Blog

  • New Zealand blues

    Back at my desk in Wales, I’m struggling to concentrate on ‘work’. it’s not just the jetlag preventing me from focussing, my mind is still full of New Zealand. What a lovely country! I couldn’t possibly do it justice in 2 weeks but I’m fortunate to have spent almost 3 months there before.

    I was delighted to meet Paul Caffyn, someone who every seakayaker should have heard of. Paul has circumnavigated all of New Zealand, Japan, Great Britain, Alaska, New Caledonia, a chunk of Greenland and Australia. Yes, all of it. It was a pleasure to spend a few days with Paul getting an insight into a pioneering paddler and hearing about some of his incredible adventures. My favourite story is about when a bear ripped a hole in his tent in the middle of the night in Alaska. Closely behind that is the tale of when he paddled for 36 hours continuously to pass a 120km section of sheer cliffs in Australia. By the end of the marathon journey a headwind had reduced his progress to 3km/ hour but he was feeling happy because by then he knew he would succeed.

    Paul took me on a 3-day paddling trip in the beautiful Marloborough Sounds at the top of the South Island. I did some filming with him for ‘This is the Sea 3’ – probably the last in the ‘This is the Sea’ series. I also hope to include footage of Paul’s Alaska trip in the feature.

    Another highlight of the trip was surfing in seakayaks with Steve Knowles at Tauranga, on the East coast of the North Island. Steve runs the ‘Canoe & Kayak’ store with his wife Karen which is 5 mins away from consistant surf on a beautiful sandy beach. A few small offshore islands mean that even when the surf is HUGE, there are smaller broken-up sets behind the islands. I had a bit of a surf and then did some filming of Steve.

    My last weekend was spent at the ‘Coastbusters’ symposium, where I was the Saturday night speaker. No-one threw any tomatoes at me so I think I did OK! It was great to meet a big chunk of the seakayaking community and chat to lots of friendly people. I also had the pleasure of meeting Greenland-style paddlers Cheri Perri and Turner Wilson for the first time, aswell as seeing Greg Stamer and Freya Hoffmeister again. I’ve already filmed with Greg in ‘This is the Sea’ and Turner gave me a hard time becuase I chose to film with the 2 girls for ‘This is the Sea 3’. Cherri is a lovely kind person who has been to Greenland twice to compete in the rolling, paddling and rope tricks competitions there. Look out for my underwater footage of her doing her what is widely regarded as the hardest roll, the straight-jacket roll. Freya has taken to Greenland-style paddling fairly recently, but due partly to a gynmastic background she has quickly picked up many of the rolls. Having had an attempt at her famous ‘handstand in the kayak’ my admiration for her balance and strength has multiplied!

    New Zealand is a beautiful country with many friendly paddlers. I am sure it’s only a matter of time before I return!!

  • Singapore Sling?


    OK, so it’s a bit cheeky but I thought I’d try to take advantage of this blog network. I’m flying to New Zealand on Monday and I get to spend a whole day in Singapore on Tuesday 7th March. I do have a friend there but he’s working most of the day, so I was thinking…. wouldn’t it be nice to go paddling in Singapore!?

    I know this is pretty late notice – aswell as plain pushy – but if anyone from Singapore would like to take me paddling next Tuesday then please get in touch!! I arrive at 7am and leave again at 9pm.

    I’m going to New Zealand to attend the Coastbusters symposium in Aukland, and to do some filming for my next DVD. Yes, there will be 1 more in the ‘This is the Sea’ series! I’m lukcy enough to be paddling with Paul Caffyn for about a week and filming him for the video, aswell as a fantastic foursome of Greenland-style paddlers – Cheri Perri, Turner Wilson, Greg Stamer and Freya Hoffmeister. I also hope to meet up with Graham Charles, one of the Kiwis who paddled around South Georgia Island last year.

