Do you fancy some pre-Easter sea kayaking in the mediterranean, good food & vino after a grim Scottish winter? Then join Ana and me for the 2027 Paigaia (=sea kayak club) sea kayak symposium! We would love to see some Taysiders there...
This is a write up of the 2025 sea kayak symposium that we attended so that you can get an idea. Do not hesitate to ask Ana or myself if you have questions. We are actually now members of the Pagaia club.
Llançà is a wee coastal city on the Costa Brava ("wild coast") just south of the border to France and north of the Cap de Crues (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cap_de_Creus) peninsula and national park. Every second year they organise a sea kayak symposium in the week before Easter. This year Ana and I took part. We highly recommend it if you want to paddle in typically good mediterranean weather and want to meet fellow paddlers from all over Europe (=Bretagne/France, Italy, Germany, Spain).
Travel: a) By plane: Fly to Barcelona or Girona and then take a rental car which is cheap (we paid 200 EUR for 2 weeks). You can hire sea kayaks in Llançà. b) By car & ferry: There are many car & ferry combinations and the advantage is that you can take your own kayak. However, if the ferry goes to San Sebastian then you must still drive many miles to Llançà.
Accomodation: The Pagaia sea kayak club offers free camping (rustic in the dust, noisy but fun, place for camper vans, non-luxury facilities of a sports club, most folks do this). There is also a camp site in town plus plenty of holiday lets plus hotels. Costs are moderate as it is pre season.
Kayak rental: Available in Llançà and at other places. No problem to attend the symposium without your own kayak.
Impressions: Below are some images from the symposium. There are close to 200 participants and instructors from Wales (Nigel Dennis came with 10 of his kayaks and several instructors), Germany, Netherlands, Spain and France. The Mediterranean is non-tidal but expect the tramontana wind that blows down from the Pyrenees some days. The coast is beautiful with a mix of beaches and rocky bits but there is little wildlife (we saw some sun fish though) and there are no islands. Nonetheless, the good weather and the international, middle-aged crowd makes up for it. The first three days of the symposium were skills (you can book groups that develop specific skills) followed by four days of tours.
We had 2 overcast days, one rainy day and the rest was sunny. Generally the 2025 spring was wet for Catalunya (in Scotland it would have been considered as dry). The locals are happy about rain because Catalunya is just recovering from a draught due to several years of very little rain.
Here is our wee Fiat 500 and Ana sorting out kit. There is lots of parking
and here is a group discussing the plans for the session or trip.
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