Left at daylight this morning on the first legitimate trip with the new pirogue. Put in on Grand Bayou, a bayou that runs through the town by the same name. I grew up in Grand Bayou but it is gone. A few years ago, a gas storage well leaked 300 million cubic feet of gas into an underground aquifer and it escaped into the small town. My mother and everyone else was evacuated from their homes for two months. To make a long story short, buyout offers were made and everyone ended up selling out and almost all the homes were moved. So the town I grew up in is no more.
Anyway, I paddled down the bayou and poked around in some smaller bayous and sloughs that I had not been in in 30 or35 years. Saw 20 or 30 wood ducks and heard that many more. Found a tiny logging canal and followed it back and found 7 wood duck nesting boxes. Poked around for another hour and pulled over to a spoil bank(levee) the highest ground I could find (18 INCHES above water level) and broke out the alcohol stove and made a pot of coffee. While I drank my coffee, I watched a squirrel feed 20 ft above my head.
Did some more investigating and then headed for home. Just to see what she would do, I paddled hard for a few hundred yards until I had water splashing on either side of the bow. No way to measure it , but I seemed to be going faster than a quick walking speed. I was satisfied with that.
I came back and plotted my course on Goggle Earth and it was about 6.5 miles. I was not tired at all and I figure on the slow moving streams we have here I could easily do 12 -15 miles a day. Looking forward to the cooler weather so I can plan an overnight trip.
Joey
Anyway, I paddled down the bayou and poked around in some smaller bayous and sloughs that I had not been in in 30 or35 years. Saw 20 or 30 wood ducks and heard that many more. Found a tiny logging canal and followed it back and found 7 wood duck nesting boxes. Poked around for another hour and pulled over to a spoil bank(levee) the highest ground I could find (18 INCHES above water level) and broke out the alcohol stove and made a pot of coffee. While I drank my coffee, I watched a squirrel feed 20 ft above my head.
Did some more investigating and then headed for home. Just to see what she would do, I paddled hard for a few hundred yards until I had water splashing on either side of the bow. No way to measure it , but I seemed to be going faster than a quick walking speed. I was satisfied with that.
I came back and plotted my course on Goggle Earth and it was about 6.5 miles. I was not tired at all and I figure on the slow moving streams we have here I could easily do 12 -15 miles a day. Looking forward to the cooler weather so I can plan an overnight trip.
Joey