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The Everlasting Youth Of Dale “Greybeard” Sanders

In 2016, I received my first assignment from Paddling Magazine, then known as Canoeroots. Dale “Greybeard” Sanders, had just finished paddling the 3,700-kilometer-long Mississippi River—a stretch of water known for its exposed lake crossings, countless dams, difficult portages and dangerous freighter traffic.

It was an extraordinary feat, made more extraordinary by the record Sanders had set. At 80, he was the oldest person to paddle the Mississippi from source to sea, and I was asked to interview him.

“I’m only 5’6” and sometimes I think I wanted to overcome my stature and show that I’m bigger than I really am,” he told me then. “All my life I’ve had a competitive spirit.”

It was that competitive—some might say stubborn—spirit that led Sanders, now 87, to do it all over again. Sanders had a title to reclaim. His record on the Mississippi had been broken by 81-year-old Stan Stark in 2020.

So, in June 2022, Sanders set out in his 15-foot canoe, Perseverance, and invited a documentary crew along for the ride. The resulting 90-minute film, Greybeard: The Man, The Myth, The Mississippi, chronicles Sanders’ journey from the headwaters of the Mississippi River at Lake Itasca, Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico—as well as provides the origin story for the serial record-setter.

Born on June 14, 1935 in Lickskillet, Kentucky, Sanders first discovered his competitive nature as an acrobat, and later as a springboard diver, spearfisher and free diver. A true Renaissance man, his adventures haven’t been limited to watersports either. In total, he’s set nine world records (some official, some not) including becoming the oldest person to hike the Appalachian Trail when he was 82. But all the records Sanders holds aren’t the most notable thing about him—nor is his age. Instead, it’s Sanders’ infectiously positive attitude and approach to life that are impossible not to be swept up in.

In celebration of reclaiming the Mississippi age record and his recent documentary, I spoke with Sanders again—just shy of his 88th birthday. He told me why he’s a canoeing purist—and even shared his three-ingredient recipe for everlasting youth.

Dale Sanders
Dale “Greybeard” Sanders. | Photo: Courtesy Greybeard: The Man, The Myth, The Mississippi

A conversation with Dale “Greybeard” Sanders

Paddling Magazine: In 2015, you paddled the Mississippi River in 80 days at the age of 80. In 2022, you did it in 87 days at the age of 87. How did the two experiences compare to one another?

Dale Sanders: I expected it to be easy this time. And because I was already in good shape, I didn’t train right. I paddled one day for a couple of hours and that was it—so I did not train at all. I was overconfident, I think, and probably should have spent a little more time with a paddle in my hand than I did.

I was able to do it, but it was actually harder than the first time. We had record-low water, so it was really slow. I also wanted to start on my birthday on June 14, but that put me on the Lower Mississippi River right in August; right at the time of year when it’s very hot and humid. It was unbearable at times and the mosquitoes almost took me away. So, to put those three things together? It just made for a tough trip, although I never thought about quitting. But there might have been another factor, too: I’m 87 years old.

Us old people, we can get in and out of shape, just like at any age. But it probably takes us longer to get back into condition. I’m just really fortunate to be healthy.

PM: Why does a canoe remain your watercraft of choice?

Sanders: I was really active in my younger years as a lifeguard and swimming instructor, and became a canoe instructor in 1954.

The way Guinness Book of Records has it written, I could have paddled a kayak or canoe down the Mississippi. As a matter of fact, Stan Stark paddled a kayak when he broke my record to become the oldest person to paddle the length of the Mississippi in 2020. So really, if we want to get technical, he didn’t break my record because I had a canoe record—but Guinness-wise, it is a record.

I prefer canoes over kayaks—it’s the historic and classic way of paddling. That lifelong connection to canoeing certainly has had a big play in it.

PM: You’re an active river angel on the Mississippi, with paddlers invited to sign a wall of fame in your home. You even hosted Stark when he was attempting to break your Mississippi record in 2020. In the film, we meet some of the river angels along the way—but are there any who stand out to you?

