Self Belief is Everything

All words and pictures copyright Alastair Rose 2011

Sunday, December 27, 2009

The Unblelievable

I have frequently told people in recent months about how wet and nasty Scotland is at this time of year. The snow comes usually in the new year and the days around christmas are dark and dreary. This year that does not appear to be the case. Currently there is about 10 inches of snow outside, the country is in a state of emergency (as no-one carries snow chains) and I am about to go canoeing. I have managed a couple of wintery things and here are the photos for the non - believers that Scotland gets snow.
Sledging (thats sledding to you americans) on christmas day (me and cousin Emma)
Kees and I in the evening (330pm) light after "testing" the sledging for chrismas day
Ruaridh and I on the summit before the ski down on Chrismas Eve
Ruaridh looking west towards Ben Alder and Creag Meagidh
Ruaridh skinning up the final slope to the summit (looking north)

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Alligators and Other Dangerous Animals

Life and plans change fast, especially when working short contracts for Outward Bound. That is how I recently found myself in the Florida Everglades. A phone call telling me my work was no longer but that I could attend a staff training, a flight to Alabama, a day at our base in Alabama, a car ride for 7 hours with someone I didn't know, another day at another base, another road trip (this time with 6 people I didn't know), another day at another base then three hours back in the van and I was getting in a canoe that I was not to leave for the next 5 days. I'll say that again. A canoe I was not to leave for the next 5 days. The course area in the Florida everglades does not have land. None. Well none that we used until we stood on highland beach in the gulf of Mexico.

The system is simple if a little weird. paddle all day with all the gear stored on top of the boards in the bottom of the canoes, anchor for the night, get the boards out from below all the gear, put them on top, tie it all together, and do all normal camp stuff on the boards.

The Everglades itself is pretty crazy with amazing diversity of wild animals (think crocs, alligators, sharks, manate's, flamingos, mosquitos, no-see-ums (midgies) etc)

For the Canoeists - the boats we used were 18ft Trippers in which we had an assortment of gear with boards hidden underneath (the boards are 2 x 8ft and were possibly developed as a system by OB down here). The photos.
Organisation - list taped to bow of the boat so you know what you should have and where to access things with the boards on top.


Yes you guessed it - the toilet system. the pad on the bottom right is the "privacy screen"

Getting up in the morning - everyone has 2 x 8 ft of space with all their sleeping gear including "healy hammock" (a bug net). very hot, very buggy and very awkward getting in and out of your healy........
Amy solo paddling into late afternoon light as we head further towards the gulf of Mexico.

On a chickee (platforms you can book to camp on) waiting for the lightning to pass and the tides to change.
John highly unimpressed with the bug and mangrove situation in "the nightmare" (yes that is really what it says on the map)
About to set of on the last paddle into the gulf of mexico. our last "day" comprised of 37 miles (nautical miles....) lots of navigation, lots of darkness and lots of paddling. Setting off at 4 pm we paddled till 7pm slept on the beach for 4 hrs then paddled through the night and dawn to our take out at 9am.

Sunset as we paddle down the Gulf of Mexico
The boards in place. This was the living space for 12 of us. All of us!

We met this rather large "crocagator" (10ft!) at night. This was taken with my lens set at around 30mm. A little to close I think. Final assesment is that it is a Crocodile.

Osprey taking flight.