Paddler Eric Tucker enjoys Hell Hole rapid on the Middle Ocoee. Photo submitted by Rapid reader Larry Tucker.
Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected]
Paddler Eric Tucker enjoys Hell Hole rapid on the Middle Ocoee. Photo submitted by Rapid reader Larry Tucker.
Want to see your photo here? Submit your whitewater images to Rapid’s Daily Photo! [email protected]
The perfect storage place for items you want to keep accessible and out of the bilge water. Stowaway packs attach under the seat with two release buckles and can be left attached during portages. Made of durable cordura fabric, they fit on both bench and tractor seats. Three models available in high tenacity 210 Denier Cordura fabric with waterproof YKK zippers. The Original fits bench style seats best but will also work with most tractor style seats. The Padded is the same size as the Original but has the benefit of a padded seat pad. The Tractor Seat model is narrower and deeper, to fit nicely under tractor style seats. (Original shown.)
$44.95 | www.granitegearstore.com
Some carnage from the Green Race this weekend in North Carolina—two rescuers on live bait leap in after kayakers at Gorilla Rapid.
“Lots of excitement today during the 2013 Green Race in NC. Of the 45 or so that came through Gorilla while I was watching, I counted 24 that went belly up.”
From Youtube user dwbrooser.
Click here for our report on the race and full race results.
Retired Sault Saint Marie firefighter Bruce Lash is one of the “original ten”— a group of core paddlers who joined Great Lakes sea kayak pioneer Stan Chladek for the very first Gales of November on a blustery Halloween weekend 29 years ago. The concept then, as it remains today, is to gather for a social weekend of rough water paddling, story telling and general merry-making on the wild shores of Lake Superior, at a time of year notorious for laker-sinking storms.
In those nearly three decades, the number of participants at the invitation-only event has swelled as high as 50 and dropped to just a handful. Recently, with Chladek and many of the original 10 reaching senior citizen status, the gathering has peaked at 15 or so participants. This year, I join Lash, former Adventure Kayak editor Tim Shuff, and frequent contributor Conor Mihell to round out a party of five to seven that also includes veteran Marquette boater Sam Crowley and locals Ray Boucher and David Wells. Health issues, work commitments and the temptation of rain-swollen creeks have kept other regulars away. The forecast for tame offshore winds hasn’t helped either.
Basing out of Wells’ Michipicoten Bay-based outfitters for the weekend, we thaw requisite neoprene and Gore-tex garb in a diverse assemblage of wood stove-heated dwellings: the outfitter’s capacious staff cabin, Lash’s cozy tipi, and Mihell’s canvas prospector tent. Puddles and forgotten beer bottles develop frozen skims overnight, but the lake remains as inviting as a chilled punchbowl.
Although gale-force winds don’t grace our humble gathering, we enjoy an exciting downwind run from Michipicoten to the towering cliffs of Old Woman Bay, scarfing left-over Halloween candy around a driftwood campfire at a lunch stop near Brulé Harbour. Sunny skies and sub-zero temperatures the following day invite a coastal journey north from Montreal River. The river mouth’s often gut-clenching surf is today just a few small bumps, and we revel instead in intimate exploration of waterfalls tumbling from the cliffs and rippled golden sand beneath Caribbean-blue waters.
Sharing tales from past events is a Gales tradition. With his larger-than-life personality, Chladek usually holds the floor as the event’s chief storyteller. In his absence, however, we goad story after hilariously told story from Lash: the classic tale of Ron Monkman’s near-death swim at Agawa Rock, and a Slate Islands trip on which a tripmate insisted on making the 10-km return crossing to the mainland butt naked…
The Gales of November celebrates its 30th anniversary in 2014.
Read about the open-registration Gales Gathering in the Spring 2013 issue of Adventure Kayak
Adventure Kayak reader Félix Martin was braving dark skies to launch his kayak in the St. Lawrence River at Quebec’s Bic National Park, when professional lenswoman Elisabeth Cloutier captured this shot.
Cloutier is a fashion and wedding photographer, see more of her work at http://elisabethcloutier.com/
Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.
The start of another perfect day on the water.
This photo is was taken by Fotopedia user Stan Oleson and licensed under Creative Commons. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.
World-class boaters and hundred of spectators flooded to North Carolina this weekend for the 18th annual Green River Race—the self-proclaimed “greatest show in all of sports.”
This year, Pat Keller took home the coveted glass trophy with his first place time of four minutes and 14 seconds. This is Keller’s third win at the Green Race—he also claimed the prize in 2006 and 2008.
Only 5 seconds behind Keller, Dane Jackson claimed second place for the second year in a row. Jackson turned heads at last year’s race by riding switch in his short boat run.
With water levels a little lower than last year, 2012’s record-breaking times are still the fastest since the race started in 1996, but Katrina Van Wijk set a new women’s record this weekend with a time of four minutes and 43 seconds. The time crushes her 2012 run by 23 seconds and continues to close the ever-narrowing gap between men’s and women’s race times.
The race is held each year on the first Saturday of November. Spectators hike a steep one-mile trail into the river to watch the timed race runs, which happen one at a time and lead paddlers through the iconic Gorilla rapid, a class V drop with a reputation for causing carnage.
Click here to see the full list of race results.
Rapid Media at the 2010 Green River Race.
This photo was taken at the Center for Wooden Boats show in Seattle.
This photo is was taken by Flickr user cruizinbye and licensed under Creative Commons. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.