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Beginners Series
It’s springtime. There is still
snow on the mountain passes, but some of it has started to
melt. Rivers are beginning to run, creating ideal playground
flows for boaters. And the winds that surge in with March and
April are arriving in gusts, churning up waves. Conditions
are perfect for playing outside.
Everyone has a new sport on their adventure list that they
have been meaning to try for years — this is the year
to do it. Simultaneously inspiring, hilarious, and painful,
starting a new sport is not easy, but it is worth it. In the
next six pages, we follow six rookies as they make their first
attempts at new sports.
Vicariously, we
get to try snowboarding, kitesurfing, telemark skiing, ocean
kayaking, surfing and outdoor climbing through the eyes of
these beginners. We won’t
share their bumps and bruises with them, but we will share
their enthusiasm and maybe get inspired to try something new
on our list. After all, it’s springtime — a perfect
time for starting something new.
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Photo:
Elliot Kay |
SURFING: Old Man
and the Sea
By Jerry Kay
I’m 58 years old
and I’m going to learn how to
surf. I’ve done just about everything else in the ocean
for the past 20 years: I’ve bodysurfed and body-boarded.
I’ve scuba-dived and snorkeled in several oceans.
So why
this late inclination to surf? Three reasons: It’ll
save me from golf, which has claimed the minds and bodies of
some of my best friends.It’ll give me another reason
to go into the water now that my usual body-boarding buddies
are chained to land by work and families.Mostly, I want to
learn because, after 20 years of lying prone in the ocean,
I want to evolve. I want to stand up on my feet and see how
it feels.
While body boarding, I would tell myself, “I like riding
a wave lying down; it puts me into the wave, right on top
of the wave, like... like... making love to it.”But
my romantic notions of belly surfing have faded because I
no longer want surfers to refer to me as a ‘speed bump.’
Am
I hoping to imitate one of those lean kids on a pointy
short board, shredding back and forth down the steep face
of a 10-foot breaker?Nah, I’m only hoping to dance
a longboard with some grace diagonally down the slope of
some mild waves. I have harbored this secret desire to surf
upright for years but never admitted it.
So, I take myself
one fine, foggy summer day to Cowell’s
Beach and rent a surfboard — a huge monster — and
give it a try. After fin-kicking around for so many years
on a sponge body board, paddling a surfboard feels like
propelling a redwood log with your arms.And in a wetsuit
it’s
hard trying to aim toward shore, screw your neck around
and see a wave coming.After 45 minutes, my arms are rubbery,
my neck is kinked and I haven’t caught one wave.
I
need a lesson.But it isn’t until I take the family
to Hawaii during the following spring break that I’m
able to take a warm-water lesson with my 13-year-old
son.I learn a few things on this easy, balmy Lahaina
break.Like, how to get up, where to stand on the board
and how to balance yourself once you’re up.We spend
45 minutes on the beach learning this before we even
paddle out. I confess to the instructor that I can’t
remember all the steps as he’s about to launch
me and my 12-foot soft-top ocean liner onto my first
wave. “It ain’t rocket science, brah,” he
yells, pushes, and off I go, onto my first one-foot ripple.
I get almost
up and fall off backwards. My son is up, though.
“Look
straight ahead to shore when you get to your feet,
brah,” the
instructor tells me. Second launch and I’m up! I’m riding
this monster board at an exhilarating snail’s pace, standing.
And then I do it again.And again.I think I have it.I’m ready
now for a wetsuit, cold water, and the Pleasure Point break in Santa
Cruz.
Once home, I procrastinate.
Months pass. I need a kick in the ass.Then my neighbor, Jason,
comes by.“Let’s go surfing,
Jerry. You’re
always talking about it.” I go with him to the nearest
break.I can barely carry the board down the steps, balancing
it on my head like a painfully heavy plank, hoping not to bang
into stuff. The water looks rougher than Lahaina, murkier, too.
