Sounds about right. When did it last have sailable water? Only sailed there a couple of times. Before the advent of short bottom scraping fins. Had to walk hundreds of metres to get out to good depth. I once met a bloke out there, ahead of his time, who packed a screwdriver and a fin cutoff to half length. He proudly explained that it saved him 15 minutes of wading, he said he could broad reach to within 200 metres of the carpark.
Sounds about right. When did it last have sailable water? Only sailed there a couple of times. Before the advent of short bottom scraping fins. Had to walk hundreds of metres to get out to good depth. I once met a bloke out there, ahead of his time, who packed a screwdriver and a fin cutoff to half length. He proudly explained that it saved him 15 minutes of wading, he said he could broad reach to within 200 metres of the carpark.
Sounds like a good idea for Primbee! A tiny fin to get out a bit then swap to the proper fin... which is fine if they are simple to change like powerbox, but maybe not for tuttle, although still worth the effort I think.
Someone told me why Lake George is always empty now. It made sense when they told me, but I forgot why now.
Yes its empty now because of the drought. Used to be good sailing , don't think ill take a foil out there
Never sailed there but remember seeing the lake full of water when driving past on the road to Canberra in the early 90s.
Could the rest of the article be scanned and posted?
On the way to Burrum last year there was a fair bit of water in the Lake. Hard to get a good photo, but looked sailable!
Someone told me why Lake George is always empty now. It made sense when they told me, but I forgot why now.
Its not always empty now. I am sure it was full a couple of years back.
Someone told me why Lake George is always empty now. It made sense when they told me, but I forgot why now.
Its not always empty now. I am sure it was full a couple of years back.
I sailed it in early 2017, launching from Picnic Point on the NE side as the water didn't reach the shore near the highway. It is vast and once you'd walked the 200m to get sufficient water depth for your fin, you had a straight reach of 11+ KMs! That said, you have to stop every couple of km to step over the top of the sheep fencing which was a couple of cm above water level - I know a small chop hop would have worked, but the danger of getting it wrong and then walking back wasn't worth the risk. Being so shallow there was no swell and the water was 'thick' with silt, it was bizarre to step off in the middle of the lake, in waist deep water, and be 4+ KMs from any shore. Certainly worth a trip if ever get rains like that again.
A different state but when driving west from LG the Coorong looked amazing, you'd get a 100km leg!!
Yeah but it smells like an open sewer.