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Butt End: Cheaters Prosper

Photo: Kevin Callan
Kevin Callan on the Meanest Link in Algonquin Provincial Park

 It wasn’t for the faint of heart. I sent my paddling mate, Andy, details about the trip I had planned—a 350-kilometer loop around Algonquin Park labeled the Meanest Link.

My emails outlined the difficulty of paddling up three of the six rivers we would encounter and that we had to portage 93 times, adding up to 68 kilometers of drudging along bug-infested trails. The problem was, he didn’t read my emails. Four days into our journey, Andy told me I was never to organize another trip, not for at least 10 years.

We weren’t the typical candidates for the route. It’s usually type-A personalities, striving for perfection and personal challenge that take it on. Our reasons for adventure were solitude and relaxation. The record for completing the loop was seven and-a-half days; I allocated three weeks.

We were the turtles, not the hare. Anyone who paddles the route is celebrated for trying and, if necessary, having the sense to call it quits. Except, maybe, us.

Local paddlers developed the route in 2004 in honor of Bill Swift Sr., one of the founders of Algonquin Outfitters, a man with a tough exterior but a heart of gold. Aside from sticking to the route, there are rituals to follow—camping on a specific site, travelling only by canoe and visiting 100-year-old Camp Pathfinder. That’s where our trouble began.

Andy had a scant 16 days of holidays and I thought it would take 20 days for us to complete the trip. At first, Andy planned to leave the trip on day 16 and let me continue alone. By day 12, however, he changed his tune. He wanted to cross the finish line. Finishing together was a far better way to complete the Link, I thought. A change of plans was in order.

We had to make a few shortcuts. First, we hired a boat shuttle across Algonquin’s biggest lake, Opeongo, as it’s more than half a day’s paddle. Then we hitchhiked the three kilometers of Portage Road. Our biggest time-saver, however, was to skip paddling up the Madawaska River to visit Camp Pathfinder.

At the finish line, on the afternoon of the sixteenth day, we learned of the controversy. 

I had posted online throughout the trip, sending photos and text, but not receiving. After writing about our change in plans we received righteous online lashing. A few Meanest Link alumni disagreed with our shortcuts and labeled us cheaters. Some even wrote we didn’t deserve to travel the route and had disgraced the institution of Meanest Link paddlers. Ouch.

On one hand, all others who completed the route kept to the customary ways. But the cheater label is hard to stick when you’re honest about what’s going on. Should I have kept to the plan and left my canoemate behind only to follow the rules? Or were we right to alter our trip to cross the finish line together?

In typical 21st century fashion, I let the device that initiated the debate decide our fate. I posted the question to Facebook and Twitter. Five cursed us and over 11,000 agreed with our decision. Andy and I had completed the Meanest Link together—guilt free.

Kevin Callan lost 10 pounds on the Meanest Link. His favorite section involved dragging upstream along the Big East River for four days. He recommends you try it sometime.

 

This article first appeared in Rapid Media’s 2014 Paddling Buyer’s Guide. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.

 

Daily Photo: Hunkered Down

Photo: Ontario Tourism
Daily Photo: Hunkered Down
Hunkering down for a night under the stars in Woodland Caribou Provincial Park. 
 
This photo is courtesy of Ontario Tourism. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Sting Ray Paddle Gear Review

Photo: Virginia Marshall
Sting Ray Paddle Gear Review

A test of the Aqua-Bound Sting Ray carbon paddle from Adventure Kayak magazine.

 

Aqua-Bound

Sting Ray Carbon

 

 

Like a poorly adjusted bicycle derailleur, a sloppy fitting split paddle will sap your efficiency and your patience. Who needs the aggravation? Aqua-Bound’s new Posi-Lok ferrule lets you tweak your feather in 15-degree increments and dual buttons eliminate infuriating wiggle-waggle, or as AB engineer Jason Eccles puts it, “There’s no radial or linear free-play.” A mid-size blade and pure carbon shaft round out this slick stick.

 

 

$190| www.aquabound.com

 

stingray.jpg 

Take a peak at more hot new gear in the Summer/Fall 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak—click here to read for free.

 

Paddle Camp Fortune

Courtesy: The UK Outward Bound Trust
Canoe Camp. UK Outward Bound Trust.

 

Arnel had never seen the stars before. A 12-year-old from the inner city, his family hoped a 21-day canoe trip with Outward Bound’s Youth Challenge program would provide a touchstone for the rest of his life.

His presence in the bow of a canoe wasn’t an accident, but it did put him in increasingly rare company. For many families, the rising overhead of some paddling camps threatens to make what was once an affordable rite of passage, a milestone that caters only to the wealthy and a small handful of underprivileged kids who receive grants, leaving many high and dry.

According to Peg Smith, CEO of the American Camping Association (ACA) since 1998, rising transportation and food costs take the blame for higher tuition fees across North America. To mitigate the increases, the ACA provides $216 million each year in scholarships and “offers flexible sessions, discounts for early or multiple registrations, sliding fee scales, and payment plans” to assist parents with costs, says Smith. No one has been harder hit by rising costs than tripping camps.

Taylor Statten, director of the internationally renowned wilderness canoeing Taylor Statten Camps, agrees that prices have increased dramatically. “What used to be $5,000 for a 36-day canoe trip in the mid ‘90s, now costs almost $11,000,” he says.

While those numbers reflect the tuition for high-end camps, heightened parental, camper and industry expectations are significantdrivers of camp costs across the country. Even while some camps have resisted the widespread adoption of Kevlar boats and chosen to retain fleets of aluminum canoes, many have had to keep up with the times when it comes to technological advances. In the 1980s, canoe trip staff felt comfortable circling the locations of cached emergency radiophones on their maps and crossing their fingers, now many camps mandate that satellite phones be carried into the field. The technology is not cheap and there’s an expectation amongst parents that all trips will carry one.

