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Husband dies, wife survives 8 days after canoe capsize

Needle Falls. Photo: Courtesy RCMP
Needle Falls

“A woman survived eight days in the northern Saskatchewan wilderness after her canoe capsized and her husband perished,” reports the CBC. “The woman who survived is Enid Dice, 62, and the man who died is her husband, David Dice, 66. On Tuesday, a float plane pilot spotted the canoe and the man’s body on Kinosaskaw Lake, near a set of rapids known as Needle Falls. The lake is about 45 kilometres northeast of Pinehouse, Sask.”

 

Get the full story here. 

60-Year-Old Aims to Paddle Miss. River

Ellen Mcdonah on day 92 of her record paddle. Photo: Courtesy Ben Hilyer/Natchez Democrat
Ellen Mcdonah on day 92 of her record paddle.

“60-year-old kayaker aims to become first to travel Mississippi River,” read an article on Natchezdemocrat.com. Ellen Mcdonah has already been on the river more than 92 days, on her quest to become the first women to ever paddle the length of the river. “Mcdonah anticipates another two or three weeks of kayaking before she wraps a bow on her goal.”

Read the rest of the article here.

Skills: After-Dark Adventures

Photo: Kevin McElheran
After dark adventures

 This Family Camping article about eight awesome, after-dark activities that are fun for the whole family was first published in the Summer/Fall 2014 issue of Canoeroots magazine. 

 

 

Creepy Crawlies

Get up close and personal with your local creepy crawlies. Drape a thin white sheet over a taught line or tie it up between two trees, then point a bright light at it. Sit on the other side of the light and see the silhouettes of all types of nocturnal insects, including moths, beetles and crane flies that come to visit—can you identify them all?

 

Glow Bowling

Fill five to seven plastic, re-useable camp bottles with water and take them to an open area. Line them up in bowling pin formation, drop a differently colored glow stick in each one and screw the lid on tight. Stand back 15 feet and try to knock them all down with a ball—strike one! Use a glow-in-the-dark ball so you can locate it if it rolls away…

 

 

Screen_Shot_2014-07-23_at_3.25.53_PM.pngGet six more awesome after-dark activities in the full article in the digital edition of Canoeroots and Family Camping, Summer/Fall 2014. Get it on our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.

Gear Review: Sea to Summit Spark Sleeping Bag

Photo: Alex Cousins
Gear Review: Sea to Summit Spark Sleeping Bag

Don’t be fooled by this super compact sleeping bag—it packs a toasty punch. Thanks to 850+ loft goose down treated with Sea to Summit’s all-new moisture repelling Ultra-Dry Down, paddlers can finally feel comfortable bringing a down bag on trip. The Spark offers one of the best warmth to weight ratios—in fact, it’s so lightweight the bag is a little translucent. To save on weight and allow this bag to pack into a grapefruit-sized ball, it features a half-zip and tiny drawstring clamps. Ideal for temperatures down to 56°F.

 

Manufacturer Specs:

  • Shell: 10D Pertex®Quantum® treated with DWR
  • Liner: 15D nylon soft touch, high density weave
  • 850+ loft Ultra-Dry Down® (90/10 European goose down)
  • Fill weight: Regular 6.3 oz | 180g
  • Bag weight: Regular 12.3 oz | 348g
  • Temperature Rating: 46 F / 8 C Lower Limit

www.seatosummit.com | $299

 

CRv13i2-48.jpgGet the full article in the digital edition of Canoeroots and Family Camping, Early Summer 2014, on our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.

VIDEO: RTM’s Touring Kayaks

Check out RTM Kayaks’ line of touring kayaks at the Outdoor Retailer show. With lots of different styles and options there is a boat here for you. Watch it now!

Geek Beak! Why An Iconic Whitewater Fad Won’t Die

Photo: Kaydi Pyette
Geek Beak

In the days when playboats were more than eight feet long, when freestyle was called rodeo and pirouettes were a hot move, paddlers had a problem.

It was the early 90s, and the Pro-Tec and Wildwater helmets of the day worked well for protection but did little for sun protection.

