I’LL BE THERE FOR YOU. FOUR DAYS A WEEK. FROM 9-3:30.| PHOTO: KAYDI PYETTE
When dam operators are receiving thank you notes from the paddlers downstream, something is awry.
Flowing east out of Algonquin Provincial Park, the Madawaska River is an Ontario whitewater hot spot, famous for being one of the best places in the country to learn to paddle. Thousands of boaters got their start on the mighty Mad and, with its friendly class II to technical class IV, it draws kayakers and canoeists year after year.
It’s here that one of Canada’s best-known paddling families has taken things to the next level in terms of cooperation with the provincial power company.
It may come as a surprise that celebrated slalom paddler Claudia Kerckhoff-Van Wijk, who owns and operates the Madawaska Kanu Centre (MKC) with her husband Dirk Van Wijk, speaks highly of the folks at Ontario Power Generation (OPG), who control the dam upstream.
Following in the footsteps of her parents, who started the paddling school in 1972, Kerckhoff-Van Wijk has fostered a unique relationship with OPG that’s helped build and sustain the area’s thriving whitewater industry.
When her parents emigrated from Germany to Canada and set up their school on the Madawaska, the patchy and inconsistent flow made it difficult to build a business that relied on the river. They approached OPG and asked if they could condense the necessary 26 hours of flow per week—the minimum requirement to fulfill sewage demands, hydro production and environmental needs—into just four days a week, from May to August, so the flow would be substantial enough for good paddling on those days.
I’LL BE THERE FOR YOU. FOUR DAYS A WEEK. FROM 9-3:30.| PHOTO: KAYDI PYETTE
OPG agreed, at no cost. “Sometimes very small changes in when a power company operates their dams can have huge economic and social benefits that really are just no skin off the power company’s back at all,” says Kevin Colburn, the national stewardship director of American Whitewater.
South of the border, Colburn works long and hard to negotiate releases with power companies to guarantee water for paddling communities and the river ecosystem. However, he says it’s unusual for things to go as smoothly as they have at MKC—more often than not, interests do not align.
Understanding all the stakeholders involved is key, says Kerckhoff-Van Wijk. From there, it’s a matter of clear negotiation and constant communication. It doesn’t hurt that in her case, the relationship has some history. “My parents were way ahead of the curve,” says Kerckhoff-Van Wijk. “There was less red tape and fewer parameters then, but it is still possible today if you listen, do research and share your resource.”
Kerckhoff-Van Wijk encourages her students to send the dam operators thank you notes after they’ve enjoyed their time on the Madawaska. An OPG employee confirmed they have a stash of emails from athletes, adventurers and vacationers alike thanking them for their cooperation with the whitewater community.
OPG has 240 dams in numerous communities in the province, each of which has its own management plan. “It’s a balancing act,” says OPG spokesperson Neal Kelly. “It’s an ongoing relationship we have with businesses, community members and elected officials in communities where we operate.”
Of course there are many factors that will determine whether an arrangement like this one will work. The stars have to align for such anarrangement to be struck, says Colburn. But the MKC deal is a promising precedent.
“If you don’t have that conversation about interests and what people want and need,”says Colburn, “than you’ll never figure out those easy wins where interests actually do align.”
This article originally appeared in Rapid Early Summer 2016 issue.
Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.
Brush up on your canoe terminology. | Photo courtesy of Pixabay.
Whether you are completely new to canoeing or an enthusiastic novice who wants to brush up, knowing all the parts of the canoe will make you a more knowledgeable paddler.
It will also help you make better decisions when purchasing a new or used canoe and provide a foundation for you to learn from. Use this guide and brush up on the specifics of each canoe part with our terminology list below. Happy canoeing!
Knowing more about the craft you are paddling will make you smarter on the water. | Photo: Paddling Magazine
Basic parts of the canoe
Deck:
A triangular covering at the bow and stern of the boat where the gunwales are attached. It may be made of metal, wood or plastic.
Stern:
The back of the boat. When in a tandem canoe, the stern paddler will use strokes that control the direction of the boat.
Bow:
The front of the canoe. You can tell the stern from the bow because the bow will have lots of space in front and behind the seat, while the stern seat has almost no space behind.
Gunwale:
Gunwales run from bow to stern along the sides of the boat and meet at the decks. They are often made of plastic or wood.
Hull:
The hull is the main structure of the canoe and encompasses the exterior of the boat and the interior. The hull shape affects how the canoe performs on the water.
Thwarts are cross braces that stretch from one side of the boat to the other. They strengthen the canoe.
Yoke:
The yoke is a thwart that stretches from one side of the canoe to the other and has a small semi-circle cut out that allows for more comfort when a canoeist carries the boat on his or her shoulders while portaging.
Some boats will have handles next to the decks that allow for easier transportation and carrying of the boat into and out of the water.
Seat:
The seat allows the paddler to sit comfortable and at a good distance from the water while paddling. There is a large selection of solo canoes, but most canoes have two seats.
Know your terminology. | Photo: Paddling Magazine
Tumblehome:
Tumblehome is identified by the width of the canoe being narrower across the gunwales than the waterline width. Boats with a tumblehome can be more stable to paddle.
Chine:
The chine is the part of the canoe where the floor becomes the wall. The shape of this transition varies, and a more angular, sharper one is referred to as a hard chine while gentle curvature is soft.
Knowing the parts of the canoe is just as important as the trip you are planning. | Photo: Paddling Magazine
Keel:
A keel is the centerline that joins the two halves of the hull and runs bow to stern on the canoe.
Painter loop:
Painters are ropes that are attached to the canoe that can be used for tying, tracking and lining or to aid in tricky situations like a capsize. Painter lines can be attached through rings or holes in the bow of the boat.
Rocker is the amount of curve in the keel line of the boat from bow to stern. If a boat has a lot of rocker, less of the hull sits in the water and it will maneuver quickly but not track straight as well as a boat with less rocker.
Beam:
Beam refers to the width of the canoe, and the measurement is taken at the boat’s widest point.
Destination: anywhere. | Feature photo: Ryan Creary
Engineers have created a 15-foot commercially runnable waterfall, you will take 462 river selfies before you have your first child, our boats are 28 percent fatter than just 15 years ago, and 23 other things you probably didn’t know about whitewater today.
Back in the day, if you wanted to whitewater kayak you built your own fiberglass boats. Nowadays, if you want to win slalom at the Olympics you paddle a carbon fiber boat. The origins of modern freestyle are in squirt boating—also all-composite boats. Carbon composite boats won most of the medals at the 2015 Freestyle World Championships. Carbon is also in carbon dioxide, the colorless and odorless gas exhaled in excess when paddlers fortunate enough to paddle such boats go off about how much better their boats are than yours.
“The C-to-C roll was popular in the ‘90s,” says Charlie MacArthur, who’s been teaching whitewater kayaking for the ACA since 1990. “It worked best with low-decked and narrower boats. I will still happily work with a student to help hone their C-to-C, but people generally take to the sweep roll due to its speed and friendliness in wider modern boats. Less flexibility is needed for the sweep roll technique, and there are fewer shredded thumbs from rubbing on harder chines.”
Destination: anywhere. | Feature photo: Ryan Creary
If you could put your seven-pound whitewater boat on your bike where would you go? Before you can go where you could not, hmmm. Yes, to get that last sentence we used the official Yoda-Speak Generator. Herh herh herh.
4 Outfitting
“Gear used to be a big liability,” says long-time ACA instructor Kent Ford of the kayaks he was teaching people to paddle back in the 80s. “The worst part was that the boats didn’t fit larger people, and nearly everyone was tippy because outfitting forced the knees close together—it was like paddling a tightrope,” says Ford. “Even the first plastic boats, the Dancer and Mirage, had terrible outfitting.” These days outfitting is so user-friendly there’s no excuse for having an ill-fitting kayak. The trouble with outfitting today is that it’s so comfortable people don’t take the time to really dial it in. In the little mesh bag lays the secret to greater boat control. No contact (cement) high required. Too bad.
The closer, the better. | Photo: Ryan Creary
5 Live near a river
If you spend more time driving to and from the river than on the water, it’s time to move. And we’re not the only ones who did. River towns are exploding everywhere.
This new rule-of-thumb for rescue gear popped up six years ago and has changed the way we carry our equipment, right? “It can all fit in your pocket and on your person,” says Dan Kirvan, regional manager and Whitewater Rescue Technician instructor at Raven Rescue. Since pulleys and quality ropes have gotten smaller, and PFDs are designed to accommodate this kit, “You no longer have all your rescue equipment in one boat, which is invariably the one that will need help,” says Kirvan.
Selfie game strong. | Photo: Nick Troutman
7 Selfies
Millennials are people between the ages of 18 and 34. Whitewater paddlers are generally people between the ages of 18 and 34. A recent study found that a Millennial may take up to 25,700 selfies in his or her lifetime. If a Millennial paddled 15 weekends per year every year from high school to a mortgage with children, he’d take an average 462 whitewater selfies. So, you are probably wondering, if you didn’t take a selfie on the river did the trip really happen? Yes.
