2025 Massive Murray Paddle

The following text is mostly a transcription of the conversation Hugh and Hugh had in the car, driving back to Adelaide on the morning following the finish of the Massive Murray Paddle in November 2025.

In summary

They trained for the event by doing the Riverland Paddling Marathon in June 2025 and paddling 3-4 times a week, with a focus on Zone 2 training. They felt under prepared going into the race due to not doing enough long-distance paddles but in reality they managed the conditions pretty well after the first day (which was always going to be hard).

Logistics-wise, they stayed in tents at caravan parks and had a support crew to help with gear. They recommend staying at least two nights at Tocumwal (end of day One , start of day 2), Echuca (end of day 2 start of day 3 ) and Koondrook (the finish point) to minimize travel time.

For food, they used a homemade “goop” made from maltodextrin and fructose, which worked well for energy. They also used commercial muesli bars, lollies, gels and sachets. They drank 2-3 litres of water per day on the water (plus sports drink and coffee).

The race was challenging, with strong winds for the first two days, currents, and changing water conditions. They recommend finding a rhythm and pace and taking advantage of fast water and tailwinds. They also suggest not stopping at checkpoints unless necessary.

For gear, they recommend a stable kayak, a deck bag or camelback for hydration, and a good pair of scissors for cutting Coban for blisters. They also suggest wearing thermals, sunscreen, and a hat, and bringing spare clothes.

They had a positive experience overall and enjoyed the camaraderie and support from other paddlers and spectators. They are considering doing the event again and are looking at different kayak options, such as a Grafton Sports Fusion or an Epic V10.

 The full conversation 

Training:

(We had both done the Riverland Paddling Marathon in June 2025 (HS did the 200 and HM did the 100) so we had a good base.  We had both been paddling 3-4 times a week since then without doing a lot of long-distance work.  2 weeks before the race we did a 100km week with a 5-hour, 40k paddle on the Sunday morning. )

Hugh Mac:

I think concentrating on Zone 2 was an extremely sensible thing to do. I should have added to the Zone 2 a bit more strength in the water training, as it were, not necessarily speed, but the surges, because so much of that race is involving surges, not flat-out sprinting speed, but the ability to pick up your pace and maintain it for a usable period of time, which can go anything from a minute to 10 minutes. If you’ve got a really good wash, you want to hang on to that one, because the water speed changes so much, so if the guy’s a boat length in front of you and he hits a  patch of fast water, then you’ve got to be able to just do that little kick to stay with it.

Hugh S: I think the cumulative weekly mileage is very important, without a shadow of a doubt, and I would underscore the importance of a long paddle.

Hugh Mac: I think the longest ones we did were not terribly long, and there weren’t enough of them.

I think so too, I think we came in a little under, I certainly felt a little underprepared for that one.

We did do a four lapper and took five hours as well as paddling the day before for 2-3 hours.

So the rule that I usually use is your longest day of the event should be your weekly cumulative. So we should have been aiming for about 90, at least 90 kilometres a week, which we probably would have got at least one of those weeks.

I think we would have got 90, and probably if we were doing that a bit more regularly, it would have helped, would have helped me anyway,

I guess, because we don’t do much speed play when we’re paddling around West Lakes.

Logistics

Hugh S So, logistics wise, Hugh Mac handled most of the bookings. We stayed the first night in Echuca at the Rich River Tourist Park, which was fine.

Hugh Mac: Yeah. And then we booked two nights in Tocumwal, so we stayed the Sunday night in Tocumwal. We set up at Tocumwal before we went to Yarrawonga for day zero briefing between 12 and 4, which was a bit of a non-event really, wasn’t it?

Hugh S: Yeah, it was a bit of a waste of time. We weren’t really given any information. It was just a means by which they can give us our decals for the boats and our numbers and our trackers.

Hugh Mac: So you’d find a way to circumvent short-circuit that process. Yes, one person gets it for everybody else. that would be a smart thing to do.

