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canoeing, kayaking and other adventures

canoeing and kayaking adventures born in the Southeastern U.S. and now centered in Scotland...

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Second Stateside Guests: Jody and Jacob arrive in Scotland 1/7/2006 - 2/7/2006

Two by two until late August, that's the visitor schedule. Jody and Jacob were the second pair to arrive. Lucas met them in London while, sadly, I worked. They arrived in Edinburgh on a Thursday, wandered the city on their own on Friday and were ready for something different by Saturday. We went to Linlithgow Palace, a historic site recommended by several friends. The mazy ruins were fun to explore and the weather couldn't be better. Even better still, the ruins of Linlithgow Palace plus train tickets were about the same price as the crowded tour of Edinburgh Castle. After plenty of exploring, we found our way to Tesco, found dinner and enjoyed a picnic on the hillside between the palace and the lake.

The plan for Sunday was Cupar Highland Games. Think track meet meets county fair as far as atmosphere. Competitions were held in dancing, running, cycling and piping as well as the more famous throwing of large objects. The rain showed up about halfway through the day. Band geeks Jody and Jacob had already wandered under the covered stands to watch the pipe bands compete. We joined them, staying mostly dry while alternately watching the pipe bands and the large heavy objects in flight in the distance. We walked back to the train in the rain. Lucas enjoyed his first Irn Bru, a chemical concoction that once outsold Coke in Scotland. Its caffeine and quinine content meant that I could only smell the chemicals, but I was quite happy to not go any farther. It smelled of cheap bubble gum and I can't imagine that I would like how it tasted. While we waited for the train to arrive, I learned that Mad Amy was in a dealership about to purchase a motorbike. Another toy for her ever-expanding toy collection and definitely more stories in the works.


Tower view #1.


Tower view #2. We enjoyed a picnic dinner where those people are lounging on the hill slope.


Tower view #3


The courtyard fountain, reassembled. Colors differentiate new from old pieces in the completed sculpture.


Outside corner of Linlithgow Palace, not far from our picnic dinner spot.


At the Cupar Highland Games, the Highland dancers kicked off the competitive events, figuratively and literally.


Cyclists race while dancers dance.


Apparently, she thinks the sign is odd, too.


The cyclists raced on single-speed bikes while the kilted heavyweights threw large things like rocks and cabres.

A First Encounter with England: Lake District 18/6/2006

We took advantage of our full day hired car to see a bit more of our adopted country. The weather, which had behaved for Lucy and Andy's visit took a sharp turn toward rainy. It wouldn't be enough for a river trip, so we decided to see what England looked like. The Lake District had been given a big thumbs up from other foreigner friends. On a map, it looked like maybe 2 hours of driving. In reality it was a tad more. The drive in to the Lake District impressed me as being designed with a Mini in mind. Our Ford Fiesta was no Mini, but she handled herself well. Zip zip zip.

We found our way into Windermere, one of the bigger towns in the area, and began our quest for lunch. The plan was a picnic. The rain picked up. We picked up food from the Co-op and picnicked in the car. After lunch, we found our way down into Windermere proper, found the visitor centre and picked up a 50p hike guide for an easy walk we could do in a few hours.

I forget the name of the trail, but the objective was to end up at a nice overlook down to Windermere and the big lake before descending back into town. We followed many trails up, wound around through the countryside, paid our respects to the English sheep and occasional fellow walker and enjoyed semi-consistent rain. Raincoat on. Raincoat off. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

The summit overlook did indeed give us a lovely view back down to the lake and town. Overcast seemed to add personality to it, rather than detract from it.

Not far from the summit on our hike down, my ankle had a painful encounter with a loose rock. Not the worst sprain ever, but definitely the worst in recent memory. Continuous motion made it hurt less. Driving home made it hurt more.

