Planned Whitewater events



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Check general trip requirements and information at the bottom of this page

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Official Club Trips (off campus)

The club regularly organises trips to destinations off campus. These can be one day, weekend, or multi-day trips located in Queensland or interstate. Destinations are typically rivers, lakes, estuaries, islands, and bays around south-east Queensland. Sometimes they even include artificial beaches (aka South Bank) for competitions or exhibitions.

To find out about planned official club trips, please consult the trip/event calendars for each kayak area.

Private Unofficial Trips


There aren’t always enough places in official trips for all members to learn as much as they would like. Additional, unofficial trips are often organised amongst individual club members on a private basis, without the involvement of the club committee. Instead, enthusiastic members put together their own trip where they can spend more time learning from each other. Because private trips are among friends, they can more quickly respond and adapt to prevailing weather conditions and circumstances.

To find out about any private trips, come to the regular paddle sessions, meet people, network, and make friends with club members who have similar interests.

Please be aware that the club is not associated or involved in any trips organised by its members on a private basis. The club does not monitor, organise, or necessarily have particular knowledge of privately arranged excursions.

Organise your own Trips


If you are an experienced paddler, you might consider going on your own trip somewhere, preferably with other paddlers. Better still, you could organise an official club trip if you have sufficient competence (this requires committee approval). The club may also help subsidise any accredited training that you undertake which will help you to organise trips (prior approval of the committee is required for this too).

LM: Mar 06

Tides and trips planning aid Sem II 07

This page shows a list of weekend tide times and some potential trips that are favourable for the tides.

The list is a guide to aid club trip planning and scheduling and may include errors and misinformation. Not all trips have been attempted and information could be wrong or unfeasible. Conditions may also have changed since a trip was last attempted. Please check the official tide times, do your own additional research and scouting, and make your own trip plans carefully yourself.

Check tides are correct here

 

Brisbane bar tide times (daytime) for the weekends (Sat/Sun) of second semester 2007

Optimal dates (bold), acceptable dates (normal), poor dates (grey)

Day
Month
Tide

Potential trips

Notes
4
Aug
07:19 L
13:25 H
   
5
08:00 L
14:23 H
   
11
08:20 H
14:15 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
12
09:05 H
15:44 L
Breakfast creek hotel  
18
06:30 L
12:42 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
19
07:00 L
13:23 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
25
06:54 H
12:51 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
26
07:45 H
13:45 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel  
1
Sept
06:07 L
12:15 H
18:27 L
Dunwich island hop weekend (early starts)  
2
06:43 L
13:04 H
island hop weekend (early starts)  
8
07:21 H
13:15 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
9
08:07 H
14:05 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel  
15
05:17 L
11:31 H
17:09 L
Green island (late), Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
16
05:44 L
12:06 H
18:20 L
   
22
05:30 H
11:18 L
18:09 H
Night Paddle to Oxley Creek, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
23
06:31 H
12:24 L
19:00 H
Breakfast creek hotel  
29
04:57 L
11:09 H
17:32 L
Green island, Night Paddle to Oxley Creek big tide difference
0.11m-2.54m-0.33m
30
05:31 L
11:56 H
18:24 L
   
6
Oct
06:10 H
11:57 L
18:23 H
Night Paddle to Oxley Creek, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
7
07:00 H
12:56 L
19:12 H
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel  
13
04:12 L
10:31 H
16:52 L
Green island, St Helena (no tour)  
14
04:38 L
11:03 H
17:42 L
Green island  
20
09:18 L
16:14 H
Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
21
05:00 H
10:42 L
17:19 H
   
