Showing posts with label Tom Noffsinger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Noffsinger. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Action shots from Tybee Island November Session 2014

I am planning to buy a GoPro or something. It tends to be risky to reach for my camera in the waves. Hard to hold on to one's paddle and take a picture at the same time. Also, I seem to have taken many shots of my deck. Gee, how did that happen?

Full moon the night we arrived in Tybee

Lining up to launch


um


Kevin catching a little one


climbing a wave

Looks like Sandy Bottom and Tom heading back out to line up





This is mostly what I saw of others, disembodied heads over the top of waves.

Tom explaining towing



Heading back to the house, our rental is far right 

the beach was quite steep in front of our place


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Sorry for falling silent

I am still battling exhaustion gathered while on a long road trip that included rough water training with Dale Williams and Tom Noffsinger. For whatever reason, by the time I got home, six days after starting my journey, I was wiped out.

Week long trip down the East Coast

The link to the above photos will hopefully work. The album is unedited so the photos are "raw." I do not normally allow my pictures to go up without processing but in this case I decided it is a genuine reflection of my experience.

It has been hard for me to convince myself that I needed to talk about my week-long foray into the kind of water I am unused to paddling.

While hind-sight is 20-20 I had no illusions going into the trip about my skills, or lack thereof. I was not surprised the first time I flipped, or the 5th time either. My boat performed admirably, but I did not. My take aways are:

Tybee Island is amazing, wonderful, and surrounded by amble big water.

I need a full-on drysuit. My Kokatat paddler's suit held up but I did get some water in at the neoprene neck.

I suck. I need to seek rough water out for mucho practice.

I held my braces too long and was too tense on the first day. By the second day I was throwing down brace-forward stroke-brace and stayed upright  much better. By the third day I did not flip even once. The third day I was more relaxed because I was so exhausted, ha ha. Brian said "you should be tired when you go home," and I was.

Actually, I was so tired I did not make it back out on to the water until the following Sunday.