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Labrador Passage

Photo: Courtesy Peter Marshall
Tradional gear for 2014 Labrador Passage expedition

 This summer two men will embark what might be the most unique canoe expedition of the year.

Using only non-synthetic equipment, the paddlers will retrace a 600-kilometer historic route through Labrador, a remote province on the eastern coast of Canada.

Classic gear, such as a waxed canvas tent, cloth rain gear and a cedar canvas canoe, will be used, doubling the weight on an already treacherous route.

Setting out in June with their traditional gear, Peter Marshall and Andrew Morris will retrace Mina Hubbard’s historic 1905 canoe journey through Labrador, filming a documentary along the way.

Mina set out to complete the doomed exploratory route of her husband’s 1903 canoe expedition. “Her husband’s team had paddled up the wrong river and it turned into a horrible ordeal for two and a half months. It’s an inhospitable and hilly wilderness, with long portages,” says Marshall. Mina’s husband died of starvation awaiting assistance.

Marshall, who has paddled more than 10,000 kilometers in Canada’s north, had been looking for a new kind of trip when this route caught his eye.

“On all long trips, I’ve been equipped with big, Royalex canoes, GoreTex nylon, the most lightweight material and top-of-the-line tents. When I read about old times, I can’t help but feel as if I’m cheating,” says Marshall.

“It’s very suiting that this trip with a traditional aesthetic is a historic route as well,” he adds.

Their canvas tent alone will weigh between 30 to 40 pounds—four times as much as a four-season tent, Marshall points out. After a rainy night, it will weigh even more. The expedition’s rain gear is waxed canvas, much different than one-pound, two-ounce breathable nylon, Marshall adds.

The two men will do their cooking over a campfire stove that Marshall made himself at a welding shop.

Much of the equipment used has been handmade by local craftspeople. “That was one of the ways the trip evolved, we realized that we couldn’t go to REI and buy this stuff, so we’re reaching out to people who still make it.”

The exception to tradition will be in the safety gear. “We both have serious girlfriends and mothers who want us to come back,” jokes Marshall. Their first aid kit will be full of modern supplies and they’ll bring a satellite phone and SPOT messenger to check in as well.

The PFDs will also be 21st century technology. “No cork life vests, I looked into it but it didn’t seem like it was going to work,” says Marshall.

He expects the route will take 40 to 45 days to complete, however they’re packing for 50 in case filming or the added weight in equipment slows them.

Watch the teaser for the documentary below or learn more at labradorpassage.com.

 

 

Preview of Labrador Passage #1 from Peter Marshall on Vimeo.

 

Q&A with Big Muddy Paddler

Photos: courtesy Norman Miller
Q&A with Big Muddy Paddler

Janet Moreland believes it is never too late to pursue your passions. The 56-year-old mother from Columbia, Missouri, graduated from university with a degree in education in December 2012. Less than four months later, she set out in Blue Moon, her 17-foot Eddyline Shasta tandem kayak, on a 3,800-mile expedition from the headwaters of the Missouri River at Brower’s Spring, Montana, to the Gulf of Mexico. On December 5, 2013, she became the first woman to complete a solo, source-to-sea descent of the Missouri/Mississippi River system, the fourth longest river in the world. 

 

Who is Janet Moreland?

I love the outdoors and strive to immerse myself in the natural environment whenever possible. I spent much of my youth in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains ski mountaineering, and windsurfing the northern California rivers, bays and waves. I began canoeing rivers when I moved to Missouri in 1994, and started kayaking the Missouri River in 2001 after moving to Columbia, MO, in 1996.

You can often find me three miles down the road from my house on or near the Missouri River at Mile 170, Cooper’s Landing, where I spend much of my time walking my dog, paddling, or enjoying the company of our large river community.

 

Do you remember the moment you decided to walk out your door to take on a solo Missouri River source to sea? What was the biggest factor that motivated you?

