Author: admin

  • Irish Sea crossing track

    I finally ( with help from Sanoodi) uploaded the track of mine and Barry’s paddle to Ireland on New Years Day. Well, it was actually 1.30am on 2nd January by the time we left, but we hadn’t been to sleep so it felt like it was still New Years Day!

    We followed a bearing of 280 degrees the whole way across but the tide took us north, then south and then north again. It was really strong as we approached Wicklow but turned as we arrived so we had to fight a tidal race off Wicklow Head before we could land! If you missed it, you can read about the crossing on an earlier blog here.

    If the track doesn’t display properly then you can see it on the Sanoodi website here. The stats given on the website show a distance of 59 miles in 11 hours 53 minutes, an average of 5mph. This is statute miles – it was about 52 nautical miles I think.

    We plan to get a ferry to France on Sunday and drive down to Italy as tourists ( i.e slowly!). We should be in Sardinia and paddling by early April. First, we have to pack!!

  • "Eastern Horizons" DVD here, and new art for "This is the Sea"

    It was Christmas here yesterday and a batch of ‘Eastern Horizons‘ DVDs arrived at my door, ready to go to eager viewers in the UK, Europe and Australasia. It’s now for sale in the CackleTV shop!

    I also took delivery or another batch of “This is the Sea” DVDs as the classic DVD is still popular and I’ve nearly run out. At the time when I first made ‘This is the Sea’ it cost about £25 per colour for the artwork on the DVD. Money was tight and I chose a very simple design with just 2 colours. Or so I thought….. I actually got charged for 4 colours anyway, as the blue and yellow that I chose weren’t the blue and yellow that they had in their palette so they had to mix different colours to make them! So much for money saving!

    THE NEW ‘THIS IS THE SEA’ DISC BESIDES THE OLD ONE!

    In May it will be 5 years since ‘This is the Sea’ first came out so when it came time to get some more made a month ago, Derrick from Kayak Quixotica suggested making a special anniversary cover! Well, we left the cover that Jim Westcott designed as it was, but Derrick designed some new disc art using a photo of Hadas Feldman and I from Kamchatka. I’m really pleased with it and think it looks great! So if you order “This is the Sea” from the UK, Europe & Australasia store from now on, then you might get the new look DVD! Some of the DVDs are headed to a shop in Sweden today aswell!

  • Mediterranean sun, here we come!


    SARDINIA

    This weekend, Barry Shaw and I are packing up the van and driving south in search of the Sardinian sun!
    Barry kayaked around the next door island of Corsica a few years ago and enjoyed himself so much that he wanted to return to paddle around the bigger neighbor. At around 900km of coastline, we expect it to take us around 4-6weeks. We expect the surf to be less than in New Zealand! but it is a very windy place so that will be our biggest challenge. You can read more about the trip here.

    Whenever we have a phone signal we will be recording the route we paddle on our blackberry, using free SMap software from Sanoodi. You can follow along by ‘following’ CackleTV on Twitter, or by checking the twitter feed on this blog, at the top of the page. You’ll see a message saying, ‘CackleTV’ is kayaking in Sardinia with a link. click on the link to go to the map of where we are. If the twitter feed doesn’t work, then you can also go to the Sanoodi website and search for routes in Sardinia.

    Not long now, I’m busy preparing for the trip… lots to sort out!

    BARRY IN CORSICA. PHOTO BY JOHN-BOY

  • Bardsey lambs & track

    Axel and I went to Bardsey on Sunday, in a brisk breeze. Axel hasn’t been there since about 2002 so we took the scenic tour, including using the eddy close to the mainland, and then going around the island. I also thought Axel would appreciate a slightly longer and more challenging route so we chose to go to the island with the strong tidal streams giving us more hindrance than help. ( If we’d left from “Whistling Sands’ on the West coast of the Llyn, we’d have been able to drop onto the island using the ebb, and make the most of the afternoon flood to take us back later).



    You can see the resulting ‘tracks’ that we made on our journey, as recorded by our Blackberry and the free Sanoodi software. The tide is strongest nearest to land and you can see that we were swept downstream as we approached our destinations on the way there, and back. On the way back we were aiming about ENE, even though the tide tide took us much further West than this!

    Once on Bardsey, the Porter family were very busy in the middle of the lambing season. After a cup of tea, Axel and I were happy to help move some young lambs from the stable where they were being looked after to the field outside. Steve took the mum while we got to carry the cute cuddly lambs. Later we went on ‘patrol’ with Steve and Jo looking for any new-born lambs, or any mothers who needed some help with a difficult birth. We saw 3 new lambs come into the world – 1 set of twins and 1 single lamb. Despite the goo, there is something magical about new life!


    The technology I used to track our progress to and from Bardsey will be used on my next trip. In theory, an update from ‘twitter’ should alert people to the start of a new paddle, and you can follow along live, or check the progress once we’re reached our destination. For some reason, the twitter update part didn’t work on the paddle to Bardsey – perhaps because the phone signal was very week? I’m trying to find out if that can be fixed.

    Click HERE to see the outward route to Bardsey and HERE to see the return route on the Sanoodi website, from where you can navigate around and look at other things.

    You can read Axel’s account of the trip here.