This past week I had the opportunity to kayak on Lake
Michigan with one of my sons. We
were up in
Door County, Wisconsin, for a few days to visit with our son, Jason, who
has played for several summers in a really fine classical music group at the
Midsummer Festival,
which features concerts at most of the villages within Door County. For the past seven years, we have gone
up to the Door County to stroll the beaches, bike the great trails, hike along
the coast, shop the great variety of boutique stores, and enjoy a great variety
of restaurants, none of which are chain related. The environment of Door County
is decidedly nautical and reminds me of coastal New England.
One of our activities this year was a kayak cruise out to
Horseshoe Island, an island off the Green Bay side of the Door County
peninsula. The put-in was a beach
within Peninsula State Park between the villages of Fish Creek and Ephraim.
Horseshoe Island is located a mile off shore in Lake
Michigan. While the island is now
part of the state park, it was one of the original settler locations in the
northern part of the peninsula in the mid 1800s.
The passage between the island and the peninsula has a good
deal of traffic, both power and sailing craft. As I gazed out over the water, I had visions of big wakes
from motorboats creating a series of waves that might lead to a capsize in very
deep water far offshore. But, lots
of people kayak most days out to Horseshoe Island, and I was fairly confident
that we could make the crossing without incident.
A kayak rental concession operates in the park, and we
rented two Ocean Kayak sit-on-top boats.
This was my first time using a sit-on-top. They are easy to get on and tracked pretty well. They are slow, of course, and you sit
with your legs at an angle within a series of slots built into the hull to
support your feet, a position that created some cramping after a while.
I was relieved as we arrived at the island. The shoreline where we landed was quite
rocky, and I was without my aqua-socks.
Hobbling around on the rocks while heaving the kayak up on the shoe was
a bit painful. I had my shoes in a
storage bin on the hull, so I was ready for a hike into the interior of the
island.
There is a hiking trail that runs for one kilometer around
the perimeter of the island, along the coast, into the woods, and up and down
some slight hills. There are spots
on the coast that have a cliff over the shoreline, and there were occasional
fallen trees across the path. A
few service type small buildings and the foundations of earlier buildings from
a past when people lived on the island are to be found along the path. The
hiking path is not groomed, but it is easy to follow it around the island.
The trip back across the passage was also uneventful. I found myself apprehensive at the
sight of motorboats approaching, fearing the waves associated with a deep
wake. But, each time the skippers
cut their power, I paddled on, and the peninsula grew closer. I found my energy lagging toward the
end. I suppose that the strain of
apprehension regarding wakes from motorboats drained me, and the paddle itself
and the hike around the island contributed. Finally, the uncomfortable posture of paddling the
“sit-on-top” took its toll as well.
Still, this was a great day of paddling for me: an opportunity to go
paddling with my son (34 years younger) on the big waters of Lake Michigan,
landing on a new island, and then hiking around it . It was as good as it gets!
1 comment:
Sounds like a great paddle with your son! I understand your apprehension concerning boat wakes. My wife and I were on the "receiving end" of large wakes and "close encounters of the dangerous kind" during our recent paddle on the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway! We also rented a tandem sit-on-top kayak and found it to be a little "top heavy" and unstable - being strictly sit-in kayakers ourselves. Glad you and your son had an uneventful paddle!
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