One of the biggest motivating factors was the notion that I would be the first woman to paddle the entire length of the Missouri River solo. This turned out to be very inspiring for many women, students, and men, following my expedition. Later, I realized I would also become the first American to journey from source to sea.

 

You write on your blog that your mission for this trip included empowerment, education and environmental stewardship. How do you meet these lofty goals and paddle 3,800 miles?

Well, the journey is not over until the mission bears fruit. I am still actively working on realizing these goals. The first step in my trip was to complete the paddle successfully. Many who followed my trip on Facebook or on my blog were very inspired that a 56-year-old woman was attempting such a grand and challenging expedition. Also, I wanted to model for school-age children that they can overcome challenging obstacles and be successful in achieving their goals. Many of my students from last year were excited about my attempt, and followed me on social media.

Regarding education, I tried to share as much of my experience on the river, including some cultural and historical information. I wanted to increase awareness of Missouri River Relief, a dynamic non-profit organization dedicated to the stewardship of the Missouri River, as well as educating our youth and communities about the river, on the river. While I was on my expedition, River Relief was conducting river cleanup events on the river from St. Louis to Washington to Kansas City to Omaha.

 

Who are your paddling heroes, who inspired you and who continues to?

Well, Norman Miller was my go-to guy when deciding and planning this expedition. He was a motivating factor as well. He paddled up the Missouri River in 2004 for the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial celebration. He followed their route up the river, over the Rocky Mountains, and back on the water to the Pacific Ocean.

I made a point of meeting all of the 2012 long-distance paddlers (LDPs) on the Missouri River when they passed by Cooper’s Landing. I enjoyed talking to all of them about their journey and took mental notes. So, some heroes include Dave Miller, author of The Complete Paddler, and the one who planted the seed in 2005 when he passed through Cooper’s Landing (Norman Miller watered that seed last summer), Bob Bellingham, Mark Kalch, Dave Cornthwaite (swimmer), Rod Wellington, and Dominique Liboiron. The LDPs I paddled with this year, Reed and Josh, Shawn Hollingsworth, and Scott Mestrezat are also my heroes, and I consider them my river brothers.

The MR340 paddlers are also my heroes. Anyone who immerses themselves in a 340-mile race across the state, on the Missouri River, is inspiring to me and a hero in my book. Stand-up paddle boarder, Shane Perrin, is my hero in this regard.

 

What kayak did you use to take on the Beaverhead, Jefferson, Missouri and Mississippi rivers during your Source to Sea expedition, and why?

I paddled an Eddyline Shasta kayak on my journey. Paddlers Andy Bugh, 2011, and Bob Bellingham, 2012, paddled the same kayak. In fact, I bought Bob’s kayak from him before he flew home to Australia. The boat is a 17’ tandem open cockpit carbonlite kayak and very stable. And, the open cockpit makes it more roomy that the standard plastic mold sea kayak. I did not want to be cramped inside a tight cockpit. I love my boat. We could go anywhere in extreme conditions and I never felt nervous about capsizing.

The Shasta was challenging on the Beaverhead because the river is narrow, windy, swift and shallow. I had a 12.5’ plastic kayak with me, but my support crew needed to head back to Missouri so I just put in with Blue Moon, my Shasta, and went for it. I put two holes in it on the second day. Oh well, they were above water line and duct tape fixed it until I stopped over at Norman Miller’s house near Three Forks and I fiberglass patched the holes.

 

 Janet

 

What were the highlights of this journey? Was there anywhere along the route that you would highly recommend to paddlers that they might not know about?

There are so many highlights of the journey that I cannot name them all. I will say that the ski in to Brower’s Spring at the source was a highlight. We planned on a seven-hour ski, but it took us 31 hours. We were totally unprepared to spend the night, but we managed. The Jefferson River in Montana was a beautiful stretch of river. Fort Peck Lake was some serious wilderness paddling. I had already gone two weeks without internet in the Missouri River Breaks National Monument, and then another two weeks on Fort Peck Lake. I felt very isolated and exposed to wilderness. I loved it. I have had wilderness yearnings all my life, and that experience fulfilled them. And, the Mississippi River turned out to be a wonderful romantic experience. I fell in love with the sandbars, the tow and barges, the freighters, the wildlife, and the river. My Mississippi River experience far surpassed my expectations.