So, Sunday night we had in Tocumwal and drove to Yarrawonga on Monday morning for day one start, and finished that day in Tocumwal.

Hugh Mac:  So that was great that we had tents already set up and we could just crawl into them and getting off the water at 4.30 and being able to just roll straight into the camp was fantastic because we were pretty spent.

Then started there the next day, so it was an easy up and out and Ryan, our land crew, was able to pack everything up and we were away with no bother really.

Yes. And moved from there to Echuca. Two nights in Echuca, back at the Rich River Caravan Park for Tuesday and Wed nights. Same campground, same camp spots as we had on our trip to the race. And sort of similar deal there too, which was great.

So we paddled into Echuca on Tuesday night, and then could just go straight to the campground.

Cute town too. And then final two nights in Koondrook, which was the finish point, which again had the advantage of, would have had the advantage that we’d be at the finish point. We would have walked out of our kayaks to our tents.

But this year they changed the course for the last day at the last minute, so we ended up having to be picked up way down the river. So I guess that’s always a thing to consider is that course changes can be sprung on you, depending on what’s happening in the forests and various things.

Yes, some people just stay at Echuca the whole time. It makes for some long drives here and there. And we stayed in tents, which is manageable, but people also stayed in cabins and various things, which would have been marginally more comfortable. But it’s hard to get a three-bedroom cabin.

Food.

Hugh Mac :Bring out your goop. Yeah, goop. Goop was a winner.

Goop is a mixture of two parts of maltodextrin to one part of fructose,

And make it a little bit on the runnier side. So it worked, I think, remarkably well. It’s incredible, you could be feeling after chasing somebody down, you could be feeling a little bit weak, and just grab that damn bottle and just squeeze, and you’ve just squeezed in, you know, $9 worth of commercial commercially bought things.

Hugh S: And those sachets are a pain in the arse, because you can’t stop in the kayak with wet fingers and try and tear the tabs.

Hugh Mac: No, just from a sport bottle with a nozzle.  And in fact, I think what I would do next time, if I do this again, I will just put it in the bladder in on my life jacket, and another bag with three litres of plain water.

Hugh S: Yes. And how often were you drinking? Were you eating the goop?

Hugh Mac: I wasn’t as scientific about it as I should have been. But what I did do was basically, I had enough goop to provide me with food for half of the day. And so I would just assess it as I lifted up the bottle. How much did I have in there, versus how much of the day was left? And whether I could stomach another children’s packet of pear and apple. One year old, one year is much better than the six-month-old. And in fact, it was a refreshing change. Because when you do that, and it doesn’t take long, actually, to squeeze that stuff in, you can squeeze that stuff in quicker than you can the goop  in the commercial sachets. Yeah, the top comes off a lot easier. And the few times I tried doing things like eating McVitie’s Hobnobs, I had instant digestive problems. So anytime I tried to eat any solid food, which you start craving, don’t you? I’m craving a bloody hamburger halfway through a section, thinking nothing but McDonald’s. If you eat anything solid, it just sits in your stomach.

Hugh S: Certainly, the first couple of days, the nine-hour days, and I found I typically wouldn’t eat for the first hour and then might be able to go for an hour and a half or so and then grab something like just a squeeze of goop. I also used some of the commercial gels for a couple of days and managed to get one of those in after a while. And then probably every hour I was trying to eat something. So I had some muesli bars, which, as you said, I felt I needed something solid after a little while, especially on the long days. towards the middle of the afternoon, I felt like I needed something like a half a muesli bar. And then I could just stick with a few lollies and things. Snakes.

Hugh Mac: And they work okay, but I think the goop is actually better for me. Well, scientifically it gets into your system better. That’s the point. So, your body can absorb a maximum. Some people apparently can train themselves to absorb as much as 120 grams of carbohydrate. So, the goop that I made was designed to… That 600 ml bottle held 300 grams of carbohydrate, which is not shabby considering the cost of what… That’s like 10 sachets. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 60 bucks or 40 bucks there.

And it’s just designed to get directly into your system. And you will still be hungry, but you will be absorbing the maximum amount of carbohydrates your body can anyway.  You don’t want your stomach having to fight with digestion. So, if it’s fighting with digestion and trying to provide you with the carbohydrates, you’re going to get less carbs into your system.

Water

How much water were you using?

Denby said he was doing six litres a day. No way. No, I’m surprised. I probably didn’t do…

Hugh S: The maximum I would have done any day would have been three litres.

Hugh Mac: Yeah, I was the same. I think the long days, probably three litres, but those the last three days, I was barely getting through two litres in my back.

Hugh S  :Yeah, I had my backpack. And that was about, you know, I was barely finishing.

Hugh Mac :And I was feeling fine. I wasn’t feeling parched or anything.

Hugh S: Yes, I did. But clearly dehydrated by the time I got off, given the colour of my urine.

Hugh Mac: You weren’t? Oh, you weren’t? Oh, I didn’t. Well, your performance was deteriorating then. I was not experiencing that. But I think because I was having those kids…What do you even call them? Yeah, baby food.

Fruit, baby food. Fruit, all fruit based. Because I had quite… I would probably have four of those during the day. That’s a fair amount. Four of those as well. That’s the good. Yeah, that’s what it was to do. Because that’s all carb. And I had the commercial gels. Oh, and yesterday, and I still got one left. I wasn’t taking my… I had commercial sachets with… they were caffeinated with espresso. Yeah.

Yesterday, I took two of those. I’m wondering why my performance was better.

Hugh S  Yeah, well, I carried a little thermos of coffee and a couple of days I had coffee and sustagen mix. And if I was feeling particularly flat, I would actually stop and have a little capful of that. And did you feel it gave you a boost?

Yeah, the first day I started to feel a little bit of caffeine withdrawal headache. And so I thought,

oh, I better have a shot of coffee just to sort that out, which was fine. But I didn’t notice a big kick.

It was better from the goop. I did get quite a kick out of that caffeine yesterday.

Hugh S Yeah, a lot of it helps. A lot of it’s what it does to your head. You’re just feeling hungry and your stomach’s rumbling and you think, oh, I’ve got to get something in. And once you get something and it settles, you feel okay, content to concentrate back on the paddling again.

Hugh Mac: So yes, there’s a whole bunch of factors which go into it. But recognising that what your body, what your brain’s telling you, you need, may well be wrong. Science will tell you that what your body’s going to be able to absorb is basically just some really concentrated carbohydrates. You know, without any fibre, nothing too fancy.

Race start

Typically boats are set off in multiple waves. Try and get the earliest wave you can, would be our tip. That way you’ve got less concern about meeting time cutoffs at checkpoints.

That’s right. You’re less worried about meeting the cutoff and you’re probably going to get off the water a little bit earlier.

Yes, you’ll be getting off the water earlier. You will also be with a bunch of other people who will set off like scalded cats. And they’re great to follow for a while until they burn themselves out.

Yeah, so don’t worry about people charging off, let them go because you’ll catch them probably.

You will, unless they’re going to be winning in their category, you will.

But if you can find some, you know, big TK2 to sit behind, which we did on day one, we found

Angie and Dave in the…

Was that a TK2?

No, it wasn’t. That was a marathon double.

That SLR2 was a lovely, sleek racing boat with two people who were paddling at about our speed, and we could sit behind them quite happily for a while, couldn’t we?

So checkpoints, we talked to a couple of newcomers around the race time and they were saying that they learned that you don’t have to stop at checkpoints, so that’s one tip we would say.

Yes, don’t feel the need to stop at a checkpoint. And even when you get there, there are no amenities. There’s not a snack shack, there’s not a port-a-loo, you know, you’re on the banks with a bunch of other people.

Yep, and if you’re going to stop, try and not stop very long would be the tip.

If you have to get out for a stretch, just do that, get back in your boat, especially if there’s some flow, which there will be.

You want to take all your breaks on the water if you can, so you don’t lose too much speed.

Yeah, and when you take a break, take a break on a stretch there where the water, the wind and the current are working for you.

Don’t stop facing into the wind and then suddenly discover you’ve just gone backwards.

Racing:

And race days, you know, we just need to find a rhythm and find a speed that you’re comfortable with and the water, the water will change volume, change velocity as it goes around bends. Constantly changing. So you need to keep working out where, which line to take.

A lot of people, and I noticed on day one, they were determined always to go with the fastest flow of the water, which means they were always going wide on the bends because that’s where the water would flow fastest. But we noticed the couple of the old timers, two guys racing an OC2 who’d done, you know, something like 60 or 80 marathons between them. And they would always cut the corner. You go in hard to the apex and then go straight out wide again, so you miss the back eddy and you try and get back on the fast water as soon as you can.

Follow the old blokes who had done it before and watch what they do would be my tip.

And in the wind that we had some days or day one, we had quite strong winds, I’d say 15 knots.

Yeah, and you know, there would be a point at which you probably want to just go for a bank to get out of the wind because the water, the wind, the water speed won’t, you know, but yesterday and, you know, day four and day five, the wind was a lot lighter.

And I just felt it was more important to follow the water than the wind, than worry about belting into a headwind because they weren’t really taking a lot of speed off.

And also sort of, hence, going into a headwind, don’t, don’t fixate on your, on your speed. Say, oh, my speed’s dropping, I’ve got, I’ve got power into it. You’re just wasting energy there. So I wouldn’t say throttle back going into the wind but get a good steady state.

And you’ll find those lulls, it’ll be blowing, blowing, and then it’ll stop for a second.

And that’s when you literally, you’ll say, I just pick it up, say, oh, crikey, here’s my chance.

Setting up the boat:

And I had so much deck furniture on my boat, that big deck bag, and stuff for kayak sailing and the, the compass, which was useful.

Yeah. Yes, the compass was useful.

But that big deck bag I had, which was absolutely marvellous for its capacity, it’s like a damn windbreak.

Yeah, no question. I felt that before. Yeah, I took my deck bag off after day one. I found

I wasn’t using it. It was too slow. It was easier to have all my drink bottles and various bits and pieces either in my PFD or in, in, down in my lap.

Yeah. So we weren’t using spray decks, of course, we could just reach in and grab stuff out of the cockpit. Yeah. If I were to do it again,

I would take that deck bag off. I wouldn’t use it , because the contents of it, I mean, I basically use those two sport bottles with one with goop and one with electrolyte in it.

And what I would do is I just do it in some big camelback bags, one big three litre one and a one and a half litre one full of goop. Yeah.

Yeah. It was handy to have a bottle of Hydrolyte or Gatorade just for, towards the end of an evident, particularly last few days, it was quite hot. Hot. And I felt I needed to, didn’t want to cramp up. Yeah, grab some electrolytes because it just helps the recovery a bit better.

And so in terms of setting up the boat, we had to carry a first aid kit, which was in the back hatch. And all you need, all you need is a bag with the words first aid on it. And a roll of toilet paper.

Yeah. Their safety checks are somewhat peremptory.

But we should talk a little bit about, about the process of setting up because every day we got into a routine, you know, you had to, the night before you had to sit because you wanted to get away early and make sure nothing’s missing. So I would have a, a, all my food. So it was typically, you know, I’m usually bar a couple of gels, maybe a bag of lollies in my PFD.

Fill my water bottle in the back of my PFD. I had another bladder in the bottom of the boat. I had a couple of litres of water in it as a spare.

