Friday, April 29th, 2005. Going native.
Tomorrow at dawn, I shall drive 140 miles to attend a weekend long rolling retreat in the outskirts of Barcelona. I have booked a room in a shoreline hotel in nearby Vilanova. The clinique will be hold in the pool of a private French School. Four to six people are expected to have registered. I expect Martin, an Argentinian kayaker, to be coaching us in my first approach -let’s keep it down- to Eskimo rolling.
I have deliberately avoided my rolling books and dvds, relying instead in a sudden intuitive leap of understanding while upside down in the water. Then, some striking occurrence should enable me to perform.
Martin Grondona is an Argentinian coach who in 1999 traversed the Horn Cape and in 2001 paddled into the South Atlantic from the southernmost accessible point in continental Argentina until reaching the Islas de los Estados (States Island), circumnavigating it anticlokwise. Isla de los Estados is a 75 km long adn 10 km wide uninhabited island located 18 km into the Le Mair Strait, East of Tierra del Fuego.
Not a long expedition, Martin and its team took 27 days in its completion. Tierra del Fuego is surrounded on three sides by two oceans. The winds blow one way from the Pacific, and the other way from the Atlantic, constantly bringing clouds and roaring rain storms. The area has a reputation for a perfectly miserable weather. The island’s lighthouse is known as the southernmost in the world and was the inspiration for Jules Verne’s “The Lighthouse at the end of the World”.
This should do it.













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(and Derrick's right!)