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Kayaking Washington’s San Juan Islands Is The Digital Detox Retreat Of The Summer

A guide and young boy sit in kayaks side by side on the water surrounding the San Juan Islands.
Image: Outdoor Odysseys

The pings arrive before morning coffee: work emails, news headlines, social notifications. Thirty minutes later, you’re thumbing through suggested videos, trying to remember what you were supposed to check in the first place. The glowing screen sapping attention before the day has properly begun.

The modern benefits of being accessible mean our smartphones are interrupting our sleep, our conversations, and even intended quiet moments. Studies link excessive screen time to stress, anxiety, fragmented attention and emotional fatigue. Yet stepping away from our devices isn’t easy with the dependency on them we’ve interwoven into our lives, and it can feel equally stressful, nearly impossible, to disconnect.

Ironically, just a few hours north of the tech capital of Seattle, there lies an unexpected reset.

In Washington State’s San Juan Islands, guests launching sea kayaks with Outdoor Odysseys often begin their trip with a radical act: switching their phones to airplane mode (or as the advertising implies, kayak mode), and some even leaving them behind altogether.

A group kayaks the San Juan Islands in Washington state.
Image: Outdoor Odysseys

“There’s information overload and mindless technology use. Both are taxing people in different ways,” says Tom Murphy, the owner of Outdoor Odysseys. Murphy has been with the outfitter since 2005 and purchased the company from founder Clark Casebolt in 2012. He believes strongly in the digital detox, an intentional period of time where we cut the cord and eliminate our screen time.

The research sides with Murphy. Exercise, meditative activities like paddling, and time spent outdoors, in nature, untethered from technology, have been found to reduce stress and symptoms of depression.

While everyone has the power to change their relationship with their phone anywhere, Murphy sees paddling the San Juan Islands as a transformative catalyst. “What we’re really helping guests do is reset their relationship with technology, to enjoy their time with us as fully as possible.”

Murphy and Outdoor Odysseys have built a four-decade reputation guiding paddlers through the waters around these islands. And as the small sea kayaking outfitter has evolved, they have become increasingly relevant with an essential need for modern travel: an analog antidote to our digital lives.

Digital Detoxing by Way of Kayak in the San Juan Islands

Rewriting the schedule on island time

Kayak travel dismantles urgency. Movement depends on tides, weather and daylight rather than rigid itineraries. Launch times sometimes shift. Routes sometimes adapt.

“We’re used to controlling our daily schedules,” Murphy says. “Out here, nature sets the pace, but no matter the route, you’ll have a great time on the water.”

That slower rhythm, commonly called “island time,” begins before paddles even touch water, with travel to the San Juans based on the schedule of ferries. The ride gives guests their first moment of pause to begin disconnecting from the mainland and focusing on the trip ahead and the people they will be traveling with.

Unlike viral destinations of social media fame, Outdoor Odysseys avoids performative tourism in the San Juan archipelago. “There are no queues for the perfect photo rock,” Murphy says.

Instead, you explore one place deeply rather than racing between highlights to check off a list.

Going out of office and into the blue

Sea kayaking demands presence almost immediately. Unlike passive sightseeing on a large boat, a kayak connects travelers directly at water level. The result isn’t an escape from reality, but more a recalibration, with attention returning to the physical world, truly IRL (in real life).

“You’re moving under your own power,” Murphy explains. “Your hands are busy, your brain is engaged, and you naturally start paying attention to what’s around you: the birds, the water, your paddling companions.”

Without engines or exhaust, the kayaks move almost silently, allowing you to tap into the marine network around you.

“It’s a respectful way to move through the water,” Murphy says. “You see things more organically, from urchins slowly crawling the sea floor in the clear waters to marine birds swooping and plunging nearby.”

A group of kayakers paddling across a stretch of open water in Washington stae.
Image: Outdoor Odysseys

Getting Real Without Reels

Wildlife encounters in the San Juan Islands are anything but predictable, but in a world of influencer-curated itineraries, that unpredictability is exactly what makes encounters so intimate.

“Seeing whales is a privilege, not an inevitability,” Murphy says as he expresses to aspiring detoxers that this is a kayak trip first and the rest is up to chance.

Encounters do happen regularly. Harbor seals appear on nearly every trip, curious heads bobbing like what Murphy jokingly calls “marine Labradors.” Sea lions announce themselves long before becoming visible. And occasionally, paddlers experience moments impossible to script, like the sudden breath of a porpoise breaking calm water or an orca surfacing nearby.

Guests often reach instinctively for cameras, but the quickness of these encounters usually foils their attempts. Murphy believes that dozens of rushed photos rarely replace one deeply lived moment.

Any wildlife interaction, according to Murphy, reminds us that there is a lot going on under the boat. And that it’s worth slowing down to experience it and consider the positive impacts of marine conservation too.

Meanwhile, night paddling transforms perception of the waterscape entirely. During bioluminescence tours, darkness settles across calm water until paddle strokes ignite flashes of living light.

For many guests, Murphy says, it’s their first experience with true darkness, free from screens, streetlights, or artificial glow. Without visual overload, he says, awareness sharpens. The water sounds louder and stars appear brighter.

Replacing social media with social life

Once phones get put away conversation is inevitable. And in tandem kayaks, communication is essential to adjusting pace, pointing out wildlife, and getting to know your shipmate. Even strangers quickly develop a shared rhythm.

“You’re literally in the same boat,” Murphy says. “Everything becomes something you’re doing together.”

Evenings amplify that connection. Well-thought-out meals unfold slowly on remote beaches. Murphy, an avid cook, has shaped Outdoor Odysseys’ backcountry menu around sustainability and enjoyment rather than convenience and speed. Local produce is prioritized when possible, fair-trade coffee fuels mornings, and herbs grow beside the company’s office.

