Technique—October
2006
by Craig Jungers
Illustration by Christopher Hoyt |
| Whether you paddle at night
by choice or by necessity, the right gear and a little practice is
all it takes to keep from being in the dark after the sun goes down. |
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Many paddlers—perhaps
most—are reluctant to venture out at night. This is not unreasonable.
After all, at night it’s harder to see almost everything that’s
not lit up. In fact, it’s often difficult even to see the people
we’re paddling with since few of us have running lights on
our kayaks. Still, mariners have been making night passages and landings
for thousands of years and, for most of that time, doing it without
electronics or navigational aids.
Some passages might even be safer if you make them at night. Generally,
the winds—even steady trade winds—tend to blow less at
night than during the day. And when the wind dies down, so do the
waves. A boisterous trip with a tough surf landing during the day
can be a gentle paddle after dark.
Night paddling will also get you away from the madding crowd. A night
paddle can transform a busy tourist spot into your personal paddling
paradise.
Sometimes you have little choice but to make a night entry into a
bay or onto a beach you have never visited before. Mind you, no one
(or almost no one) really wants to approach an unfamiliar shore in
the dark. But there are circumstances that can force you into choosing
between staying offshore all night (no fun in a kayak) and making
a night landing. And if you paddle enough, you may find yourself
in this sort of predicament, so it’s a good idea to at least
learn the basics of night navigation when you can control the conditions.
Navigating in the dark is a skill that can be acquired with practice
and some forethought.
Every ocean paddler should be able to read a marine chart, use a
compass and plot a course. The ability to use a GPS is an advantage
but should not be used as a substitute for more traditional skills.
You should also be able to brace and to perform various forms of
self-rescue. If you are prone to motion sickness during day trips,
then it’s possible that you’ll be affected even more
by motion during night paddles.
Night paddling is an art and depends on many factors. Your skills
with a kayak will help determine where it is safe for you to paddle
in the dark. Around your local lake is one thing; around an offshore
island is another thing entirely. If you aren’t safe on an
exposed coast in the daylight, you are likely to be much less safe
at night.
You can practice some night-paddling skills during the day. You can
recognize sea state and wave direction by paying attention to the
way your hips move in a seaway. Waves hitting you from one direction
will feel different from waves that come from another direction.
At night, you may not be able to get all this information from visual
cues, but you can still sense the patterns of the waves and your
orientation in them. Maintaining your balance in waves relies in
part on having a visual horizon. Getting more attuned to the rhythm
of the waves can help you anticipate the motion of your kayak and
compensate accordingly to keep upright.
It’s vitally important to learn how to see the world at night.
We’re accustomed to dealing with the lighted world; if it’s
dark we light it up. Just 200 years ago, it was not practical to
illuminate streets or outdoor spaces or even brighten up the indoors,
so most people went to bed when it got dark. Not anymore. We don’t
have to deal with the dark unless we want to go for a romantic stroll
in the moonlight down a deserted beach. It’s deserted because
it’s dark. Everyone else is inside watching TV.
Using a flashlight or headlamp when walking along a path at night
makes good sense, but using one to light your way while you’re
paddling is not a very good idea. For one thing, it destroys your
night vision (and the night vision of everyone the light shines on),
but more importantly, it doesn’t show you much and what it
does show you is usually not that important. After all, if you’re
not heading in for a landing, right in front of your kayak is almost
always water and waves, and they generally don’t tell much
more than you already know.
There is no white centerline to follow, so most of the time, it’s
better to keep all lights off and keep your night vision intact.
Ship captains don’t navigate with headlights on for a very
good reason: They need to see what’s in the distance. Use a
flashlight when you must—when closing in on shore—but
otherwise let your eyes adjust to the available light.
Except on the darkest of nights, it’s surprising how well you
can see shapes and landmasses in the dark once your eyes become accustomed
to the low light of stars and the moon. In the daytime, landmasses
are seen in detail and depth, but at night they’re often just
a dark smudge or silhouette. Practicing at night when the location
and the weather are safe and you already know where you are is a
way to become accustomed to using those shapes to help you navigate.
So the first step in learning to paddle in the dark is to go out
and give it a try.
It’s important to prepare your boat and gear for night paddling.
If things go missing in the dark, you’ll want them to show
up clearly when you scan the area with a flashlight. Retroreflective
material, available in adhesive tape and fabric ribbon, is embedded
with glass beads that reflect light directly back at any light shining
on it, creating a bright reflection. Without retroreflective patches,
anything that gets washed off your deck will be virtually impossible
to spot even with a flashlight.
I also put retroreflective tape in long horizontal strips along the
aft gunwales of my kayak and a couple of vertical strips along each
side of the bow. The different orientation of the tape on bow and
stern will let others see immediately which way I’m headed
if they flash a light at me. For safety’s sake, I put several
strips on the hull of my boat so it can be seen if a searchlight
hits it when capsized. I place these where they won’t get worn
off by beach landings and launchings.
I recommend putting adhesive retroreflective strips vertically on
the upper arms of your dry suit or paddling jacket and horizontal
strips front and rear on your PFD. Most PFDs will not raise you out
of the water very high, so strips on the PFD’s shoulder straps
may be the only part of the PFD visible above water if you wind up
out of your kayak and in the water. A few retroreflective dots on
your paddle and your helmet or hat wouldn’t hurt and would
make it easier to find these things if they get loose. |
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