Sunday August 4th Walton Backwaters 10.9 miles
This paddle was organised and led by Adrian. It was an early one, the plan was to leave the club by 8am. The participants were Adrian, Mark, Jerry, John, Lorraine and Clare, in four single kayaks and a double. We left the club at the allotted time in three cars and the drive to Dovercourt went smoothly with us arriving in a convoy at Dovercourt. As Adrian had predicted parking at this location is tight but we all managed to fit in for an easy beach launch. The weather was perfect with very little wind and no waves however there was a swell which was different to paddling on the crouch.
Adrian remembered from the last time he had paddled, some twenty years previously, there was a small creek before the main channels that would enable us to cut into the Walton Backwaters without paddling all the way down the coast. We thought we had found this entrance shortly after leaving the beach. It looked promising but just got narrower and narrower. After a while we were paddling with paddles on the shore either side and the hulls scraping along the mud. We had to reverse a little way before we could turn the kayaks.
Having back tracked we continued down the coast before attempting to enter again. The inlets into the marsh make quite a maze and it is very easy to become disoriented when you are viewing everything from a couple of feet above the water line. The second attempt eventually worked with the map on my watch suggesting a route through and we arrived at the seal spotting location. There were plenty of reddy brown seals on the bank and also in the water. Heads kept popping up quite close to the kayaks and it was hard to know who was watching who.
We crossed Hamford Water and landed on a beach behind the sunken barges for lunch. The wind was now picking up and was certainly more than had been forecast. After lunch, with the tide now dropping, we paddled straight back to our starting point. It was certainly a more challenging sea state than when we left.
Thank you Adrian, a very successful day in a location I have previously only ever explored by boat.
John