After hours of paddling, these shared meals become memorable rituals rather than refueling stops. Many of Outdoor Odysseys’ reviews comment on the excellent food, and amazing guides. So naturally, conversations at camp linger long after dinner ends.

A family kayak trip in search of a digital detox leads to unforgettable moments like rock jumps.
Image: Outdoor Odysseys

Connection found

Without digital distraction, simple activities regain novelty: skipping stones, tidepooling, building driftwood sculptures, being mesmerized by flames dancing in a campfire, and watching sunsets that light up the sky.

Murphy recalls watching a young child sit happily in the middle seat of a triple kayak, occupied with nothing else as she turned her spray skirt into a tidal pool with some seawater, kelp and a rock crab.

“It pulls people away from a false urgency,” Murphy says. “They remember or figure out how to fill time differently.”

As trips end and phones reconnect, messages and notifications flood back. Headlines resume their relentless pace. And Murphy says that’s okay. What Outdoor Odysseys ultimately offers isn’t escape from modern life, he says, but perspective on how to live within it.

“We don’t need to abandon technology,” Murphy explains. “We just need a healthier relationship with it.”

Out on the water, paddlers rediscover things increasingly rare: sustained attention, shared experience and the quiet confidence that comes from moving through the water under their own power, immersed in the natural world.


Outdoor Odysseys offers half to multi-day kayaking itineraries in the San Juan Islands between Victoria Island, the mainland of British Columbia and Washington State.

 

Canoe Review: Esquif Prospecteur 16

Paul Brittain paddles the Esquif Prospecteur 16 canoe
The Chestnut Prospector design has roamed windswept lakes and rivers for more than 100 years. Paddler Paul Brittain, not quite as long. | Feature photo: Scott MacGregor

Sometimes, Paddling Magazine gets one of the very first production boats out of the molds. There are NASA-like logistics to get a still-warm hull onto a trailer headed to some river put-in somewhere. Other times, like with the Esquif Prospecteur 16, we wait so long it feels like surely we’ve written about it already. Did we? We must have. Turns out, no. So, 10 years after its release, we loaded Esquif’s second best-selling tandem canoe into a boxcar for a five-day end-of-season whitewater trip down the Spanish River in northern Ontario.

Canoe Review: Esquif Prospecteur 16

This Spanish River trip was originally planned back in 2023, which would have been clever timing for the 100-year birthday celebration of the Prospector design from the Chestnut Canoe Company, from which the Esquif Prospecteur was eventually shaped. Before we get into the nibbly bits of this review, can you think of any other piece of sporting equipment designed in 1923 you’d consider using today? A paddle, maybe.

Lots of companies claim to make the Chestnut Prospector. Historian Dan Miller’s website, The Wooden Canoe Museum, tracks the changes over time, revealed in fractions of inches in beam and depth. The shape of wood-canvas Prospectors evolved slightly over time as builders’ forms deteriorated and were modified or replaced. The Peterborough Canoe Company version, which went out of production when the company folded in 1961, was sleeker in the stems and less rockered than the Chestnut.

Esquif Prospecteur 16 Specs
Length: 16’0”
Width: 35”
Depth: 14”
Weight: 65 lbs
MSRP: $2,309 USD (vinyl gunwales)
esquif.com

In 1978, Bill Mason’s neighbor, Chris Frank, borrowed Mason’s river-scarred 16-foot cedar canvas Chestnut Prospector—the one seen in the film Path of the Paddle—to create a mold suitable for producing fiberglass and Kevlar hulls. The mold was passed along to Wally Schaber and Chris Harris, owners of the Ottawa-based paddling shop Trailhead, who began producing and selling composite Trailhead Prospectors.

Ten years later, Trailhead created its own version of the 17-foot Chestnut Prospector and, soon after, partnered with Mad River Canoe to create Royalex molds of both models. Eventually, these molds ended up at Esquif, which produced the Trailhead Prospectors until the end of Royalex. Esquif then purchased both the 16- and 17-foot molds, invented T-Formex to replace discontinued Royalex, and here we are.

A keen, historically accurate eye will notice both the 16- and 17-foot Prospecteur models have a flatter bottom than the original Chestnut cedar canvas versions. Maybe they were purposefully tweaked for more initial stability. Or maybe it was simply because the hulls didn’t need to be as rounded because they weren’t steaming and bending cedar ribs over a form.

Paul Brittain paddles the Esquif Prospecteur 16 canoe
The Chestnut Prospector design has roamed windswept lakes and rivers for more than 100 years. Paddler Paul Brittain, not quite as long. | Feature photo: Scott MacGregor

On the water

I’ve spent a lot of time in the Prospecteur 16. I like its symmetrical shape. I like how the gunwale lines smoothly and evenly arc from the 14-inch depth at the center yoke to the bow and stern ends. The 2.75-inch of rocker bow and stern is enough for a whitewater canoe, but not too much to be squirrely in flatwater. The Prospecteur 16 won’t win races like the sharp-edged Boundary Waters rocket ships. You have to remember that in 1923, Chestnut was building these out of cedar and canvas for the Geological Survey of Canada, which needed high-volume and seaworthy canoes that performed well on both windswept lakes and whitewater rivers, like say the Spanish River.

We got off the train in the whistlestop community of Biscotasing. In a matter of a few minutes, our two canoes and gear were handed down from the boxcar, the conductor posed for a photograph, and the train rolled north. Founded in 1884 as a railroad construction town and later a Hudson’s Bay Company fur trading post, Bisco, as they call it here, is now home to only 22 permanent residents. It is the northernmost access point to the West Branch of the Spanish.

the Esquif Prospecteur 16 paddled in the mist
One design to rule them all. | Photo: Scott MacGregor

Leaving the trip until the middle of October limited the number of takers to just three. We agreed to take turns soloing the Prospecteur 16 in the flats and rapids.