And then, which we both kind of needed, because both of us sprung leaks. Yeah. You do want to carry two water bladders, one as a, as a spare for sure. And then on the, so what was I going to say about food?

Getting to the race from camp

got up in the morning, make a pot of coffee, excellent coffee.

Jet boil. And the jet boil. Key piece of kit, a jet boil. And a table. And a small collapsing table. Jet boil burns water at record speeds. And the headlamps, of course, for early morning starts because we’re up at five, four thirty in the morning, a few mornings to get, to get going.

And, and then your bottle of Gatorade and I had a little thermos of coffee with me, I would put in a, in a bag that would always be my deck bag, have my hat, my sunglasses, gloves, anything that was going in the boat that I was going to wear or go in the boat was in a bag.  So that would be my, my boat bag that I would just carry down to the start and get set up.

So first aid kit and I had a spare paddle in the back hatch of my boat, didn’t use it. It’s probably a bit unnecessary.

So then, yeah, so get in the morning, make up your, your oats, whatever, for breakfast, cup of coffee, and then throw all your gear, all your gear’s kind of ready to jump in the car, jump in the car and eat, drink, eat and drink all the way down. And then get to the start line, give your number to the lady waiting on the bank to register, get the boats off the car down to the bank, grab all your gear on, get everything set up, ready to go on the water.

Oh, Coban.  Coban (self-adhesive elastic bandage) is your friend. Yeah. Blisters is a real problem for the first couple of days, a real problem for the first couple of days, particularly.

So we all, I had my fingers Cobaned up and, around the thumb, the old, um, the knuckle part, the big callus on the thumb,

But I also had a polypropylene glove that I tended to wear on my left hand because I know that’s, that often gets, I often get blistered at that hand if I’m doing these long paddles.

So the Coban goes on in the car, so a pair of scissors and a roll of Coban each. And a good, good hint for the right scissors, use the, uh, ones for a medical kit, the ones which are made for cutting bandages and things, so that you don’t stick yourself.

Yeah, that’s true.

And I didn’t use gloves. I just, because I’ve got a very light touch on my paddle typically, so I don’t get much of the way of blisters until it gets windy and you actually have to grip your paddle or your paddles get ripped out of your hands. So days one and two, uh, I actually develop blisters. Yeah, but I, which I really couldn’t cover with anything other than the glove, but I just don’t like wearing gloves. So, and I just feel it’s topical pain which I can put up with the discomfort.

Clothing

We just wore thermals. I had my, element,  thick thermal uh, which is a, kind of a fluffy thermal for the first day, which was a bit cooler.

The first two days  were chillier. Yeah, yeah. They were probably, you know, 18 during the day, overcast all the way through. Windy. And windy, yeah, yeah. So tended to get a bit more of a chill.

Long pants, booties, sunscreen and, uh, a good hat. Yeah, proper shoes. Yeah.

Day 2

Uh, day two was much the same really. That was a long day, just hard slog. And…

Yeah, just had to, had to keep going and get that one done. Yeah. On day two, that was the day when I landed up, with that, that double, I landed up with them wash riding me for a while. Oh yeah. Which is hysterical. Yeah, especially since how they ended up, they just, uh, stopped their silly surging. Yeah, two, two young, two younger guys in their 40s who, uh, had just bought themselves a 730 about six months ago and were, uh, very new to kayaking all day.

We did a few rescues, didn’t we? Day one, we had to rescue a guy who tipped out of his epic.

His epic, yeah. And he didn’t know how to get back in. He’d been paddling for ages and the same with the, those chaps in the double. Yeah. They’d never practiced. They’d never tipped out of it.

We don’t capsize typically until you do. Lots of snags in the water. So you’ve got to be, have your eyes peeled all the time. Yeah.  !found someone went sideways against a log. Yeah, I find these two young kids gone sideways against the log sitting out.