Sanders: Venice is very special for its river angels. The Gulf of Mexico’s saltwater is 110 miles south of New Orleans and 22 miles south of Venice, which is the last town on the road. There’s nothing beyond Venice. There’s no trail. It’s all mangroves and it’s just a mess of water. The only way to get back up is in a boat. Somebody has to bring a powerboat to help us get our boats back. So, the last day on the river is very special—but it’s also a very special place for river angel support.

Dale "Greaybeard" Sanders on the Mississippi River.
Feature photo: Courtesy Greybeard: The Man, The Myth, The Mississippi

PM: When it comes to group adventures, attitudes can mean the difference between a unified team and a fractured one. While most struggle to stay positive in moments of adversity, you seem to have the opposite problem—in the documentary, your paddling mates struggled at times with your relentless positivity. How do you keep morale up, even when everyone around you is struggling?

Sanders: You hit the nail on the head because anything you do in life with other people—especially adventure—you have to, have to, have to stay positive and keep the negative words out. That’s really important.

When we were paddling the Mississippi, we tried to stay positive. Occasionally we’d break down and once in a while we’d have an argument, but we would always end it with, “Hey, let’s put it aside,” shaking hands, and then looking at each other and laughing.

Once in a while, I wanted to get off by myself and paddle and get out of the rigamarole of communicating and not hearing well. I didn’t hear well even with my hearing aids, so it was very frustrating trying to carry on a conversation. If I had one thing that I could ask for—for doing an expedition with other people along with me—it would be better hearing. It can be really rough to try to do an expedition when you can’t hear well.

PM: If we gave you one of those “real age” tests—which measure how fast you’re physically aging—how old do you think it would say you actually are?

Sanders: I don’t know what an 87-year-old is supposed to feel like, but I don’t feel old. I don’t feel 87.

There are studies to suggest that if you’re happy, then the body can ward off disease better. And if you’re really happy and active in life, your body is filled with adrenaline, which also keeps the brain working.

I live a really happy life. I’m active. I have a good spiritual life. And if you put those three things together, that’s a pretty good formula to ward off disease and have a productive life.

Someday, I’ll get old.

PM: The last time I spoke with you was in 2016. If I call you again seven years from now, you’ll be 94. What do you think competition will look like for you then?

Sanders: Well, God willing I stay healthy and the creek don’t rise, I’m gonna try to do the Appalachian Trail again.

In 2021, my friend Nimblewill Nomad [83-year-old M.J. Eberhart] took the record, so I don’t hold that age record anymore. I would really like it. I could pull that off.

PM: I’m having déjà vu. When we last spoke, you told me you were planning on hiking the Appalachian Trail next—and then you went on to set the record a year later.

Sanders: Well, don’t wait seven years to call me again. What about you call me when I’m 90?


GREYBEARD: The Man, The Myth, The Mississippi is an official selection of the 2023 Paddling Film Festival, and available to stream today as part of the Adventure Program.

 

Best Whitewater Books To Read

Whether looking for a book to keep you occupied between paddle sessions or to read in your tent on whitewater weekends, this list of the best whitewater books promises to enthrall readers with stories of adventure, friendship, courage, daring and skill.

Best Whitewater Books: New Releases

cover of Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon

Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon

By Melissa L. Sevigny

The riveting tale of two pioneering botanists and their historic boat trip down the Colorado River and through the Grand Canyon.

In the summer of 1938, botanists Elzada Clover and Lois Jotter set off to run the Colorado River, accompanied by an ambitious and entrepreneurial expedition leader, a zoologist, and two amateur boatmen. With its churning waters and treacherous boulders, the Colorado was famed as the most dangerous river in the world. Journalists and veteran river runners boldly proclaimed that the motley crew would never make it out alive. But for Clover and Jotter, the expedition held a tantalizing appeal: no one had yet surveyed the plant life of the Grand Canyon, and they were determined to be the first.