Our beefier Prospecteur 17 is Esquif’s top-selling touring canoe, driven mostly by outfitter and livery sales. I have a 17-footer for big trips. But when people ask me what canoe they should buy, my answer is—if you can only have one—the canoe you should buy is the one you will paddle most often. And for lots of people, the 16-foot Prospecteur is one of those canoes.

Where the Prospecteur shines

Going on a weekend-to-weeklong whitewater canoe trip like the Spanish? The Prospecteur 16 is perfect, either tandem or solo. The same is true for a lakewater trip. I realize that at 65 pounds it’s far from the lightest canoe, but it’s still fine. The T-Formex my shoulders begrudge on portages is the same T-Formex durability my dry feet appreciate when I mindlessly ram the bow up on shore and step out. Slide the Prospecteur 16 off the dock at the cottage for a misty morning tootle around the lake? Sure, why not. I see no reason why you couldn’t round up an old phonograph, wicker picnic basket and parasol and escape with your true love from the watchful eye of your chaperones. And it’s sporty enough that for the examination run of my moving water instructor course, I got sick of waiting for a solo whitewater playboat to become available, so I jumped in a 16-foot Prospector and ran the Madawaska River’s class III Chalet Rapids.

Paul Brittain paddles the Esquif Prospecteur 16
Carefree durability in T-Formex. | Photo: Scott MacGregor

Some canoeists will argue over a half-inch here and there. If that’s you, builders like Headwater Canoes are still making cedar canvas Prospectors from the original Chestnut forms. For me, I’ll trade the authenticity of having to do pine pitch and birchbark canoe repairs for the modern-day durability and practicality of T-Formex.

I’m not without a nostalgic bone, however. The Chestnut Canoe Company offered their Prospector canoes in two stock colors, red or green. Guess which of the two T-Formex Esquif Prospecteur 16 colors I think you should order. Red, of course. And while you’re at it, to celebrate more than 100 years on the water, I’d upgrade your Prospecteur from vinyl gunwales to Esquif’s ash trim package. It just feels right.

Scott MacGregor is the founder of Paddling Magazine. And yes, he passed his instructor level in the Prospector.

Cover of Issue 75 of Paddling MagazineThis article was published in Issue 75 of Paddling Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

The Chestnut Prospector design has roamed windswept lakes and rivers for more than 100 years. Paddler Paul Brittain, not quite as long. | Feature photo: Scott MacGregor

 

7 Paddling Expeditions To Watch In Summer 2026

image of expeditions of 2026
From left to right: The Missouri Speed Record team trains, Dale "Greybeard" Sanders on the Appalachian Trail, Team Canada by Canoe breaks ice. Feature Image: Facebook.

Every spring, hopeful adventurers dust off their paddles and plan ambitious routes. From legendary paddlers taking on trips of epic proportions to newer paddlers chasing Fastest Known Paddles, here are seven expeditions to follow this summer.

Missouri River Speed Attempt

In June 2026, four paddlers will tackle the 2,341 miles of the Missouri River in a Fastest Known Paddle attempt. The existing speed record is 33 days, 18 hours and 45 minutes. The team is made up of Scott Miller, Scott Duffus, Lada Zednik and Curt Leitz as primary paddlers with Ed Wagner as a back up paddler. The mission also includes a robust support team, and all four paddlers were involved in the 2023 Mississippi Guinness World Record for speed.

The route along the Missouri spans from Three Forks, Montana to St. Louis, Missouri. Follow along on Facebook.

Will Steger is on an 800 mile spring thaw expedition

At age 81, Will Steger is out on a solo expedition across the top of the North American continent, tackling 800 miles of spring breakup conditions with a seven-foot, eight-pound whitewater raft, alone.

Steger is sending out daily audio dispatches from the expedition. Take a listen to what’s happening in the tundra today, provided by the Steger Center.

Dale Sanders tackles the second half of his Appalachian Trail age record

Paddling legend Dale “Greybeard” Sanders has paddled the Mississippi from its headwaters to the Gulf of Mexico twice and holds the age record for doing so. Now in 2026 Sanders has set off on the second half of his thru-hike of the Appalachian trail to reclaim his age record for the popular long trail at age 90.

Sanders began his trek on September 6, 2025 heading southbound from Harper’s Ferry West Virginia toward Springer Mountain, Georgia. He then took a short break for the winter before flipping, and hiking north from Harpers Ferry to Mount Katahdin.

Follow the adventure at Grey Beard Team USA Appalachian Trail on Facebook.

Justine Curgenven and Jean-François Marleau to circumnavigate Iceland

Expedition paddler and filmmaker Justine Curgenven and Jean-François Marleau have set out on a 2500km circumnavigation of Iceland, clockwise. For Curgenven, this is a return to Iceland after having visited the island’s west fjords 25 years ago during a solo trip and promising to return.

The journey promises strong currents, challenging surf beaches and sneaker waves, brutal wind and of course, some of the most stunning coastline the Atlantic has to offer. According to Curgenven’s blog, she was even warned to mark her kayaks’ location by GPS as they might get buried in by the strong winds and sand storms.

Read Curgenven’s blog about the journey, or follow the journey on Facebook.

Ireland Circumnavigation Speed Attempt

Juliana Brotzman and Nate Gueltzau have departed to begin an ambitious speed attempt to circumnavigate the island of Ireland. The pair also aims to raise funds and awareness for Team River Runner, an organization supporting veterans and service members through adaptive paddling.

The team aims to paddle 1,100 miles of paddling over 15-22 days, or a minimum of 50 miles a day to meet their goal. Brotzman and Gueltzau will be accompanied by a support crew for logistics, resupply and emergency coordination. Ireland By Paddle lists Brotzman’s experience as including several solo travel cross country trips to hike, backpack, paddle and work and Gueltzau’s paddling resume includes long distance kayak expeditions including the Missouri River 340, Alabama 650 and Suwannee River 230.