8 Stop paddling harder
“Really, really, really, really inaccurate teaching.” That’s how instructor Andy Convery describes the old school “Power, Angle Tilt,” tool for teaching new paddlers. “We used to say, ‘Go in at 45 degrees to the eddy line. Unless the current is super fast, then go less. Or if the current is super slow, then open up a little more.’ So, what we were basically saying was, ‘just make it up and paddle harder.’”
“Now we look for wave troughs as the gateway of entry to current. The new rule is ninety degrees to the trough. Don’t worry about eddylines or the rocks or the beach or the dog on shore, just look at the trough. When you start using that, you can be very accurate. It’s a tool to develop judgment about how much momentum you need instead of just yelling, ‘Go hard! Go fast!’ which makes people think if they’re not strong, they’re not going to be able to paddle whitewater.”
On the Green River, we’re now 13 seconds faster than we were in 2010. | Photo: Scott MacGregor
9 Paddle faster
The Green River Narrows Race is an annual gauge for advancements in our sport, and race times are sneaking up on the coveted four-minute mark. The 2015 co-champions, Eric Deguil and Dane Jackson, clocked in at a record-breaking four minutes and thirteen seconds, while a total of 60 participants finished in less than five minutes. For some perspective, in ’99 when Rapid was launched, Tommy Hilleke’s time in the open class was five minutes and three seconds in a Prijon Tornado. It’s a little known fact that the Tornado has eight open class wins, followed by Dagger’s Green Boat and Liquidlogic’s Stinger.
Photo: Pascal Girard
10 Bye, bye, American pry
“We used to focus on this perfect, mechanized, robotic forward stroke and what needed to be a super precise, impeccable stern pry,” says long-time open canoe instructor and owner of Echo Paddles, Andy Convery. “Of course, stern strokes in a solo open canoe still have their place, but when should you use them? Only when you absolutely need them. We’ve tried to move away from using them as a crutch because they rob valuable momentum. The goal is to recognize that momentum is hard-fought and maintain it when at all possible. When you’re in control, stay up in the bow and adjust your line with bow strokes.”
11 Enough about sex
We’re past an important tipping point, so read carefully: Ladies charging hard is so much of a thing now that it is not actually a thing anymore. Celebrating women’s accomplishments on the water because they’re women just feeds old-school gender stereotypes. It’s 2016. We’re all paddlers. Move on, please.
There’s a reason certain people clean up at competitions. What do Nouria Newman, Pat Keller and Katrina Van Wijk have in common? Hours and hours running gates. With downriver races growing in popularity, it’s never too late for gates. Green down. Red up.
13 Straps
Before NRS cam straps there was rope and these three knots: bow line, trucker’s hitch and half hitch.
Advocacy 2.0. | Photo: Dylan Page
14 Access
“It’s great to say you’re a conservationist and then go out and huck some waterfalls, but I didn’t want to be that guy who said I stuck up for something and then just jumped in my kayak and drank beers at the take-out,” says whitewater filmmaker Mike McKay, whose films are now largely conservation themed. There have always been hardworking river advocates. Now it’s expected of us to fight for what we love. Talk is cheap, and so is tweeting.
Yes, you should carry a rope and a knife even if you don’t know what to do with them. We’ve evolved past the old argument that rescue gear, in untrained hands, will do more harm than good. Yes, a rescue course is still the best idea, but having basic tools on hand provides options in an emergency and ups the odds that someone will be able to respond. “At the very least, this rule reinforces the moral obligation we have to our fellow paddlers,” writes Jeff Jackson, risk management author and Rapid magazine columnist.
Tyler Bradt holds the world record for tallest waterfall kayak descent with his 2009 drop of Washington’s 186-foot Palouse Falls. Brad McMillan set the open canoe record in 2014 with a descent of Alabama’s 70-foot Desoto Falls. However, it’s not just the world record holders who are going bigger.
“In the early days you never had people arriving [to courses] with intent to paddle the steeps,” says ACA instructor Kent Ford, who’s been teaching kayaking since the ‘70s. “They are obsessed with waterfalls,” agrees World Class Academy teacher Crista Wiles of her students.
The WCA up-and-comers attribute the trend to the fact that big drops are a fairly recent development, so it feels like the next step up in whitewater. “Playboating has been replaced—by many, though not all—with downriver freestyle,” adds Wiles. “Waterfall running is what gets all the glory with kayaking at the moment.” And, to avoid triggering the ongoing is-going-bigger-good-or-bad-for-the-sport debate, let us say that class III is still as good as ever.
