By Geoff Jennings

It's 4:15 in the morning. Monday.
It's been a long weekend, and now it's my day off.
I should be sleeping in but I peel myself out of
bed, stumble to the car. I stop for gas, and head
to the shop. Damian is waiting, so we load a couple
of sea kayaks onto my truck. Toss the gear in. 5:30
am. Most of the world is still asleep, and we roll
out of town. Huh? Traffic? There's a wreck on the
interstate, and we sit. With traffic and such, it's
a long drive to Oxnard and it's nearly nine in the
morning before we launch.
Our goal, Anacapa Island, about 12 miles off the
coast. I've never done an open ocean crossing,
neither has Damian, and I'm facing the trip with
excitement, anticipation, and a dose of trepidation.
A heavy fog is present, which means we'll be doing
the crossing with nothing more than an inexpensive
compass and a photocopied chart to guide our way.
My concerns include weather, crossing a heavily
used shipping channel, and finding the island in
the dense fog. I can't help doing the trigonometry,
and calculating that being off by only a few degrees,
we could paddle right past the island and never
see it. Damian is trusting me to find the island
and I feel some pressure.
We head out into the fog. Within minutes, the
shore disappears behind us. The ocean and sky bend
together in a lifeless grey color. Sounds are muted.
Colors are muted. We paddle through the fog. I
keep a close eye on the compass. Listening through
the fog for ships, we proceed. A sea lion approaches
and plays in our wake. I start to relax, settling
into the rhythm of paddling, trusting my compass.
Nothing quite makes you feel as small as being
in a kayak in the middle of the ocean, not being
able to see anything in any direction.
A grey form starts to take shape through the fog.
At first I think it's just a shadow, but the hard
angles prove otherwise, and it's an oil derrick,
which will be our only navigational way point.
We continue into the fog, and the derrick melts
away.
Hours start to pass. There's a fair swell on the
ocean. Paddling, paddling. Sea lions and dolphins
play in the water. I was expecting the crossing
to take 4 hours or so, but as the time stretches
on, I begin to worry. I try and keep my mind free,
but I secretly yearn for a glimpse of the island.
I need to see it to reassure me that we haven't
paddled past it in the fog. Grey forms appear in
the fog, and I think I can make out the shapes
of the island. But I wonder if it's just my imagination.
Yup. It's an island, and the arch off the end tells
me that it's Anacapa. Whew. I'm relieved. Damian
give's me the thumbs up, and I relax much more.
We paddle towards the west end of
Anacapa, aiming for Frenchys Cove. Wind and an evil
current make this stretch feel like paddling on a
treadmill, and it seems to take an eternity. Paddling
hard, and the island doesn't seem to get closer fast
enough. We've now been in the boats for close to
6 hours, and we're ready to get there. Time stretches
on. Eventually I land on the small rocky beach (picture
with two kayaks on rocks). Damian is soon to follow.
We stretch our legs and eat some food. Happy to be
here.
After
a break, we start paddling down the coast of the
island. Amazing to watch huge groups of sea lions
hunting schools of fish. It's a gorgeous area,
and a sea kayak is definitely the way to see it.
Playing in the water, I nose into a few sea caves,
and play in one little rock garden, but the swells
are big enough that I mostly just enjoy the scenery.
We paddle past middle Anacapa, then on to East
Anacapa. We round a corner into a cove, where we
are greeted by Holly, a NP Ranger. After helping
us get our kayaks on the pier, she gives a brief
outline of where things are at on the island. We
ferry some gear, set up camp, and I cook some burritos.
Wander around the island a bit, and soon, I'm feeling
sleepy.
Anacapa
is a working lighthouse, and there a few buildings
for the National Park Personnel, but other than
that it's basically a big, pretty, rocky, birdsnest.
Gulls nest everywhere. I mean, everywhere. The
cacophony is amazing. the smell is amazing. Gulls
EVERYWHERE.
We wake to more fog, and as I eat
breakfast, I flip on the weather radio that Doug
(my boss at Southwind) loaned us. It cackles "Small
Craft advisory- wind 15 -17 knots, rising in the
afternoon" Damian throws a worried glance, and I
look back at him. "Think kayaks are considered small
craft? " " well, it's on the big side for a kayak..." We
decide to err on the side of caution, and head back
as soon as possible. Pack up camp, an head down to
the water. Load the kayaks, and launch.
The paddle back was less worrisome.
We had much

more
visibility, and enjoyed several pods, totalling hundreds,
of dolphins, passing us, some swimming within sight
under our boats, and leaping from the water just
feet away. More faith in my navigation allowed me
to relax a bit more, and I really enjoyed the paddle
back. BIG ocean swells swept beneath us, and a few
times we'd get a bit of a breeze, but mostly the
weather seemed to be pushing us along, and the severe
stuff we feared never surfaced. Even with a few long
breaks, we made it back in a little over 4 hours.
Overall, a great trip, it was fun.
the wildlife was amazing. I think when I do the trip
again, I'll plan three days, to allow a day to explore
the island more, but it was a blast, and I look forward
to doing ti again. Unfortunately, the wonder of being
out at sea, with dolphins passing all around you,
is something hard to put into words, as is the amazing
emptiness of a foggy open ocean, and I don't feel
like I've well described the experiences. It's awesome,
in the truest, original sense of the word.