On the drive home, overcast and rainy became very rainy. The high pass became quite foggy, so I had a caravan of impatient English drivers behind me. I attempted to shoot some video on the way home, but unfortunately Lucas and I miscommunicated about what I wanted him to capture. I wanted to send a clip or two of Lake District curvy fun to the MINI club back home. Unfortunately, he corrected the camera angle for every zip in the road, making it nearly straight. Ah well. Next time. Perhaps if I shoot the video while my evil twin drives, we'll get the zip zip zip and then some!


Our first overlook on the hike.


I must have been a sheepdog in a former life.


The summit view, overlooking Windermere.

First Visitors: Lucy and Andy visit 16/6/2006 - 18/6/2006

Our first visitors from back home were Lucy and Andy. A conference in London and brief jaunt to the Netherlands offered a reasonable enough excuse for a short trip to Edinburgh. Lucy had seen Edinburgh already. Andy had not. If they had not been delayed by train, they may have enjoyed some brief touring in the city, but our big plan was to drag them north to see the countryside. A test hike that Friday night on Arthur's Seat determined our plan for Saturday: Ben A'an. It's a nice hill in the Trossachs, technically a chunk of a bigger but less impressive hill called Meall Gainmheich, which I'd love to learn how to pronounce someday. This trip was my third car hire experience in Edinburgh and my first where they saw my American license and didn't "upgrade" me to an automatic. Very nice. :)

We set out first thing in the morning, picking up picnic lunch supplies first and then heading into the hills. I picked up a map in Callandar and Lucy attempted some early Christmas shopping for Andy's sometimes difficult-to-please family. Then, we headed to the Ben A'an car park, where we were not the only ones to think it was a fine day for a hillwalk.

The first half of the hike was wooded and midgy if you stopped or walked too slow. We reached the treeline and were treated to a first glimpse of our summit. The stark and rocky terrain made it look farther away than it was. We continued upward. Midge issues followed, although not nearly so bad as in the woods. Lucas played drama queen for a moment, protesting the continued upward climb. I gave him a little encouragement.

Occasional breaks gave us lovely views back to Loch Achray. About 2/3 of the way to the summit, a wee castle on a peninsula in the loch came into view.

We stopped for lunch near the summit, on a nice overlook facing Loch Katrine. Our logic, in addition to being hungry, was a trade off between enjoying a view and keeping the wind to a breeze. Sure enough, when we summitted after lunch, the wind was definitely stronger. Not epic, but strong enough that the summit was not warm. We took a bunch more pictures and then began the journey down.

We hiked down fairly quickly, taking one good break at an overlook in the woods only to retreat from the midges. We reached the car park and walked out to the loch for a quick peek. Then we loaded ourselves back into the car. The next part of the plan was to give our friends an epic mini-tour of the Highlands, pointing out some of the nicer places. They slept through much of the tour. We stopped for dinner at a pub in Glen Coe, enjoying fine food and chats with fellow adventurers, before turning to head home. Our fellow adventurees slept much of that drive, too.


A first glimpse of the Ben A'an summit greeted us as we emerged from the forest.


Move it!


Taking a break to enjoy the view...


...the view to a wee castle on Loch Achray.


Dueling photos atop the Ben A'an summit

Monday, July 24, 2006

Loch Lubnaig bimble -- 11/6/2006

First posted on the Song of the Paddle website.

On Sunday, Lucas and I drove up with Charlie (urchaidh) to join Mr. & Mrs. Tenboats, Silvergirl, Paul and the Silverchildren for part 2 of a demo day at Strathyre. Mr. & Mrs. Tenboats were the first to greet us, but the midges said their hellos, too, especially to Charlie. According to the elder Silverchild, Saturday featured nine hours of against the wind paddling and they were all pretty tired. As such, we enjoyed a pleasant bimble on Loch Lubnaig, launching from the Tenboats’ camp







and following the wee (and low) river out to the Loch.