Quack. Quack. Splat. | Photo: Ryan Creary
17 Why duckie style is all wrong
You’ve seen it. It goes something like this: The instructor—Mama Duck, as he’s almost certainly referred to himself—runs a simple center entry, makes a wide arc around a rock garden to the deeper left channel before heading to the river right eddy. Mama Duck knows the line. One by one the ducklings follow, getting closer and closer to the rocks until poor duckie number four gets hung up. A pile up on the rocks ensues. The end-of-the-line duckies didn’t stand a chance.
This follow-me approach to teaching whitewater needs to go away. We must end the Duckie Dynasty! Sure, it gets people down the river quickly, but it’s of little service to our students and friends. We used to scout everything so everyone knew the lines. As soon as duckies are following Big Mama, they stop trying to read the water, they stop paddling for themselves, and they stop learning. In this case, the old rule should be the new rule.
18 Go green
From fuel-free stoves to recycled underwear (really), there’s now more outdoor equipment that helps us keep the planet clean.
19 BioLite stoves
Time to replace white gas with teeny twigs. Boil times are comparable to your average camp cooking setup, and these stoves also harness the power of the mini fire to juice up your USB chargeable devices.
20 Goal Zero chargers
Even your headlamp batteries can be rechargeable. Goal Zero chargers are light, portable and weather resistant. Stay charged even on longer trips with the simple power of the sun.
21 Patagonia panties
Patagonia recycles soda bottles, manufacturing waste and worn out garments to make polyester without relying as heavily on petroleum-based products. The result is a light, moisture-wicking fabric perfect for paddling pursuits.
The power of POV. | Photo: Tegan Owens
22 Sponsor me
Notwithstanding selfies (above), capturing your life on a POV camera is the way to score sponsorships in the digital age. “Everyone thinks it’s about how big you can airscrew, but these companies might not even know what an airscrew is,” says Nick Troutman, who appears heavily branded by GoPro, Jackson Kayak and Adidas in just about every photo you see of him. “It’s not as much about skill level as it is about what you can bring to the table for a company,” says Troutman. “It is a bit tedious to keep it going when I’d rather just be kayaking or spending time with my family, but it’s a job I’m very willing to do to be able to kayak as a career.”
Photo: Courtesy Vector Wero Whitewater Park
23 Paddle parks
The very first man-made whitewater run in North America was created in 1966 in Kernville, California. A flood had destroyed the Kernville Bridge and the Army Corp of Engineers made a channel to flow around. The late Tom Johnson didn’t want to see the paddling go away so he worked with paddlers and fishermen to construct wing dykes to create eddies.
There are now dozens of dam release, flow diversion and city tap waterfed courses across the continent. Think conveyor rides to the top and bladder-controlled features. The $45 million Oklahoma City project with its raft-in movie theatre opens May 7, 2016. The U.S. National Whitewater Center in Charlotte, South Carolina claims to be the most used and most profitable whitewater venue in the world.
Yeah, but they don’t have waterfalls. Auckland, New Zealand does. Whitewater Parks International just opened the taps at Vector Wero Whitewater Park’s 4.5-meter (15-foot) manmade commercially runnable waterfall.
Spinal Tap’s Marshall amplifiers are not the only things with more volume. A 2001 creek boat review in Rapid had Pyranha’s Micro 240 at 257 liters. Today, Pyranha’s three sizes of their Shiva creeker are 280, 305 and 348 liters. In the same test, Dagger’s CFS creeker held 284 liters. The three sizes of Dagger’s all-new 2016 Nomad are 292, 326 and 363 liters. It may be worth noting that while the Tesla Model S’s volume control knob does go to 11, more volume in contemporary creek boats is better than cranking the parody British heavy metal band’s Hell Hole in an electric luxury sedan. Larger volume creek boats in Hell Hole on the Ocoee River, however, is a whole other kind of spinal tap.
Long live the onesie. | Photo: Ryan Creary
25 It was colder then
It used to be that newbie paddlers froze their asses off in hand-me-down neoprene. Few invested in the Holy Grail of whitewater equipment: the drysuit. Not anymore. We can attribute the drysuit’s rise in popularity, at least in part, to the enormous improvements in quality.
Let’s not forget that early drysuits were urethane-lined nylon—“Big bags with zippers on ‘em,” says Jeff Turner, sales manager at Kokatat. Gore-Tex changed the game in 1989 with waterproof breathable fabrics, and continuous innovation has turned drysuits into tailored-fitting pieces of customized equipment. These days you can even pick color and almost every entry imaginable.