We paddle out, and
I have a tough time pushing through the series of frothing
broken waves — throwing me off-balance, knocking me
off, filling me with self-doubt. Self-doubt can kill you, or save you out in
the water. Like Hamlet, you’re
never quite sure when to listen to your inner coward.
Once I make it out to the line of surfers, exhausted, I’m faced with
a problem: I’m really not skilled enough to judge which wave I can take,
let alone line up and paddle for one without cutting somebody else off.I need
a clear spot for myself.So I make a tactical decision to stay inside and try
and ride some foam. I’m determined because I’ve
yet to stand up on a board in Santa Cruz.
My chance is coming with a wave that broke 50 yards out and
now is slowly forming another low, gentle wall.I turn, and
I paddle; I’m lifted and sliding
down the wave! I stumble to my feet, I’m standing I’m moving
I’m surfing I’m heading for the cliffs. Oh, shit! I jump off.
But I recover my board, return and do it again, and again — the
first signs of a new addiction taking hold.
Finally, I have evolved to standing up in the ocean. Not bad
for an old rookie.
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Photo:
Robert Barbutti |
SEA KAYAKING: Wet
Exits
By Deb Bolt
As I make my way
down Highway 1 to Monterey, my pulse quickens. I have butterflies,
big ones, a mix between dread and exhilaration. I’m sea kayaking for the first
time today. I’m
heading to Monterey Bay Kayaks for a tour of the bay and introduction
to the sport, and tomorrow I will be in Oakland for a beginning
sea kayaking class with California Canoe & Kayak.
It is
a perfect April day in January. After a few wrong turns,
I’m
at Monterey Bay Kayaks in Monterey. I join my group, a semi-novice
couple from San Francisco, and our instructor Ryan. I sign
my life away on a standard release form, and am tossed a
paddling jacket and a PFD (personal flotation device), for
the adventure. My heart is racing.
I grab some gear
and the four of us head down to the water to meet the kayaks.
Ryan is the perfect instructor — he’s
kind, goes out of his way to make everyone feel safe, has
a very calming presence, and knows his stuff.
We put on our
gear, learn how to wear the spray skirt, and adjust the
multitude of straps on the PFD. I look and feel like a big
blue and orange stuffed frog. Ryan shows us the way to hold
a right-handed paddle by placing the knuckles of your right
hand in line with the right blade, and by placing our arms
and paddle above our heads with elbows at a right angle. He
says this is the path of least resistance, the best balance
between strength and leverage. He demonstrates how to get in
the kayak, how to fiddle with the foot pedals, how to deal
with the spray skirt, and how to wet exit if we dump. Then
we learn a few basic paddle strokes to get us around the shoreline
and Monterey Harbor. My apprehension and excitement grows
with each new lesson. Then we’re off.
The four of
us push our kayaks into the surf and we paddle like crazy
past the breaking waves. I’m now wet, thrilled,
feeling a little overzealous and can’t wait to
hit some huge waves.
Over the next several hours we explore the Monterey
Harbor for marine life. Ryan shares the ecology of
the area and the names of every bird and animal: grebes,
sea lions, cormorants, and pelicans.
As we move into the bigger waves beyond the jetty, Dana
starts to get a little freaked. I might be too, if the
instructor wasn’t sitting in the back of my kayak.
So, we cruise back into the harbor refuge to look for starfish
and decorator crabs. Soon, we are land bound.
The next class
at California Canoe & Kayak is an
immersion program for beginning sea kayakers; there
are 6 of us today. The instructor, Mark, is a seasoned
kayaker with many years of teaching under his spray
skirt, and a few expressions that remind me of Bill
Murray. He makes an excellent instructor.
We go through
how to wear our gear, how to hold the right-handed paddle,
and the basics of a wet exit — and since this all review
for me, I’m feeling pretty
confident. We practice a few strokes on land, with our
assistant instructor, Chris, before entering our single
kayaks: the forward and reverse stroke and sweep, and how
to use torso rotation to gain the most from our strokes.