Director of Temagami-based Camp Wanapitei, Eoin Wood says the heightened standards are not unreasonable. “Ten years ago we didn’t use satellite phones. Now every trip has one and a SPOT [satellite GPS messenger], too. Some parents think, ‘Oh, it’s summer camp, my kids just go and play—how expensive can that be?’The truth is,” says Wood, “most families, including my own, expect top-rate care and equipment for their child while at camp. It costs money to make that happen.”

That dollar value can include the increased price of counselor certifications, which cover the gamut from first aid to technical skills to leadership development, as well as liability insurance for business and staff and, for some camps, the cost of providing a once-in-a-lifetime trip.

In order for high-end camps to remain competitive, there’s pressure to increase the length of trips and offer them in ever-more remote locations, says Statten.

Twenty-five years ago, a weeklong canoe trip in Algonquin Park would have fulfilled many expectations for a wilderness experience. Today, trips are exponentially longer and increasingly remote. Just this past summer, Taylor Statten Camps sent out six 50-day canoe trips and Camp Wanapetei led three 53-day expeditions in Canada’s North.

While there’s no way to return to the days of dented Grummans for some, it’s not all bad. Certainly camp has never been more expensive, but it has also never been more professional. Backcountry trips are equipped with high-tech devices, paddling routes are the stuff of dream destinations and counselors are trained and seasoned specialists.

Camp is no longer just a rite of passage, some have evolved into an unparalleled leadership and learning opportunity.

 

 

This article first appeared in Rapid Media’s 2014 Paddling Buyer’s Guide. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it on your desktop here.

Daily Photo: In Living Color

Photo: K Pyette
Daily Photo: In Living Color
“To those devoid of imagination a blank place on the map is a useless waste; to others, the most valuable part.” — Aldo Leopold
 
Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Daily Photo: Blow Me Down (Under)

Photo: Damiano Visocnik

Damiano Visocnik paddles year-round in his home waters near Brisbane, Australia. An avid kayak sailor, he’s designed and sewn his own sails, and regularly tackles winds up to 30 knots. “If you have not tried sea kayak sailing yet, I strongly recommend giving it go,” Visocnik writes on his blog, Gnarlydognews.blogspot.com.au. “Windy days will suddenly become a welcome diversion.” Read all about sailing in the Early Summer 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak.

Location: Queensland, Australia

 

 

 

This image originally appeared in the Summer/Fall 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak. To see more stunning paddling photography, download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

Want to see your image in our Daily Photo? Send to [email protected].

 

 

Tips: Leech Removal

Photo: James Smedley
Photo: James Smedley

 

Do thoughts of the scene in the 1986 hit movie Stand By Me, where child actor Wil Wheaton pulls a fat, slimy leech out of his underpants, send chills up your spine?

If so, there’s little reason to worry—only a few species of leeches feed on humans. However, if one attaches to you, here’s what—and what not—to do.

Do

The best method is to wait 10 to 20 minutes until the leech detaches itself. But if that’s too gross, use a sharp fingernail to dislodge its sucker. Remember to always wash the wound with soap and water.

Don’t

As tempting as it might seem, don’t rip the leech off. This tears your skin and can cause infection. Another treatment commonly prescribed is the application of salt or heat from a flame. While these methods work, they cause the leech to regurgitate into the open wound, which can cause infection, or worse, disease.

 

Discover 21 more survival tips in Canoeroots and Family Camping’s Late Summer 2010 issue. To read it, download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

Daily Photo: MacFarlane River

Photo: Willie Bridge
Daily Photo: MacFarlane River
The MacFarlane River, which empties into Lake Athabasca, provides an exciting canoe journey. With long stretches of whitewater, the MacFarlane’s highlight is a wild canyon with three dramatic waterfalls, just before it cuts through sand dunes.
 
This photo was taken by Willie Bridge. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Daily Photo: Pink Whale

Photo: John Hyde

John Hyde made the most of poor conditions to capture this remarkable image of a breaching humpback. The Juneau, Alaska-based wildlife photographer explains: “Forest fires were burning in British Columbia, the Yukon and the Alaskan interior. Even hundreds of miles away the skies were grayish brown.” But in the evening, the smoky air and sun setting behind the Chilkat Mountains created a magical backdrop for a pod of feeding whales, including this playful calf.

Location: Douglas Island, Inside Passage, Alaska

 

 

 

This image originally appeared in the Summer/Fall 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak. To see more stunning paddling photography, download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

 

Want to see your image in our Daily Photo? Send to [email protected].

 

 

Keeping Polynesian Voyaging Culture Alive

Vaka Taumako Project

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70892066

Video Courtesy Vaka Taumako Project

The Vaka Taumako Project is trying to perserve a way of life. 

Located in Taumako, a village in the eastern Solomon Islands in the South Pacific Ocean, this community is arguably the last in the world to keep the traditional wayfinding and open ocean voyaging canoe tradition alive. They have launched an Indigogo with the help of an anthropologist to build another canoe and keep their knowledge alive.

The vessel in the video is a traditional vaka, a voyaging canoe built by hand using only sustainable local natural materials. Using precise navigational skills based on a comprehensive system of wind, waves and stars, these vaka are sailed for great distances without the use of any modern technology. The maritime knowledge of Taumako Polynesians is quite possibly the only fully authentic Polynesian voyaging tradition still alive in the entire Pacific Island community, according to their Indigogo web page. 

 

Find out how you can help keep Polynesian voyaging culture alive and donate to the project here.