Sunday, December 30, 2007

Ogwr Fawr, Sunday 30 Dec

Report from Phil:
"Today's river was the Ogwr Fawr the 7 paddlers were;
Phil D
Dave C
Red Nick
Blue Nick
Antlers Emlyn
Ben M
Paul M

It was a brand new river for all the paddlers although
 Red Nick had walked
part of the river and was able to offer valuable
 advice. The get in was at
Blackhill on the Ogwr Fach which flowed into the main
 river just past a
small drop.

The river promised a good run when we shortly came
 upon a 10ft slide.

The river had approx 20 small weirs some more
 technical than others. Because
the level was on the low side I had a look at playing
 in a small sticky pour
over. A good practice for setting an edge and skulling
 for support. All the
paddlers had a go except the 2 Nicks and Emlyn. Red
 Nick went next and set a
great edge... then lost his paddle... capsized... and
 then held on till
support came. Blue Nick was then persuaded to have a
 go... and after making
it out without with a massive grin Emlyn said "no
 way".

Coffee break was taken while we scouted the boxed in
 weir from the bank.
Myself and Dave ran it first and had a surf in the
 first drop, took the 2nd
drop then waited for the rest of the group who saddled
 up after watching
while giving safety. Everyone ran the boxed weir
 safely and in control.

More drops followed and we were nearly at the get out
 when a giant squid (or
was it a rock) attacked my boat forcing a
 roll-in-anger. 

No swimmers and a fabulous time was had by all.
 Leading an unknown river was
an exhilarating and exciting experience.

Phil D"

River Wye, Sat 29 December

The team: Matt, Dave, Mark, Adam, John O', John C, Euros, Owain and me (Hywel).

The river: Wye, from Dernol to Rhayadr (Rhaeadr Gwy in Welsh which as you may have forgotten means Waterfall of the Wye). UK River Guide description:http://www.ukriversguidebook.co.uk/wyeupper.htm

Water level: pretty high. According to John O', the Environment Agency said 1.17m on the gauge at 06.00 that morning.

Although we left Abercynon at 9.00 we didn't get on the water until after 12. The water speed then meant a fairly quick trip, over by around 14.15 (followed by a visit to the Lamb and Flag, we got home around 17.15).

Memorable events:
1. not recognising the Letterbox (where I got back-flipped and stuck in the slot before swimming on my last trip a couple of years ago, in very low water). High water meant it merged with the drop on river right.
2. Owain took a swim on one of the falls.
3. Euros rolled in anger on a river for the first time- twice, most impressively when caught in the stopper just above Town Falls.
4. Me, the only fool to try the main drop at Town Falls, capsizing and eventually swimming as my leg lost its grip on my third attempt at a reverse screw roll.

An exhilarating trip, excellent fun. Thanks to all participants.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Christmas Eve on the Upper Taff

We had a nice paddle, though the Christmas cake at Matt's at the end was the high point as the water was so low.

Here's a picture of us at the put-in, looking forward to the cake:

Here's the film: "http://www.youtube.com/v/Fz9NdMBNREE&hl=en&fs=1"

The following link takes you to a Google map showing trip waymarks:

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Upper Taff in near flood, Friday 6 Dec

An account from John O'C:

"On Friday I went on the Taff with two Kayakers  Phill & Dave C (Matt had to lay some thing, well that's what he said!)
 
At the put in at Quakers Yard the high water was grade 5   the tree was cpmletly under the water
 
I assume it was only a few yards at this grade I was wrong It lasted about 80yards, I was thinking  this is not the place for a 16ft open, the rest of the rive was continues grade 3 with huge waves coming at you from all directions I have never see water like it. It made the Trweryn top section look like child's play
 
Some waves had to be over 6 ft  No one stopped to play a swim would be very long
 
Then came to the grave yard (grade 5) it was huge water and rocks every where the others took the drop ion the centre of the river I arrived safely
 
I went down the LHS to avoid the drop which I was not confidant I could make, and if I did I would be full of water. All was going well I now had to move into the centre of the river to avoid a tree
I knew there was a 20ft wide wave across part of the river and I tried my best to get past it. the boat was at a angle and the long and short of it is I swam
The boys were waiting for me after this section and they rescued me and then the boat
My dry suite is in for repair so I was very damp
 
Then were on more features after the grave yard,  just grade 3 with huge waves coming at you from all directions.
 
