The last time we attempted a trip to George's Island, we would up just looping Long Island, so I was anxious to join this trip. Today I joined up with 6 other intrepid paddlers from the Boston AMC, several of whom I had paddled with in the past. We had a newly certified leader who was anxious to demonstrate his navigational skills, taking into consideration the tides, winds, and forecasts.
We put in at City Point in South Boston, and we got started early because the parking in the area fills up fast.
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First stop is Spectacle Island. A very long concrete dock reaches out into the harbor. |
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The view to downtown Boston here is great. It's about 4 miles to those tall buildings as the crow flies. |
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The visitor center is open and has restrooms. |
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Lunch stop on George's Island. It's only 11:00, but we're hungry because we've been working hard. We don jackets before snagging the plastic Adirondack chairs facing the harbor. |
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Ferry boats from Boston and Hull arrive and depart regularly. |
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I had to take a peek inside the fort before leaving. It's a nice place to visit any time of year. |
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We head back down to the water to get back in the water around noon. |
My phone ran out of power at the south end of Long Island, so I had to reconstruct the map for the last quarter of the trip. While on the water, we changed plans to go around the north end of the island, and instead traveled down the east side to come around the southern tip. The waves coming at us as we traveled southeast were 2-3" following waves that really pushed my boat around a bit. It was quite a workout.
From there we passed by the old Long Island Bridge abutments and headed toward the Dorchester Gas Tanks coming around the south end of Thompson Island. We had to pass through a standing wave that extends from the south tip of the Island down to Quincy. Then we turned north to head back to City Point, passing the JFK library. Ultimately, we paddled 13.04 miles. We were on the water by 8:35am and were back at our starting point around 2:25pm. With only an our for lunch and exploring the island, that means we were paddling for a long time. All things considered, one of our leaders said this was a solid Level 3 paddle adventure. I'll be due for a soak in the hot tub later.
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On the way back to City Point, we could see the Anthem of the Seas (RCCL) rising about the Black Falcon terminal. Boston is the first stop on an 11 night cruise out of Cape Liberty (Bayonne, NJ). |
Here's an additional comment from our leader Al ---
ReplyDeleteOne note to the trip: After lunch conditions were holding in ACA L 3 range. From Georges, we crossed in the lee of Gallops to Nubble Channel with the idea of going around the North end of Long Island, thence to north end of Spectacle Island, thence to City point. Plan changed in the actual conditions we faced. At Long Island side of Nubble Channel, we swung SW to play down wind (against ebb tide) and really surf our way to West Head on Long Is, thence past Moon Head to Squaw Rock, south end of Thompson. There we found a small standing wave over the gravel bed on the Ebb, 2 hours after high tide at Moon Head. We headed straight for City Point from there. Squaw Rock is reachable thru Squantum. A combo of routes 3, B and A plotted on the chart above. Winds: NNE @ 10-15, higher gusts, Seas: 2-3 ft at 6 sec, NE to SW direction, plus the inevitable, afternoon "Boston Harbor" chop. Lovely.
No pictures of kayaks. Tell the truth, you guys took the ferry. LOL. You've had some great journeys with this club. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteNot true. Look at the second last picture. Down on the beach. The white/read kayak with the red skirt drying on it is mine!
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