Rather than assemble the Pakboat, Lucas and I borrowed a hardboat from Tenboats’ fleet. He paddled bow and I paddled stern. Probably because of the flexibility in seat position in the Pakboat, the hardboat felt a bit wider. However, it lacked the anti-rocker of an unladen Pakboat, so it tracked much easier.



The wind had picked up a little as we got out to the loch. At lunch, Paul took each of the kids for a sail using Tenboats’ rig. He seemed to translate his experience as a sailing instructor to canoe sailing quite well.





While Jade enjoyed her turn at sailing, Tenboats gave Ewan a brief lesson in poling









...and Charlie continued to talk himself into buying a Prospector.







The wind kicked up a bit more and the sun finally came out for a while. After lunch and demos, we paddled upwind for a bit longer before heading back toward home. I found paddling into the wind to be easier for controlling direction than paddling away from the wind. On the paddle home, the wind kept pushing the boat to my offside. If I was solo, I would have struggled more (or perhaps become a right-hander for a little while), but instead, Lucas provided propulsion while I just ruddered in the back. Isn’t that what stern paddlers are supposed to do? ;)



We reached the shelter of the river and the wind became more manageable. Lucas took a lounging break and left me to do all the work for a while. Perhaps to make up for the loch crossing? Silvergirl, Paul and family finished their last hurrah at sailing before the shelter of the river meant they had to paddle again.







We paddled and dragged boats upstream to camp where some opted for more demoing, poling practice and/or swimming practice.







Thanks for a nice day on the water!

Falkirk Wheel cycle - 10/6/2006

After our Belgium trek, Lucas and I (probably moreso Lucas) decided to cycle to the Falkirk Wheel and back while the summer days meant long hours of daylight. We packed a lunch and some snacks and set out not too early. The cycle was fairly sheltered, although the Scottish wind reminded us of its presence on occasion. We rode over 30miles to the Falkirk Wheel on the Union Canal trail, passing over and under bridges along the way. Lothian countryside is not flat, so occasionally the canal would compensate. Ever been standing beside a canal looking down on a river? It's odd to say the least. We arrived at the Falkirk wheel a little after lunch, picnicked on the lawn nearby in what can only be described as a festival atmosphere and then cycled back. Door to door, it was somewhere between 65 and 70 miles. We were tired, but it was a worthy day trip.


The view west along our ride from Edinburgh to the Falkirk Wheel. The trip is 30-something miles along Union Canal.


The top canal coming away from the Falkirk wheel. The wheel itself was a millenium invention to replace a series of I think 10 locks connecting Union Canal from Edinburgh to Forth and Clyde Canal from Glasgow.


To give you a sense of scale, here I am with the Wheel behind me. It's like a ferris wheel for boats, although a hair slower for the obvious reason.


An artistic look west...

Cycling in Belgium (Bruges to Leuven) 31/5/2006 - 4/6/2006

Just after the River Tweed trip, we headed back to The Continent for three and a half days of cycling in Belgium with friends Kate and Dave. Their plan was for three weeks of cycling. Our plan was to cycle the second, third and fourth days with them. The route took us from Bruges to Gent to Brussels to Leuven. We hired bicycles from a shop in Brussels that I found over the internet. The trick was to get to the shop before 6pm, which happened despite the cartoon of obstacles in our path.

Once we had our bicycles, we learned how to ride a train with them. The bicycles need tickets, too. A train conductor must be found to find the appropriate bicycle storage location on the train. Bicycles don’t really fit well in this space. We spent the train ride sitting on the floor beside them.

Bruges was a tad overcast and threatened to be rainy. We met Kate and Dave at the train station, cycled to set up camp near the outskirts of the city and then cycled back to town to find food for dinner. Sometime between Germany and Belgium, I went veg and gave up anything containing wheat. In short, I became high maintenance, especially on the Continent. Still, dinner was found. It was divine. Our companions enjoyed their first? Belgian beers of the trip. We cycled more through Bruges and then back to camp for a good night of sleep.