We learn draw and recovery strokes, and rescues after a
lunch break lesson about tides and currents. My eyes glaze
over as we review the Bay Area map: I had no idea there
are so many swirling tides and currents to consider.
Mark is right there with answers to our rookie questions.
The
most intense session is the recovery and rescue. The water
is freezing. I’m the first one to wet exit, and it’s
not on purpose — just that my bracing strokes are
lagging behind my enthusiasm. I feel like a wet seal hoisting
myself up on the rear deck of the kayak during my paddle-float
self rescue, but I pull it off. At this point, my hands
are frozen and I’m
sitting in the cold water now pooled in my kayak; my
bilge pump forgotten on the dock. Luckily, my rescue partner
lets me borrow hers, and soon I’m in the water once
more for the T-rescue, which involves using the bow of
a partner’s
kayak to right yourself from your fish-eye view.
We
finish up with a relaxing paddle back to Jack London Square
in the Oakland Harbor where we began. I’m so happy
to have a warm towel, and leave feeling invigorated and
enthusiastic about my new sport. I’ll be back next
weekend.
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Photo:
Christa Fraser |
SNOWBOARDING: Snowplowing
By Christa Fraser
When I went skiing
as a kid with my grandmother, who was a right ripper in her
50s and 60s, she used to call me a snowplower. To be fair,
I was actually quite good at tucking my poles under my armpits,
crouching low and heading straight down the hill at what
I felt to be warp speed. But that is where my skiing prowess
ended. After 20 something years of taking lessons from ski-wee,
my grandmother and mom, and a couple of boyfriends who thought
they were Glenn Plake’s
soul twin, I was still a mediocre, intermediate skier.
For several
years, I had been eyeballing snowboarding as a logical next
step. With a snowboard, there would be no ski tips to get
tangled when plowing into the lift line, my legs wouldn’t
head in separate directions when I couldn’t
complete a carve, and best of all, I wouldn’t have
to carry two sticks and two poles while walking in stiff
boots to get a hot chocolate.
So I headed to Bear
Valley Ski Resort for my inaugural lesson, accompanied by
my boyfriend, Matt, and his 10-year old son, Caleb, who were
there to offer me moral support. But as soon as we got to
the resort, they ditched me for some blue-diamond warm-ups.
That was fine — I was due for my first lesson, anyway.
At the rental
department, I got suited up: boots, helmet, wrist guards,
and a board set for my goofy-footed stance. Then, I was off
to my lesson with six other neo-boarders, and two instructors.
I admit that I’m prone to get a big head with very
minor victories. But like many middle of the pack athletes,
it becomes deflated just as easily. The first few minutes
of my lesson, I felt like the overweight, out-of-shape writer
I’d become.
My feet were cramping, I was huffing and my legs felt
like rubber. We hadn’t even attempted a hill yet.
After
a few warm ups and some basic instruction, I gained a measure
of comfort. We hit the lift, sweetly named Cub Chair. I,
however, renamed it Cuss Chair, because that is what I
did after every attempt to exit the chair upright (Once, I
wiped out so solidly, that for a second I had the wind knocked
out of me). Our lesson at the top of the bunny slope started
with all of us wiping out and taking breathers on our butts
or knees before trying to get back up. It was a harbinger
of things to come: I would venture to guess that none of
us went more than 40 feet without a crash. On the upside,
the wipeouts never seemed to be painful.
Halfway down the
run, I was able to sort of trace the falling-leaf pattern
that our instructor demonstrated. In this drill, we basically
pointed our bodies, boards, head and hands in the direction
we wanted to go and then switched to the other side. This should
not be confused with actually turning a board, however. I was
getting good. Someone even said, “Hey.
Why are you even taking a lesson? You don’t
need one.” I
smiled knowingly, and then went down in a spectacular
heap. By the time we reached the bottom of the hill,
our first lesson was over. We had managed to complete
one bunny slope run in an hour and a half.
