5 of us decided to explore the Essex River Basin in Essex, Mass one chilly March afternoon this past weekend.
The Essex Basin is a gorgeous shallow sandy semi- protected estuarine bay bounded by large sandy necks to the northeast and southwest and is the drainage for the Essex River.The Essex basin is famous for tasty clams, warm water and lots of marine and avian wildlife. It is also famous for a notoriously cranky and mobile river entrance with strong current, wandering sandbars and shallow spots. Makes for great surfing and nerve wracking powerboating! Rumor was that the river mouth had changed dramatically in the winter storms, and so we were tasked by the USCG Auxiliary to investigate.
We set off from Conomo Point, our launch and landing site into the ebb current and run with it down the main channel. Almost immediately we find misbehaving sandbars squatting in the channel and we get pin balled back and forth as the current bounces around. Great fun; the wind is at our backs and we are flying out towards the mouth. We are joined by a lone harbor seal and black guillemots hunching in groups to avoid the cold wind.
As we approach the mouth, the current speeds up a bit and we begin our slog crossing to avoid the worst of the current. This is sometimes hard as the basin is so shallow; 12″ of water seems luxurious. We slowly make way across to what appears to be the far northeastern edge of the basin; a sandy neck called Crane’s Beach. Well, it may well be part of Crane’s Beach, but it is now in the middle of the river mouth. Now there are 2 fairly narrow channels with fast moving current bisected by a great big sand flat.
The Essex River mouth will now be even more challenging for powerboaters and probably better surfing for paddlers. Yeehah!
We land to take a break and a look around. I take some pictures and Rick checks out his GPS track which he will present to the USCG Auxiliary.
The current we got a free ride out on has now begun to ease, and we start heading back westward to the landing site. The sun is lowering, and as we land, the melon and pink backdrop of clouds provides a gorgeous closure to a fun March afternnon exploration.
Category: Trip Reports Page 75 of 78
Sea Kayak River Clinic
This funny clip above is from our monthly “Sea Kayak Intro River Clinics”. Instead of driving three hours to teach new paddlers how to paddle in rip tides & tidal flows, we take them to the river and do a “simulated” intro tidal flow clinic. It works real good and develops great confidence before they perform their first ferry in the ocean.
Enjoy nerds in action!
Captain Penguin
Shetland is a cluster of inhabited islands located to the North of Scotland and without out doubt offers some of the most spectacular paddling in the World
One of the attractions of kayaking is that it is a low-impact way of exploring the wilderness. And that’s true…to an extent. Once we’re in the water, we’re totally zero emissions. But what about getting there?
What a wonderful weekend of paddling. Each month the Penguin Paddlers Kayak Club travel somewhere for a three day road trip.
I live in Madison, Wisconsin where we have water to paddle eight months of the year, but no real sea kayaking conditions. If I jump in my car for a quick weekend trip it’s usually to head for Door County…
The spring in Scotland is just round the corner and it is time to start daydreaming about classic paddles like Barra Head in the Hebrides which may be on the agenda for this season
Brrrr — We had a great couple of days at the Canoe Sport Expo. Whilst it was cold –1 degree F while we were there — it snowed big after the event.
The numbers of people grew as seen here during a dry rolling session

All of thepret off well and the folks in Iowa have a great paddle season to look forward to.
Jeff and Casey thats for a great event and I hope that you and your customers found it very worth while.
Thanks for a great event.



