Saturday, May 30, 2009

Kayaking on the lake

We felt it was a waste to have the Ob sea next to our place, and not being able to use it for navigation. So Christian and I decided to buy kayaks... You'd think with such a beautiful sea and people being so close to nature, the place would be swarming with kayaks, right? Well, no. People don't have kayaks here. We had to get the kayaks sent from Moscow by the Transsiberian on its way to Ulan Bator. The train arrived on Thursday, and we were very excited and went to the train station ahead of time to make sure we'd get them. A good way for us to learn that all train schedules in Russia are in Moscow time, and also to remind us that there is a 3-hour time difference between Moscow and Novosibirsk. But we got our boats in the end...


You should know that as of today, the pristine water of the Ob has been kayaked by 2 people only: Christian and me. We could have made it 3 if we had let the drunk guy swimming toward us use our boat for 5 minutes as he asked us, but we're jerks and we don't want to jump in the cold water for 5 minutes while the guy figures out how to use the paddles. But let's not get this little story ruin our beautiful day.

So today was the big day: we met at the beach behind the Lada dealership, a primary spot for getting our boats wet. And off we went...



Boy, if the locals only knew what they were missing! If you think there is only dull coast and flat water to explore... there is so much more to see here. A kayak tour on the lake is the opportunity to discover magnificent reefs and architectural gems left by previous generations. No further than 20 minutes after our start, we discovered beautiful cement blocks. How were they brought there and why? Mistery... woooohh... So many questions left unanswered.

Anyway, why travel half way across the Earth to go to places like Tulum or Macchu Picchu, when here you have more recent constructions, in a more advanced state of degradation?

And what a blast to glide between those cement and steel structures! See how Christian just found the perfect spot, protected by blocks of cement and steel, to practice his flipping technique...


And here, a buswreck, probably left there intentionally as a breeding ground for fish...


There are even dark caves to explore, where the fauna includes moth and mosquitoes of the size of actual butterflies. Also, it's amazing how the steel is reminiscent of real stalactites...


Well, that was it for the first day. We got our load of fresh air and nature, and made it back after 5 hours of paddling. Next time, we should try to go paddle in an actual industrial zone to gauge the difference.

4 comments:

Ian said...

Wow. It's like Stonehenge, but in the water. Amazing. I think you need a name for your kayak.

Anonymous said...

I suggest you keep your kayak at work and use it to access the basement

Bruce Lenorf said...

Yeah, a chilling preview of what Stonehenge will look like after global warming has melted all the icecap...

Unknown said...

Hey! Mais t'es fou! Mais c'est pas fait pour les lacs avec résidus de centrales nucléaires inondées! L'autocollant devant tes pieds fluorescents stipule bien "Coral sea kayak"!