Pyranha’s 9R race machine. | Photo: Anze Osterman
26 Growth
Some 2.4 million Americans, 0.8 percent of the population, went whitewater kayaking in 2014 according to the most recent Outdoor Industry Association’s Special Report on Paddlesports. While these numbers don’t do a great job at illuminating the experience of enthusiasts (those stats include people who tried the sport even once) they do help us broadly gauge the general population’s engagement with whitewater. The numbers represent only marginal growth in participation for whitewater kayaking in the last few years, but have doubled since the lonely days of 2008 when only 1.2 million Americans tried whitewater kayaking. As for open boating? Let’s just say we’re still all on a first name basis. Just the way we like it.
This article was first published in the Early Summer 2016 issue of Rapid Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.
Destination: anywhere. | Feature photo: Ryan Creary
With warm, breezy sunshine a distance memory, autumn’s dark, cold and windy days transform the Great Lakes into wild and churning frenzies. Mariners refer to these winds as the Witch of November, testament to the gales’ often devastating wickedness. On Lake Erie—the shallowest of the five Great Lakes with an average depth of just 62 feet—treacherously steep waves form, responsible for some 2,000 shipwrecks.
Last fall, I took a break from professional sports photography to capture the Witch as she raged across Erie’s north shore. The small, lakeside community of Port Stanley is notorious for its powerful rip currents, and the wave pattern becomes extremely erratic here. With air temperatures dropping below freezing at night and daytime highs hovering just above, the town’s sandy shore was vacant as I suited up each day to enter the fray.
Capturing the true size of monster waves 500 feet offshore is about finding the right perspective. Being at water level brings the horizon lower in the frame, giving a more accurate idea of the size and scale of these 25-foot freshwater freaks. Depending on wind speed and direction, I decided if conditions were safe for me to wade into the near-freezing water, or if I should shoot from shore.
Photo: Dave Sandford
Armed with wetsuit, neoprene gloves, booties and hood, I used an Aquatech waterproof housing to shield my Canon EOS-1Dx and telephoto lenses—a 70- 200mm and a 400mm—from the elements. Being tossed around as if in a washing machine, and sandblasted by wind gusting to 60 miles per hour, made this shoot both physically and mentally demanding.
Leviathan waves rise and explode in the blink of an eye. Coping with the cold for up to eight hours a day, waiting for these fleeting moments, takes a great deal of concentration, awareness of surroundings and patience.
Waves may look similar, but no two are ever the same. When that beautiful banshee swoops in over the lake next November, I’ll be waiting.
See more of Dave Sandford’s spectacular storm wave images at www.davesandfordphotos.com.
This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak Early Summer 2016 issue.
Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.
Walking on the bottom of Buttle Lake on Vancouver Island feels like walking through a graveyard. Instead of crosses and marble markers, there are one-ton giant stumps left as tombstones, their rings dating their origins back some 900 years.
More than six decades ago these trees were cut down to make way for BC Power Commission’s Strathcona Dam, harnessing a watershed more than 1,400 kilometers square. Today, that denuded forest floor is visible only when water levels are especially low. Usually canoeists only catch a glimpse of the ancient ghosts below as they paddle on the surface above.
I’ve put my canoe in the water here at the southern end of Buttle Lake many times. Each time I’ve been humbled by the giant firs on the shore at the access, and then by the apparitions that pass beneath my boat. Yet, it was when the lake was low that the most striking photos I have taken here were created.
Paradise Lost | Photo: Graeme Owsianski
I had come here to paddle and found a nearly dry basin instead. It felt unreal to be standing on ground that is sometimes several feet under water. Equally unreal was to imagine that half a century ago, this almost-dry lakebed was a pristine forest. I asked my friend to climb onto a nearby stump with the canoe and pretend to go for a paddle, freezing the surreal landscape and our experience in a single frame.
I’m not naive to the necessity of industry, yet this photo stirs a conversation about conservation. Stewardship of vulnerable ecosystems is crucial for the future. With less than 10 percent of old growth forests remaining on Vancouver Island, a fraction remaining around the world and logging continuing, these towering sentinels are becoming more and more endangered, and when they’re gone, it’s forever.
Graeme Owsianski is an outdoor adventure photographer based in Ucluelet, British Columbia. Discover more about endangered old growth forests at www.ancientforestalliance.com.
This article originally appeared in the Canoeroots Early Summer 2016 issue.
Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.