Breakfast in Bruges became lunch in Bruges, but eventually we were off to Gent. A light rain accompanied us for most of the way. Our route followed a canal, with only the most occasional hiccup, so getting lost was difficult. We found our way to camp easily enough, got warm and dry, and then cycled into Gent proper for dinner. Wheat-free and veg meant most restaurants limited my options to salads and, if I was lucky, a starter or two. My salad was gorgeous, though, so I can’t complain.

While we enjoyed dinner and our companions enjoyed more beer, some Belgian ned-equivalent helped him or herself to my bicycle’s saddle. I got to cycle back to camp without one and then find a bike shop the next morning to replace it. Just when my backside was getting used to it!

Bicycle saddle faff and other faff gave us a late start for our longest leg of the trip, Gent to Brussels. The guessed distance was 50 miles. A late start probably wasn’t the best plan, but we had lights, each other, and enough maps that we would figure it out eventually. Our route was more complicated. We no longer had canals to follow. Slowly, the terrain began to acquire some topography. My turn at map reading led the group through a brief offroad experience. I think the mapreading was taken away from me for a while for this trek. For lunch, we picnicked alongside the canal with sundries acquired from a grocery stop or two. We cycled onward, this time under pleasant sunny skies.

The mileage wore on as we pushed toward Brussels. Dinnertime arrived with about 20miles to go, so we stopped in Aalst for dinner. Here, wheat free and veg made it impossible to order from the menu. The menu was written in German, French and Flemish, so we didn’t know until after we sat down. The waiter spoke great English and promised me he would feed me something good. He did. It was another gorgeous salad. A little rested and definitely fed, we forged onward.

We transitioned maps just east of Asse and just as the road we were following transitioned to motorway. We headed south looking for a bike-friendly way into Brussels. I had booked a hostel on the west side of the city and phoned ahead to let them know we would be late. We just had to find our way there. Dusk became dark as we found our way into Brussels and began the urban adventure of city navigating. Brussels is not as bike friendly as Gent or Bruges with the cycle lanes and paths, but at least the motorists are used to looking for them. We took turns navigating, until Dave started getting flat tires. Then I was primarily navigating, with the occasional pitstop for him to refill. I could do two, maybe three turns at a time. We cycled into what felt like the hood with only a few turns remaining. I wondered what our hostel was going to look like.

Dave’s second to last refill was at a large junction. Just as I set up to make a big left turn across all lanes, some wahoo made a far right to far right u-turn in front of me, making a donation of rubber to the road. We turned. Another young Belgian resident gave me a raspberry as I led the group of cyclists down the street. Counting roads one, two, three, right on the fourth street. We stopped across the street from a mosque for one last tire refill. Kate was convinced the gentlemen standing around were the proselytizing type. I was just hoping I wouldn’t have the opportunity to sound American. A short bend in the road brought us back to a greener and quieter neighborhood and our hostel waited on our left. We rolled our bikes through the front door sometime after 10pm… and everyone slept well that night.

A light breakfast bright and early led to a late morning start. Once outside of Brussels, we would transition to the most useful cycling map ever for the trek to Leuven. It had every tiny road highlighted along with several recommended routes described in detail. Except not a single road or route bothered with the modern convenience of street names. We decided lunch in Brussels would be a good plan, so we stopped at a few wee groceries on our eastern trek through the city and lunched at a nice park.

As we climbed the hill beyond Brussels’s ring road, passing a few retail parks and finally transitioning into suburbia, we transitioned officially to our useless map. A few turns later and we were hopelessly lost. My appalling French came in handy when we visited a local mechanic whose shop we stumbled across. Literally. Je me suis perdue. Ou se trouve Leuven? Was replied with a few hmmms… and Anglais? Oui, yes. Ah. Leuven. He waived his arms, gave us some directions to get to a main road (including some town names that helped where he confused “straight” with “right”) and sent us on our way. The main road proved fruitful. Suburban became rural and hills grew larger. Not Scottish steep, but enough to be interesting.