We were off the water before 3:30
 
It was a paddle I will remember, and I am glad I did it and survived, would I do it again NO not at this level
KNOW WHEN YOU'RE LUCKY 

Thank you
 
John O'Connell"

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Sennybridge- Aberbrân on the Usk Sat 1 Dec

Just to record a trip. Fairly low water, quite fine weather. Though a bit chilly, not bad for Aberbrân. We were: Matt and his mate Adam, Dave C, John C., Paul and Ben, Andy and Josh, me (Hywel) and Euros.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

North Devon Sea Meet, 15-16 Sept 2007

Three Dragon Paddlers attended (Hywel, Rob G. and Emlyn), and undertook two trips. The first, around 12 miles long, was in fine weather, flat sea and no wind, from Lynmouth to Combe Martin. The second, on Sunday, was again in fine weather but with a slight-moderate sea and a Force 3 - 4 south-westerly wind to start with, though a Force 7 was forecast. Because of that forecast we were very cautious and paddled a round trip of only about 6 miles, from Hele Bay to the east of Ilfracombe to the beach at Brandy Cove point. 7 paddlers undertook the full first day trip, 8 the second. We had one capsize and rescue on the second day. Both were great trips (as are all DP trips of course).

Monday, February 26, 2007

River Dart, 3-4 February 2007

A weekend trip, 4 members did the upper Dart on the Saturday and 12 did the Loop on the Saturday.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Lower Taff, Sunday 27 January

Report from Emlyn: "4 of us took to the waters on this nice Sunday morning. Weather Calm, cloudy ,10 deg C. Andy Rees in charge, with novices Nick Bradshaw, Nick Thorne and me (Emlyn.).Andy decided that we’d shoot the weir for starters. N.T and myself hadn’t done this before so an apprehensive start. Andy went first (to guide us) and from the top he looked o.k., didn’t realise till he explained after that he’d overshot it to the right and at the bottom shot out to safety(he’s previously described this as the pool of death!). NT went down the weir on the correct section, (the piece that is angled higher than the rest) but came unsteady at the base, overturned but managed a good roll and made for safety. NB and myself managed to get down unscathed. NB hadn’t done it over this part of the weir, he’d done it on the left previously. The river level had dropped a bit from recent weeks, but was at a comfortable level, and fast flowing, with a few rocks just under the surface at the beginning hampering progress. Saw a few fishermen on the way down – some heavily camouflaged! We were soon travelling quite nicely, practiced some break-ins and outs on the way, played a bit as well – still getting used to these could do with some more practice. Saw a couple of nasty strainers on the way down, one a shopping trolley plus a gathering of attachments – could be nasty in difficult conditions, but today were easily spotted and avoided. Bouncy bits further downand NT went over but managed a good roll again. We made it in one piece through the little rapid, that was nice and stopped for a picnic just after the railway bridge (little beach left) – mars bar and coffee really! The river was quite smooth after this and when we stopped in an eddy, saw 2 sets of white water racers going past - strange looking crafts. NB was slightly disturbed by the fast current when he made his way to the eddy (we’d used this part previously for breaking in) so he decided to practice a couple of these, unfortunately at the second attempt he went over. No problem as the kayak was brought in to the nearest bank, with Nick towing it. No more adventures, went past a few rowing boats in the lower section then the wind picked up as we neared the open area next to the rowing club. A nice morning’s outing – thanks to Andy for chaperoning."

