Kayak Long Island City

Kayak Long Island City


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Angel Island Kayak Tour


Angel Island Kayak Tour


$105


Pack your kayak and take a real kayaking adventure to Angel Island in the San Francisco Bay.While paddling the majestic Bay, take in the spectacular views of San Francisco, Mt. Tamalpais, Mt. Diablo, and East Bay. Designated as a State Park, Angel Island boasts a long history of many uses.Angel Island was once a Miwok Indian Village, a military installation site from the Civil War to the Cold War, and termed the “Ellis Island of the West” during 1910-1940. Conditions permitting, a circumnavigation of the island provides an exciting view of the bay usually reserved for stronger groups.This kayak trip is appropriate for beginner and intermediate paddlers in good physical condition.

Passing Kayak Island


Passing Kayak Island


$59.99


John Bortniak Passing Kayak Island – Wall Decal

Ramada Long Island City


Ramada Long Island City


$169.99


Ramada Long Island City is located in Long Island City’s Long Island City Queens neighborhood, close to Museum of Moving Image, Chrysler Building, and Grand Central Terminal. Nearby points of interest also include Rockefeller Center and Central Park. Hotel Features. Recreational amenities include a fitness facility. Complimentary wireless Internet access is available in public areas. A complimentary continental breakfast is served each morning. Additional property amenities include ATM/banking services. Guestrooms. Air conditioned guestrooms at Ramada Long Island City feature coffee/tea makers and irons/ironing boards. Wired high speed and wireless Internet access is complimentary. Televisions have satellite channels and complimentary TV Internet access. Notifications:No onsite parking is available. Notifications:No onsite parking is available.

Quality Inn Long Island City


Quality Inn Long Island City


$146.99


Quality Inn Long Island City is located in Long Island City’s Long Island City Queens neighborhood, close to Museum of Moving Image, Chrysler Building, and Grand Central Terminal. Nearby points of interest also include Rockefeller Center and Empire State Building. Hotel Features. Those traveling on business have access to a business center at this hotel. Complimentary wireless Internet access is available in public areas. The hotel serves a complimentary continental breakfast. Additional property amenities include multilingual staff and ATM/banking services. Guestrooms. 48 air conditioned guestrooms at Quality Inn Long Island City feature coffee/tea makers and hair dryers. In addition to desks and complimentary newspapers, guestrooms offer free local calls (restrictions may apply).

Days Inn Long Island City


Days Inn Long Island City


$169


Days Inn Long Island City is located in Long Island City’s Long Island City Queens neighborhood, close to P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, Chrysler Building, and Grand Central Terminal. Nearby points of interest also include Rockefeller Center and Empire State Building. Hotel Features. A complimentary continental breakfast is served each morning. Days Inn Long Island City features express check in, coffee in the lobby, and complimentary newspapers in the lobby. Complimentary wireless and wired high speed Internet access is available in public areas. Additional property amenities include self parking. Complimentary guest parking is limited, and available on a first come, first served basis. The front desk is open 24 hours a day. Guestrooms. 70 air conditioned guestrooms at Days Inn Long Island City feature coffee/tea makers and complimentary newspapers. Bathrooms feature shower/tub combinations and hair dryers. Wireless Internet access is complimentary. In addition to desks, guestrooms offer free local calls (restrictions may apply). Televisions have premium cable channels.

Comfort Inn Long Island City


Comfort Inn Long Island City


$95.99


Comfort Inn Long Island City > LGA > 42-24 Crescent St > Long Island City > NY > 11101>Location. This city center property is located in Long Island City, close to P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, Isamu Noguchi Sculpture Museum, and Chrysler Building. Also nearby are Grand Central Terminal and St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Features. In addition to a fitness facility and a business center, Comfort Inn Long Island City features a safe deposit box at the front desk. Guests are served a complimentary breakfast each morning. Guestrooms. Bathrooms feature hair dryers. Notifications:Additional fees and deposits may be charged by the property at time of service, check in, or check out. >The closest major airports to Comfort Inn Long Island City are:New York, NY (LGA LaGuardia) 6.4 km / 4 miNew York, NY (JFK John F. Kennedy Intl.) 17.8 km / 11.1 miThe preferred airport for Comfort Inn Long Island City is New York, NY (JFK John F. Kennedy Intl.). Distances are calculated in a straight line from the property’s location to the point of interest or airport and may not reflect actual travel distance. Distances are displayed to the nearest 0. 1 mile and kilometre.