Through the vibrant letters and diaries of the two women, science journalist Melissa L. Sevigny traces their daring forty-three-day journey down the river, during which they meticulously cataloged the thorny plants that thrived in the Grand Canyon’s secret nooks and crannies. Along the way, they chased a runaway boat, ran the river’s most fearsome rapids, and turned the harshest critic of female river runners into an ally. Clover and Jotter’s plant list, including four new cactus species, would one day become vital for efforts to protect and restore the river ecosystem.

Brave the Wild River is a spellbinding adventure of two women who risked their lives to make an unprecedented botanical survey of a defining landscape in the American West, at a time when human influences had begun to change it forever.

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Chasing Rivers:
A Whitewater Life

By Tamar Glouberman

From a debut voice in adventure writing comes the thrilling true story of a female whitewater guide as she navigates some of the most extreme and remote rafting rivers in North America―until tragedy strikes.

When Tamar Glouberman was in her twenties and thirties, rivers were flowing through every aspect of her life. Whitewater and the paddling community bring excitement, friendships, lovers and a connection to the natural world as she traverses the map in search of her next adventure. As a short woman who nearly failed high-school gym, Glouberman does not fit the stereotype of a kayaker or raft guide and must prove herself time and again. Yet she feels more at home on water than land.

Driven to guide increasingly dangerous rivers, Tamar overcomes her self-doubts and challenges both on and off the water, using a combination of grit and wit. But when a rafting trip ends in a fatal accident, she is consumed by guilt and exiles herself from the rivers she loves, convinced she can never return. Tamar must eventually decide if being unable to save her passenger’s life means she also must sacrifice her own.

A raw and honest work from a talented new voice in adventure writing, Tamar’s memoir is a page-turner, transporting readers through wild rapids and breathtaking canyons, navigating eddies and currents, as she learns from the river that finding self-forgiveness might be the most hard-to-reach destination of all.

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cover of Torrents as Yet Unknown: Daring Whitewater Ventures into the World's Great River Gorges

Torrents as Yet Unknown: Daring Whitewater Ventures into the World’s Great River Gorges

By Wickliffe W. Walker

A dramatic narrative tour of 10 of the world’s most incredible whitewater adventures—spanning 5 continents and 40 years—guided by a legendary whitewater trailblazer.

This fascinating history of daring whitewater explorers stands alongside classic works on mountaineering, outdoor survival, and extreme sports.

Perfect for fans of Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air and Candice Millard’s River of the Gods.

In ten thrilling real-life adventure stories, pioneering whitewater explorer Wick Walker examines what lured a generation of incredibly daring pioneers into some of Earth’s most wondrous yet forbidding river canyons.

Loaded with great moments and personal stories, Wick details what these adventurers found there, and within themselves. The extraordinary characters, driven by different motives and visions, but united by their compulsion to seek the unknown and the pulse of free-flowing water, are as remarkable as the daunting geography and conditions they confront.

Whitewater sport today stands side-by-side with mountaineering in participation and public attention, yet it has lagged in generating its own literature. Torrents As Yet Unknown will help fill that gap for readers interested in human drama played out against great natural challenges.

Mountaineering history is deep and its literature rich, but whitewater adventurers approach and experience the same forbidding terrain from a different vantage, between the steep walls of their canyons and atop powerful torrents of cascading water.

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Best whitewater books to read

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Amazon Woman

By Darcy Gaechter

Part memoir, part feminist manifesto, Amazon Woman shows what incredible feats we are capable of and will encourage people, especially women, across all backgrounds and ages to find the courage and strength to live the life they’ve imagined.

This 148-day journey began on Darcy Gaechter’s 35th birthday. She sold her successful outdoor adventure business, upsetting her partner and boyfriend of twelve years and getting them both fired in the process. The emotional waters that would fester and erupt on the ensuing journey was often more challenging to navigate than the mighty river itself. With blistering lips and irradiated fingernails, Darcy would tackle raging Class Five whitewater for twenty-five days straight, barely surviving a dynamite-filled canyon being prepared for a new hydroelectric plan. She and her two companions would encounter illegal loggers, narco-traffickers, murderous Shining Path rebels, and ruthless poachers in the black market trade in endangered species. They would plead for mercy at the hands of the murderous Ashaninka people who were convinced that they had come to steal their children’s organs.

