The seasons swing. Summer is over, despite the clear blue skies out my window, and autumn - fall - is upon us. Sarah and I, along with a small band of New Zealanders (Marcus, James and Karen), were on the water the last official day of summer. We were kayaking in Desolation Sound, on BC's Sunshine Coast. The sound was charted by both Spanish and English expeditions in 1792 and named by the captain of the English ship, George Vancouver, who noted "there was not a single prospect that was pleasing to the eye." I have to disagree with the man. We had gorgeous kayaking weather: clear sunny skies, glassy waters and little wind. The landscape was beautiful and dramatic. The sound's waters mirrored the line of jagged mountain tops that form the Coast Mountain range on our horizon; the forest-covered humps and rises of the islands of the strait, Cortes, Kinghorn, Mink, East and West Redondas; the arbutus bursting from the rocky cliffs and bluffs of the shorelines we followed.
We put in at Okeover Inlet on a Monday morning, after Sarah and Cuzza had made the run to Lund for eggers and the all important TP. Sarah and I were in a double sea kayak, a Seaward Passat G3, along with James and Karen. Marcus cruised in a Seaward Ascente. (Seaward is a Vancouver Island-based kayak company.) We traced our way through Okeover and Malaspina inlets, coming across a posse of seals sunning on rocks, before gliding into the "Aquarium", a shallow channel containing anemones, urchins, sea cucumbers and a multitude of starfish.
After a lunch that featured freshly plucked and shucked oysters, we left the inlet and entered Desolation Sound. There was a sail in the distance, but barely a breath of wind. We followed the coastline, then crossed the sound to the shores of Mink Island. We kept to the edge of Mink, passing by a beautiful piece of property with a wood-fired hot tub sitting snugly in the rocky cleft of the shoreline. A small fishing vessel overtook us as we approached the Curme Islands, a tiny cluster of treed rocks off the eastern edge of Mink Island.
We hit the ebb tide kayaking up Malaspina Inlet and stopped for lunch on a small island bordering the Aquarium channel. We watched a few salmon bypass seals via a small channel in front of our lunch spot. The water was crystal clear. A seal glided through the channel, an aerodynamic bullet with speckled skin and tucked-in flippers. It rose for a breath, saw us gawking humans and disappeared in an explosion of white water. The dumbfounded, bug-eyed expression of surprise on its face had us all laughing.
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