 

Favorite location you pitched your tent? Least favorite?

Numerous favorite locations I called home for a night, or two. One that sticks out was on the Mississippi River just below the Arkansas River confluence across from the Chicot City navigation light. I camped on a sandbar shelf, which positioned me up, and looking out, over a narrow bend in the river. I was protected from the north by a long hedge of willow trees. I love being up high, and I love having the tow and barges passing close by. The tow and barges have a romantic feel to me because I believe the pilots of these boats would be navigating the river in steamboats if they were living in that era. The river is their life, so I felt at home navigating amongst them. The fog on the river the next morning was exquisite and I managed to capture the moment with photography.

Least favorite camp was on Fort Peck Lake in a low-lying cove with no trees and covered with mud. It was here that I experienced one of the several severe electrical storms on my trip. I bolted out of this site first thing in the morning, wallowing in mud. Ugh.

 

Reading your blog, one is struck by the many helpful, hospitable folks you met along your journey. Can you tell us about a few who stand out most in your mind?

This is a very difficult question to answer. There are sooooo many river angels. People up and down the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers were very supportive and wanted to be a part of my success. People were constantly asking me if I needed anything, offering food and a place to sleep, gear needs, coming out to paddle with me, picking me up off the river and taking me into their homes, sharing their lives and families with me. Some were strangers who just gave me cash because that was the only way they had to support me and help me. It was unbelievable. The people who cared about me and my success are the greatest memories of this expedition.

 

Did you ever come across people who just didn’t get what you were doing, or told you it was dangerous or foolish?

On the drive up to Montana we had to replace a windshield wiper and the manager of the store, upon explaining to him what I was doing responded by saying, “Well, THAT seems like a big waste of time. Why would you want to do THAT?” Then, his employee came out and replaced the wiper, and offered kind words of encouragement. I learned early on that such an expedition is not for everybody.

All of us LDPs this year can tell the same story of people warning us about Fort Peck Lake and how people die on that lake. The all told us the same warnings: winds come out of nowhere and huge swells and waves will swamp you and people drown on the lake all the time. Very discouraging messages, and taken with an element of caution. Fort Peck Lake made us all stronger and wiser for Lake Sakakawea, 178 miles long, and Oahe Lake, 230 miles long, the two huge lakes still ahead on our journeys.

 

Was there ever a point you would rather have been doing something else, or a place you just couldn’t wait to escape due to unhappy circumstances?

I never experienced unhappy circumstances that discouraged me. I never felt that I would not complete this expedition, or that it was a burden. I loved every minute of this journey and was very sad when the river ran out and I had no more paddling to do. I can never duplicate this journey. It is over. I want to share it, though, in presentations and writing, and will get a book out there in due time.

 

What advice would you offer to anyone contemplating a long trip or solo journey?

Do what you love and love what you do. If there is any doubt as to the journey you are embarking on, and whether you will be content or successful, take some time to consider if you are doing the right thing.  Consider your reasons for doing it. Your mission is an important motivator.  If you are inspiring others, you will likely succeed and be fulfilled while doing it.

 

What’s next for you?

I have lots of things I am thinking about, including writing a book, teaching school full time, and presenting my experience around the country. That said, I am scheduled to be the featured speaker at the Quiet Water Symposium on March 1, 2014, in East Lansing, Michigan. I also have [another] major river expedition I have begun researching.

As told to Virginia Marshall

 

 

To learn more about the expedition, visit www.loveyourbigmuddy.com.

