![]() |
Trip Report - Canoe Orienteering Course set up
Canoe Orienteering set-up. Transquaking River Marsh Loop – 3/14/04
OC2 – Tom Wilhelm, Brian Sill OC1 – Dave Maneval, Dave Hone, Frank Weichold, Don, Mike McCrea The Canoe Orienteering course is set up and ready to go and the long-range forecast for this coming weekend look good as well. Those you who have participated in the Canoe O in years past will be happy to know that this year's course lay out was performed at low tide, so you should have no trouble disembarking for markers requiring a landbourne route. Add to that a steady headwind that blew strong throughout the set-up portion of the day and it added up to the usual long, tiring day of course design deviosity. With the low tide and breezy conditions it took seven guys seven hours to set out 50+ markers. Actually, to clarify, it took the team that set up the western leg (Dave, Dave, Frank & Mike) six hours to paddle their assigned half of the marsh loop, disembarking to set out markers, take compass headings and measurements and marking the topo map. Heading back once the course lay out complete that daylong headwind turned into a delightful tailwind and the western leg band of brothers surfed their way home in a record 53 minutes. I say it every year once the course is laid, but this year's course should be the best ever. Every year we learn a little more about designing a challenging course, ever year we devise new tricks and traps, every year we grow more devious, more strategic, more artfully cunning, more unscrupulous. CWDH would say this is a metaphor for my life as a whole, but then his moral compass is off by twenty-some degrees anyway. Note from the Western Leg Crew: The western side of the course this year features an international design flavor, with Aussie Dave, German Frank and Floridian Dave in attendance. The very first disembarkation showed that just a few years living in Florida was enough for Dave to forget the deep treachery of the Transquaking's pluff mud. Dave beached his boat, stepped out nonchalantly and instantly plunged into 47" of pluff mud. Fortunately his chest waders were 4' high, but it was a near thing, a matter of inches. Dave may have won the Silent Otter Canoe O a few months ago, but this is Duckhead territory. Watch your step boy! I'll offer a couple of hints about the design of the western leg: the main slough off the river into the Thorofare Marsh is rich in points. Rich enough that a winner or two may be crowned with the bounty from that slough alone – 11 markers worth a total of twenty points. It'll be interesting to see how the challenger's strategies pan out in the narrow confines of that slough, with multiple side channels, splits and bifurcations. And, having expended all our energies early in the day, the markers on the south slough, though fewer in number (5 for 13 points) should prove easier to capture. By the time we had reached that end of the day's set up I was slaphappy tired and was having enough trouble remembering to record all of the data (artifact #, point value, compass heading, distance, hints and clues) much less undertake a long slog through the marsh. Riding the wind and wave back to the cars was a fine and fitting conclusion to a hard days work, and having my International House of Duckheads buddies along to lend a hand, and a twisted mind, to the course design was finer still. Thanks to all. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:01 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com