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Written by Bill Harbord   
Friday, 17 August 2007

Image[Editor: Bill Harbord lives in Nelson, British Colombia, Canada and sometimes commutes an hour & forty five minutes to work. 

Sounds like a drudge - but not this commute!  BC is an area of outstanding natural beauty and his "commute" is a 19km paddle on Kootenay Lake]

 

 

Commuting in BC

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Spearhead Timber Works (Photo: Ted Hall)

Living here in Nelson BC Canada and working 19 km east on Kootenay Lake I occasionally paddle to work. I leave at first light about 5.30AM and usually the lake is like a mirror. Osprey and eagles over- fly fishing for breakfast. I have seen deer, bears, moose, otters and beavers on the shoreline.

Last Friday I paddled with new Nelson resident Steven Kaup formerly of Colorado. An accomplished whitewater paddler Steven is new to flat water paddling. Our morning commute took a couple of hours with generally sunny skies with a few walking rain showers sweeping over the mountain peaks above.

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Bill Harbord (Photo: Steven Kaup)

(This photograph was taken from one of Nelson’s famous mountain bike trails near Kokannee Provincial Park. Spearhead Timberworks and Clear Form Design appear just off the highway in the middle of the peninsula. This is where Steven and I work.)

Nelson - mecca for the adventurous 

Nelson is situated in the south eastern corner of BC. Surrounded by the Selkirk, Purcell and Monashee mountain ranges, it is a mecca for the adventurous. This year I have paddled with former members of the French and Czech national teams as well as an 8 time medalist at the world masters games at our Wednesday night races.

Nelson sits on the western end of the west arm of Kootenay Lake. Generally benign it's not often we get the chance to capture a run. That morning Steven and I had made a leisurely commute to work.

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End of the morning commute (Photo: Steven Kaup)

Network failure, early exit!

Over the day the weather worsened. Severe lightning storms swept over the office. Lightning striking the ground meters from the building which seemed to affect the computers and made it impossible to work. Both of us being good employees we waited for ½ an hour secretly hoping the IT guy would fail in his effort fix the network failure. Failure for the network meant an early exit for most of the staff.

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Leaving work early! (Photo: Steven Kaup)

Skies had cleared but a stiff wind blew down the valley from east to west. We carried the boats down to the lakeshore and launched into a growing chop on the lake. Steven paddled the XT and I was on my Millenium.

Fast ride home

Normally this paddle home takes me about 1.75 hours but I had a feeling that I would be a bit faster today. The first couple of km's featured an unruly cross chop to nine mile narrows. As we approached the narrows the sand bar at the entrance and the following current pitched the swells up to a meter in height. We got some short runs in and a taste of what was upcoming.

By the ½ way point the swells had grown to 1.5 meters and were directly behind us. I knew Steven was behind me because I could hear him gleefully yelling. I was mentally sick by this time all I cared about was finding another wave to surf on. What an addictive feeling.

It's 19 km from work to home but I bet I paddled 25km with all the zig-zagging. I could barely carry the boat 200 meters to the house. We were fully ½ an hour faster than usual. Later, sitting at the kitchen table regaling my wife with stories about our epic paddle with a hot cup of tea warming our bellies it struck me that occasionally we have these experiences that mix an odd blend of emotion and athleticism that just make you feel good about yourself.

Steven is now actively looking for a surf ski to buy.

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written by Sean Gibson, August 18, 2007
Awesome story guys. For buying used skis in BC, try the Deep Cove web site in Vancouver. Now is the time to buy, they'll be more expensive in the spring. If your mate wants new one. Demo the Think Evo and the Epic V10 (the sport is a great ski - I have one - but the seat is a bit big, what the hell, demo it too.) Come to Van for a week. Cove races (flatwater) are tuesday nights, jericho races (open water) are thursdays.
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written by Dean Jordaan, August 30, 2007
This is such a great story. Watch that weather forecast and look forward to a kickass downwind on the way home. Thats living.
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