After lunch,
I came back with Caleb for a second lesson. Caleb
is also a rookie snowboarder and decided to join
me for more bunny slope basics. Our instructor, Asa,
was wonderful. After showing him what a good base
I had developed with the falling leaf, he decided
I was ready to learn some turns.
True to my past,
however, I simply transferred my snowplowing abilities from
skiing to snowboarding. I just kept my front edge up, and
scraped snow all the way down. I simply could not psyche
myself up to turn. When I tried, I crashed instantaneously.
Asa stuck with me, however. Though I didn’t quite get
the hang of turning, Asa did help me figure out
how to get off the lift upright. Having an instructor can save
a rookie a lot of time reinventing the basics.
Quickly, that
lesson was also over. Caleb and I were on our own for a couple
more tired runs. I was ready to come back another day, for
another lesson. I was sad that I hadn’t
become a ripper in one day, but I really did enjoy
myself. Caleb agreed with me that I had a long way to go. But
then, with a 10-year old’s honesty, assured me that I
really wasn’t that bad, at least for a grown up. I
will be sure to pass that on to my grandmother.
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Photo:
West World Images |
TELEMARK SKIING: Free-heeled
Patience
By Cathy Claesson
”Why in the world would you want to learn how to telemark?” my
husband asks with a mixture of humor and disdain. Before I
get to answer, he continues, “Is tele-skiing sort of
inefficient? Isn’t it sort of like doing squats all the
way down the mountain? Why not just stick with good old fixed-heel
skiing and snowboarding? Is it necessary to purposely make
life more difficult?”
At the time, I didn’t have an immediate answer for my
husband’s perfectly reasonable questions. Fortunately,
I was already committed to taking a tele-ski lesson. I had
watched graceful tele-skiers scribing beautiful arcs down the
mountainside as a child, and I was still intrigued after all
these years. For better or worse, I was going to tele-ski.
A few weeks later, I was heading up to Bear Valley to take
my first telemark lesson with Mountain Adventure Seminars.
I was happy to be heading up to the snow with a good friend
and to have some “girl time.” During the drive
up Highway 4 we rocked out to various CD’s and got fired-up
to play in the snow.
I pulled in to Bear Valley Cross-Country
Center to rent my tele-gear. All of a sudden I was nervous.
I had the sneaking suspicion I was about to get my butt kicked.
I even considered skipping the class and just snowboarding
all day. That way I would be guaranteed to have fun. But
before I knew it, the helpful people at Bear Valley Cross Country
had my tele-skis, boots and poles ready to go.
Before long, I was heading up the lift with my MAS instructor,
Marty. Still nervous, I was looking at the snowboarders making
smooth turns and thinking to myself, “I’d be
guaranteed to have fun if I was carving down the mountain
on my snowboard.”
Marty distracted my thoughts by speaking of
his passion for telemarking and how it opens the backcountry
up to skiers. He went on to explain that the adaptability of
tele equipment gives skiers the liberating ability to experience
the whole mountain.
As we neared the
end of the lift, I nervously asked Marty how I’d get
off the lift. He said I could ride the tele skis just like
alpine skis, as long as I made a conscious effort to keep
my heels down. I slid off the lift, kept my heels down and
rode down the slope. I instantly knew that my 14 years of
alpine skiing would pay off. It was a huge relief and the
excitement was building.
Marty skied
on ahead of me for my first drill. As I watched him make
graceful tele turns, I remembered why I had wanted to try
this sport in the first place. I’ve always thought
tele skiers look more tuned in to their turns while making
their way down the mountain. The tele turn has more elements
to it than alpine skiing or snowboarding, and comes together
in a rhythmic and graceful dance. No two turns are exactly
the same. I was excited by the prospect of linking my own
turns together.
The majority of the
lesson involved doing drills to practice the four basics
of tele skiing — balance,
edging, pressure and rotation. I felt a little silly doing
some of the drills, but as I began to improve I was encouraged.