27
10:04 H
16:35 L
20:10 H
Green island / St Helena (no tour), Breakfast creek hotel  
28
04:24 L
10:51 H
17:29 L
Green island  
3
Nov
04:34 H
10:13 L
16:40 H
Night Paddle to Oxley Creek  
4
05:38 H
11:25 L
17:37 H
Breakfast creek hotel  
10
03:08 L
09:35 H
16:02 L
Green island, St Helena (no tour), Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
11
10:09 H
16:39 L
Green island, St Helena island (tour)  
17
07:33 L
14:21 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
18
03:04 H
08:46 L
15:24 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
24
09:00 H
15:35 L
21:03 H
Breakfast creek hotel  
25
09:49 H
16:31 L
Green island, St Helena (tour), Breakfast creek hotel  
1
Dec
08:15 L
14:46 H
Brunswick Hotel, Dunwich island hop weekend  
2
03:46 H
09:25 L
15:41 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
8
08:40 H
15:10 L
Breakfast creek hotel  
9
09:16 H
15:50 L
Breakfast creek hotel  
15
06:23 L
13:01 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
16
07:16 L
13:48 H
Dunwich island hop weekend  
22
07:56 H
14:34 L
Brunswick Hotel, Breakfast creek hotel (sat)  
23
08:49 H
15:34 L
Breakfast creek hotel  

To add your trip possibilities to this outline, contact the webadmin

LM: July 07

Training Subsidies

The club has secured a Queensland government grant to improve the level of sea kayak and whitewater skills within the club. The club is in a position to significantly subsidise members in the following certified courses –

  • First aid courses
  • Flatwater guide/ instructor courses
  • Level 2 sea leader courses
  • Swiftwater Rescue courses

The club expects to get something back from people whose courses it subsidises. Accordingly, these subsidies will be awarded according to a number of criteria. These will include things such as past participation and contribution to club activities, likelihood of future contribution and participation in club activities, and suitability of the course to the individual.

If you would like to do a course, please submit the course you would like to do, when you would like to do it (check Queensland canoeing’s calendar), and a short summary of why you think the club should subsidise your course.

Contact Dave ( club vice-president ) for details and course submissions.

Look for details from Qld Canoeing’s course calendar for the courses and times you are interested in

Skills Development

In addition to the regular Saturday social paddling and weekday paddling sessions, extra training sessions are sheduled periodically through the year – particularly around the beginning of semester when there is an influx of new members. These training sessions usually have an emphasis on a particular canoeing discipline, but don’t be put off. The skills covered in these sessions include many that are useful for ALL types of kayaking. Training with different types of boat is also desirable because it helps you to adapt your skills, practice, and gain more experience. Sometimes a skill is easier to learn in a particular type of kayak.

Skills sessions for any kayak discipline are open to all club members
Sessions cover many basic skills used with all kayaks

Training arrangements for the different disciplines are generally as follows.

  • Sea Kayaking skills – Periodic sea kayak assisted rescue and paddle stroke training on the UQ pool. Sessions typically cover basic and then advanced paddle strokes, manoeuvring, wet exits, recoveries, and rescues. Check the pool calendar for sessions (training takes place alongside canoe polo). Introductory sea kayaking sessions are generally held later as a separate trip.
     
  • Canoe polo skills (pool training) – a series of evening sessions in the university pool, using “polobats” and other smaller kayaks, or any kayak if desired. Sessions typically cover paddling techniques, manoeuvring, wet exits, recoveries, rolling, ball skills, etc. These sessions are a chance to practice your skills in fresh water.
     
  • Flatwater skills – sessions on the UQ pool that include beginner and advanced paddle stroke training, and occasionally assisted rescues specific to fragile flatwater boats (TKs and Ks). Check the pool calendar for sessions (training takes place alongside canoe polo). Other flatwater trips to local dams are periodically organised with the aim of helping members progress from basic kayaks to racing kayaks (TK1s and K1s).
     
  • Whitewater skills (intro day) – these training sessions are typically held only once per semester. They are day trips that take place below Wivenhoe dam using whitewater kayaks. It helps to have attended other skills sessions prior to this. Sessions typically cover paddling techniques, manoeuvring, wet exits, recoveries, rolling, moving water techniques (ferrying, eddy turns, peel-outs), with the option of negotiating a rapid. [Note these sessions no longer run after the 2011 floods destroyed the location]. Playing canoe polo is a useful way to develop necessary whitewater skills.
     
  • Internet Resources – a great deal of training information is available by searching the net. A great place to obtain information and demonstrations of basic paddle and rescue techniques is http://kayakpaddling.net.

New Members

New members with little paddling experience will find the most convenient and useful training sessions are the polo sessions in the pool, followed by the sea kayaking pool training and river paddle sessions. These will help you to get more out of the training trips in Moreton Bay and at the dams, although they are not a prerequisite.