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Kayak Fishing Long Island Sound



Improve Your Sea Kayaking Skills In 7 Planned Steps

If you are a sea kayaking buff, loving to get out onto the water and paddle around your local area, there are ways to improve your skills, make your paddles safer and more rewarding, and to increase your stamina for longer paddles.  Over my paddling years, I have kind of stumbled onto some things.  But when I got more serious about improving my skills to be a better paddler, (really just to keep paddling as my body aged!), I took up a long-term course of action to be a better kayaker.  This is more or less what I have done to improve myself as a sea kayaker.  I have boiled it down to 7 things that I have done, and still do over the course of each year.

1.  Learn how to pack your kayak for stability and safety. Believe it or not, the way you pack your kayak can make a significant difference in its stability.  Even to just add weight into it usually increases stability.  Increased stability means it is more safe.  Take along a set of extra clothes, a shelter of some sort, a bit of food, a stove and matches or lighter, extra water, and a way to signal for help.  These items are then in your kayak in case a sudden weather change makes you land and strands you.  The weight of these items should be packed evenly from left to right and from front to back, maybe with a slight extra in the back to raise the nose a bit.  If the weight is kept as low as possible, then you will be more in the water and more stable.

2.  Improve your paddling skills. Every time you go out paddling, try practicing a particular stroke that you find difficult.   Practice the sweeps and draws, as well as the braces, each and every paddle.  Get more instruction, if necessary, to learn more strokes, and just to have someone watch and help you with the movements you need to perform the stroke efficiently.  A good way to improve your paddling skills is to join a group of river kayakers and play around in the smaller, more responsive boat.  You have to use your core body strength and motion more in a river kayak which helps develop the habit of body to do it in a sea kayak.

3.  Learn a variety of rescue techniques. If you are a regular kayaker, you need to be able to get back into your kayak if you capsize.  This is really critical.  If you can do a cowboy scramble on to the back of your boat, your are doing great.  If you can do a paddle float rescue, great.  If you can re-enter and roll, or just roll back up on your own, then you are totally awesome.  Many kayaking centers and universities offer instruction to help kayakers with rescues.  If you are lucky, then you can do it in the warmer water of a pool.  Many smaller town and most cities have someone offering pool sessions for kayak resuce.

4.  Paddle some challenging areas, but with a safety net. If you haven’t paddled in currents or small surf, then challenge yourself to go do it.  Take along some friends who know what they are doing to give it a bit of a safety net.  If you are in real life challenges, you will better remember what you have learned, so challenge yourself and practice your skills in the challenge.

5.  Learn some weather prediction skills. One of the biggest dangers on the water is sudden wind changes.   Wind can make kayaking very difficult to impossible at times.  Learn how to view the clouds and what they mean.  Pay attention to the stories from your area about what to look for for wind or for rain.  Get licensed for marine radio to listen to the forecasts and be able to communicate to other mariners about the weather.  Local kayak centers often provide short courses in the local weather patterns and what to look for.

6.  Learn and use navigation skills. Start learning how to read nautical charts and use a compass with it.  Take these things out with you on your kayak and begin observing the islands and rocks that are in front of you, matching them to the chart information.  Practice taking bearings and setting courses.  Pay attention to times and chart distances you’ve travelled to begin estimating your speed and location.  If you happen to be out on a really rainy or foggy day, you will thank yourself for practicing these skills.  Learn how to use the tide tables to calculate your nearest tides and currents.

7.  Learn to rely on your kayak and yourself. Plan your routes and write down these float plans to give to someone before you leave.  When packing your kayak, think through the placement of things to make sure you have needed items at hand.  Try to set yourself up to be able to reach everything you need with minimal interruption and compromise of your stability.  Watch ahead and around you and think through what may be under the water or around the corner or, coming fast down the passage you are in.

If you are thinking about working on any one of these steps each time you paddle, your skills will improve and you will be more comfortable and more confident in the water.  These are all essential skills for being a good paddler, and developing them only helps you to get the most out of your paddles.  By training, preparing, and learning, you can improve your kayak abilities, giving you greater options on where and when you can paddle.  So, follow the steps and get out there and enjoy the water.

About the Author

Gary Ward has been leading trips and teaching in wilderness areas for 20 years. Having travelled from desert to sea, he spends most of his time now in coastal areas, exploring the boundary between land and sea, land and sky, and sea and sky.

Gary can be found on one of these boundaries, running Coastal Bliss Adventures with his partner, Georgia Newsome, and writing about Beautiful BC.