Too soon, my private lesson was over. Marty left me with
what was called the “patience
turn,” a turn that starts in a basic alpine turn
and once the skis are passed down the fall line would end
in a tele turn. This would become the foundation for complete
tele turns in the future.
At the bottom of the run and the end of the lesson, Marty
had given me enough of a foundation to keep me going through
the rest of the afternoon. I abandoned my original plan
of grabbing my snowboard for “guaranteed fun down the hill.” I
was having just as much fun trying to put my turns together.
I spent the rest of the afternoon doing patience turns
and by the end of the day was actually linking some regular
tele turns together. It was a great end to a fun day of
learning something new.
To answer my husband: Tele skiing doesn’t add unnecessary
difficulty, but it does make for an interesting and exciting
new challenge. One that eventually rewards with increased
versatility and a unique, graceful dance with gravity.
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Photo:
Nadav Aharonov |
ROCK CLIMBING: Playing
at the Edge
By Dan Curtis-Cummins
As we approached
the edge of California Cliff at beautiful Castle Rock State
Park before my introductory climbing lesson, I could sense
what propels people to rock climb: a love of the natural
environment and the “camaraderie” of
the sport. On the 15-minute hike from the parking lot to the
55-foot cliff, Benji Weizel, my guide from Outback Adventures,
and I talked about the sport of climbing. His enthusiasm for
the sport was contagious.
Benji prepared the class for the
climbing lesson. Sarob, Angela, Nadav and I were beginners.
For us, this was an experience of trying something new, feeling
the instantaneous camaraderie that arises from trusting strangers
with our lives (as Nadav brought to my attention while I
was his belayer), and daring ourselves to reach new heights
of adrenaline-pumping, seemingly extreme adventure.
For Benji, it was just one of numerous trips he makes to
the cliffs to teach various levels of rock climbing. Castle
Rock offers a perfect climbing classroom, with easier, beginner
routes that are rated 5.7, like California Cliff, to others
rated in the mid 5s (on the American climbing scale of 5.5-5.15)
like at Indian Rock or Summit Rock.
Our lesson for the
day would be on the basics of free climbing. Free climbing
involves many technical skills that range from tying the proper
knot (a figure-8 followed with a double fisherman’s
knot), to tightening your harness correctly, to learning
the skills of smooth belaying.
The rope we used
was an 11 mm thick, 70-meter ‘dynamic’ rope, made
of strong, elastic material for better absorption of falls. The belayer
holds the other end of the climber’s rope, attached
to his/her harness through carabiners and the belay device.
The belayer watches the climber intently and works to “pull,
grab, slip, and break” the rope, essentially eliminating
slack and cinching the rope in the belay device, repeating the cycle
as the climber ascends.
When we were ready
to descend, our belayer steadily released the rope and lowered
us down. The most exhilarating point of my day was during
my first climb, after I had sought out all the holds and
gathered the strength to reach the peak of the 45-foot face.
From below Benji told me to let go of the rock. This felt
like a totally unnatural move, but, defying my intuition,
I followed his instruction: “sit” in
your harness, trust the rope, and bounce down the rock with your feet.
We developed a strong respect for the rope; if we stepped
on it at any time, Benji said we had to kiss it to show
our appreciation for being our “lifeline.”
Throughout
the day, Benji stressed that “communication is the
most important thing,” especially between the climber
and belayer. We learned to check each other’s gear
before each climb, and ask, “Is my belay on?” “Belay’s
on.” “OK, I’m climbing.” “Climb on.” When
I traversed side to side and needed more rope, I would ask my belayer
for “slack,” or
if I needed the rope tighter, I would say “up rope.”
After
lunch, we all got a chance to try “chimney climbing” in
a large crack. It requires a different climbing technique called “stemming,” using
the heel of one foot and toe of the other, as well as your back and
shoulders, to wedge between the rocks, gradually pushing and pulling
yourself to the top. Chimneying was a challenge, but the technique
demonstrated to us that climbing involves many different skills and
that route options evolve from these varying skills.