That’s probably how I’ve got that bang on the front of my boat actually. And then I had,I just had to go in between them and the log and push, push, push and get them to basically push off. They, they caught the current and swung backwards. They were no longer stuck.

So yeah, just, just had to really keep, keep an eye out for the, for the, strainers in the water and logs and various things, because they did tend to tip people out if you hit one.

And there are eddies and whirls. Yeah.

Yeah. Not too, too many. So I would say, noticed a few of them, but I mean, we were okay. If you were in a really, if you were in a boat that you felt tippy in, because you felt the need for speed, you would get a rather rude awakening. I think 60 Ks into a race. 60 Ks in when you’re feeling absolutely knackered. Well, your, your, your, your senses are dulled by pain and fatigue. You, you, you’ll flip and not even know why.

Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

And then day three was a shorter day. That was a 70-kilometre day.

No, that was what? 70, 73 or something. Anyway, whatever it was, it felt, it felt a lot better. A lot easier doing that day and it felt a lot better after it.

Oh, it was so nice to be finished earlier so we could get back and wash clothes and have them dry. Getting into wettish clothes in the morning is not fun.

So take a few changes of clothes. The weather up here is pretty dry usually, although we had rain the first night.

We had rain the first two days. Yeah.

Just light sprinkles, but enough to wet anything that was left outside.

So bring a couple of change of paddling clothes, I’d suggest. I had, I think I went through, probably only used three tops and two sets of pants. What that’s worth.

Yes, that’s pretty much the same. Yeah, I used my Vaicobi V-Flex,uh, long, uh, long, long tights in the first day and then the shorts for the rest of the time and the Vaicobi, What do you call these? Rashi. Rashi basically for the rest of the time. That was adequate. The times at which you were chilly, but never cold enough for it to affect you. To be worried, no. Except when you’re waiting for the effing race to start.

The crowd

Yeah, so, most, most, the, generally the race was pretty well organized in terms of getting boats on and off the water and it was great to have, kids, the whole bunch of teams of kids, uh, high school students here who were great value cheering and that as you came in, that was a way that was very well, uh, well received.

Yeah, it’s great for morale. It really is. And, and while it was totally unnecessary for our ground crew to be there at the checkpoints, I can imagine why for some people it would be. Yeah, absolutely. For instance, for, for, uh, uh, Russ Schmidt from Compassion, you know, the guy, he had his, his family would go to all lots of stops and he would just stop off, say hi to them and then take off and beat everybody all again.

Catch up to the leaders.

The paddlers:

Lots of skis paddling, weren’t there?  There were 10, I think.

The most skis he’d ever had.

And a ski wouldn’t be a bad, a bad thing. If you had a stable ski, we wouldn’t have been a bad boat to use on that race.

Yeah.It’s what I’ll use next time.

Yeah. But things like the Grafton Sports Fusion,there was about two or three of those.  TK, a couple of TK1s, which went pretty well.

The guys paddling those did well. TK2s, quite a few 530s, 580s, 533s. And 730s galore. Probably 40% of the, 40% of the paddlers were probably in 730s.

15 or 20 of them, perhaps. Yeah. Used a lot of them, used in relays, of course, but, yeah.

It’s just an exceptional boat for those conditions.

So. If you did it again, what would you paddle?

If you were given, if you were given a free hand to pick your boat?

I would love to do it in a Fusion, one of those Grafton Sports boats, I reckon. Yeah.

Yeah, you can probably handle the tippiness. So, yeah, that initial tippiness really contributes to its speed. I just find that I sit there and I do that type of thing. I don’t like it.

Well, you really, I would really want to find a boat that I could sit in and take my hands off the paddle and I’d need to just find that boat.

Well, the Fusion is, is faster and tippier than the Time Traveler.

Is it?

Yeah.

Well, maybe not the Fusion then. Yeah.

Something like the Time Traveler would work, because I used that in the 200.

Yes. I don’t think I could handle the Time Traveler. I’d probably go over in it. I don’t have your level of expertise.