Remember that if you are very new to paddling, and have little idea what to do, then you should come to the regular Saturday, or Tuesday/Thursday morning paddling sessions(at least until you are competent by yourself). On Saturday mornings there are other more experienced club members available to give you tips, help you choose the right boat, and to assist you should you get into difficulty.

LM: Oct 15

Planned Sea Kayak trips



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Please check the basic trip requirements and information at the bottom of this page

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LM: Feb 18

Sea Kayak Trips 2003


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Peel Island
Moreton Island
Sea Kayaking Trips for Andrew Kapa, John Pascua, and friends.

Peel Island

Mike Brown, Jonathon Peake, Ben Barry and Carolyn Proellochs kayaked to Peel Island from Victoria Point to spend a night on Peel Island and paddle back the following day. A lovely smooth paddle with sea turtles and wrecks to look at. The camp site in Halfmoon Bay is a nicely sheltered spot.

MORETON ISLAND

On a lengthier crossing Jonathon Peake, Mike Brown and Ben Barry, from the club, left from Manly and headed straight for the Moreton Island Little Sand Dunes after a brief stop on Green Island. Dugongs were about on the trip over, and the middle day of the trip provided a nice opportunity to paddle along Moreton’s bay side shores with a dolphin. The trip back was via St Helena Island swinging close to Mud Island.

Sea Kayaking Trips for Andrew Kapa, John Pascua, and friends.

During the year Andrew and I participated in a sea kayaking proficiency course at Mooloolaba under the instruction of Gayle Mays. Since then, we have undertaken several sea kayaking trips.

Two separate trips were conducted over 2 and 3 days through Moreton Bay. The first I did with friends, going from Victoria Point through Karragarra Island and Maclay Islands to Blakeley’s Anchorage at Straddy and then to Peel Island where we camped over night. It was a big paddle the next day, as we made it to St Helena Island. We were lucky to have a SE wind behind us as we continued through to Nudgee Beach. My colleagues made use of this wind and used their sails. I had a hard time keeping up so I ended up scoring a tow – I know, I’m a cheat! But I wasn’t going to get left behind.
The next trip through Moreton Bay, Andrew and myself went with two other friends. Leaving from Cabbage tree point we paddled North and then through the passage between Karragarra Island and Russell Island (where we stopped for brunch) and then over to Blakeley’s Anchorage where we set up camp. It was a great paddle – very calm and reasonably warm. We were even fortunate enough to see dolphins, turtle’s, and a dugong.

The next day we paddle to Peel Island where we had lunch on the North side in the Mangroves. We then paddled over to Green Island to camp. On the way we privileged to see a humpback whale and it’s calf only 20 metres off our bow. It was awesome! When we got to Green Island we copped a low tide and we had to negotiate an oyster reef. I’m bringing my oyster knife next time.

The third day saw us paddle over to Whyte’s passage and up the Brisbane river to New Farm – stopping at Colmslie Beach for lunch. We paused at Whyte’s Island for half and hour to watch a pod of dolphins play and I guess ambush fish. They came right up to the kayaks though – a fantastic experience.

Andrew and I then tackled the Pumicestone Passage. We had no idea what it was going to be like so we put in at Coochin Creek and paddled through to Caloundra. It ended up being too short. We were finished in a couple of hours. We did get an idea of how strong the currents were in the passage though. Tides should be taken into account.

So our most recent trip ended up being the whole passage – from South Bribie Island to Caloundra. We timed it with the tides and camped over night at Mission Point (across from Donnybrook). You can’t miss Mission Point, it’s well signed and very obvious on the Bribie Island side. If you ever camp there, take heaps of mozzie repellent though. They were really bad. We nicknamed it Ningi Point (“Ningi” is aboriginal for “mozzie”).

I took my fishing rod and yabby pump on the trip. There were heaps of yabbies on the bar in front of the point but fishing in front of the campsite was full of snags. I have found a good nearby fishing spot since but you’ll have to come out paddling with me to find out where. The tides, by the way, were extremely helpful in making it a pleasant trip.

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