so, shoving us hard backwards. This also meant we had big sets of rollers to climb. Now, this is exactly the kind of thing I'm keen on, and the Eli handles this well. So I didn't take any photos, I literally had my paddle blown out of my hand twice while trying to reach for the camera. After the second time I gave up and "just paddled."
Woohoo! It was a great day.
Lastly, my friend Indiana Jones, patiently waiting for me to start running again. And so I have. The knee I busted up in the Keys in early January is finally somewhat better. It ached after I ran/walked 5 miles yesterday. I iced it a bit and hobbled off happily to bed.
:-)
ReplyDelete