Moping around camp in a damp paddling jacket is poor substitute for shore-specific rain gear. The new Elite Cagoule offers decadent dryness in an ultralight (8 oz.), ultra-compact package. The secret lies in this cag’s extra-long cut and a sophisticated system of overlapping panels, awning vents and snaps that eliminate bulky zippers while maximizing coverage. $175 | SIERRADESIGNS.COM
Astral Rosa Flip-Flop
A technical flip-flop? You bet. Astral’s new Rosa (women’s) and Filipe (men’s) feature a removable heel strap to quickly convert from standard jandals to snug sandals for more demanding terrain. Combined with a non-slip foot bed and super grippy traction in and out of the water, we’re flipping out over these lightweight flops. $69.95 | ASTRALDESIGNS.COM
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Thermos Insulated Food Jar
Perfect for hot stew shore lunches, Thermos’ stainless double wall vacuum insulation keeps our afternoon pick-me-ups piping hot for up to eight hours. The 16-oz. food jar’s wide mouth makes it easy to stuff, scarf and scrub. The lid conceals a folding spoon, and doubles as an insulated bowl for your paddling buddy’s pity portion. $24.99 | THERMOS.COM
SOTO Helix Coffee Maker & Aeromug 450
Made in Japan using simple, elegant designs and gleaming metals, SOTO’s stoves and cookware are both functional and beautiful. Pop open the…
“SO WHAT SHOULD WE DO
NEXT YEAR?”
“I’D LIKE TO STERN.”
“CAMP OVER THERE.”
“BRING MORE BACON.” | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR:
With so much focus these days on experiential learning, I sometimes feel to be a good parent I have to bombard my children with new experiences. Each new place and new activity adds to their memory banks, building their toolkits of knowledge so that the next new tidbit can be processed and filed in the appropriate neurological pigeon hole somewhere in the jam jars between their ears.
And so each spring, on Sunday mornings after we finish our pancakes, I pull out pen and paper to create a list of adventures we’ll have during that summer.
I have wild ideas. I propose rafting 21 days down the Grand Canyon. Flying in by de Havilland Beaver to Lady Evelyn Lake and seeing the ancient pines of Temagami. The five-month-long Kallin family hiking adventure is the type of thing I have in mind. Though hiking 2,185 miles of the Appalachian Trail through 14 states doesn’t fit between summer camp and the trade shows I attend for this magazine, it’s the type of grand adventure that I dream about when stuck in Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport at Terminal F, awaiting a delayed and overbooked 737.
More often than not, our kids write down places we’ve already been. They want to go back and do the things we’ve already done. I’m disappointed, so I bait them with my rich uncle game.
“If our rich uncle came to town and said we could paddle any river in the world, which would it be?” I ask. Again, they pick the Madawaska River, a 20-minute logging road shuttle from our home.
“SO WHAT SHOULD WE DO NEXT YEAR?” “I’D LIKE TO STERN.” “CAMP OVER THERE.” “BRING MORE BACON.” | PHOTO: SCOTT MACGREGOR:
If you flip through our family albums (who am I kidding, I mean click through our family albums), at a glance our first 10 years of memories look very much the same. It looks like we do the same activities in the same places, year after year.
Throughout university a climbing friend of mine had a poster on his wall of an old Indian and a proverb written below that read, “It is better to know one mountain than to climb many.”
The river the kids write on the list I have already paddled hundreds of times. I can close my eyes and picture every rock, every eddy and every wave I’d use to ferry a fully loaded canoe. This river is the reason we live where we do. I can see it right now sitting at my desk through the sliding glass doors of Canoeroots’ office. I tell my friends I know the Madawaska like the back of my hand.
I asked the kids why they like going down the same river over and over again. They said, “It’s not the same river.”
I asked the kids why they like going down the same river over and over again. They said, “It’s not the same river.”
Greek philosopher Heraclitus wrote, “No man ever steps in the same river twice.” He argued that change is constant, that everything in the world is always changing. Even a river that seems constant is always undergoing change. And so are our children. They are not the same as they were a year ago, a week ago, a day ago.
Looking more closely at our family photos, I see how Doug and Kate are bigger and stronger. They are paddling more and they are carrying more. They are now swimming further from shore and jumping from taller rocks.
Children are like the river that seems to stay constant yet is continually changing ever so slightly right before my eyes. They have been changed by their experiences and by every trip down this river.
And so, on the list on the refrigerator is written a new river: the Madawaska River. It is better to know one river than to paddle many.
Scott MacGregor is the founder and publisher of Canoeroots. On his fridge there are now two lists: one for new adventures and another for family traditions.
This article originally appeared in the Canoeroots Early Summer 2016 issue.
Subscribe to Paddling Magazine and get 25 years of digital magazine archives including our legacy titles: Rapid, Adventure Kayak and Canoeroots.
REMEDY #2: FIND YOUR NEXT FIX. | PHOTO: MIKE MONAGHAN
Trips to the wilderness are supposed to revitalize us. That’s why they call it re-creation. So why, after a week of paddling, do I feel so restless and irritable the moment the trip is over?
