OK, so I am resurrecting this thread as today I HAVE SOME FIRST-HAND DATA you should know about, so does the Beaner.
Today it's Herring Fest at CB, lots of sea birds feasting on them and the left-overs from others, you guessed it, our lion friends. Usually I am just concerned to run into one by fluke or get swept into their hanging areas, like Ruskie did one year.
Not today. Nope. Today was (moreso than yesterday) "avoid the drunken, drifting along sideways high as a kite on herring, literally tens of lions" day. They hung around together in groups or swam across the surf in twos or were just drifting and surfacing all over the place on their own.
..... EVERYWHERE...... but especially inshore in as little as 2' of water and all the way out on the bar. So, at first it was just "go slow, avoid and stay out" to sail but every time I did they were barking harder and harder. Some even seemed to follow us out into the deep water.....they were certainly observed swimming after us waaaaay out in twos. Kinda freaky
Anyway, so this goes on for a while, me slapping my board and yelling when I get close to shore, avoiding ditching at any cost (it's amazing what you can do if you have some concern you might get chomped). There were those who would only get startled by loud yells they were so stoned, others were super startled when the finally noticed me almost upon them, some didn't even move a muscle and just barked at me.....those were the ones I stayed esp clear of. Some drifting with their "feet" tail flippers sticking straight upward into the air, others with their pectorals and tail flippers sticking up looking like some huge seabird (to those with marginal eyesight, ha
)
But we did notice that the bulls would start to separate from the groups and started swimming toward us when we passed. This got so bad that once when I wanted to leave the beach, two bulls swam from two different groups toward one another, one from up the beachstart and one from below. With two feet of their massive torsos pushing wakes sticking out of the water they looked like big round jetskis under low power, literally cutting me off. I had to chicken gybe twice and only got through by mere few feet the third time, yelling at them at the top of my lungs. This was kinda the incident that pushed me over the edge.....well, and the fact the wind was dying
Beaner was swearing at them too which probably just confirmed to them that we were indeed bad news and needed to be dealt with......I figure it's all his fault
Anyway, being underpowered and being chased by a 500++lb sea lion didn't exactly make my day if you know what I mean
So then I was out and plotted my next move, barely planing while way out and the wind dying
I sailed back and forth a few times to give things a chance to cool down, then sailed in quite a bit upwind from the earlier scene, promptly fell off the plane near shore and slogged in. I was already picturing being knocked down, scrambling over sail and board to keep from those chompers, yelling for help that obviously wouldn't come but.....once again.....good thing, the ambulance boys were having coffee at the beach
What a nice coincidence, they might actually be of some use today
As I got closer I saw one large bull and several other lions that dove away but I stayed mum except for singing "I'm just a log, see me float along, I don't eat herring, la..lalala...lala..."
Made it in sans barks or chomps, I would have been easy pickings for the earlier irate boys but maybe I got lucky again.
All I know: People, I am NEVER sailing at CB during peak herring season again And I would suggest neither should you.
Just an edit here: I'm perhaps over-reacting, many of us have had sea lions around when sailing but today WAS REALLY FREAKY several times. Some potential drivers for the lion behavior: feeding frenzy, protecting the group & territory, maybe even mating going on, who knows. To me: not worth it, I'll wait til there are many fewer lions in the water.
See also
http://www.bigwavedave.ca/phpBB2/viewto ... t=sea+lion and
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/n ... ons29.html