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River
of the Month... By Mike Buckley (sorry no piccys, email 'em in if
you have any)
It's
November, and here's the Leny
"Too much time spent sea-paddling" I told myself as I leant the
wrong way and the first (grade 1 ish!) wave reached a watery hand
from the depths and tried to entice me into an intimate study of
the sub-hydrographic environment otherwise known as the river-bed
of the Leny, near Callender in Stirlingshire.
Natural
skill, superb balance and a well-executed brace avoided the embarrassment
of a swim at the start (ok - I punted off the bottom) and we carried
on playing for a little bit on the wave below the misty slopes of
Ben Ledi on an autumn morning.
We'd
met at the take out at Kilmahog, a couple of miles up from Callender.
Handy having a hotel there - the Lade Inn - as it's just down from
the SCA egress point at the car-park by the bridge over the Leny.
Ran the shuttle to launch at the end of Loch Lubnaig and enjoyed
the scenery as we paddled down past a few friendly fishermen to
the first wave at the bridge at the Ben Ledi car-park (also a good
get on point).
The
river was at a nice level - if it's low it's a bit bony, but gentler.
High, and it can be a deeply spiritual place to be!! It's low if
there isn't anything at the Ben Ledi car-park bridge rapid, and
it's high if all you have there is a mass of water.
On
we went, a few good breakouts and a bit of playing until the river
starts to drop a bit and the pace speeds up with a couple of nice
little drops, a few big waves and lots of nice holes - I'm happily
bouncing down river-right as Tom is checking the river bottom in
a hole in the middle - he rolls superbly and grins with the sort
of happy grin which equals "fun".
Tom
used to live in South Africa and apparantly the Zambezi was a regular
little outing so I'm a bit outclassed! I'm glad he's still in the
boat as the Falls of Leny are rapidly (sorry) approaching and the
second of the ruined railway bridges appears through the hazy mist
that my steamed up glasses provide. We break out river right as
it seems the better option than running the grade 5 Falls!
If
you want to inspect the Falls, break out left and have a look. They
need to be high to be good - be wary of running the right hand side
as the stopper can be closed and not a nice place. We portage through
the trees keeping the Falls on our left and having a good look as
we walk past and put on in the pool at the bottom where the tourists
wave and we bask in their admiration (is it admiration - or are
they wondering what manner of fool dresses up in black rubber and
bounces down a river in a plastic cigar tube?)
As
the river speeds up again we bounce along an increasingly to the
point where I need a rest and make the excuse of wanting to check
the line through a nice grade 2, then a 3 and then a lovely, seething
cauldron of a 4 with a big rock to splat off if you're good enough
or crash into like I usually do! Tom seal-launches with a certain
controlled grace and lurks in a micro eddy as I flop unceremoniously
into the water with little or no control, a paddle barely held in
one hand and about as much balance as an inebriated penguin checking
overflying aircraft.
As
I'm meant to be leading this little outing, I bounce off into the
maelstrom (remember, it's about 2 years since I've paddled rivers)
and the boat drops into the hole, sinks and rockets out as I brace
right before slipping elegantly into the eddy on the right to watch
Tom follow with another of the those Big Grins! I'm feeling more
confident now so another couple of strokes sees me back in the breech
and over the grade 3, change line and roar down the 4 with it's
drop, hard right and hard left to avoid the boulder with it's water
pillow and lots of white, seething, bubbly stuff. Tom follows and
the GRIN is even bigger and we're both "whooping" and "ye-haaing"
it up in the sort of style you tell people not to do, but it's FUN.
On
again to the point where the river divides in two round an island
and we take the right channel as it seems free of stuck trees and
at the bottom the flow from the left creates a nice bouncy bit to
give a great end to a super little trip! A few hundred meters finds
the bridge by the Lade Inn and the egress just below it!
Thanks
to Tom, who was the only person able to take up the invite at short
notice, or (more likely) the person who didn't know me well enough
to think twice about sharing a day on the water with me. Time was
about 1.5 hours although you can make it as long as you like if
you play all the play spots. I've also done it in 20 mins! When
it's low, it's still good fun and everything drops a grade or so.
Nice intro to good water at that level. Callender is only about
2 hours from Dumfries.
River
of the month October - The North Esk
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