The start
The start at Cape Point already proved a challenge with heaving 5m surf making exit impossible off the treacherous SW Reefs, so Chris had to move 5km North to Olifantsbos. This also proved tricky, but it was a stunning exit point with Gemsbok and Ostriches roaming the beach and a light initial tail wind to start out this mammoth adventure. It seemed beyond perfect.
First stop was Sandy Bay, 39km away, and apart from the solid surf making getting back into the beach through the heaving shore break a challenge, all went well and the first night spent in his tent went down without a hitch. It takes Chris over an hour in the morning to break down camp and another 45 minutes to fasten down everything back on his board, every day. That means very early starts; up at 4am to be on the water heading out between 5-6am would become the norm.
Day 2
Chris woke up to howling 35 knot offshore wind which would have blown him way out to sea, but luckily, as forecast, the wind backed off and by 8am and he was able to paddle from Sandy Bay to Robben Island, with a quick pit stop at Three Anchor Bay.
Calm winds allowed for a smooth crossing to the Island, which normally doesn’t allow any stay overs, so Chris snuck in around the back of the islands and set up camp with a colony of jackass penguins for the night.
Day 3
Day 3 was a monster 52km to Dassen Island, often paddling over 12km offshore. Unfortunately for Chris the predicted South-South East wind never got out of the South West corner and he had to paddle the entire way on the one side, with the wind 90 degrees off his left shoulder.
To make matters worse the wind really picked up by the time he reached the island and by the time he got around into the lee, over 10 hours from his initial start at 6am in the morning, he was well-poked, fatigued, sun stroked and exhausted.
Once around the point he grabbed hold of a piece of kelp and spent the next 20 minutes gathering himself, before the final paddle to the beach. This had been a tough one and had taken its toll; dehydration, blistering and burnt corneas had begun to make things very uncomfortable.
Day 4
was to be even worse, as he woke up with burnt corneas, making seeing difficult, body aching from the previous day and a thick fog which had set in down the coast, taking visibility down to less than 50 metres.
With a Northerly headwind at first and then, just as bad, more South West wind making his 55km line to Langebaan lagoon a nightmare with side-wind the entire way once again. Plus there was a huge 5 metre swell smashing into the treacherous rocky coastline through the fog – so much for the predicted downwinder…
When Chris finally made it to the entrance of the lagoon he was completely spent, clinging to the thought of merely surviving this leg, after only barely clearing the rocky entry and certain disaster. Avoiding the huge swells smashing up against the rocky headland had taken every last bit of his energy, his eyes were burning and his body was screaming for rest.
However once around the corner he got his first taste of downwinding of the entire trip thus far, for a measly, yet well-deserved 4km run down into Saldanha Harbor. That evening he went blind from the sunburn, blistered, with all the skin peeling from his burnt feet, he decided to take the following day as rest day and recover, before heading on further to St. Helena Bay.