Epic Family
World Cup War Story Print E-mail
User Rating: / 2
PoorBest 
Written by Dean Jordaan   
Thursday, 05 July 2007

ImageWhat a difference a day makes. 

Sunday morning dawned full of promise.  The front arrived during the night, the West wind was blowing strongly, and the chilly grey dawn sat at odds with the excitement and anticipation I was feeling.  After months of waiting and hoping for thrilling downwind conditions, Durban was poised to deliver... 

Monday morning was like waking from a bad dream - an incomplete race, a missing ski, and the hollow emptiness of my disappointment.  This is my World Cup story.

OK Start

It's been a long time since I was this excited about something.  The race had a lot of hype, what with the prize money, the best competitors in the world and great organization.  Add to that the chance to spend a few days with my family in Durban (I live in Cape Town) enjoying the mild Durban winter. I am an A/B grade paddler, really enjoy downwind conditions, and was really looking forward to a great event.

Image
Dean - confident & ready to go (Photo: Dean Jordaan)
 

My race started ok-ish.  I got jammed at start, got knocked off, got back on, beached the front of my ski on someone else's tail, got going again, and rounded the buoys roughly mid-field. 

Image
Chaos at the start (Photo: Dean Jordaan)
 

It took a while to find my rhythm in the runs - catching the wind swell out to sea then hooking the bigger runs toward shore while working a solid line up the coast - but I was very comfortable in the conditions and after ½ hour was going along nicely.  An hour into the race and it really became fun, the swell picked up, I had caught a few screaming runs (25km/h+ on my Garmin) and I caught myself letting off a few yee-ha's. 

Image
[ Editor: Can't get enough of this shot] - Darryl Bartho catches a run (Photo: Gameplan Media)
 

Disaster Strikes

It happened very quickly.  I was bottoming out of a steep run when I fell out.  I wasn't completely straight on the run and as the swell pitched I ran more sideways and my ski got rolled.  Maybe I wasn't concentrating enough but I didn't have a chance to brace or correct.  I hit the water hard and when I came up my ski was already 15 meters away, being rolled by the wind and waves. 

I made an attempt to swim after it, but the sea was pushing it along faster than I could swim.  I had a flare pack in my PFD and fired one off thinking if I could attract the attention a safety ducks they could quickly take me to my ski and I could continue the race.  I waited for about 10 minutes but nothing.  Fired a second flare, waited another 10 minutes but nothing. 

Two paddlers came by in response to my flares but I waved them on because I was comfortable with the idea of swimming to shore so they couldn't really help.  It took me about ½ hour to swim in, doing a slow 1 arm because I didn't want to ditch my paddle as well - I was probably 1.5 kms offshore.

Image
Where Dean came off
 

Two Broken Skis

I came in at the cutting.  The NSRI had a lookout on the hill and he radioed the vehicle that later took me to Ansteys where my second picked me up.  While waiting with the NSRI another paddler was dropped off at the beach, and we saw a lone ski being swept up the coastline.  I searched the beach around Ansteys, saw 2 broken ski's - neither were mine.  While at Ansteys 3 or 4 paddlers were brought ashore.  My race was over and my ski was gone.

Lessons/observations:

  • So stupid not to tie my ski to my body.  I always do this on a downwind paddle in Cape Town.  My paddle was leashed to my ski but the Velcro ripped right off.
  • Very happy I had my PFD and flare.
  • Very happy it was the warm Durban water not cold Cape Town.
  • Very happy I am a good swimmer so wasn't stressed about reaching shore.
  • Less happy that 2 flares and 15 minutes didn't bring a boat to my assistance.  I'm guessing the safety craft were pretty busy.  Was there sufficient coverage given the conditions?  Did a safety craft even see the flares?
  • Very grateful to the NSRI for their assistance and general efforts on the day.  They are pretty jacked.  All paddlers should make a monthly contribution to this organization, one day they might save your life.
  • The organizers should have made PFD, flare and leash compulsory in those conditions.  They do so in the Cape in far more benign conditions so I don't know why they didn't here.  If branding is a concern make it optional for the international teams but compulsory for the rest.
  • Paint your paddle neon pink.  A black blade is invisible to rescue craft/helicopter in those conditions.
  • Paint your ski tips red.  A white ski is invisible in those conditions - blends in with the white horses.
  • Ensure your second is carrying your mobile phone, or that you know the number of theirs. (My second had mine)

New Gear

So it's a new ski and Garmin for me - I'm thinking of upgrading to carbon and the Garmin 305.  That and this weekend's paddle from Hout Bay to Camps Bay off the picturesque Cape coastline should wash away the blues.  We are the lucky few that get to do the most awesome sport.  I'm already psyched for the Mens Health Series and Cape Point Challenge later this year.  Come on summer!

Dean

Postscript

Editor: Dean's ski was found (in two pieces) on 5th July at the Bluff - with his GPS still attached.

 

Hits: 2954
Comments (5)Add Comment
...
written by Hamish Wyatt, July 06, 2007
Mate that seems like a pretty full on race...so I assume you were the one that the 52kph boys went past? This is going to sound like a strange question, but did anyone see any marine life during the race? Hope you have a new ski lined up quick - there's always another race somewhere...good work though getting in...
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0
WHales
written by jackie, July 06, 2007
During my very eventfull world cup experience I saw two monster whales. They were swimming parallel to me and every time I branched off right on a run they popped up just meters from me. They hung around for about 15 minutes just cruising along in the swell.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0
Godfather...!
written by DawidM, July 06, 2007
Deano, dude, how legendary is your swim to shore!!!! Sorry about your ski man. I bet there is one super happy indian fisherman somewhere though... But hey, its these stories that add the colour to our lives.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0
dolphins
written by nat, July 06, 2007
i saw a couple of dolphins but they didn't stick around. although i was having too much fun on the runs to pay attention to the sea life around me!
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0
Wohoo
written by Luke Jordaan, July 09, 2007
Ha ha ha bean man, good story bro i can hear your squeels of delight going down those runs. Just as well you were brought up tough by your siblings.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0

Write comment
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >