By Vladimir Brezina
The new World Trade Center tower can be seen for miles out at sea, and at night it becomes a luminous beacon to guide sailors, and kayakers, in—
A contribution to Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge, Luminous.
By Vladimir Brezina
The new World Trade Center tower can be seen for miles out at sea, and at night it becomes a luminous beacon to guide sailors, and kayakers, in—
A contribution to Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge, Luminous.
By Vladimir Brezina
It was late December 2013, on the first day of one of our shakedown paddles through the Florida Everglades in preparation for the 2014 Everglades Challenge. We had just landed on the muddy beach behind the Everglades City ranger station to get our permits for camping in the Everglades.
As Johna tells it, “as we headed inland I caught sight of a couple of figures—a man and a woman—dressed identically in Army-green T-shirts and black pants. The woman was wheeling a loaded barrow, and I took them for park rangers.
But Vlad stopped and said to the man, ‘I know you! We’re friends on Facebook!'”
The couple were Doi Nomazi (“Two Nomads”), Adrian and Mihaela, a Romanian husband-and-wife adventure team. Even though they too are based in New York, we’d never met before, and this was the only time we have crossed paths so far.
Like us, they were on a kayak expedition in the Everglades over the holidays—but they were sailing, rather than merely paddling, their black U-boat, a double Long Haul folding kayak.
Later, back in New York, I looked to see how their trip had gone, and found that they had produced an enchanting 86-minute “video diary” of their adventure, entitled “Echoes of the Eskampaba—2013”.
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“Echoes of the Eskampaba” remains my favorite among their videos, perhaps because it features many of the places in the Everglades that we, too, visited on our trip (such as the lovely but mosquito-plagued Highland Beach, where Doi Nomazi camped a few days after us).
But that’s just one of their videos. There are now 28 of them. Once or twice a year, on their vacation, Doi Nomazi visit some fascinating, remote corner of the world. The resulting video is as well-produced as any commercial movie, and more watchable that most. (It’s perhaps not surprising to find that Adrian has a rich resumé as a journalist, cameraman, and film producer and director.) In addition to the Everglades, Doi Nomazi have paddled in the Black Sea, in the Gwaii Haanas of British Columbia, in Greenland, in Alaska’s Glacier Bay… And it’s not all paddling, either: they have climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, driven through the back country of Africa and Australia…
Here is their latest video, from Glacier Bay:
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Doi Nomazi say that “we have no special training, we are not athletes and we are not seeking any records.” Perhaps not, but their thirst for nature and adventure, and their willingness to endure the inevitable discomforts and hardships, are extraordinary. An inspiration to us all!
Posted in Culture, Kayaking, Travel
Tagged Adventure, Doi Nomazi, Everglades, Florida Kayaking, Kayak Expeditions, Kayak Sailing, Kayaking, Video
By Vladimir Brezina
As we returned from our paddle on Sunday night, the Manhattan skyline glowed in the last rays of the sunset, then grew cool with a myriad twinkling lights—
(click on any photo to enlarge it)
And here are some GoPro clips of that part of our trip (the water drops on the lens are a distinct nuisance!):
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The story and photos of the rest of the trip are here.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Kayak Photography, Kayaking, Manhattan, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography, Sunset
By Vladimir Brezina
This is how we’ve always before seen the Yellow Submarine of Brooklyn—
—but what a difference a fresh coat of paint makes!
(story and more photos here)
A contribution to Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge, Paint. A second contribution is here.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City, Photography
Tagged Kayaking, New York City, New York Harbor, Paint, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2015, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge, Yellow Submarine
By Vladimir Brezina
No words are needed…
A contribution to this week’s Photo Challenge, Happy Place.
Posted in Kayaking, Photography
Tagged Everglades Challenge, Florida Kayaking, Happy Place, Kayaking, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2015, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Johna Till Johnson
Photos by Vladimir Brezina and Johna Till Johnson
In the town where I was born,
Lived a man who sailed to sea,
And he told us of his life,
In the land of submarines.So we sailed on to the sun,
Till we found a sea of green,
And we lived beneath the waves,
In our yellow submarine…
The yellow submarine isn’t just an invention of the Beatles—it exists for real. And it had gotten a paint job, courtesy of our friend Erik Baard and his HarborLab crew. So we decided it was high time to paddle out and see the results.
Let me back up… in the waters of Coney Island Creek, just off Gravesend Bay, there rests—amazingly, improbably!—a yellow submarine. We’ve told a fuller story here, but suffice it to say that the story of its existence just underscores the crazy sense of possibility that permeated the 1960s.
But it’s closing in on 50 years since the yellow submarine was launched, and it had become somewhat the worse for wear. So when we heard it had recovered its original cheerful coloring, we had to go see.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Brooklyn, Coney Island, Kayaking, Long-Distance Swim, Manhattan, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography, Yellow Submarine
By Vladimir Brezina
A routine paddle from Lower Manhattan up the Hudson—up the West Side of Manhattan, under the George Washington Bridge and along the Palisades—and back, about 30 miles. Nothing special.
But I do have a few photos…
By Johna Till Johnson
Photos by Vladimir Brezina
The lively school of fish flashing by probably should have been a clue.
On our kayak trip several weeks ago, we decided to pay a visit to the Gowanus Canal. I know it seems crazy to paddle on a heavily-polluted Superfund site, but we both have a secret fondness for blasted industrial landscapes. And the canal also features charming, idiosyncratic quirks: festive murals, and a houseboat or two.
Or at least it did, upon our last visit. We hadn’t seen it since just before Superstorm Sandy. Then, the mood had been somber, filled with foreboding and a sense of upcoming loss. We feared what the storm would do to the places we’d come to love, Gowanus among them.
True to our fears, Sandy kept us off the water for months, and in the nearly three years since then, we didn’t make it back to Gowanus to see how it survived. So this trip was very much an exploration: How much had Sandy destroyed? And what was left?
Things had definitely changed, as it turned out—but not exactly in the way we expected.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Gowanus Canal, Kayaking, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography, Pollution