|
We decide
to continue south around the point for the next few miles, and
then head east to get protection from the swell. We will be forced
to rely on a compass to guide us. Kris takes a look at the chart
and pulls out her compass. I hesitate to paddle too forcefully,
not wanting to move too quickly into the fog. At the same time,
I want to reach the reassurance that being on solid ground gives
me. After what seems like hours, treetops begin to emerge from
the white as we make our way to a pull-out on the south side of
the point. Dealing with a day like today would have seemed impossible
a month or two ago, but today it feels only slightly more difficult
than any other day out on the water.
|
|
Throughout
the last month, we paddle in sunshine, each day bringing us closer
to Vancouver. On August 19, I watch the sun sink straight into
the water for the last time, before we head into the shelter of
the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Washington’s Cape Flattery mellows
the swell. We watch the waxing moon in the sky.
Two weeks
later, under a full moon, we sit on Bowen Island staring at the
city lights just nine miles away.
The next morning,
on September 5, we approach Vancouver’s Ambleside Beach. We paddle
close beside one another. By now, our kayaking and navigational
skills have merged. It no longer feels like we are just five separate
individuals. It is almost as though our minds have melded and
we have become extensions of a single entity. In the 119 days
and 1,140 miles we have been traveling, there have been many moments
when we were challenged and came through for each other—as sisters
do. Our family and friends stand waiting for us on the beach,
calling out to us as we take our last strokes—together.
Alice
Weber is a skier and a student of biology and creative
writing in Nelson, BC. She spends her summers as a kayaking guide
on northern Vancouver Island.
|