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| Schaatsen op de Oostvaardersplassen |
It's winter in Holland: skating with friends and family on the Oostvaardersplassen.
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| Schaatsen op de Oostvaardersplassen |
Downside of this solution is (1) that the suction cup sucks really powerful - dismounting may leave some questionable traces and (2) (more serious:) downside of a white light shining above you is that it disturbs your night vision. That's why I opt for the second best solution and mount the light on the deck behind my back. OK, this doesn't meet all regulations completely - the paddler is in front of the light, resulting in no 100 % visibility from all directions. But because most traffic looks down on a kayak from a higher position - on the water the light works also sufficient with approaching vessels.
To read compass and charts I use in addition a simple red LED-bikelight in a waterproof bag. Works better -and is much cheaper - than a chemical lightstick!
Screenshot of the radar kindly supplied by Dutch Coastguard. Click on the image for a more detailed view. The light-blue-line is the reflection of the surf along the Aardappelenbult and the beaches of Goeree.
The Buoys around the Aardappelenbult are named "BO" which is an abbreviation for "Bollen van de Ooster" (the more official name for the sand the seakayakers call A'bult).
The legal status of the resting area is made clear on the backside of the Buoys: "Nbw 1998, art. 20". "Nbw 1998" is an abbreviation for the "Natuurbeschermingswet 1998" - the Dutch law on nature protection, "artikel 20" refers to the nature reserves with restricted acces.
More pictures of a fantastic morning in Zoetermeer in the Picasa-album. The number of seakayakers exploring the white water discipline is steadily growing - today we were 3: Hans, Bernhard and Govert.
In April 2009 the 3rd edition of the International Sea kayak symposium on the Costa Brava is held. Last year members of the organising kayakclub Pagaia took part on the NKB-Vlieland-seakayakweek. I am very pleased that I can join their symposium in return. I am looking forward to meet my Catalan friends and to cooperate in this international event.
Tomorrow is the final edition of this year of the NKB-white water sessions at DWD (-the artificial white water track in Zoetermeer). There is a short winter break for the NKB-sessions, but the site stays open. There are several training occasions, also during the winter-months, for (advanced) white water kayakers: visit www.wildwateracademie.nl for more information and time schedules.

A few minutes later I was part of another world: in the Nieuwkoopse Plassen – a nature reserve in the middle of the Randstad. It was calm and quiet – no-one outside, even the fisher-men decided to stay home today: I was alone with the birds (and the fish, hidden deep in the cold water below me).
Last week I reported about Rolph's presentation in Alphen about outrigger canoeing in the Netherlands. As an illustration I took an old poster of last year's Quicksilver Outrigger-race in Hoek van Holland. Yesterday I received this fantastic picture of the OC6 of the Bloemendaal Outrigger Canoe Club in full swing as a replacement for that old poster. And even better: the picture came with an invitation for a paddle with these guys. Thanks, I am looking forward for this experience!


The other seakayaking-development is just in the opposite direction. There is also a growing interest in playful, manoeuvrable seakayaks to paddle in rough water and surf: kayaks with a shorter waterline, a good amount of rocker and a cockpit design where the paddler is tightly connected to the boat for optimal control. Representatives of this category are for instance the Tiderace Xcite (picture), Rockpool Alaw, NDK Romany, Valley Avocet - and I would also classify my trusty Anas Acuta in this category.
Note: the pictures are not on scale - the blue Tiderace kayak is half a meter shorter than the yellow Epic kayak.
Or the closed variant of the waveski:
Yet Waveskis are no real success in the Netherlands - which is partly due to character of the surf. The swell on the North Sea is quit short, resulting in relatively small and steep waves - the surfrides are not long enough to really benefit from the advantages of a waveski - short rodeo-kayaks are preferred for playing in the surf on the beaches of the North Sea.