The previous Ireland circumnavigation record holder Mick O’Meara completed the 930 miles in 23 days, paddling into fierce headwinds; of five other pairs of kayakers who set out at the same time as O’Meara, two of the five abandoned or postponed their trip according to the Irish Times. At the time of securing the speed record, O’Meara already held the speed record for crossing the Irish Sea with paddler Brian Fanning.

Follow the adventure at Operation Emerald Isle on Facebook.

Freya Hoffmeister continues North America circumnavigation

Perhaps the most legendary sea kayaker of all time, Freya Hoffmeister began her journey to circumnavigate North America by sea kayak in 2017. North America will be Hoffmeister’s third continent circumnavigation, and she estimates it will take 10-12 years, paddling in blocks of about three months twice a year.

Hoffmeister is no stranger to circumnavigating continents. The paddling legend paddled around Australia in 11 months, South America in 30 months and is now onto “the North Island” and will be heading north to Nain, Labrador in summer 2026.

Follow Hoffmeister’s expedition at her website.

Canada By Canoe

Will Vyse, Nolan Aziz, and Georges Kirijian are paddling from Tadoussac, Quebec to Prince Rupert, British Columbia in a coast to coast journey. All three paddlers are 24 years old, but have worked as professional canoe guides since 2019 and had a cumulative 888 days of canoe tripping experience between them going into this most recent expedition.

The paddlers expect the journey to take 200 days, and their mission in part is to raise money for True North Aid, an organization which provides practical humanitarian support to northern and remote Indigenous communities in Canada.

Follow the Canada By Canoe tracker.

From left to right: The Missouri Speed Record team trains, Dale “Greybeard” Sanders on the Appalachian Trail, Team Canada by Canoe breaks ice. Feature Image: Facebook | Missouri Speed Record, Greybeard Team USA Appalachian Trail, Canada By Canoe. 

Inside America’s Largest Private Collection Of Kayaks: Charles Albright’s Boat House

Charles Albright stands in the living room of his Boat House, housing his extensive collection of kayaks
“Folks give me free boats all the time,” says Charles Albright. “I’ve loaned out about 50 that I’d love to get back someday.” | Feature photo: Scott Sady

Charles Albright has more boats than you ever will. At last count, the Reno, Nevada, kayaking legend had a whopping 150 in his house, including about 25 in the front room, four in his bedroom, more in his basement and garage, and a full boat room of 40 or so.

The boats range from downriver and sprint racing kayaks to surf shoes, surf skis, outrigger canoes, whitewater slalom kayaks, C-1s, regular whitewater kayaks, a smattering of sea kayaks and canoes, and more, all hanging from rafters, lining the walls and taking up nearly every available square inch of space.

A former USA Wildwater Team member and longtime instructor, he just keeps getting them, curating them into one of the world’s biggest, most eclectic collections. And he doesn’t hoard them; last year he gave 24 of them away—many to local kids—and makes similar donations every year.

To Albright, 75, spreading the paddling love is far more important than his museum pieces.

“My biggest prize isn’t my boat collection but all of the folks I’ve met racing and paddling over the years,” he says. Below, we call out a few favorites—and some other odds and ends—in his kayak-heavy home.

Charles Albright stands in the living room of his Boat House, housing his extensive collection of kayaks
“Folks give me free boats all the time,” says Charles Albright. “I’ve loaned out about 50 that I’d love to get back someday.” | Feature photo: Scott Sady

Inside America’s largest private collection of kayaks: Charles Albright’s Boat House

Olympic K-4Olympic K-4

“That’s a Struer from the 1968 Mexico Olympics. I bought it from a flatwater racing team in Seattle. The white one is a K-4 from Susan Starbird, an Olympic paddling coach from Petaluma, which I got from their training center when they needed room.” The 34-foot-long K-4s join another wooden K-2 Struer. “I love Struers. I bought wood boats for a while because they’re so beautiful.”

Wave SkiWave Ski

“That’s a Raider from Australia. I competed on it at the Santa Cruz Surf Kayak Festival. Breaking through the surf was challenging, and it was intimidating to be in sometimes, but it’s dynamic and cuts quick.” The ski joins a K-1 collection that ranges in size from a 24-foot-long Missile to a 7’5” Wave Sport Stubby and 6’9” Minnow by Ann Dwyer.

ValhallaValhalla

“That’s a double surf ski I bought from a builder named Keith Keillor out of San Diego. The yellow one is a Plastex Olympic flatwater sprint boat from Fairfield, California.” They join other rare designs most paddlers only ever see in grainy photos, including a Hydra Taurus, Duet C-2, Mongoose and Hollowform from Tom Johnson, several boats from the 1960s by Apple Line, and his first kayak, a wood frame/Naugahyde skin Folbot.

Wall ArtWall Art

“My cousin painted a picture of Poor Red’s [bar] in El Dorado, California. It’s a great place to party after paddling and get s**tfaced on Gold Cadillacs, a drink made with Galliano. The bottom photo I took myself on the Rogue River in my RPM. My roommate put ‘Home Sweet Home’ on it, which describes me when I’m on the river.”

SpongeBobSpongeBob

“Usually, I’d have it on the dash of my van, but there’s no room there; it’s too filled with other things. The pink duck was a river find. I found it in an eddy on the Grand the last time I did it—a super cold November trip during Covid. They were doing some river studies, so it dropped to 4,000 cfs and rose to 20,000—some of the highest water there since 1984, which I was also there for.”

Life JacketLife Jacket

“That’s a Donald Duck life jacket. His face and body are a bouncing ball. We brought him to Poor Red’s once and sat him on a barstool with us and bought him drinks. I had a business selling paddling gear from 1981 to 1994, and it was one I used for taking people with disabilities out on the water. I still do that, teaching and putting about 60 to 80 people with disabilities on the water every year.”