 

 

Video: Quebec Connection in Tlapacoyan

[iframe src=”http://www.epictv.com/player/embed-player/272930?title&seriestitle” width=”600″ height=”335″ frameborder=”0″ scrolling=”no” ]

“What do you get when you toss a bunch of Quebecois whitewater fanatics into the river systems around the Tlapacoyan region of Veracruz, Mexico? Awesomeness, that’s what you get, pure awesomeness. If you are a fellow lover of hard-running water, don’t miss the way they toy with Tlapacoyan’s tight, class V curves. If you aren’t, just skip to 3:55 when the boys start heaving themselves over Tomata falls. Gadzooks! That looks dangerous! Dangerously awesome.”

From EpicTV.

For more great whitewater videos, click here. 

 

Heritage Canoe Heaven

WCHA President, Ken Kelly. Photo: Jude S-R Photography
WCHA President, Ken Kelly, in heritage canoe

For wooden-canoe lovers, it’s the event of the year.

Each year, the Wooden Canoe Heritage Assembly draws hundreds of canoe aficionados from across Canada and the United States to gather in Paul Smiths, New York and admire a vast collection of canoes, participate in workshops and discuss all things about the wooden craft.

Celebrating its 35th anniversary this July and committed to being bigger than ever before, the event showcases everything from cedar-strip to wood-and-canvas to traditional birch bark designs.

“Each year we feature a specific historic canoe maker to focus on—this year we’ve made a little exception to the norm and will feature our current professional builders and their new wooden canoes,” says Ken Kelly, president of the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association, which hosts the six-day event.

“Just as we all get excited today about old BN Morris, JR Rushton or Dan Heralds models, some day, canoe enthusiasts will get excited about the canoes our builders are making now,” says Kelly.

Titled “Tomorrow’s Classics”, the event will host more than twenty modern-day wooden canoe builders, showing their models and demonstrating them. More than just show-and-tell, the event boasts full-day programs of paddling skills workshops, instruction in campcraft and in traditional crafts, such as quilt making and paddle carving. In the evenings, attendees are entertained by evening presentations on prolific paddlers or inspiring adventures.

“In many ways, we think modern wooden canoes may be even more highly prized some day,” adds Kelly. “We’ve learned a lot from the examination and restoration of 100-year-old canoes and witnessed what techniques and materials hold up the best.” Kelly adds that the current builders, driven by a relatively small demand by discerning clients, can put more time and quality into their builds.

“Now that collectors are restoring and preserving these old canoes we take a lot of interest in their quality. Today’s builders have the benefit of this perspective and a little larger budget to build a higher quality canoe. These canoes are also used more for entertainment and recreation than the canoes of 100 years ago. They’re lighter and even more fun to paddle than the workhorse canoes of old,” adds Kelly.

Discover these future wooden canoe classics July 15-20 at Paul Smiths College in Paul Smiths, New York. www.wcha.org.

Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine went inside Ken Kelly’s antique canoe collection, one the largest private collections in North America, in the 2014 Spring issue—get it here!

This article was first published in the February issue of Paddling MagazineDownload our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

Bay of Fundy 2014

Last September, Adventure Kayak had the pleasure of dropping in on the inaugeral Bay of Fundy Sea Kayak Symposium in Lower Argyle, Nova Scotia. Now, registration is set to open for the second annual BOFSKS, scheduled for September 12-15, 2014. Registration begins February 21, 2014, and early birds are entered to win some pretty amazing prizes, including a Kokatat drysuit and Lendal paddle!

Read all about the Bay of Fundy Sea Kayak Symposium in the Spring issue of Adventure Kayak, available on newsstands now!

 

To learn more about the event and register, visit www.bofsks.com

Visit Us at the Outdoor Adventure Show!

Come talk with our editors and meet Rapid Media publisher Scott MacGregor. Photo: Outdoor Adventure Show
Come talk with our editors and meet Rapid Media publisher Scott MacGregor.

Rapid Media will be exhibiting this weekend at the Outdoor Adventure Show, in Toronto, Ontario. The show is Canada’s largest showcase of outdoor gear and adventure travel experiences. Come meet our editors and talk all things paddling!

The Paddlers Paradise stage is a new feature at the show and they’ve rounded up some great speakers throughout the paddling world, including Rapid Media publisher, Scott MacGregor.  