The sun warmed our shoulders as we cycled east. I even went sleeveless for the last few miles. We rolled into Leuven definitely on a weekend. Tourists swarmed the city. We cycled and walked to a visitor information centre and got directions to the hotel where Dave and Kate were staying as well as the train station. Lucas and I had to be back in Brussels before 6pm to return the bicycles, so we bought our tickets and enjoyed a pudding with Kate and Dave before catching the train.

We couldn’t find a conductor or a way into the bicycle storage compartment as on the last train, so we improvised a bike storage location in one of the train corridors. Parked on their back wheels, with the luggage acting as an anchor, the bikes were not really interested in moving. The conductor finally asked for our tickets at Brussels North station. He informed us that Brussels Central does not permit bicycles to exit, so we could leave at the north or south stations only. I wasn’t so fond of the trek back from the south station, even though it would be somewhat easy to replicate, so I chose a few more miles of urban orienteering from the north station.

All downhill from the bicycle shop to the south station suggested all downhill from the north station to the bicycle shop. Right? Not exactly, but it worked out all right in the end. Lucas got annoyed at me once for either not letting him participate in the map reading or giving him enough notice to keep up. We repeated some of our Brussels cycling from the day before, including another pass near the arch and Brussels Central station, the latter being situated on a leg-burner of a hill. A few more turns and we were back at the bike shop unloading our gear. We had about an hour to spare, maybe just a little bit less. Well timed.

That night, we slept in a hotel in Charleroi so we would be close enough to catch our flight home without any hiccups. Aside from a block or two right on the waterfront, Charleroi is a bit of a ghetto. I wasn’t very hungry for dinner, so Lucas picked up takeaway from the Belgian equivalent of a chippie. We slept well again. Continental breakfast gave us a good start to the morning. We caught the bus and then the plane feeling more than a little bit jealous that the responsibilities of real world waited for us while Kate and Dave had about two more weeks of cycling adventures ahead of them.


A long day of travel made this seat as comfortable as any other the train could offer.


Fully-laden bicycles in Bruges


The rain accompanied us from Bruges to Gent, but cleared by the time we arrived at our second camp of the trip.


Gent faff saw us depart for Brussels after noon. Fifty miles is a long way to cycle with a late start.


The weather improved steadily as we cycled across the countryside. On our way to Brussels, it was sunny and warm.


A familiar event in the cycle to Brussels, the map huddle.

Catching up on "other" adventures....

It’s been a while since we’ve been on a river trip, so I think it’s only fair to include some “other” adventures to fill the gap weekends. Before the River Tweed trip, we went to Germany for a few days, spending time in Cologne, Koblenz and touring several miles worth of the Rhein River. We met a friend of one of Lucas’s classmates in Cologne. She took us for a lovely dinner and then backstage in the opera house where she works. After maybe 24hrs in Cologne, we took the train with every football fan in Germany to Koblenz. We didn’t know which team was which, but we figured out that the red team had won that day. Memorable moment: The football fans baaahing as we rolled into Koblenz station. We met Lucas’s cousin Bruce in Koblenz and joined Bruce’s MBA classmates the following day for a boat tour on the Rhein that included a few hours of wandering in St. Goar and St. Goarshausen. We were able to tour Burg Rheinfels, a castle ruin that overlooks the city of St. Goar. My favourite foods of the weekend were ice cream (it was awesome) and spargel, a white asparagus. Upon my return to Edinburgh, I became a vegetarian.


The Dom, Cologne's famous cathedral. In the photos of post-WWII Germany, it is the only building still standing in all of the immediate area.


The chocolate museum brought out my not-so-inner science geek.


Construction on this castle spanned several generations.


ABC tour continues. Yes, it's another bloody castle on the Rhein.