CeilingCeiling

“I moved into the house in January of 2000 and decorated it to think I was outside. I painted the walls and ceiling with clouds and rainbows, and put in light brown carpet and green linoleum. I also added skylights and 12-inch glass blocks.” You can see Albright’s house for yourself as he gives informal tours twice per month (just get in touch and ask). He’ll be ogling those sky lights aplenty this spring after getting shoulder surgery in February, admitting, “I have to spend three agonizing months off the water.”

Deep Creek PosterDeep Creek Poster

“I helped run the Slalom World Cup on Deep Creek in McHenry, Maryland, in 2014. I showed up and said, ‘Tell me what you need me to do.’ I did everything—timing, cleaning, hanging gates, you name it. It was a total reunion of boaters.” Albright stayed in his truck—a 2005 Ford Explorer with a license plate that reads “Canoer”—which he’ll drive to Alaska this summer for a two-month paddling trip.

Wildwater SweatshirtWildwater Sweatshirt

“During Covid, I was supposed to be at the World Championships at NOC, competing in Wildwater C-2, but it was cancelled.” Albright was on the USA Wildwater Team 12 times, competing in 12 events in the U.S. and in Europe, finishing as high as fourth. He also raced whitewater K-1 in Europe and attended four team trials in Slalom C-2, placing one spot off the team four times. “But it’s all a little fuzzy now,” he says.

Cover of Issue 75 of Paddling MagazineThis article was published in Issue 75 of Paddling Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

“Folks give me free boats all the time,” says Charles Albright. “I’ve loaned out about 50 that I’d love to get back someday.” | Feature photo: Scott Sady

 

Whitewater Kayaking Hits the Big Screen in Apex

If you’ve been browsing Netflix recently, you might have noticed an uncommon sight: a film featuring whitewater kayaking trending number one among English films, with 40 million views just two weeks after its release.

Apex is a thriller starring Charlize Theron and Taron Egerton, and involves the former being chased by the latter through the Australian wilderness as part of a deadly game Egerton contrives. Sasha, played by Theron, is an extreme sports enthusiast—as she says in the film, she “does a bit of everything,” including rock climbing and whitewater kayaking.

It’s not often whitewater kayaking is featured so heavily in the plot of a mainstream Hollywood film. To make it happen, the film employed two high-level whitewater kayakers to be Theron’s stunt doubles on the river: Luuka Jones-Yaxley and River Mutton.

Both hailing from New Zealand, neither Jones-Yaxley or Mutton had been part of a movie previously. In this capacity, at least—Mutton notes she was an extra in the film Yogi Bear when she was eight years old. Pete Townend—who is managing director of Canoe & Kayak, a New Zealand-based company specializing in paddling gear, tours and instructional courses—has been doing kayak and water safety on movie sets in recent years and was asked by the Apex crew whether he knew of any whitewater kayakers who could double for Theron. A friend of both Jones-Yaxley and Mutton, he reached out in late 2024 to see if they’d be interested.

“I thought it seemed so farfetched and unbelievable,” says Jones-Yaxley, who is a five-time Olympian in canoe slalom and K1 bronze medallist at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships. “The next thing I knew, I was being called by some of the stunt coordinators and River and I were having to send in our measurements for costuming. It started to become more real.”

Four people sitting in helicopter
Mutton says one of her favourite parts of the experience was the views they got from the helicopter. | Photo: Courtesy River Mutton

Preparation for filming began in early 2025. The pair were flown to New Zealand’s South Island where they met up with a small film crew. They spent about a week being flown by helicopter into remote rivers, scouting locations where they planned to shoot most of the whitewater kayaking scenes. Then they spent a week flying back to those locations to film.

“We were working together [with the director and stunt coordinator] on what looks cool in a movie context,” continues Jones-Yaxley. “Because when you’re paddling really well on whitewater, you look smooth and you’re dry. But when you’re in a movie, you need to make it look exciting. So it was quite interesting, looking at a river differently and trying to figure out how to make it look as dramatic as possible.”

Mutton, who is an extreme kayak world champion, explains that she was told to hit rocks and miss lines to make the kayaking look more exciting. They were also told to paddle “a little more oddly,” with a less technical forward stroke, so the shots of she and Jones-Yaxley paddling would be easier to knit together with the shots of Theron paddling.

She says it was difficult at first to override her instinct to paddle well.

“It went against what you naturally have trained yourself to do,” says Mutton. “But by the end of filming, I was so practiced at it, that when I went back to my own kayaking I was a little worried I had practiced paddling like that too much. I didn’t have any problems, but it did get in my head a little bit.”

They divided up the stunt work according to costuming. Jones-Yaxley was in the costume with the red life jacket and blue helmet, which meant she did the scenes before Theron was being chased. Mutton was in the costume with the hoodie and jeans, which meant she did the chase scenes.

“It did mean River had to do more swimming in the cold river than I did,” laughs Jones-Yaxley. “I got the Gucci role.”

Mutton says she isn’t sure why she ended up doing the chase scenes, which involved more swimming.

“Maybe I just seemed a little too enthusiastic,” Mutton says jokingly. “Maybe I looked like I was having too much fun swimming.”

Part of Mutton’s costuming was to not wear a PFD or helmet, because in the film Egerton steals Theron’s equipment and provides her only with her kayak, paddle and backpack of supplies to carry through the chase.

Woman sitting in kayak in pool with camera on bow
Jones-Yaxley says she was able to visit the Disney studio in Sydney, where they had a pool and other sets. | Photo: Courtesy Luuka Jones-Yaxley

“A lot of the kayaking was reasonably chill,” says Mutton of the rivers and sets they were paddling. “But as soon as you’re taking your helmet and life jacket off, you’re a little sketched out because you’re not really supposed to do that.”

But she says they had a good safety crew and since filming took place late in the summer, they weren’t dealing with “heaps of water”—with one notable exception. They were filming on the Turnbull River when a flash flood occurred and the whole film crew had to be evacuated. Then Jones-Yaxley and Mutton were asked to go out and paddle and be filmed on the drone.