 Scott MacGregor

Meet our editors! Friday through Sunday, Emma Drudge, editor of Rapid magazine will be at the Rapid Media booth. Virginia Marshall, editor of Adventure Kayak magazine will be there on Saturday and Kaydi Pyette, editor of Canoeroots magazine, be there on Sunday.

Click here to print off the schedule and a special coupon for the show! (Coupon also below.) Drop by Rapid Media booth #641 for a $10 Show Subscription Special! 

Toronto Outdoor Show Coupon

For more information about the Outdoor Adventure Show check out their website at outdooradventureshow.ca. 

Yellowstone Update From American Whitewater

Photo: Courtesy of Kevin Colburn
Yellowstone whitewater

Earlier this month, we posted news that paddlers may be one step closer to paddling long forbidden, ultra-classic whitewater runs in Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, thanks to the River Paddling Protection Act passing in the House of Representatives.

Kevin Colburn, who we spoke to for the article, has since posted an update on why American Whitewater won’t be pursuing Yellowstone legislation in Senate:

“Earlier this week we posted a quick article informing our community that American Whitewater would not pursue the Senate version of the River Paddling Protection Act, ending our exploration of a legislative solution to the management of paddling in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks,” Colburn writes. “We’ve obviously gotten some questions about this decision and would like to offer a more robust explanation.”

“We recognized this situation as one that was rapidly headed for a long, heated, damaging, and distracting fight. The legislative effort we hoped would lead to a meaningful debate and science-based management was being taken in the wrong direction. The resources required to fully engage in a struggle of this scale and nature would consume significant organizational resources and prevent us from engaging in countless other high-priority projects. Our capacity to continue our original strategy on the river management plan in these parks, and other high priority regional and national projects would be threatened.”  

Click here for the the full explanation from American Whitewater and visit their website to see more news and stay up to date. 

For more whitewater news, click here. 

 

Rite in the Rain Notebook Review

Photo: Rite in the Rain
Rite in the Rain notebook

This gear review originally appeared in Rapid Media’a monthly Paddling Magazine.

Working as a journalist in the outdoors, year-round presents no shortage of challenges. Batteries get cold and die, electronics can be ruined by humid conditions and when things fail, there’s rarely a back up option. All of this led to trying Rite in the Rain notebooks, made of “all-weather writing paper.”

Since trying my first notebook, they’ve become my go-to item for keeping track of anything outside—and by no means are they just for journalists. You’ll find them handy for keeping notes for a trip report, noting the wildlife seen from you canoe or keeping track of the fish you catch.

The first Rite in the Rain notebooks were developed for the Pacific Northwest logging industry in the 1920s. Produced out of Tacoma, WA, today they’re used all over the world by military operations, scientific researchers and everyday outdoorsy people.  

The paper itself feels a little waxy, and, true to its claims, it has shed water, mud and snow with no trouble during my use. Rite in the Rain also sells all-weather pens for use on their pages, but I found pencil works fine—and pencils don’t freeze.

While I didn’t completely submerge my pages, Rite in the Rain’s website shows a video demonstration of writing underwater. Even while underwater, notes are taken on the page with pencil easily, while regular paper tears apart. It’s doubtful that the paper would stand up to long periods of submersion, but a quick dunk is no problem as the water beads on the page and shakes right off.

The notebooks aren’t cheap, costing 10 times what a comparable sized notebook costs at the dollar store, but these aren’t normal notebooks. Not only do they stand up to the outdoors, they also meet archival standards that should see your canoe routes, recipes or journaling last hundreds of years. While I haven’t been able to test that claim, it makes me more mindful of what I write, in the interest of looking good to future generations.

Rite in the Rain notebooks now have their own pocket in my camera bag so I always have one close by. 

$6.95 and up | www.riteintherain.com

This article appeared in Paddling Magazine, April 2013.

