Ironman II: Kayaking

Get in your waka
Get in your waka. Leaving the university sports jetty. © 2014 by Christoph Tyblewski, used with kind permission

There is historical evidence for the use of kayaks from the tour of 1974/75, although in my naïveté I called them “canoes” or “dinghies” at the time. The diary entry for Tuesday, January 7, 1975 at Blackwood Bay commences:

“I slept in again, and later went out on a canoe.”

Lesser Circuit
Lesser Circuit, September 13
I say this because I had booked myself into the uni sports’ flat water paddling group, turned up on time, was given a boat, and then proceeded to make myself into a best example of the Dunning-Kruger effect. After a little more than 100 m of floundering about, I was ordered into the Canadian canoe that is reserved for the less skilled. But in the second week in the Canadian, I met Conny, so it wasn’t all that bad. She basically gave me a rundown of her life so far, which included a stint at Monash, as well as Russia and Japan, and my diary of the following night only had one topic.

Underwater selfie
Underwater selfie by and of Conny. © 2014 by Christoph Tyblewski, used with kind permission
After which the instructor, Stefan nicknamed Zottel, made a very gentle suggestion to me of doing a beginners’ course. As I was going to be in this for the long haul and had planned to continue into the summer break, and had bought the uni’s Paddle Card for €40 to cover the cost of two or more courses, this would be right up my alleyway, and the beginners’ course would essentially be free. In between two later episodes of the Lesser Circuit of the Ihme and Leine Rivers, I absolved said beginners’ course on two (originally one) weekends. This was in white-water boats, which are the least stable of the lot, and teach you how to move in a straight line, and the instructor, Thorben, had just the right attitude towards safety, i.e. everyone wears a flotation device, instructor included. I said as much to him at the end of the course, and how much I appreciated it. At the end of all this I was able – but only just barely – to get around the 7.9 km course under my own steam. There were blisters and cramps, and the style was neither strong nor steady, but I made it around.

Greater Circuit
Greater Circuit, June 15, 2014
One night I asked Conny if we could take a double kayak together, and to my surprise she agreed, so that we have been partners in kayak ever since. When Conny was out skating or was on her summer programme, I took on a student, Julia, who barely made a dent on a pair of scales, and was not much help in moving forward, and on other times I have taken a solo boat on the course. Eventually we also made it around the Greater Circuit (Leine River to Garbsen, and back along the canal system, 32 km) twice in the course of the summer, although the distance is a little misleading: The first 18 km are downriver at speeds of up to 11 km/h, and the rest is very flat with little current to paddle against. But lots of blackberries to be harvested.

The aim was to be fit enough to absolve the Whanganui River Journey, the only Great Walk that is not a tramp, estimated at 150 km downriver in 5 days. Progress in the training period was pretty linear, starting with 2.8 km/h in the Canadian, reaching about 4.2 km/h by the end of the semester, and finally almost walking speed of 5.6 km/h at the end of the summer break. Unfortunately the week-long summer tour was right in the semester which precluded me from going, but not Conny, as she is in research. Also unfortunate was that the autumn tour failed to materialise, possibly because only the two of us wanted to go. But practice there was enough.

Queue at weir
Queue at the exit. Boats line up at the jetty to bypass a weir. © 2014 by Christoph Tyblewski, used with kind permission
Unlike the swimming, kayaking was very much a group event: We went out for a beer on most evenings; or to the Markspeople’s Festival for Stefan’s birthday in early July, where Conny discovered that another of our number, Alexander, a psychology professor, had bought her ex-boyfriend’s car; or there were picnics during and/or after the weekend tours. Apparently there’s also climbing (both wall and rock), cycling and tramping/long-distance skiing on offer, although I have been unable to make avail of the former two, I may give the last a try before I take off.

It’s hard to let go. Even after the end of the “official” season in September, the weekend tours continued on almost as far as they could, rounded out with a slide night and a Xmas party. Travelling by water has one serious limitation, and that is 0°C. There are no ice-breaker kayaks. On the second last trip, the day’s temperature range was 1.6°/0.1°. And that’s about as far as it goes.

It was, however, also an opportunity for me to see the uni sports centre in full action. When I walk past during the day, it seems rather sleepy, but returning from the kayak tour in the later evening, all the gyms are full of sweaty students prancing about, a different loud music emanating from every room.

I would never have known.No 1