Start: Makara
Beach (1,623km)
Finish: Camp
Bay (1,724km)
Distance for the day: 101km
Cumulative distance: 1,724km
by Mark T
Jez's whoops of delight said it all as we paddled towards the beach in the beautiful Ship Cove at Captain Cook Monument on Sunday afternoon. A small crowd of cheering onlookers had gathered to applaud Jez as his kayak glided onto the sand.
Jez's whoops of delight said it all as we paddled towards the beach in the beautiful Ship Cove at Captain Cook Monument on Sunday afternoon. A small crowd of cheering onlookers had gathered to applaud Jez as his kayak glided onto the sand.
We had left
Makara Beach on the North Island at 5am, just as dawn was breaking.
It had taken
9 hours to paddle the 44km.
Our
departure had been delayed by an unexpected deterioration in the weather on
Saturday afternoon. Jez had triumphantly run the last 29k of the North Island
on Saturday morning finishing at Island Bay, south of Wellington. He immediately
ran into the sea to celebrate his remarkable achievement of 1623km in 25 days!
He then
cycled up to Makara Beach on the West coast fully expecting to make the Cook
Strait crossing that afternoon, having been encouraged by a promising forecast.
However Jez's delight rapidly turned to great disappointment when Tim Taylor,
our guide for the Crossing, told us that it would not be wise to do the
crossing that afternoon due to a change in the forecast to 30 knot Northerly
winds. The forecast for Sunday was no better but it was decided to stay near
the beach overnight, to be ready to paddle before first light, & to set off
if conditions allowed.
We were back
to the kayaks at 4.20am &, in view of a better forecast, we departed full
of optimism & anticipation.
We got off
to a flying start with a flat sea, a following wind, & a beautiful dawn to
witness. However, an easy first 2 hours was followed by a rapid change in wind
direction & speed, & we found ourselves paddling into a strong headwind
against the tidal flow. Cape Koamaru remained tantalisingly on the horizon
& did not seem to get any closer over the next 2 hours! It was a case of
grinding on.
Eventually
we reached Arapawa Island on the north-east tip of the South Island &,
landing for a short break after nearly 6 hours & 32km of paddling, we had
successfully crossed the Strait. However we were still 12km short of our final
destination. At that moment Tim received a gale warning for Cook Strait &
we realised how fortunate we had been, but we wondered what the last leg of our
journey would bring.
After 10
minutes on the beach we were back on the water & enjoyed 'rock-hopping' our
way along under the cliffs to the Cape &, at last, we were able to turn
into the beautiful Queen Charlotte Sound.
To our
delight we were greeted by a flat calm sea & we began to relax in the warm
sunshine whilst trying to make out Captain Cook's Monument in the distance.
However the wind was to return as a sudden squall blew up on our beam, testing
us over the final kilometres.
The landing
at Ship Cove was a huge moment for Jez as the Cook Strait crossing was the most
unpredictable section of the whole trip, & it's successful completion was
critical to Jez's dream of completing an end-to-end of New Zealand solely by
human power.
Tim Taylor
of http://nzkayaker.com/ was our guide for the Cook Strait crossing. He is
perhaps New Zealand's foremost sea kayaker being the only person to have
completed a full circumnavigation of the North & South Islands. His skill
& judgement in deciding when to make the crossing was crucial to our
success & we are very grateful to Tim.
We are also
grateful to Bournemouth Canoes for supplying us with our excellent Werner
paddles.
Mid-Strait |
The temporally calmer waters of Queen Charlotte Sound |
Tim and I |
Pretty chuffed to be on South Island - dry land! |
Captain Cook's monument - so much history to the location |
Kissing dry land! |
5 comments:
What a fantastic paddle and I take my hat off to you guys , that long in a sea kayak with an endless horizon ,well done. Sounds lucky with the weather and I am so glad that it worked so that you could do what you had set out to do.
Mike W
Very happy to read of your successful crossing. Congrats to you all! Sue and Antonio
Well done Team! That's a major part of the jigsaw cracked; don't take your eye off the ball though, plenty more ground to be covered.
MtM
Congrats on all you've achieved so far,great effort and sounds like lots of fun.Enjoying your blog,keep it coming!!
Good luck for next stage
Stephen and Debs
Super! what a wonderful feeling it must be to have achieved the crossing on top of everything else you've done, thank you for sharing!
Jess from sunny Mexico
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