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There is a place on the East Coast of Sweden, in the Baltic Sea, that I named “Magic Island”; I paddled to it on my recent Scandinavian sea kayak trip.
The seas were bumpy, created by the waves rebounding the rocky cliffs hitting the outer islands. I was paddling unprotected waters and the steady breeze from the preceding days was sending a decent swell in my direction. My paddling companion Petra was a little concerned as her paddling experience was mostly limited to very different waters of land locked Austrian lakes; the last time she paddled salt water was in Pacific Ocean, Australia.
Rounding the South-East point still presented non land-able locations for a camp. The map showed a little cove but I was having a bit of trouble finding it; after all with 30.000 islands in the Stockholm archipelago alone I was now having doubts that I was in the right place…
And suddenly there it was, as promised by my little map, a fantastic sheltered bay of polished granite.
The action of the glacier of the last Ice Age some 11.000 years ago managed to shape this very hard granite into smooth rocky waves. The location of this island away from the mainland prevented a lot of vegetation from taking hold and the winter storms have dwarfed and shaped the small trees. The presence of this windy place was palpable; I felt exposed and vulnerable here.
The skies turned to dark clouds and storms could be seen approaching.
I climbed up a small rocky outcrop and could see lighting in the distance. The storm would be upon us soon and I made sure I secured our tent with extra guidelines anchored to the cracks in the granite.
The wind came followed by a downpour and as we lay in the tent, I was glad that I was picky in selecting just the right tent site as small creeks ran down the smooth rocky slopes. We stayed dry and the tent proved to be solid.
But as most summer thunderstorms this one did not last and eventually it passed leaving only a few puffy clouds around.
The sun was getting lower and the magic hour was approaching (I borrow this term from my early inspirational photographer Galen Rowel. Galen describes the perfect time of the day to take photographs when the light is warm and the shadows long as magic hour).
The rock was still wet but we wanted to see the sunset on the other side of the island, facing West.
We took a walk.
In Sweden, at such high latitudes, the sun sets later in the evening and the twilight lasts so much longer than at home in Australia; I did not have to rush to see the landscape in its best light but I could take my time to wonder around and pose to take it all in.
Cold enough to wear a wind braking jacket I could feast with my eyes on the sensual soft shapes of granite waves sculpted by ice. A few birds were still trying to catch dinner before darkness fell and I kept on smiling, happy to be present in this magical place.
Video coming soon
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Very spartan but very appealing nonetheless. Thank you thermarest *lol*
ReplyDeletespeaking of Thermarest, I had a small leak one night that I made priority next morning to be repaired swiftly; a stream of small air bubbles when submerged in the Baltic sea was soon revealed. Lucky I had a repair patch with me or suddenly my Spartan islands would not look so no nice anymore :-)
DeleteReally nice!
ReplyDeleteHi
ReplyDeleteOnce again its wonderful to read your view of the swedish waters.
I would LOVE for you to point out on a map the places that youv paddled. For example this magic island. Im from the north of sweden and have no clue about the sweet spots of stockholms waters.
Looking forward to see you film.
I am not really sure which route I took since there are so many islands that at times confused me. "Magic Island" is North of Nynasham, it's a non sheltered outer island, away from the mainland.
DeleteGreat picture Gnarly...looking forward to see the movie:))
ReplyDeleteHave a great day:)
Hello!
ReplyDeleteWhat a surprise that you paddle in Swedish waters and Nynashamn! What parts of Sweden are you going to? If you are traveling again to Sweden, please contact me.
I fell in love with the Swedish coast and I am planning to return to paddle there again. Will contact you when something is finalized and maybe we can meet on the water
DeleteFantastic kayak trip!
ReplyDeleteWonderful photography as always. What type of tent did you use? IT looks interesting.
ReplyDeleteI purchased that tent for this trip and I wanted something light that wouldn't cost a bomb. I really lusted over a Hilleberg Nallo 3GT but found a similar much cheaper tent (3 hoop, tunned design) from North Face (Westwind 3, no longer available).
DeleteA freestanding tent would make pitching it easier but that would add a couple of pounds to the weight. Since there was no shortage of rocks for aiding anchoring, the tunnel tent worked really well. I will write a post about pitching non-freestanding tents on hard ground at a later date.