I’m not the first adventure-seeker afflicted by wicked post-trip hangovers. Paul Caffyn described a similar depression after he kayaked around Japan in 1985. “The worst side of sea kayaking for me was the immediate period following a successful trip,” he noted. “It was not one of elation and satisfaction, as you might expect.” Instead, Caffyn’s sudden lack of purpose left him feeling adrift.
I’ve even suffered from hangovers following weekend-long trips. After two or three days of steady exercise, nature and simple rhythms, I walk through my front door and quickly feel overwhelmed. I’m simultaneously trying to return to the outdoors, catch up with friends, clean my gear and read email. It’s a potent cocktail of regret, frenetic activity and fatigue.
Re-entry is abrupt. I remember talking with a paddler who finally arrived home after 1,500 miles and months away. Shifting his mindset from monitoring the tides to tracking the flood and ebb of Seattle traffic, he said, was the hardest transition of his life.
In the wilds, we return to our hard-wired evolutionary origins: small bands of nomads wandering an ecological landscape. In my kayak, I’m doing what our ancestors did on the plains of Africa. Of course checking email feels weird.
Pulling up to that last beach also adds social disruption. We’re suddenly among people who haven’t shared our experience. As a kid growing up near Manhattan, I returned from my first backpacking trip to the Rockies exploding with stories of jagged peaks, steep alpine passes, cobalt blue lakes and snow in July. The kids on the block weren’t impressed—they had their own experiences hanging out in the neighborhood. While you’re adventuring, others are simply getting on with their lives.
REMEDY #2: FIND YOUR NEXT FIX. | PHOTO: MIKE MONAGHAN
Snow specialist Matthew Sturm, veteran of Arctic science expeditions, describes returning from the Far North in blunt terms: “Your place has been filled like water smoothing the surface of a pond…returning from an expedition is a chance to see how little your world would change if you died.”
Transformational experiences matter to the people who have them, but are puzzling to everyone else. That’s why outdoor adventurers are so tribal: we seek people who understand our experiences even if we haven’t had them together.
The cure for a trip hangover probably isn’t longer or more frequent trips. Most of us struggle to clear decks for a two-week vacation—turning ourselves and our families into Kerouacian wilderness vagabonds isn’t likely. If we can’t spend more time in the wilds, we have to figure out how to keep the simplicity and clarity of the wilds with us when we return.
I once had a boss who spent her career studying wildlife. She lived next to a river where animal tracks and birdsongs were part of her daily life. When she moved into an urban condo, she began her day by opening the window and listening for whatever birds were singing. She kept a journal of nature observations as detailed as the one she’d kept by the river.
My own ritual is sitting on my front porch in the morning with a cup of coffee, regardless of weather, simply to feel the outside air. It’s not the same as coffee on a remote beach days’ paddling from another soul, but I find it helps. Trip hangover is a kind of heartache, and as Stephen Stills sang: If you can’t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with.
Neil Schulman celebrates kayaking’s diverse heritage in Reflections.
This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak Early Summer 2016 issue.
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Venturing off into the wild unknown with furry best friend in tow is a dream for many paddlers. Often, the reality falls somewhat short. Untrained, a canine canoe tripper is likely to disrupt your tranquil experience by barking during wildlife observations, dashing after chipmunks along portage trails and anxiously awaiting the return to shore.
Dogs aren’t born to act like stalwart Lassie, but you can train this behavior. A patient, controllable and confident dog will complement any on-water adventure. All that’s necessary to prepare a dog for canoeing is a bit of specialized training and a proper introduction to the activity.
LAYING THE FOUNDATION
To ensure your dog is ready to board a canoe, ask yourself whether your student can sit patiently and quietly for more than 10 minutes while you sit beside the dog. Often sitting down beside your dog results in a happy and playful response, which will be unwelcome afloat.
With both you and your dog sitting on the ground, provide distractions. Toss balls, have children run about, move a paddle side to side and then pass it over the dog’s head. Distractions will appear while paddling and your dog must ignore them. This stillness without restraint will take practice.
If your dog is easily excited by simple distractions, spend more time working on foundational obedience skills before paddling together. If your dog is able to remain quiet and calm, you’re ready to introduce the canoe.
WHEN HAIRY MET SALLY
Start by introducing the craft on land. Stabilize the canoe and teach the dog to confidently enter and exit on command. Many dogs won’t want to lie down in the craft and limit their field of vision until they feel more comfortable, and that’s okay.