    I’m bringing a few copies of Paul Caffyn’s book “Obscured by Waves” back with me and am selling them on my website in the UK/ Europe Store. This book is not avaliable anywhere else in the UK or Europe. I’m not offering it for sale in the States because postage will be too much, but if anyone in North America would like one then email me, or reply to this post and providing you are happy to pay for the postage aswell as the book price then I’m sure either myself or Paul will send you one.

    Happy Paddling!

    The photo follows on from the one in the last blog and shows the aftermarth! The good news is that I got my ‘North Face’ hat back!

  • The wrong way up

    Sharp viewers may notice that my kayak is the wrong way up on this wave. Others may dare to suggest that this is my best side? So yeah, I got a bit of rolling practice in at the weekend – one on my strong side, and one on the side that makes me doubt just a little bit that I’ll come straight back up!

    Alun, Gemma, Barry and I went back to Penrhyn Mawr on Sunday to try to get more photos for a future edition of ‘Paddle World’ magazine. I’m not meant to give too much away in advance but I thought I’d share this with you because it makes me laugh! It brings back happy memories of playing with the glorious sea, surging down the face of a wave one minute and being engulfed by pounding white spray the next. I am smiling now as I re-live that moment when the wave behind me starts to surge and lift up the back of the kayak, I lean forward and dig in my blades – paddle, paddle, paddle, come on, come on, come on… then suddenly the wave steepens, the kayak starts to race down the face, I’m leaning right back now trying to stop the nose from burying. What exhillarating speed! Will I surf out of it with this smile intact, or will I bury the nose, stop dead in my tracks and have more rolling practice?…….not knowing is half the fun….!

  • Orangutans – make a difference

    I wanted to write a non-kayaking blog about one of the other aspects of my life. I’ve recently got back from producing a TV programme about orangutans in Borneo. I know it sounds glamorous and I’m not complaining but the experience made me feel strongly that I shouldn’t just shut my eyes to the destruction and greed that is going on all around us in the world. Our newspapers are full of horror stories of rainforest about to disappear, animals about to go extinct and people made homeless by money-driven developers and it’s easy to turn the page quickly and just go paddling.

    I don’t claim that I’m about to drastically change my lifestyle but I was inspired to make a modest donation to some people in Borneo who are really making a difference and I’d encourage you to do the same.

    The orang utan is the only great ape which lives in Asia – there used to be hundreds of thousands of them but as their forest home continues to be logged, they are only about 50,000 of them left. 5,000 of those are disappearing every year.

    Most of the rainforest that remains in Indonesia is being chopped down to make palm oil plantations. This is a very profitable industry for the country, but the crazy thing is that there is no need to chop down primary forest to make new plantations. We saw thousands of acres of degraded land in Borneo which could easily be used for palm oil plantations. The sad truth is that developers would rather chop down primary rainforest so they can make a profit from selling the timber first. The local government is all too often bribed to allow the deforestation to go ahead.

    We were filming at the Nyaru-Menteng orangutan rescue and rehabilitation centre run by BOS – The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation. They have their hands full looking after over 400 orangutans, with the eventual aim of releasing all of them back into the wild where possible. All the oragutans have a sad story – most have seen their mothers murdered before their eyes.

    BOS are really making a difference– their work involves lobbying the government to protect the remaining forest, rescuing orangutans who have been made homeless by deforestation and teaching baby orangutans the skills they need to live in the wild. At the moment they have nowhere to release their rehabilitated orangutans. They are working hard to pressure the government to protect an area of forest which would be perfect, but until this happens their orang utans will have to stay in cages.

    A small donation can make a big difference to BOS. For example, our presenter, Iolo Williams, arranged for some binoculars to be donated to BOS. The binoculars were recently used to spot a missing orangutan. She was found severely dehydrated high in a tree and might have died if she hadn’t been found.

    If you want to read more about the orangutan and the work of BOS then go to

    http://www.savetheorangutan.info

    To donate, go directly to this page.

    http://www.savetheorangutan.co.uk/donate.php

    The programme that we made will be shown on S4C, Channel 4, in Wales, this Autumn. People throughout the UK can watch this on Digital TV. I’ll post details nearer to the time.