“We kind of looked at each other like, oh that’s quite high now,” says Mutton. “It was actually really fun paddling. It was very good kayaking, solid grade five. But it was probably one of the scariest things I’ve ever done, just kayaking without a PFD.”

Unfortunately, none of the shots from them kayaking on the flooded Turnbull made it into the film.

Two women and one man in whitewater kayaks on river
Left to right: River Mutton, Charlize Theron and Callan Grady—Grady helped coached Theron for the kayaking scenes. | Photo: Courtesy River Mutton

Despite being cold and potentially hypothermic at times, Mutton and Jones-Yaxley say they were well looked after. Where possible, there was a hot tent set up riverside where they could warm up between takes. They were given handwarmers by the costuming department and were wrapped in warm blankets as soon as they got off the river.

“It was quite nice actually,” continues Mutton. “Every day you wake up, you meet your private chauffeur downstairs and they drive you to the movie set. You can just roll out in your pajamas. And you go there and someone tells you what to wear, they brush your hair, style it. And then you go kayaking.”

Filming with the actors took place in Australia. Jones-Yaxley flew back and forth four times and Mutton once to shoot paddling scenes there themselves and advise on Theron’s paddling scenes.

They both comment how down to earth and approachable Theron was to work with, and how eager she was to make sure the paddling scenes looked authentic.

“I was super impressed by how quickly she picked up that natural-looking style and she was really good at watching myself or River,” says Jones-Yaxley.

Mutton echoes this, saying she noticed Theron would watch her relaxing in her kayak between shots. “I wouldn’t even be doing anything, I’d just be chatting and hanging out. And then she’d film her next shot and she’d instantly look like she’d been in a kayak her whole life. It was kind of scary. But it was so impressive.”

Jones-Yaxley and Mutton gave some pointers to help Theron learn how to paddle in a straight line, which she initially struggled with.

“She was like, Luuka, what do you love about kayaking?” says Jones-Yaxley, laughing. “I was like, the feeling when you get it right. I think she kind of put that into a dancing context because she has a dancing background. It’s like when you’re in the flow and in the moment, it all feels really good.”

When Apex was released, Jones-Yaxley and Mutton watched the film on a laptop at Mutton’s house.

“Watching the film, it’s actually quite amazing how they put everything together,” comments Mutton. “All these different sets from the South Island and Australia were meshed to look like the same scene. I think paddler-wise the person looked pretty convincingly the same the whole time between me, Luuka and Charlize.”

Jones-Yaxley says the movie was a lot more intense than she was expecting.

In terms of the kayaking, she says, “It was a really authentic film. It was just so cool that they had whitewater kayaking in there that was authentic in terms of going to real rivers and paddling good whitewater.”

Both agree the film is good exposure for the sport.

“I just think it’s awesome,” says Jones-Yaxley, “and I really hope it’s the start of lots of whitewater kayaking in feature films.”

 

Join Our Upcoming Webinar: How to Get Your Dream Girls’ Paddling Trip Out Of The Group Chat

women sit on camp chairs at sunset at a campsite during their girls paddling trip
Feature photo: Maddy Marquardt

Paddling Magazine is hosting an inspiring and practical webinar with Maddy Marquardt—editor, experienced sea kayaker and guide known for leading women’s trips on Lake Superior and beyond.

This session is designed for women who have spent months (or years) dreaming, chatting, and planning group paddling adventures—but haven’t taken the leap to actually book and go.

Maddy will break down the common barriers that keep trips stuck in the group chat and share actionable strategies to move from idea to execution. Drawing on her extensive guiding experience, she’ll cover how to build momentum, align expectations, make decisions as a group and confidently commit to a plan.

Attendees will leave with practical tools, insider tips and the motivation needed to transform their vision of a girls’ paddling trip into a real, on-the-water experience.

Bring your questions—there will be time for a live Q&A at the end of the session.

Note: A recording of the webinar will be made available to registrants via email after the live session concludes, so sign up even if you can’t attend on May 26!



Feature photo: Maddy Marquardt

 

Trail Salads Are The Best Tripping Lunch You Don’t Know About

Paddling Magazine editor-in-chief Kaydi Pyette and columnist Virginia Marshall pose at a canoe campsite with their trail salads
Eat fresh on Day 30. | Feature photo: Kaydi Pyette

For many backcountry paddlers, lunch is little more than fast fuel. Midday meals provide vital calories between breakfast and dinner, but they’re rarely the culinary highlight of the day. Another salami-and-cheese wrap, anyone?

Lunch planning can be especially challenging on longer adventures or portage-intensive trips where minimizing weight and bulk is imperative. The quest for a lightweight, satisfying and easy-to-prepare tripping lunch led me to a surprising (and surprisingly tasty) discovery—the trail salad.

Trail salads are the best tripping lunch you don’t know about

If the thought of salad as a hearty paddling meal has you reaching for a pack of Slim Jims, think again. Combining generous portions of your favorite grains or pasta with calorie-dense crowd-pleasers like peanut butter and coconut milk, these trail salads hit well above their weight. Toss in an endlessly customizable selection of dried fruits, dehydrated veggies and seasonings, and you have the makings of gustatory gold.

Paddling Magazine editor-in-chief Kaydi Pyette and columnist Virginia Marshall pose at a canoe campsite with their trail salads
Eat fresh on Day 30. | Feature photo: Kaydi Pyette

Because you can use just about any combination of grains, vegetables, fruit, seeds, nuts and flavors, trail salads let you build a deliciously varied lunchtime menu for longer trips. Even better, they require near-zero prep in the field, so they’re perfect when you’re hungry, pressed for time or hunkering down in bad weather.