Next, sit down in your boat with the dog and mimic paddle strokes. Tilt the canoe side to side to simulate movement. Exit the canoe and walk away, ensuring your canine pal stays in the boat. The dog should not exit until told to do so. Consider where the dog will sit to distribute weight properly with passengers and gear and teach the dog that this is his place. Have your dog repeat entering, exiting and waiting in the boat several times over different training sessions before moving to the water.
Love is a four-legged word. Aspen on Big Trout Lake during a weeklong trip in Algonquin Provincial Park. | Feature photo: Kaydi Pyette
WATER WORK
Move the lessons to shallow water and repeat entry and exit etiquette. Sit in the canoe, rock it gently and pass your paddle over the dog’s head. Add more movement by stepping out and gliding the canoe by hand around in the shallows. Dogs often react when the canoe hits a rock or the shore so practice pulling ashore while encouraging the dog to remain still as everyone exits. Reward good behavior verbally and with an occasional treat. You want the dog to associate the canoe with positive experiences.
After a few training sessions in the shallows, you can take to the water with a confident dog. Paddle on calm water before venturing too far from shore. Enter current only with sufficient river skills—a capsize in whitewater could easily turn a dog off of water adventures for life.
EXTRA TIPS
Some canines are not brilliant swimmers and even the best have limited endurance, so put a PFD on your dog. Never leave a loose-fitting slip collar or a long lead on a dog on the water because a capsize could result in the dog becoming entangled in gear or debris. Also, condition your dog to swim alongside the craft as if at heel. In an emergency situation the dog should be accustomed to staying with the canoe even if swimming is required.
Mike Stewart is one of the most sought-after dog trainers and breeders of sporting Labrador retrievers in North America. www.uklabs.com
This article originally appeared in the Canoeroots Early Summer 2016 issue.
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Pat Keller and a fairy face off in Steve Fisher's "With You" film.
Steve Fisher’s With You, part of REDirect’s Explore 2016
Video: Steve Fisher
Steve Fisher found himself in new territory as a filmmaker as he stood in the middle of the forest with spray skirt and helmet-clad Pat Keller and directed the kayaker to close his eyes and imagine he was there with a fairy.
The scene is part of With You, Fisher’s entry and one of eight films in the REDirect Explore 2016 contest that features captivating outdoor lifestyle stories.
Fisher, an accomplished expedition kayaker and filmmaker, was paddling North Carolina’s Green River several years ago with Keller when someone said, “Pat Keller knows this river so well he could run it blindfolded.” He asked Keller if that was true, and when he said yes, Fisher told him if he ever did he wanted to be the one to film it.
Over a three-year period Fisher and Keller shot some scenes together that centered around the idea of Keller—then working full-time in finance—bringing some of his work and experiences on the river with him. By the time Fisher was asked to enter the REDirect Explore contest, the idea for the eventual film had been evolving for three years.
The deep storytelling of the film is centered around the idea of Keller entering an enchanted wonderland and facing his worst fears while kayaking a set of Class V rapids blindfolded. As he confronts his demons, the narrative flows with poet Holly Coddington’s beautiful words read aloud by Sara Alford.
Pat Keller with cast on the set of With You. Photo: Steve Fisher/With You
Fisher struggled to find the right person to read the poem, and despite having multiple people do the voice over, it just didn’t sound right. The day before the clip was to be postmarked, his dissatisfaction led him to commit to not to submitting the film to the contest at all. “You wouldn’t believe the level of stress that built up,” he says. Right before the deadline, Fisher’s wife suggested he contact Alford, a musician they knew. They managed to find a narrow slot of time at an in-house studio, and a half hour and two takes later, the voice over was completed just in time.
Fisher was enthusiastic about Keller’s involvement in the project because of their history working together and Keller’s open-mindedness. He says Keller is incredibly in-tune with what he wants as a filmmaker, to the point that while hiking with his kayak he knows precisely where his foot should land in the shot. Directing eleven people he hadn’t worked with before, including the fairies and fire breathers, was a learning experience, especially explaining to them their emotional motivations in each shot.
The many different elements involved in the production led Fisher to work with a lot of efficiency, including laying the film’s seven tracks before a single scene was shot. An immense amount of thought went into each element of the film, including the beginning being composed in an aesthetically simple way, shot all mid-focal length, in real-time with the footage becoming increasingly more varied and complex as the four-and-a-half minute clip progresses. Combined with color grading changes and plot twists, this is a serious departure from your standard kayaking film. And for Fisher, that’s his style. “I’m willing and keen to be a little more out there with all the filming I do.”
Voting for the REDirect Explore 2016 contest closes August 8 and you can view all videos here.
Stoked to go on your own whitewater adventures? Explore our Paddling Trip Guide.