Better Feathers

Photo: Virginia Marshall
Better Feathers

As paddlers, we clearly love the water, but when it comes to our camping gear, we’re among the most hydrophobic of outdoor aficionados. We have to be—we spend large portions of our day immersed in the wet stuff. Which probably explains why many paddlers are still sleeping synthetic.

For years I heeded the warm-when-wet wisdom of touring with a synthetic fiberfill bag. My transition to down was cautions—first, a hybrid bag with synthetic bottom and feathers on top (you’re only likely to get damp on the bottom, right? Right?). But, once experienced, a night spent ensconced in goose or duck down is not soon forgotten.

Forget warm when wet; down insulation has unrivaled warmth to weight. A perfectly toasty three-season bag packs down to the size of a small melon—no more cramming that oversized synthetic bolus into your canoe pack or stern hatch and then using the Jaws of Life to retrieve it. Feathers also breathe better, keeping you comfortably cool on warmer nights.

You do need to be careful to keep your down dry. Unlike soaked synthetic fibers, soggy feathers lose their loft and therefore their insulating warmth. Happily, many down bags now feature DWR-treated feathers to resist dampness and hasten relofting. Either way, however, we don’t recommend sleeping wet—just be sure to avoid storing your sleeping bag on the bottom of your boat, and always pack it in a heavy-duty dry bag.

Properly cared for, a down sleeping bag is also longer-lived than a bag filled with man-made fibers. Our MEC Merlin is an economically priced, -3°C-rated down bag that has withstood seven springs, summers and falls of abuse with only a few stray feathers to show for it. For colder shoulder-season paddle camping, we love the strategically placed, space-saving insulation and roomy cut of Therm-a-Rest’s -7°C Antares down bag. Whichever sleep season you’re shopping for, remember, feather makes it better.

 

$240 and up | www.mec.ca | www.thermarest.com

 

 

 

 

Paddling Jan2014coverThis Field Test gear review originally appeared in the January 2014 edition of Paddling Magazine. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read every issue of this new monthly magazine here.

 

Small Talk

Photo: Dave Best
Whitewater kayaking

 “So what is it that you do?”

I hate that question. Not because I find it offensive and intrusive. It’s just that, unless the person who asked is a paddler, he won’t understand the answer.

Most people consider the question to be about work—a separate question from what you do for fun. Since paddling has been both my work and play for the last decade, my answer throws people off.

I used to answer truthfully, trying to capture the essence of what we do and why we do it. Explaining what we do isn’t that difficult. Explaining why we do it—not so easy.

The more I try to explain that we paddle for the feeling of focus we get when being tossed around by powerful currents, the sensation of flying when our boats plane out on glassy waves or the blissful state of being when we glide across the mirrored surface of a lake on a misty morning, the more perplexed they become.

It’s around this point that the person regrets asking the question in the first place. Head cocked to one side, staring at you with a squinty gaze and uncomfortable silence are all common signs the person wishes they had chosen instead to talk about the weather, Hollywood celebs or the rising price of gas.

What vexes me the most is that, if I had answered with golf, hock­ey, knitting, soccer, juggling, photography, football, running, biking, playing guitar or dog training—they’d nod and smile.

How is it that smacking a dimpled ball into a tiny cup a few hun­dred yards away makes sense and paddling doesn’t? Trying to keep a hunk of pigskin off the ground while a dozen giants attempt to make you a greasy spot on the grass seems reasonable but getting up to watch the sunrise from my boat is too crazy?

I’ve decided over the years that paddling isn’t just something that can be justly described to the unknowing. It has to be experienced. That’s why I developed a system for dealing with the, So-what-is-it-you-do? question. It’s simple. When someone whose company I enjoy asks, I offer to show them. It’s the best—and maybe only—was for them to truly understand why we do what we do.

For the benefit of all the others, I answer, “I’m a doctor.” My raft guide bullshitting skills allow me to fake it through most situations. Unless, of course, you’re a doctor or familiar with my system.

Dan Caldwell plays doctor on the banks of the Ottawa River. 

This editorial originally appeared in the 2013 Paddling Buyer’s Guide. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.