The secret to mouthwatering, fresh salad when you are days, or even weeks, away from your crisper is dehydration. A compact and inexpensive home dehydrator is the most convenient option for avid campers, but you can also dehydrate in your oven at low heat. Dehydration removes all the moisture from foods, drastically reducing their size and weight, and allowing them to travel shelf-stable in a kayak hatch or canoe pack for weeks without spoiling.

Before your trip

Cook the rice, orzo, farro, quinoa, bulgur or other grains as directed, then spread them thinly on trays or baking sheets to dehydrate. Veggies dehydrate best when finely diced or thinly sliced. Cook or blanch starchy or hard vegetables, such as potatoes, beans and carrots, before dehydrating. Use frozen or canned veggies for hassle-free dehydration straight out of the freezer or can.

Chickpeas, broccoli, peppers, onion, cabbage, kale, peas, corn, carrots, bamboo shoots, sweet potatoes, beans, tomatoes, zucchini, celery and beets are all tasty, nutritious additions to dehydrated salads. Try store-bought dried berries, cherries, apricots, coconut, dates, raisins, apples, mangoes and more in your recipe for a deliciously fruity twist.

Combine dry ingredients in portion-sized Ziploc bags for foolproof rehydration on trip. Cover with filtered water (cold is fine) at breakfast or the night before to enjoy ready-to-eat salad at lunch. I like my GSI Fairshare mug for easy measuring and rehydrate-and-eat convenience, but any leakproof three- to four-cup container will work.

From Asian-inspired noodle bowls to Mediterranean and tropical flavors, midday trail salad is my go-to backcountry lunch. On your next paddling trip with friends or family, serve something unexpected and watch the carnivores convert.

Szechuan Peanut Salad Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 cup soy sauce
  • 1 tsp. Szechuan chili oil
  • 2 tsp. Dijon mustard
  • 1 lbs somen noodles
  • 6 green onions, thinly sliced
  • 1 red pepper, julienned
  • 1 green pepper, julienned
  • 2 carrots, thinly sliced and blanched
  • 1 can (8 oz) sliced bamboo shoots
  • 1 can (15 oz) mini corn, thinly sliced
  • 1 cup small frozen peas
  • 1 tbsp. dried cilantro
  • 2 tbsp. toasted sesame seeds
  • 1 cup roasted peanuts
  • Natural peanut butter, to taste (optional)

Prepare at home

  • Whisk together soy sauce, chili oil and mustard in a large bowl.
  • Cook the Japanese noodles in boiling water until al dente. Drain and toss cooked noodles in the soy sauce mix, coating thoroughly.
  • Spread a thin layer of noodles on dehydrator trays or baking sheets. Dehydrate until noodles are dry and snap easily.
  • Dehydrate the peppers, carrot, bamboo shoots, corn and peas. Since different vegetables will dry at different rates (125°F for about six hours is a good starting point), I recommend dehydrating on separate trays.
  • Break dry noodles into shorter lengths and combine with dehydrated veggies, cilantro and seeds. Divide the mixture into six equal portions. 

On trip

  • To rehydrate, add ¾ cup of water to each serving the night before. At lunchtime, garnish with peanuts. For an extra peanut punch, stir a generous spoonful of peanut butter into each serving. 

This recipe makes six servings.

Cover of Issue 75 of Paddling MagazineThis article was published in Issue 75 of Paddling Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

Eat fresh on Day 30. | Feature photo: Kaydi Pyette

 

New Oregon Program To Save Lives Hinges On One Simple Concept

image of two paddlers in a raft on an oregon river with the fit to float logo overlaid on top of hte image
Meet Fit to Float, the new Oregon program designed to help new paddlers find the perfect PFD for them. Feature Image: Sawyer Paddles & Oars | YouTube

A new program is bringing an often overlooked safety concept to the forefront of Oregon lakes and rivers. On May 15, 2026, the Fit to Float life jacket fitting event will take place at multiple paddlesports retailers and outfitters from Portland to Medford. Part of National Safe Boating Week, the event is focused on educating new paddlers on proper life jacket fit and the importance of wearing a properly fitted personal floatation device (PFD) and will run from three to six in the afternoon.

Oregon paddlesports at the helm of new Fit to Float safety initiative

The Fit to Float program began with a discussion between the Oregon State Marine Board and Zac Kauffman from Sawyer Paddles & Oars about a push for broader life jacket education, a conversation that took place on the Sawyer Paddles & Oars on-water podcast. When Kauffman later met with American Canoe Association (ACA) representatives, the idea materialized into the dream of a statewide life jacket fitting day.

Together with support of the Oregon State Marine Board, the ACA and the US Coast Guard Auxiliary, Sawyer Paddles & Oars has created a replicable model of a statewide Fit to Float life jacket fitting and awareness day. Any prospective paddler or family of paddlers can show up at a participating location, try on a variety of life jackets and learn about proper fit and the importance of life jackets when paddling. The event is for all, but particularly created with families in mind to help parents find a life jacket that their children can wear both comfortably and safely.

“The whole concept is if the kids have a life jacket that fits and fits well, they’ll want to wear it,” shared Kauffman.

image of two paddlers in a raft on an oregon river with the fit to float logo overlaid on top of hte image
Meet Fit to Float, the new Oregon program designed to help new paddlers find the perfect PFD for them. Feature Image: Sawyer Paddles & Oars | YouTube

Fitting life jackets for kids can be an extra challenge for parents as children are constantly growing. It might seem economical for parents to size up, but in a life jacket this comes with high risk and high stakes as a life jacket that doesn’t fit properly can slide off a child’s body.

In Oregon, it’s required by law that children 12 and under wear a life jacket on all underway boats including paddle craft. Kauffman explained that culturally, kids stop wearing a life jacket after that age as a badge of honor. Part of the goal of the program is to meet some of these kids and instill a more positive association with life jackets so they continue to wear them beyond what is required by law.

A well-fitted life jacket serves as the first step towards becoming an avid paddler

While for many avid paddlers life jacket and PFD use is standard, many newer or recreational paddlers may elect not to use them. According to the ACA, 88% percent of fatal canoeing accidents, 60% of kayak fatalities, and 93% of SUP fatalities involve people who weren’t wearing a lifejacket.

“I would say getting a life jacket on and getting a life jacket that fits is the first step as an avid paddler and river enthusiast,” said Kauffman. “If you have a PFD that fits, it’s more likely to stay on you. It should feel like it’s part of your body.”

For padders who have not yet tested their life jacket or been professionally fitted, Kauffman had two key recommendations.

“On a nice hot day, just put your life jacket on and roll out of your boat, float around, see how it floats you,” said Kauffman.

Using a life jacket in the water will give a paddler a solid understanding of how the life jacket will function in an actual capsize scenario and a gauge of how tight a life jacket should be fastened to be effective in the water.

Kauffman also recommended paddlers visit an in-person store that sells life jackets, whether that store is a specialty retailer able to give personalized advice or a big box store. From here, paddlers can try on multiple life jackets, adjust the fit and ask for help if needed.

“If you’re curious, if there’s an outfitter in your area, go on a river trip,” added Kauffman. “That professional guide might be 19, but I guarantee you they don’t want you coming out of your life jacket.”

For seasoned paddlers, Kauffman had some advice as well.

“Help someone new get that life jacket fitting and get them on the water so that they can find the rivers, lakes and oceans like the rest of us,” shared Kauffman. “The rivers are magical places and a lot of us have known it all our lives.”

What’s In Editor Maddy Marquardt’s Sea Kayak Day Trip Guiding Kit

Paddling Magazine Editor Maddy Marquardt in her sea kayak on a trip with vivid green water, rocks and surrounding foliage in the foreground
Tools of the trade. | Feature photo: Courtesy Maddy Marquardt

When you’re out on the water with beginner paddlers every day all summer, you’re likely to run into challenging conditions and unusual scenarios. While in calm waters it might be easy to dig for your emergency gear, the conditions you’re most likely to need your backup gear in are the same conditions that might make that gear hard to reach. Here are the essentials I keep at the top of my day hatch and on me in my day trip guiding kit.

What’s in Editor Maddy Marquardt’s sea kayak day trip guiding kit

North Water Micro Tow Line
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

North Water Micro Tow Line

MSRP: $130 CAD

Marketed as an entry-level tow belt, the North Water Micro Tow Line packs more punch than meets the eye. Ideal for conditions I typically encounter while commercial guiding, the tow line comes with both a 17-foot and 50-foot line and is easily customizable by adding a shock absorber or floats to the ends.

Buy from:

MEC NORTH WATER

Quick-Fix Snacks & Mental Boosts
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Quick-Fix Snacks & Mental Boosts

MSRP: $21+

Whether hungry, dehydrated or seasick, it pays to carry a few ginger chews, small snacks and Liquid IV, even if just to give new paddlers a mental boost to help them push through challenging conditions.

Buy Liquid IV from:

DICK’S SPORTING GOODS AMAZON LIQUID IV

Buy Roctane Energy Gel from:

BACKCOUNTRY DICK’S SPORTING GOODS AMAZON GU ENERGY

VHF Radio With Tether
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

VHF Radio With Tether

MSRP: $159

In addition to flares, a signaling mirror and other essential safety gear, a VHF radio, like Standard Horizon’s HX210, is one of the best tools to carry on the water, but it doesn’t do anyone much good buried in a hatch. Tether your VHF to your person with a bungee cord long enough to comfortably make a call.

Buy from:

AMAZON STANDARD HORIZON

Micro First-Aid Kit
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Micro First-Aid Kit

A full guide’s first-aid kit is a must-carry, but there are a few items that come up regularly on trips and are worth keeping a little closer at hand. I like to separate out key items like ibuprofen, Benadryl, blister patches and a few Band-Aids into a smaller Ziploc and stash near the top of my day hatch or in my PFD pocket.

Astral Bluejacket
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Astral Bluejacket

MSRP: $265

Now discontinued and replaced by the Astral Bowen, the Bluejacket is still my PFD of choice. It features a large clamshell pocket to store gear and is highly adjustable, with most of the flotation around the waist.

Buy Astral Bowen from:

BACKCOUNTRY AMAZON ASTRAL

Sunscreen
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Sunscreen

MSRP: $19

Mineral-based zinc oxide sunscreens are considered reef safe and protect my skin from both UVA and UVB rays. At the same time, carrying a few options can be helpful to meet group needs while out on the water, and sunscreen is one of the things I’m most likely to be asked for as a trip leader.

Buy from:

BACKCOUNTRY ACADEMY SPORTS AMAZON RAW ELEMENTS

Zip Ties
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Zip Ties

MSRP: $3 per dozen

When a rudder breaks on the water, pulling out a screwdriver in choppy waters isn’t always the best option. Enter the zip tie: a quick fix that can get my clients through the day, or even the week, until I get a chance to do a full repair.

Buy from:

DICK’S SPORTING GOODS ACADEMY SPORTS AMAZON

Emergency Layers
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Emergency Layers

A space blanket, fleece and a stashed raincoat can go a long way if paddlers get cold. Search for layers in larger sizes to fit a variety of body types, and check the thrift store first; this way, you won’t be heartbroken if a paddler walks off with your extra layer after the trip.

Waxed Journal & Bic Pen
Photo: Maddy Marquardt

Waxed Journal & Bic Pen

A simple waterproof notebook can help you keep notes on weather and route, or act as a cheat sheet to help you remember names. In challenging conditions, I’ve found paddlers will respond a lot faster to their names than, “hey, you!”

Buy waterproof notebooks from:

AMAZON

Cover of Issue 75 of Paddling MagazineThis article was published in Issue 75 of Paddling Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

Tools of the trade. | Feature photo: Courtesy Maddy Marquardt