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Dave & Amy Freeman Nominated as Adventurers of the Year

Photo: Bryan Hansel
Dave & Amy Freeman Nominated as Adventurers of the Year

National Geographic has announced the 2014 Adventurers of the Year, whose extraordinary achievements in exploration, adventure sports, conservation or humanitarianism have distinguished them in the past year.

The only kayakers amongst this year’s 13 honorees are Amy and Dave Freeman, founders of Wilderness Classroom, who completed a three-year, 11,700-mile journey by kayak, canoe, dogsled and foot around North America in April 2013. The trip, dubbed the North American Odyssey, was just the latest expedition undertaken by the Minnesota couple for the Wilderness Classroom Organization (WCO), a non-profit that creates curriculum for some 85,000 grade school children via its website and school assemblies.

Online voting for the People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year is now open and runs through Jan. 31, 2014. To learn more about each adventurer through photos, interviews and a video and to vote every day for the People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year, go to http://adventure.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/adventurers-of-the-year/2014/. The adventurer with the most votes at the end of the voting period will be announced in February as the 2014 People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year.

 

WCO_ak.jpgRead more about the Freeman’s North American Odyssey in the Summer/Fall 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak

 

Daily Photo: Pup Patrol

Photo: Dzintra Jones
Daily Photo: Pup Patrol

Adventure Kayak reader Dzintra Jones says, “My dog enjoys kayaking as much as I do out on Lake Isle in central Alberta!”

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

Video: Iceland Park & Huck

 

This waterfall footage is from kayaker Martina Wegman’s trip to Iceland earlier this year with Mariann Saether, Shannon Carroll and Katrina Van Wijk.

“Lots & Lots of waterfalls, Geo-thermal activity, amazing hot springs and 24hr daylight!! With four chicks we went on a short park and huck trip and run some rowdy waterfalls and paddled between the ice blue icebergs.”

From Martina Wegman. 

 

Daily Photo: November Days

Photo: Kaydi Pyette
November in Algonquin

This weekend Canoeroots staff headed into Algonquin Provincial Park for a quick weekend getaway. Many of the lakes already have ice on them. Where will your end of seaon trips take you?

 

Want to see you photo here? Send it to [email protected] with the subject line “Daily Photo.”

Daily Photo: Greenland Sailor

Photo courtesy: Daniel Baxter
Daily Photo: Greenland Sailor

Daniel Baxter shared this wonderful photo on Adventure Kayak’s Facebook page in response to our recent post on Greenland-style technique, “Master the Forward Stroke.”

“Eh, yep! Won’t…can’t…go back,” writes Baxter of his affinity for the Greenland blade, “I have paddled with 400 lbs in my boat, or more, with no problems. I have a big…huge…boat but slow no one down.”

 

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

The Lost Gauley: Found

Photo: Courtesy Dave Fusilli
whitewater

 Buried deep under the waters of Summersville Lake since the Gauley River was dammed in the 1960s, the Lost Gauley is a section of the river that only resurfaces about once a decade.

“The dam has to lower the lake to inspect or work on the damn dam,” says Dave Fusilli of Demshitz, who ran West Virginia’s elusive Lost Gauley last weekend during one of those rare opportunities.

With three other paddlers, Fusilli did a 20 mile run ending at the Summersville Dam, where the famous Upper Gauley River begins. The Lost section began with class II to III rapids in the section that’s usually underwater. “This would be the start of paddling 150 feet lower than usual,” says Fusilli. “We could see silt and really cool layering in the silt on the banks of the river. This section reminded me of the last day of the Grand Canyon.”

Watch Fusilli’s video of the Lost Gauley here: 

 

National Geographic Adventurers of the Year

Photo: Bryan Hansel / Courtesy: Facebook/WIldernessClassroom
Dave and Amy Freeman

Adventure educators Dave and Amy Freeman have been nominated as one of National Geographic’s 2014 Adventurers of the Year. The two canoed, kayaked, hiked and dog sledded just under 12,000 miles over three years in a bid to bring environmental awareness and education to school children. Their route took them through Inside Passage, across the Northwest Territories, through the Great Lakes, and down the East Coast of the U.S. Their epic journey ended early this spring. 

Their project, titled The North American Odyssey, was interactive and involved visiting schools and hosting assemblies along their route. Students could also track their progress online through their website. It’s estimated that their project reached a total of 85,000 kids. 

See Canoeroots’  Early Summer 2012 feature on Dave and Amy’s adventure in the feature story “School’s Out” here

You can also visit the National Geographic Adventurers of the Year web page to learn more and, while you’re there, vote to make Dave and Amy the People’s Choice.

Daily Photo: Fish Eye

Photo: Jason Kuruc
Nahanni

“While exploring the summit area of Sunblood Mountain I found this amazing scree gully which drew my eyes down toward the South Nahanni River. It was flanked with spires of loose rock patches of scree and talus and was criss-crossed with game trails – predominantly Dall sheep. I used a fish-eye setting to attain this funnel effect.” – Jason Kuruc

This photo is was taken by Jason Kuruc and submitted as part of the Canadian Hertiage Rivers Photo Contest. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

Daily Photo: Vancouver Island Creeking

Photo: Jim MacDonald
whitewater

Paddler Jimmy MacDonald of Saskatchewan stompin’ some boofs on Vancouver Island creeks. Photo submitted by Jim MacDonald. 

Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected] 

 

Daily Photo: Fournel Falls

Photo: Robert Kierans
whitewater kayaking
This photo was taken at Fournel Falls, in the French Alps last summer. Submitted by Rapid reader Robert Kierans. 

Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected]