Crissy - Rescues, South Tower, Presidio Shoal, R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Posted: Mon Aug 24, 2009 12:52 pm
We've been having a pretty steady flow of 2-3 Coast Guard rescues a day. Many/most were non-frivolous (various gear failures – figured it’s that part of the season) and also the… reliably fluky Crissy inside has been shutting down early, with the bubble centered on Anita Rock expanding mile-wide by day-end. However, I dare summarize my list of more obvious bear traps at Crissy, in order to avoid the balance of “unforced errors”.
- rarely if ever there is anything to kite towards Presidio Shoal, i.e. on the inside, upwind of Crissy. Draw a line from the restrooms/flag at Crissy to the South Tower. South (beachside) of that line you’ll likely find only toil, tears and sweat. On Friday at 4pm (sic!) I saw half-a-dozen kites down littering that space. If there is a place for false security in being “close to land”, Crissy is it.
- give South Tower a really wide berth. The topography and the Fort there make for a wind shadow that moves like a ghost around the tower based on how much S there is the wind. Unless you experienced it, hard to believe how your kite can drop like an anvil in 7m wind. Then you (usually) have a washing-machine of voodoo chop there. Even after you drift away and relaunch (if lucky enough to have no twists from rip tide or swell etc.), you may have to deal with retrieving the board still floating in the middle of the wind shadow.
Then, a kind reminder on my (hard-earned) Crissy take-aways:
- watch like a hawk the locals on the water, if you see a big pack rushing back in, it’s always worth taking the hint;
- if light on the inside, take a few tacks and recon the wind line to find a way back home. On good days, coming in high (way upwind of Anita) is fine, on most days ripping across the wind may be best, but sometimes going low is the only (and counter-intuitive) option
- last chance beach (the stairs before StFYC) is usually an easy shot or even swim from inside Anita. Don’t fly your kite over the civilians that always sightsee there, it’s really a “beach” only on low tide, so don’t get greedy: self-land on the water line; you can chill w/ the peanut gallery while your kite gets dry (they took bets whether you make it in, anyway);
- if you dropped the kite inside Anita, it may be worth just swimming for it; the current is strong enough even there to take you back out/down if you fool around too long (wrapping lines, bending kite etc.). On Fri I made the mistake of staying out late; after failing repeatedly to pierce through the bubble (in the good company of all the other late-homers), I tacked back out, and with every attempt, the bubble grew bigger; eventually I rode in to the last chance beach, but dry kite ego aside, not sure would not have been easier to swim in, half an hour earlier when the bubble was smaller.
- visualize beforehand what’s likely to happen when you get in trouble:
- yesterday, in head-high swell and 4.5kts ebb, we had one lost board and one torn kite by the S.Tower. We looked for the board for quite a while, unsuccessfully (the whole ocean was moving, suffice it to say that the ferries didn’t dare crossing under the bridge), kiter eventually dragged-in to Fort Point (imho, btw, that is not a rescue option – flanked by rocks, concrete walls and huge surf-break - unless you really know it and at any rate only on low tide when you could see the small clearing between the rocks; and I speak from what I think was lucky rather than successful personal experience)
- when losing your board in rough conditions, take a time mark; how many minutes passed since you lost it is the most important information to give to the “searchers”. At 4.5kts, the board will drift a mile every 10 minutes; there is another reason to take a time mark: even in a 5/3 suit, you may get cold after a while and not realize it, so you’d want to know how long you’ve been in the water and even in a clean self-rescue hit the panic button before you lose track
o how fast you/board can drift out in the channel was vividly illustrated by the other kiter downed by the S. Tower yesterday, as the CG responded in under 10minutes from the call and still picked him up halfway to the Mile Rock, despite the pack of assisting kiters anchoring him
- buddy system is hard to beat, otherwise just try to stick with/in sight of the pack; if you get in trouble, chances are you’d get “buddies” anyway, unless you’re way out there by yourself, lose kite etc. Even if you can’t be rescued from out there by another kiter (like, say, at 3rd), my experience has been that watching the South Tower going “bye-bye” while you're being pulled out out into the open sea is a lot scarier if you’re all by yourself.
- for Crissy first timers, if in doubt about your skill set, ask yourself two questions:
1) can I safely ride a kite two sizes off from the ideal size for conditions, both too big and too small? On most any day, you're guaranteed to find both extremes between mid-bay, the gate and beach.
2) do I have a dynamic appreciation of... wind over water conditions, i.e. look at water texture and spot a wind line, flood areas or vertical chop etc.
Sorry for getting on the… sandbar and preaching the obvious, but besides the choir we have quite a few (and welcomed) new converts. Crissy is like an ancient goddess, she’ll seduce you with its awesome powers and sights, but she demands respect (and occasional offerings…).
- rarely if ever there is anything to kite towards Presidio Shoal, i.e. on the inside, upwind of Crissy. Draw a line from the restrooms/flag at Crissy to the South Tower. South (beachside) of that line you’ll likely find only toil, tears and sweat. On Friday at 4pm (sic!) I saw half-a-dozen kites down littering that space. If there is a place for false security in being “close to land”, Crissy is it.
- give South Tower a really wide berth. The topography and the Fort there make for a wind shadow that moves like a ghost around the tower based on how much S there is the wind. Unless you experienced it, hard to believe how your kite can drop like an anvil in 7m wind. Then you (usually) have a washing-machine of voodoo chop there. Even after you drift away and relaunch (if lucky enough to have no twists from rip tide or swell etc.), you may have to deal with retrieving the board still floating in the middle of the wind shadow.
Then, a kind reminder on my (hard-earned) Crissy take-aways:
- watch like a hawk the locals on the water, if you see a big pack rushing back in, it’s always worth taking the hint;
- if light on the inside, take a few tacks and recon the wind line to find a way back home. On good days, coming in high (way upwind of Anita) is fine, on most days ripping across the wind may be best, but sometimes going low is the only (and counter-intuitive) option
- last chance beach (the stairs before StFYC) is usually an easy shot or even swim from inside Anita. Don’t fly your kite over the civilians that always sightsee there, it’s really a “beach” only on low tide, so don’t get greedy: self-land on the water line; you can chill w/ the peanut gallery while your kite gets dry (they took bets whether you make it in, anyway);
- if you dropped the kite inside Anita, it may be worth just swimming for it; the current is strong enough even there to take you back out/down if you fool around too long (wrapping lines, bending kite etc.). On Fri I made the mistake of staying out late; after failing repeatedly to pierce through the bubble (in the good company of all the other late-homers), I tacked back out, and with every attempt, the bubble grew bigger; eventually I rode in to the last chance beach, but dry kite ego aside, not sure would not have been easier to swim in, half an hour earlier when the bubble was smaller.
- visualize beforehand what’s likely to happen when you get in trouble:
- yesterday, in head-high swell and 4.5kts ebb, we had one lost board and one torn kite by the S.Tower. We looked for the board for quite a while, unsuccessfully (the whole ocean was moving, suffice it to say that the ferries didn’t dare crossing under the bridge), kiter eventually dragged-in to Fort Point (imho, btw, that is not a rescue option – flanked by rocks, concrete walls and huge surf-break - unless you really know it and at any rate only on low tide when you could see the small clearing between the rocks; and I speak from what I think was lucky rather than successful personal experience)
- when losing your board in rough conditions, take a time mark; how many minutes passed since you lost it is the most important information to give to the “searchers”. At 4.5kts, the board will drift a mile every 10 minutes; there is another reason to take a time mark: even in a 5/3 suit, you may get cold after a while and not realize it, so you’d want to know how long you’ve been in the water and even in a clean self-rescue hit the panic button before you lose track
o how fast you/board can drift out in the channel was vividly illustrated by the other kiter downed by the S. Tower yesterday, as the CG responded in under 10minutes from the call and still picked him up halfway to the Mile Rock, despite the pack of assisting kiters anchoring him
- buddy system is hard to beat, otherwise just try to stick with/in sight of the pack; if you get in trouble, chances are you’d get “buddies” anyway, unless you’re way out there by yourself, lose kite etc. Even if you can’t be rescued from out there by another kiter (like, say, at 3rd), my experience has been that watching the South Tower going “bye-bye” while you're being pulled out out into the open sea is a lot scarier if you’re all by yourself.
- for Crissy first timers, if in doubt about your skill set, ask yourself two questions:
1) can I safely ride a kite two sizes off from the ideal size for conditions, both too big and too small? On most any day, you're guaranteed to find both extremes between mid-bay, the gate and beach.
2) do I have a dynamic appreciation of... wind over water conditions, i.e. look at water texture and spot a wind line, flood areas or vertical chop etc.
Sorry for getting on the… sandbar and preaching the obvious, but besides the choir we have quite a few (and welcomed) new converts. Crissy is like an ancient goddess, she’ll seduce you with its awesome powers and sights, but she demands respect (and occasional offerings…).