The principle is fairly straight forward - time the paddle to drop down with the tide to arrive at the South Bishop for slack water, and then come back up with the flood. Easy right?
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| As I stop to take a photo, Richard rapidly disappears as I'm swept away from him, during our ferry glide across to North Bishop |
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| Carreg Rhoson, with the South Bishop and it's lighthouse in the distance |
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| Richard with North Bishop to right and Carreg Rhoson to left |
Going down the west side we experience a bit of swell coming in from the Atlantic - it must get quite serious out here on a rough day. Looking at the chart you can see why as the water depth shallows quite rapidly causing large areas of overfalls.
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| Seals on North Bishop, with St Davids in the far distance |
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| North Bishop |
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| In the calm eddy behind North Bishop looking down through Carreg Rhoson and South Bishop in the distance |
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| South Bishop and it's lighthouse gradually get bigger as we drop down onto it |
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| Arriving at South Bishop |
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| Tempted as we both were, the swell was a little bit to big to make for a safe dry landing |
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| Daufraich in the background as Richard goes to play in some waves just north of South Bishop |
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| 13.2 Nm 24km in 3.75 hrs |