Or the Rebel 50s from the West Lakes Club, they would be fine.

The 46s, maybe not for me. It’d need to be a better paddler than me for a 46, I think.

But they would work.

And I will take my Epic 10s, my V10.

V10, yeah, yeah.

Torrens Island Race — 13 October 2024

Registering prior to the briefing at Garden Island

At 10am on Oct 13, Anne and Simon Langsford started 8 boats from the makeshift start/finish line between the beach and a yellow channel marker near  the Garden Island Boat Ramp.  The course was anti clockwise heading up Barker Inlet to the cutting and then out onto Port River and through the North Arm back to the boat ramp.  The distance was about 16.5km depending on how close you paddled to the mangroves.

The Start

The race started in overcast conditions with a light Easterly wind blowing enough to make a slight chop on the starboard beam as paddlers tried to find deep water near the channel markers heading up to the cutting.  Pavel had streaked ahead out of the starting blocks so he gave everyone something to aim for.  The rescue boat manned by Jim Murphy and Ian Hume stationed itself outside of the cutting and even with low tide still a half hour away it was a slog to paddle through the bar at the entrance to the cutting.  Once through and out the other side onto the Port River, paddlers had the advantage of the light breeze coming in behind them and soon the tide changed to give an extra boost.  Great racing conditions.

Tug Boats

Mark and Berny on the Port River

Half way along the Port River paddlers watched two tugs shepherd a huge grain ship out of the Port, a reminder that we were paddling on a working river.  The tug captains were very respectful and the leading tug even slowed a little as the lead boats approached it.  Most boats stuck to the left hand edge of the channel so while they were technically on the wrong side of the channel they weren’t in the channel so not hindering other traffic.  As the paddlers turned into the North arm the tide was giving a reasonable push to those out in the channel, until paddlers reached Swan Alley where the tide coming down Barker Inlet met the tide coming in the North arm and all assistance was negated. Paddlers had to paddle the last 1000m with no assistance apart from the adrenalin rush that seeing the finish line provided.

Mark and Berny in the North Arm

Finish Line

Pavel finished the race in 1 hour and 45 minutes followed closely by Hugh S and Hugh M in their sea kayaks and then Phil and Marina in their double not far behind.  Greg just managed to pip Charlie on the line and then Mark and Berny crossed together a few minutes later. All boats were back on the beach by 12.05 so all negotiated the race at good speed.

Once the paddlers  were changed and boats away, they gathered under the shelter and marquee provided by Paddle SA.  Simon had the BBQ going, effortlessly grilling sausages organised by Greg Adams and Phil provided the coffee.  Anne then presented her ‘medals’ which were delicious.  We finished the BBQ watching 3 dolphins cruising out in the passage.

Next Year

Pavel and Hugh at the finish line

Next year we hope to have the event integrated into the Paddle SA long distance race calendar and have a few more paddlers attending, but we agreed that the ‘inaugural’ Torrens Island Race was a worthwhile and fun event. Thanks go the race organisers Greg Adams, Phil Doddridge and Hugh Stewart, Starter Anne Langsford, Scrutineer Simon Langsford, rescue boaters Peter Drewry, Jim Murphy, Ian Hume and Mark Bulmer and all those who participated.

Race Results

Name Boat Time
Pavel Berdashkevich Stellar Ocean Ski 1hour 45m 05secs
Hugh Stewart Mirage 580 Sea Kayak 1: 45: 29
Hugh MacMillan Audax Sea Kayak 1 : 53: 00
Phil Doddridge and Marina Walker Mirage 730 Double Sea Kayak 1 :54:00
Greg Adams Audax Sea Kayak 1: 55:05
Charles Walker Petrel Sea Kayak 1:55:10
Mark Loram Prijon Sea Kayak 2:06:03
Berny Lohmann Ecohezhig Sea Kayak 2:06:14