uk said...
This has been a great topic with some fantastic posts and photos, well done good job.on some photos though you looked a fair distance apart or was this just the wide angle lens.
We did get pretty far apart.. It was amazing how I'd stop to take a pic.. Click one as they approach.. Then again as they pass.. and one more as they disappear away from me..and it seems like only second would pass and they'd be a dot in the distance.. and anyone ahead of them was almost out of sight... Then I'd have to paddle like hell to try and catch up.. and I think doing this added to me running out of steam towards the end.
In fact I was so buggered for the last hour or so I didn't have the strength to stand.. I'm embarrassed to say I had to sit and paddle just to make it to the end..and even though the guys would often wait for me (having a nice little rest themselves) by the time I got there we'd all be off again when it was me that needed the biggest rest.
I didn't realize how much strength it takes to balance in rough water..and if you've got no strength you can't balance at all.. I'd try and stand..and fall..and the effort that it takes to climb back on and try and stand was just making it worse..I thought if I sit and paddle for a while I'd recover..but I never really did.
The last time that I ever felt like this was Mt Bike racing years ago when I bonked (hit the wall) and could only peddle in my granny gear and it was flat ground..in fact even my paddling at this stage even though it felt like I was digging deep I was really only dipping my paddle in and out enough to get it wet.
This was a very important lesson learned by me.. I had not eaten a good meal the day before and only had a piece of toast in the morning and my body was out of fuel.. I should have eaten my Wheaties and had pasta the night before or something like that...Maybe even take some of the gel that triathletes use.
I had not expected to be paddling for so so long.. or to be paddling on one side so much heading across the swells and getting hit by side chop.. But I guess you should be prepared for the worst..just in case.
At this stage I put my camera away.. It was getting very serious.. The wind and waves were getting huge..and I mean really huge..and I often thought jeez..what a great picture that would make as some waves rolled through with a 8-10' vertical face..and missed some great shots.. I was hanging on for dear life sometimes.
DJ