People layered baseball caps under their helmets to add a brim, but the pressure of the hats’ buttons pressing into their skulls meant every paddling session ended with headaches.

Around the same time, Patrick Kruse sat in his Seal Beach, California, basement apartment trying to solve a dilemma of his own: how to launch his startup gear company into the world of whitewater and stand out against other manufacturers.

A paddler himself, Kruse had heard complaints about the baseball cap conundrum.

After a two-day flurry of cardboard and fabric cutting and pasting, he emerged with a design that would push his new business into the mainstream.

The Salamander brim was a hit.

For years, every Dagger Crossfire and Perception Pirouette contained a paddler whose helmet had a sticky Velcro strip and colorful, three-inch, foam-filled visor.

It came out in more and more colors and jungle and hibiscus patterns that would’ve made the Fresh Prince proud.

More than two decades later, the same brim comes with the same Salamander logo on the same 600-denier poly-cloth and Volara foam with Velcro-705 molded hooks, as when Kruse first designed it.

It remains on Salamander’s best seller list and is easily the company’s defining product.

In the late ‘90s though, helmet companies like Orosi started catching on—modern helmets emerged with built-in brims and started turning heads.

The Salamander does offer one advantage over built-in brims, says current owner, Shane Preston, who’s been with the company for six years. “If a kayaker is upside down, the bill will actually flip back rather than catch the water and yank your head back.”

Today, companies like Sweet Protection, WRSI, Shred Ready and Predator all make brimmed buckets of their own. But Salamander lives on.

The company still sells 2,500 visors every year, although for the most part, it’s not us buying them.

“To be 100 percent honest, it’s the horse industry—they love these things,” says Preston.

Salamander now sells 20 times more brims to its equestrian market than to whitewater paddlers. The visors fit on riding helmets just as well as they once did on whitewater helmets.

He’s also selling to bike and ski shops.

“For the hot kayakers, not too many kids are wearing them because they’re a little dorky looking,” Preston says. “But they work. You can’t deny that it gives you some nice protection.”

Salmander’s original visor designer Patrick Kruse now runs a company called Ruffwear selling performance dog gear in Oregon.

Three years ago on a hot summer day he was driving down Highway 395 towards Red Rock Canyon when a giant grin spread across his face. On the side of the road he saw a crew of 20 or so road workers, each with a bright red Salamander visor Velcroed to their hardhats.


This article on introducing friends to whitewater was published in the Summer/Fall 2014 issue of Rapid magazine.This article first appeared in the Summer/Fall 2014 issue of Rapid Magazine. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

VIDEO: Meet C4 Waterman

VIDEO: Meet C4 Waterman

Rapid Media’s Scott MacGregor chats with Brian Keaulana from C4 Waterman to talk about their relationship with Wenonah Canoe and why Balance, Endurance, Strength and Tradition are so important.

Gear Review: GSI Outdoors Commuter Java Press

Brand new wraps for 2015 give the Commuter Java Press even more style. Photos: Courtesy GSI Outdoors
Brand new wraps for 2015 give the Commuter Java Press even more style.

Early mornings mean beautiful paddling destinations, but it also means falling asleep in the cockpit. The Commuter Java Press, $22.95 (MSRP), from GSI Outdoors is great for the paddler who needs (yes, we need it) French Press quality coffee even at on trip. The slim design and GSI’s “Comfortable PLUSfoam,” a recycled Neoprene sleeve around the mug, provides an additional layer of insulation for both your hands and your coffee but doubles to ensure a soft, secure grip.

Instead of utilizing the intrusive plunger rod from classic French Press designs, the Commuter Java Press uses a Crystal-clear, BPA-free Carafe that is lightweight and shatter-resistant, meaning you won’t break it every time to go out to play in the surf. Once you’ve brewed your coffee, you can drink straight from the mug, instead of also packing a seperate mug to pour it into. I was able to enjoy great coffee sitting by the fire on early mornings at camp while everyone else was tweaking with withdrawls and staring numbly at the fire. (I eventually shared).

