Paddling Long Island and New York City. Kevin Stiegelmaier

Paddling Long Island and New York City - Kevin Stiegelmaier


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on both the North and South forks. While both kinds of ticks are a nuisance, the tiny deer tick is the one to be most wary of, as it has been found to carry and transmit Lyme disease. In general, deer ticks are much smaller than wood ticks—about the size of a freckle—and are uniformly dark in color, whereas wood ticks usually have white spots.

      Though ticks pose little threat to paddlers on the water, they can easily catch a ride on your clothing or gear while you’re walking from your car to the shore, or while you portage or camp. The best way to prevent picking up these unwanted tagalongs is to wear long pants and long-sleeved shirts in light colors, so the pests are easy to spot and remove. Bug repellent also keeps them away. Once off the water, thoroughly check your arms, legs, hair, and the rest of your body for any attached ticks. For ticks that are already embedded, removal with sharp tweezers is best: place them as close to skin as possible and gently rotate out, taking care not to squeeze the tick. Use disinfectant solution on the wound.

      Although it takes a few hours for a tick to transmit a disease to a person it’s bitten, the site should be watched carefully for the next few days for any changes. Lyme disease often shows itself as a red, circular, bull’s-eye-shaped rash, but it may not produce any outward symptoms at all. When in doubt, see your doctor.

      images JELLYFISH

      Long Island’s waters are home to two species of jellyfish: the moon jelly and the lion’s mane (red jelly). While the disk-shaped moon jelly is harmless, the orange lion’s mane can produce an itching, burning rash when it stings bare skin. A lion’s-mane sting can be serious for a person who is allergic to the venom; otherwise it causes only temporary discomfort. Pouring vinegar on the sting site can alleviate the burning and itching.

      images REPTILES

      The only reptile that may be of concern to Long Island paddlers is the snapping turtle. This fairly large turtle can be found across Long Island in both fresh and salt water. While it usually steers clear of humans, it will bite if disturbed. And with its sharp, hard, beaklike mouth, the snapping turtle can do a lot of damage. Give it a wide berth and it should leave you alone.

      CAMPING

      Many paddlers often find camping an enjoyable, less expensive, and more convenient alternative to staying in a hotel or inn. Luckily for them, Long Island has some excellent spots where paddlers can pitch their tents and throw down their sleeping bags.

      Two private campgrounds sit on Long Island’s North Fork, and a few more lie just beyond the New York City area. These facilities, and more, are listed at nycampgrounds.com. Three state parks on the island—Heckscher, Hither Hills, and Wildwood—also allow camping. Their specific information and reservation details can be found at nysparks.com/parks. Finally, both Nassau and Suffolk counties maintain 13 campgrounds in all, widely scattered across the island. The respective counties’ websites (1.usa.gov/ wQpzKl and https://parks.suffolkcountyny.gov/suffolkcamperweb) list these sites and provide all the information you might need in planning a stay.

      Unfortunately, camping on Long Island is limited to the aforementioned facilities. There are no backcountry areas as in other regions like the Adirondacks or Catskills, where people can set up a tent at no cost. Instead, campers must pay a small fee and stay within a designated space. Nevertheless, camping is a great way to spend time outdoors and lets you experience a side of Long Island that few others have the pleasure of seeing for themselves.

      More information about camping in the Empire State can be found in The Best in Tent Camping: New York State (Menasha Ridge Press).

      NAVIGATIONAL RULES OF THE ROAD

      With highly maneuverable boats that are capable of floating on only a few inches of water, we kayakers have the luxury of being able to go almost anywhere. This freedom is likely one of the main reasons people start kayaking in the first place. But because we share the water with other boaters and their wide variety of vessels, it is important to have a working knowledge of the navigational rules and regulations designated by the U.S. Coast Guard. Doing so not only increases your enjoyment of the sport, it helps ensure your safety as well.

      As small, human-powered vessels, kayaks have the right of way over larger power and even sail vessels. The latter must yield to paddlers and make sure to not impede their progress. This rule only makes sense when in open water, though, where such vessels can easily change course and speed. Most encounters between kayaks and other boats happen in shallow water, near shore, or perhaps in narrow creeks, channels, or inlets. Under these circumstances, it is the kayaker who is in the more maneuverable boat and, as such, should do whatever he or she can to stay out of other boaters’ way.

      Besides right of way, kayakers should also be able to recognize common navigational aids and understand what they mean for boaters. The two aids most often encountered on the water are the red and green buoys that mark boat channels. Known sometimes as “green cans” and “red nuns” because of their shapes, these buoys provide a visual clue regarding safe paths around shallow water, sandbars, rocks, reefs, structures, and other obstructions. Boaters must remain between the buoys to ensure safe passage.

      Of course, kayakers need not restrict themselves to the boat channel, though times may arise when they must paddle across it. At these times, you should cross the channel via a path that is as close to a right angle as is possible. Obviously, you should also make sure that the way is clear and no boats are heading down the channel in either direction. The easiest way to determine direction of travel in any channel is to remember the saying, “Red, right, returning”—in other words, boats returning to a harbor from the sea will always have the red buoys on their right, or starboard, side. Thus, a boat traveling with the red buoys on its left, or port, side will be heading out to sea.

      Things get a bit trickier at night, when navigational aids and other vessels are much harder to see. Luckily, most green and red buoys also display lights in their respective colors, which make them quite easy to find. Powerboats must also display lights—green on the starboard side, red on the port side, and white facing front and back—so their location and direction of travel is easy to determine as well. Should you spy a powerboat showing a green light, you can assume the boat is heading right. A white light in front of the green light indicates that the boat is coming closer to the kayak, whereas a white light behind a green indicates it is traveling farther away. Seeing both a green and red light, on the left and right, respectively, means the powerboat is heading straight toward you.

      Kayaks are not required to display any continuously shining lights while on the water, but as Coast Guard regulations state, “Small boats should have ready at hand an electric torch or lighted lantern showing a white light which shall be exhibited in sufficient time to prevent collision.” For just this reason, I always carry a small flashlight and wear a headlamp when paddling at night. A quick shine on myself or my kayak makes me easily visible to other boaters and makes us all aware of each others’ presence.

      Finally, you should be aware of one more rule of the road, although this one remains mostly unwritten: common sense dictates that you should be conscious of other kayakers and boaters on the water. Limit groups to small numbers, remain as quiet and in control as possible, give anglers and other nature-lovers plenty of space, and leave nothing behind but a wake. Finally, respect both public and private property on the water and on land—avoid paddling under private docks or piers, landing on private beaches or in designated swimming areas, or launching from private boat ramps without obtaining permission first.

      PARKING AND SECURING VEHICLES

      While researching this book, I had the pleasure of visiting just about every part of Long Island and New York City and was able to learn a few things about launching kayaks and parking cars along the way. For instance, I quickly found out that the put-ins that are part of the recently


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