California offers
a bounty of famous and lesser known areas to enjoy climbing. Benji
noted that the terrain and weather conditions of California can
spoil beginning climbers, with many nearby and varied locales
such as Castle Rock, Mt. Diablo, the Pinnacles near Hollister,
Indian Rock in Berkeley, Tahoe and Yosemite.
Benji, a self-taught
climber who began climbing at 16 in Minnesota, was a thorough
and knowledgeable guide who made our first experiences on
the rock relatively easy. We felt well-informed and very safe
with his instruction. Not to mention excited to come back for
another lesson.
KITESURFING: On
the Clock
By David Solomon
As I pulled into the east entrance of Crissy Field in San Francisco,
a rush of excitement came over me. Here I was, at the beach
where I had spent so many hours hypnotized watching an intriguing
new sport; a sport that I had almost subconsciously developed
a desire to learn. Waiting for my instructor, I daydreamed
of speeding through the bay as I jumped, spun and slashed on
the water.
Kitesurfing strikes me as the perfect synergy of water boardsports,
combining the mentality of surfing with the endurance of
wakeboarding and the freedom of windsurfing. Needless to
say, I was eager to start.
Cruising through the
parking lot, however, I began to get the creeping suspicion
that all was not right. Shaking off my reverie, it registered
that the beach and its waters were totally empty of kitesurfers
and windsurfers. I half expected tumbleweeds rolling along
the beach. It was a desolate scene and there was not enough
wind to even jostle a flag. Crissy Field was calmer than
I had ever seen it before and I quickly realized that conditions
were not ideal for my first kitesurfing experience.
Optimistic
nonetheless, I met my instructor Rebecca Geffert, who teaches
both wind and kitesurfing at Boardsport’s
school in Alameda. She immediately commented on the lack
of wind, but gave me hope, saying that it could still pick
up.
As we walked to
the launching area, Rebecca wasted no time in explaining
the requisite knowledge that any would-be kiter needs to
know. Patiently, she covered everything from jargon to theory.
I found it interesting, if not totally foreign. I had to
switch my thinking into the nautical mode where all directions
are dictated by the will of the wind. There was no backwards
or forwards, just upwind and downwind. There wasn’t
an up, down, left, or right; there was a 3 o’clock,
9 o’clock, and 12 o’clock. And there were
two clocks to consider: the vertical position of the
kite and the horizontal direction of the rider.
After
I had grasped the directional concepts and understood
the importance of relating everything to the wind direction,
Rebecca stepped it up a notch and started to explain
the mechanics of the kite to me. She made it clear that
kite control and safety are 80 percent of the sport,
while board riding is only about 20 percent. Soon, I
had a handle on where the kite’s “power
zone” was, how to steer it and how to determine
who has right of way. Just as it seemed we had reached
the limits of the oral lesson, the wind began to
pick up.
Rebecca sprang into
action. Quickly taking out the tiny trainer kite that all
novices begin on, she prepared it for flight as I stood by,
excited to make my first foray into the sport that I had
wanted to learn for so long. With a small toss,
the kite shot up into the air. Rebecca maneuvered it
in large swooping figure eights, while explaining
proper kite position and steering technique. I
was chomping at the bit to try it myself, and sensing
this Rebecca relinquished the miniature kite. Despite
my initial clumsiness, I found the kite somewhat forgiving
in its willingness to stay aloft and respond to my rookie
skills. But it turned out to be tougher than it looked,
and the little kite sustained several crushing nosedives.
I experienced some strong resistance when the wind got
cranking, or so I thought. Rebecca said the breeze was
too mild to really get a feel for the kite’s power.
With
wind and the lesson winding down, Rebecca explained that
at least six hours time on the training kite was prerequisite
to taking out a full size kite. After that, she said that
there was quite a bit of time spent on land mastering the
larger kite before one even ventured into the water, and
eventually began to be towed on a board. Undaunted by the
commitment, I promised Rebecca that when conditions permitted,
I would be back.
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