Sulfur Creek Campout - Friday to Sunday
This had to be one of, if not the best, campout weekends yet. Only had to rig two of my personal use sails the whole weekend 5.8 and 4.7.
Friday night, I arrived around 6:30pm. Andy Brandt (of ABK Boardsports) stopped by to say hi and give a quick demo of sorts. He gave a quick duck jibe and clew first sailing demo. Also helped Jerry rig his sailworks. Always nice to get expert advice. I hope that he helped someone out. Hopefully next year we can get him to stop for a day and give a half day clinic.
He happened to be driving from the left to right coast, so I was really glad he could stop by.
Saturday. I was on the water with my 5.8 and 100 liter JP for about 5 hours. Really great rides especially in the morning. In the afternoon it was more gusty.
Sunday. The morning session was pretty steady, I used my 5.8 again. Lots of 5.0's on the water at that time. By the afternoon the wind turned true South and really started going. After a few tail walking episodes I went in and rigged down to 4.7. The 4.7 worked well. Lots of screaming rides. I was pretty worked over from Saturday so Sunday didn't feel as productive of a sailing day, but I still had lots of fun.
And I can't leave out the Saturday night crawdad boil. Once again Rick H, put on an epic feast of Cajun crawdad boil. You had to be right next to the table when the contents (corn on the cob, potatoes, spicy sausages, carats, white baby onions, garlic, and of course sulfur creek monster sized crawdads) were poured out to get any. It looked like a bunch of refuges jumping onto a pile of food. Of course every batch turned out more and more spicy. Just over 15 gallons this year. No crawdads left over on the table thanks to Kobayashi and his apprentice.
Thanks to everyone for showing up. Thanks to all that put the weekend together. Thanks to Rick H for once again becoming a master Cajun chef. Thanks to all the kids who spent the day catching and re-catching hundreds of mud bugs.
Each year keeps getting better.
Friday night, I arrived around 6:30pm. Andy Brandt (of ABK Boardsports) stopped by to say hi and give a quick demo of sorts. He gave a quick duck jibe and clew first sailing demo. Also helped Jerry rig his sailworks. Always nice to get expert advice. I hope that he helped someone out. Hopefully next year we can get him to stop for a day and give a half day clinic.
He happened to be driving from the left to right coast, so I was really glad he could stop by.
Saturday. I was on the water with my 5.8 and 100 liter JP for about 5 hours. Really great rides especially in the morning. In the afternoon it was more gusty.
Sunday. The morning session was pretty steady, I used my 5.8 again. Lots of 5.0's on the water at that time. By the afternoon the wind turned true South and really started going. After a few tail walking episodes I went in and rigged down to 4.7. The 4.7 worked well. Lots of screaming rides. I was pretty worked over from Saturday so Sunday didn't feel as productive of a sailing day, but I still had lots of fun.
And I can't leave out the Saturday night crawdad boil. Once again Rick H, put on an epic feast of Cajun crawdad boil. You had to be right next to the table when the contents (corn on the cob, potatoes, spicy sausages, carats, white baby onions, garlic, and of course sulfur creek monster sized crawdads) were poured out to get any. It looked like a bunch of refuges jumping onto a pile of food. Of course every batch turned out more and more spicy. Just over 15 gallons this year. No crawdads left over on the table thanks to Kobayashi and his apprentice.
Thanks to everyone for showing up. Thanks to all that put the weekend together. Thanks to Rick H for once again becoming a master Cajun chef. Thanks to all the kids who spent the day catching and re-catching hundreds of mud bugs.
Each year keeps getting better.