There was one weekend in October where the weather forecast was looking promising for Toronto harbour. Strong west winds were building all week and Saturday was predicted to be windy. It was indeed windy and for a change, I had some free time. I packed up the car, drove down to Cherry street and walked out to the beach to see what people were sailing on.
There was one single windsurfer to be seen, and he was smiling as he returned from his session. He'd had fun on a 5m sail and suggested I rig my 5.4. It wasn't even too cold, maybe a bit gusty, but really, why wasn't anyone else out?
I had a great session. The Lake Ontario waves were providing nice gybe surfaces, and I managed a few downwind carve 360s. It was misting a bit, but wasn't raining. I didn't push things to much - did I mention I was the only person out sailing?
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My windsurfing GPS trail out on Lake Ontario with the Toronto downtown and CN tower in the background |
To be fair, there were two sails that I could see going back and forth from the Toronto Windsurfing Club launch around 1 km down wind. That bay provides the best launch in Toronto when the wind is SW or W. With 4 million inhabitants in the Greater Toronto Area, I would have thought there would be more than 4 sailors out over 2 hours mid day on a Saturday at the best launch on a day with solid predicted wind.
If this was a launch near Marseilles, also a town of 4 million, there would have been at least 100 people out sailing at any of the 5 or so decent launch sites that I visited over there in France. No, there weren't any kiters out either, they do tend to launch from a different beach though.
While I didn't land another vulcan in the three good
freestyle sessions I've had back in Canada, I'm still trying. I'm over 220
attempts now, and still just that
one lucky one to my name.
I could see a helicopter hovering over the city watching the first day of the "occupy" movement. I doubt that kept many people away from the beach though. Any thoughts?