Author: admin

  • Family Birthday




    My sister and I are in Jersey for my mothers 60th birthday celebrations. All I’ve done for 3 days is eat and talk (OK, and drink) – I can’t complain really; as my wise friend Tom once said ‘Eating is a pleasure you can have 3 times a day every day – why deny yourself’! However, I better not do that every weekend!

    Just to prove that I’m not always in gortex, here are 2 photos of our 2 evenings out – showing me with my parents and my sister Holly. I did manage to meet up with seapaddlers Kevin and Nicky Mansell for breakfast at Plemont beach this morning and enviously watched clean lines of 5foot surf crashing down onto the beach – not a surfer in sight. I do have a surfboard and a shorty wetsuit in Jersey, but I have more food to eat at my parent’s house and a 3pm flight home, so the surf will have to keep crashing onto the sand, without breaking over my head on the way! Maybe Wales tomorrow…..???

  • Happy to be alive



    Don’t you love those times where nothing is important except enjoying the here and now. Sunday was one of those special days for me when I forgot all obligaitons and worries and just immersed myself in the natural world. Alun, Barry, Greer & I went around ‘the Stacks’ again on another glorious warm day. The highlight has got to be surfing a wave in the South Stack outer race with 4 dolphins (and Barry) besides me on the same wave. I’m sure Barry won’t be offended that I rate sharing a wave with dolphins slightly higher than surfing with him! We saw the dolphins enjoy 2 surfs in the waves before turning and heading north, leaving us with slightly empty-feeling waves. We also saw lots of porpoises feeding off South Stack lighthouse and lots of seals and seal pups. We planned to land in Parliament House Cave by North Stack for lunch but a mother and baby seal were already on that beach so we had to turn back unfed and put up with the tummy rumbles until we could find a shingly beach that was unoccupied. This proved difficult as the next beach we came to also had a mother and pup on it.

  • Falls of Lora by seakayak

    NICK CUNLIFFE FROM SURFLINES STRUTTING HIS STUFF

    What a great few days – and what a feature the Falls of Lora is!

    Alun and I have been to the West Coast of Scotland to film some awesome paddlers playing on 2 infamous tidal races – the pretty and relatively friendly Grey Dogs and the mighty munching Falls of Lora. It was exciting to be part of the procession of vans loaded with shiny seakayaks darting from fantastic paddling location to local pub to scary, amazing paddling location to another friendly pub…. and so it went on….

    I have a brand new boat – continuing on the ‘big cat’ theme! I’m really pleased with her and very grateful to Scott in the NDK factory for doing such a good paint job! I wanted a shorter boat than my Explorer so it would be easier to maneouver and surf in the tidal races and sure enough, my new Romany looked after me!

    THE NEW TIGERSKIN ROMANY IN ACTION!!

    The Falls of Lora in particular impressed me. It’s a tidal rapid which flows under the bridge of Connel. On the ebb, the seawater in Loch Etive pours out through the narrows over shallow ledges and provides some very swirly water, some nasty churning boils and some great surfing waves. It’s more like a river than the tidal races I am used to, with sharper eddy lines and sucking whirlpools. I was glad to be in a buoyant seakayak ( rather than a small playboat)! Alun and Webby ( from Rockpool) filmed from the bridge and I filmed a bit from the water.

    AXEL GETTING STUCK IN

    Watch out for some great footage in ‘This is the Sea 3’, due out 31st March 2007. You heard it here first!

    We finished off by joining in with the first UK Storm Gathering symposium on Mull. The organiser Mark Tozer managed to provide the promised storms but no-one seemed to mind as the atmosphere at the event was great. Mull is a really dramatic island and I’ll definately return there sometime.

    WHO IS PLAYING WITH WHO!?

  • Siberian Tigers and kayaking in Far East Russia


    Alun and I have just returned from Far East Russia where we were making a TV programme about the Siberian tigers, for S4C. We flew into Vladivostok ( near the China and Korea borders, and directly West of Japan). I was really impressed by the beauty of the area and the friendliness of the people – Vladivostok itself is an attractive port, and as we drove through the Sikhote-Alin mountains we gazed upwards at a mass of shimmering yellows, reds and greens as the Autumn leaves began to fall.

    Our first stop was Terney, 800km north of Vladivostok on the East coast. We were there to film the Wildlife Conservation Society radio-tracking Siberian tigers as part of their scientific research. I was focused on their work and I hadn’t expected the scenery to be so stunning in it’s own right. The coastline is made up of steep grey jagged cliffs, covered in lush green trees, and lapped by deep blue waters. Breaking up the cliffs are azure rivers snaking out to sea across sandy beaches or gravelly bars. We spent 2 days with John Goodrich from the WCS, walking on foot through the forest trying to track a female tiger with cubs. John hoped to pinpoint where the tiger was keeping her cubs, then wait until she went off hunting, and move in and radio collar the cubs. WCS’ radio tracking work over the last 15 years has shown them valuable information which helps them conserve the tiger. Things like a single female tigress has a huge territory of 450 square kilometres, 80% of tigers are killed by man and 50% of cubs die within their first year ( mostly when their mothers are killed).

    Unfortunately we didn’t have the luck when we were there and our tigress moved off before we knew exactly where the cubs were, but it was a great experience to walk through the forest with John and his field assistant Nicoli, wondering what was silently watching you from under the trees and ocassionally being treated to amazing views down the coast. It was a beautiful hot sunny day and the only bad thing was an awful lot of nasty mosquittos in the forest. At the end of both days, Alun and I took a swim in the sea of Japan to wash the sweat and mosquitto bites off.

    John has a feathercraft kayak that he sometimes uses to radio track the tigers from the sea and inevitably we talked a bit about the possibilities of kayaking down that stretch of coastline. It really does look temptingly beautiful and remote. Unsurprisingly it reminded me of nearby Kamchatka, although this part of Russia is not volcanic so the peaks aren’t quite so conical. The surf isn’t so big either as Japan shelters it from Pacific swells. There would be the added challenge of not only bears, but also 500 Siberian tigers, although John thinks you probably wouldn’t even see either. The biggest complication would probably be getting permission to be there, as foreigners have to have a special permit to enter any ‘borderzone’ between Russia and another country – which includes the coastline. We had a permit to be there, but it took a month for the Russian organisation ‘Phoenix’ to get it for us, and they had to accompany us at all times. It looks like Alexey might get another call!

    It was also fascinating to learn more about the Siberian tiger. Despite the usual threats of deforestation, poaching, lack of prey & conflict with man I actually left feeling quite positive about the future. While many of us think of the tiger as living in India & Asia, tiger numbers are dropping in these regions. The Siberian tiger is the only sub-species of tiger where numbers are actually stable. The main reasons for this are that it lives in the biggest unfragmented tiger forest in the world – about 13times the size of Wales, and in that forest are relatively few of the tigers biggest threat – man.

    Thanks a lot to the Russian organistion, Phoenix, who arranged everytyhing for us and who co-ordinate and fund a lot of vital education and anti-poaching work in Russia.

    Having problems posting photos – will try again later