Delmarva Retreat

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Kayaking During Harbor Seal Pupping Season

Every year from late April through June, New England beaches become a nursery to one of nature's most adorable animals - harbor seal pups. As a kayaker, you can help protect these cute animals by calling your local rescue agency and by acting as their eyes on the water.

And More!

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Coast Guard to Boating Public:
It is Best to Wear Your Vest

Spring brings the beginning of the boating season and a reminder from the Coast Guard that boaters are significantly safer in and around the water while wearing lifejackets.

And More!



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The World's Most Beautiful Kayak Festival
By David Bain

I have to admit, when I first read the self-proclaiming statement describing the Arctic Sea Kayaking Race (ASKR) as "one of the world's most beautiful and fun kayak festivals," we started thinking of all the other kayaking festivals around the globe that we had attended over the years. The most beautiful in the world?
That's a big claim.



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Farthest North:
The Sledge and Kayak Journey South
By Fridtjof Nansen.
Introductory notes by David Eden

One of the greatest dreams of European explorers over many centuries is to extend our knowledge of geography ever farther north. From the Greek explorer Pytheas of Massalia (modern Marseilles) through Christopher Columbus and into the 19th century C.E., intrepid sailors and adventurers have faced extreme cold, ice, and the unknown in their attempts to push the boundaries.

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Salt Ponds to Ocean Swells:
Paddling the Sakonnet River in Rhode Island
By Tamsin Venn

Rhode Island's 400 miles of coastline has a wide variety of paddling environments ranging from high sea cliffs and large swells to sheltered salt ponds, coves, and marshes to long miles of beautiful barrier beach. The state has particularly dramatic paddling at the south end of Narragansett Bay where the bay meets open ocean head on, and huge waves break against cliffs below Newport's mansions.



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Voices of Experience:
Kayaker Stuck in Queens Saved by Cops
By David Eden

The NYPD Special Operations division rescued a man stranded for 12 hours on remote Ruffle Bar Island in Jamaica Bay, N.Y.

36-year-old Mikhail Leybovich had paddled out to Ruffle Bar on the morning of Thursday, April 16. The island is two miles across the Bay from his launch point of Floyd Bennett Field. Leybovich had made the crossing at least four times and had paddled on the Bay more than 20 times.

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Maine Lobstermen Under Pressure
to Protect Right Whale
By Tamsin Venn

The North Atlantic right whales are now swimming north on their annual migration from calving grounds off Florida and Georgia to summer waters as far north as Newfoundland. The mothers and calves at times may stay in an area for seven hours or more to rest, nurse, and play. But otherwise, it's 1.3 km an hour average steady progress.



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Kayak Kookery:
A New Department

You've been paddling all day into a headwind with spitting rain. You pull into your destination, set up camp. and start the stove roaring. Soon the water boils, the cooking is done and you gratefully dip your spoon into a steaming hot mess of... over-salted, over-processed, freeze-dried glop.

Even though the quality of the available meals has improved greatly since I first wrote those words nine years ago, the results still rather disappoint. The freeze-drying of food certainly made a lot of options available to the camper. Packages of Sweet and Sour Pork, Beef Bourginon, and Chicken Marsala certainly sound tempting. But they just don't match fresh foods.

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Klassified ads for personally-owned gear are free to subscribers; $0.25 per word, per issue for all others. Photos are $5 each. We will run your ad for two issues. Deadline for ad submission is the first of the month before the issue of publication. NOTE: If seller is advertising more than one item, contact info is after the LAST item.

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Dusky dolphions (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) at play. Photo attributions, clockwise from top left:
Kaikoura Kayaks, N.Z.
AllenMcC. - Own work, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3952047
AllenMcC. - Own work, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3952055

The dusky dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) is a dolphin found in coastal waters in the Southern Hemisphere. Its specific epithet is Latin for "dark" or "dim". It is very closely genetically related to the Pacific white-sided dolphin, but current scientific consensus holds they are distinct species. The dolphin's range is patchy, with major populations around South America, southwestern Africa, New Zealand, and various oceanic islands, with some sightings around southern Australia and Tasmania. The dusky dolphin prefers cool currents and inshore waters, but can also be found offshore. It feeds on a variety of fish and squid species and has flexible hunting tactics. The dusky dolphin is known for its remarkable acrobatics, having a number of aerial behaviours.

The dolphins normally live in large groups that split into smaller subgroups. These subgroups are composed of mating adults (mating groups), mothers with calves (nursery groups) and nonbreeding adults. Dusky dolphins have a promiscuous mating system in which both males and females mate with multiple partners. Mating groups are generally made of around ten males and a single female.

In the mating groups, the males pursue a female in high-speed chases. Females seem to prefer males with great speed and agility rather than size, strength, or aggression. Females may extend the chase as long as possible so only the best male remains.

During copulation, females tend to be on the top. Dusky dolphins sometimes engage in sexual behaviour for reasons other than reproduction, perhaps for greeting, communication, or strengthening social bonds. Homosexual behaviour between males has been observed. Dolphins having sex for social reasons tend to be more relaxed.

Dusky dolphins perform a number of aerial displays, including leaps, backslaps, headslaps, tailslaps, spins, and noseouts. They also perform head-over-tail leaps which have been called the most "acrobatic" of the displays. A headfirst re-entry is performed when a dolphin leaps entirely out of the water and positions its back in a curve while it flips the tail to land back in the water head-first. "Humping" is similar, except the snout and tail remain in the water when the dolphin is the arch. Leaps, head-over-tail leaps, backslaps, headslaps, tailslaps, and spins are often done over and over again. Young dusky dolphins apparently are not born with the ability to perform the leaps and must learn to master each one. Calves appear to learn the leaps in this order: noisy leaps, head first re-entries, coordinated leaps, and acrobatic leaps. Adults may perform different leaps in different contexts, and calves may independently learn how to perform leaps, as well as learn when to perform these when interacting others.



Dusky dolphions (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) at play. Photo attributions, top to bottom:
Sami Keinänen - Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3507209
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=527383
Dr. Mridula Srinivasan, NOAA/NMFS/OST/AMD. - NOAA Photo Library: anim1772, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17985160