GSI Outdoors Java Press body 1

The Commuter Java Press has a double wall of insulation that keeps your beverage hot without nuking your hands in the process. The flip top lid seals in heat and prevented coffee from spilling all over my kayak or my PFD. For the folks that need to add cream and sugar, the lid unscrews easily and didn’t get jammed up after being in saltwater all day. A non-slip foot helps to keep your cup upright, while the slim profile fits closeby in your kayak.

GSI Outdoors has introduced new wrapds and colours (pictured) for 2015 that give the Commuter Java Press a fresh look and feel. For more information about GSI Outdoors, or their Commuter Java Press, check out their website, gsioutdoors.com. 

GSI Outdoors Java Press body 2

 

Mapping Memories

Photo: Ryan Creary
“IT IS NOT DOWN ON ANY MAP; TRUE PLACES NEVER ARE.” —Herman Melville, Moby-Dick | PHOTO: RYAN CREARY

Without a paper map to guide me, my interpretation of a wilderness area looks more like a map from the 16th century. Without satellite precision it’s rough and hypothetical, with notched portages marked Here Be Blackflies and picturesque campsites denoted by smiling suns.

The lakes, river and creeks form the skeleton of the map and land out of sight beyond hilltops fades into obscurity. It’s not quite to scale—landmarks loom larger than life, proud and prominent, and hazards are rendered with a giant’s bold hand. Thankfully, this mental map is underlaid by an accurate paper one.

I’ve always been entranced by maps. They share more than simple topography and route finding. Through the winter I paper my floor, not just to allay cabin fever, but also to wonder what’s over that next rise, beyond that next portage, always looking for rivers and lakes previously unseen. On a trip, I love to curl up around the fire and familiarize myself with what lies a mile distant in the west or five miles off in the east.

Not everyone shares this level of enthusiasm for placing their route within the context of a 50-square-mile area. Instead, some use their map only as a navigational aid to get from A to B. While I’m feeling blissfully small in an interconnected and unfurling wilderness, I sometimes wonder if my map-ambivalent counterparts are enjoying just a series of beautiful lakes and rugged trails occurring in an arbitrary order.

Set up at camp, we tell tales about past trips. A never-ending portage, a vicious storm, waking up to a bear peering into the tent—but I’m surprised when reminiscing is followed by, “Hey, where were we when that happened?”

While mapping wild land has grown sophisticated as a science, our own familiarity with wild places has become fragmented. Paradoxically, we live in a world where we can peer down from space into distant forests to trace a wilderness route, yet the true knowing of wilderness places is in short supply.

Photo: Ryan Creary
“IT IS NOT DOWN ON ANY MAP; TRUE PLACES NEVER ARE.” —Herman Melville, Moby-Dick | PHOTO: RYAN CREARY

Less common today is the intimate knowledge of place. Indigenous communities built this knowledge over the generations and it allowed them to travel over the land using stars, landmarks and oral stories as guides.

While I can’t lay claim to the gift of rooted generations, there are a handful of wilderness areas where I’ve felt a sense of place, where even with eyes closed the landscape unrolls in all directions and I could paddle and portage for days without needing reference. It’s a surreal and wonderful feeling when the map becomes drawn inside.

Whether it’s a paper map or a map of the mind, when paid attention to, the blue lines and green swatches become a treasure trove of personal history. It’s a storyteller of geography, yes, but if we listen, it’ll also recount our own stories back to us. —Kaydi Pyette


Get the full article in the digital edition of Canoeroots and Family Camping, Summer/Fall 2014.Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions, or browse the archives.

NRS Axiom Glove Review

Photo: Kaydi Pyette
NRS Axiom Glove Review

The fingerless Axiom gloves have a silk-slim fabric back that makes them the perfect weight for keeping cool and protected on sunny summer days. The palm is a grippy synthetic leather-like fabric that’ll keep you blister free without adding unnecessary bulk or reducing paddle control. There’s a fleecy sweat wipe strip on the thumb.

www.nrs.com | $24.95

 

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Click here to find great new gear under $100 in the free online edition of Rapid, Early Summer 2014 or download our free app for Apple or Android.