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Afon Ysgir, Sunday 21 January

Report from Rob G.:

"On Matt's advice after a scouting session he did on Saturday we avoided the Taf  Fechan and kept our balls. So 5 of us did the Ysgir on Sunday instead -
Matt, John C, Phil D, Dave C and myself. Medium water levels, a good run by all, and well led by Matt. John C got very attached to a rock on the way down but was finally rejected by it despite close cuddling for what must have seemed a couple of minutes. All fine until the end when 3 decided torun the weir. Dave C first - powered through without any problem. Followed by mad Phil D who's low volume boat perhaps not enough to get him through sohe got taken down to the Green Room for a minor trashing before finding he could actually stand up in the water! I managed to run it with Dave C
shouting encouragement and John C standing by with rope."


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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Usk carnage, Sunday 7 January

Weather was low cloud at around 350 – 450 metres grey overcast with lashings of rain throughout the day; however, spurred on by this we all met up at the old little chef/Texaco Garage on the A470 @ 9.30 am to paddle the Usk from Talybont to Llangynidr Bridge.

Club Roll Call: Matt; Piers (who I was calling Dave all day); Phil; Ben McDonald; Paul McDonald; Dave; Rob; Emlyn; Nick Thorne; Nick Bradshaw; Andy R.; Steve M.

A good mixture of experience and novice which would prove invaluable on a river bloated from the continuous rain fall over the past few days. At the get in point at Talybont, the sub-structure stanchions were just about visible from the bank with a good force creating the bow wavein front. The field at the get in point was not flooded but certainly showed signs of recent watery coverings.

Once the logistics were sorted and an ill fated search for a shop selling cigarettes for Matt was abandoned by Dave, we started to organise ourselves for the trip down river. We spent 10 minutes getting the newer arrivals acquainted with the river at the get in ferry gliding across from one side to the other. No one capsized at this stage which we took as a good sign and started our journey down stream.

Most of the features on the river were washed out as you’d expect from a river in flood, so we occupied ourselves with eddying, breaking in and out, ferry gliding and more exciting rescue techniques which Emlyn, Nick and Nick wanted the rest of us to perform on them just to keep everyone busy before we reached Mill falls.

Before we approached Mill Falls Matt and I put the game plan in to action and discussed who should do want and picked the order of decent in order to give ourselves a fighting chance of performing proficient and safe rescues in the advent that anyone went for a swim we could recover live bodies and kit.

Mill falls looked a fantastic sight as we approached the first set of rapids before eddying up on the right prior to taking on Mill Falls . Everyone got down safely and the newer members did really well getting themselves in to the eddy. Once everyone was down, it was time to put the action plan in to action. Dave, Steve and I went down first, with Steve occupying the top eddy and Dave and I staggered our positions at the bottom of the falls.

Everyone did very well attempting of getting down the main part of the falls with very few capsizes. One notable capsize was Nike Bradshaw just after the falls, with Piers shadowing Nick in to the eddy and Phil, Dave and myself running down the bank with throw bags at the ready trying to get below Nick to a position that was clear of tree debris. Piers didn’t look impressed as he floated down with asking us politely to throw a line. Phil obliged, and was spot on with his throw. There were a few other side issues occurring at the same time with people get back in to boats etc, but the main thing was everyone made it down. We were by now spread out across the river bank in small groups awaiting individuals to get back in to boats etc. While this as going on Emlyn capsizes in an eddy followed by Ben.

Ben had a nasty experience as he found he was pinned but got out after a bit of a fight. Meanwhile Emlyn rescues Ben’s boat but loses his own! Emlyn goes in search of his boat which has been rescued a bit further on down the river. Emlyn is then reunited with his boat and we all head down the next large wave train which takes us to Llangynidr Bridge and egress. However, while at the egress Nick T goes over and is ceremoniously rescued by Matt, Phill, Dave and Steve.   

 Good day had by all. Much experience gained through sheer ignorance and good company plus another war story to be added to the portfolio.

Andy Rees


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