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Brothers on the Bashkaus

By Eugene Buchanan

From rafts made from old germ-warfare suits and felled logs to lifejackets stitched together from soccer balls and wine bladders, river running in the former Soviet Union has evolved much like Australian wildlife, completely free of outside influences. Brothers on the Bashkaus follows the exploits of one of the first groups of Westerners to experience this foreign style of rafting on a white-knuckled, 26-day trip down the Bashkaus River, one of the hardest whitewater runs in all Siberia.

In the early 1990s, armed with little more than former guiding experience and the prestigious Shipton/Tilman grant from W. L. Gore and Associates—the first of its kind ever awarded for a river expedition—four Americans stumble into a chance encounter with ten Latvians and soon find themselves on one of the wildest rides in the world. Along the way they deal with everything from language barriers to armed horsemen and rapids lined with memorials to those who perished before them. They battle the elements and fear starvation, finding sustenance in pork fat, sugar cubes, and fish-eyeball soup along the way.

More than just a great adventure story, Brothers on the Bashkaus combines a fascinating study of a culture and history with a riveting play-by-play of the paddling maneuvers and survival skills needed to meet the day-to-day challenges in the canyon. Thrown together with a common mission, these men soon discover the bonding qualities of the river, a medium that dissolves cultural barriers as easily as sediment. The Bashkaus creates a common bond regardless of race, religion, or nationality—one in which strangers truly come together as brothers.

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cover of Hell or High Water: Surviving Tibet's Tsangpo River

Hell or High Water: Surviving Tibet’s Tsangpo River

By Peter Heller

A grand adventure—an elite kayaking team’s heroic conquest of the worlds last great adventure prize: Tibet’s Tsangpo River.

The Tsangpo Gorge in southeastern Tibet has lured explorers and adventurers since its discovery. Sacred to the Buddhists, the inspiration for Shangri La, the Gorge is as steeped in legend and mystery as any spot on earth. As a river-running challenge, the remote Tsangpo is relentlessly unforgiving, more difficult than any stretch of river ever attempted. Its mysteries have withstood a century’s worth of determined efforts to explore it’s length. The finest expedition paddlers on earth have tried. Several have died. All have failed. Until now.

In January 2002, in the heart of the Himalayan winter, a team of seven kayakers launched a meticulously planned assault of the Gorge. The paddlers were river cowboys, superstars in the universe of extreme kayaking who hop from continent to continent ready for the next death-defying pursuit. Accompanying them was author Peter Heller. A world-class kayaker in his own right, Heller has logged countless river miles and several major first descents. He joined the Tsangpo Expedition as a member of the ground support team and official expedition journalist, and was also granted the exclusive opportunity to write the book about the descent.

Hell or High Water is that book—greatly expanded from his coverage for Outside magazine. Filled with history, white-knuckle drama, and mutiny in one of the world’s most storied-and remote-locations, Hell or High Water is as riveting as any of the great epic adventures throughout history. Publication coincides with the release of a documentary about the expedition by National Geographic.

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Kayak: The New Frontier

By William Nealy

Laugh and learn kayaking skills, from basic to advanced, through detailed text and more than 400 humorous illustrations!

If you want to learn how to paddle—and laugh out loud while doing so—William Nealy’s classic illustrated kayaking-skills manual remains dead-on hilarious. Kayak demonstrates important paddling techniques through humorous illustrations, along with detailed explanations from the renowned kayaker.

This book is perfect for beginners and more experienced paddlers, from hardcore hippy hairboaters who used to catch air in their block-long Dancers to insane youngsters clattering tiny plastic boats down steep creeks with more rocks than water. You’ll get to know everything from kayak and rapids anatomy to paddling techniques to river rescue methods.

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Living the Best Day Ever

By Hendri Coetzee

This is a true story of the greatest African explorer you have never heard of. Equipped with a core philosophy and a lot of luck, Hendri Coetzee embarks on a series of increasingly outrageous adventures in search of what he calls the best day ever. Through a series of harrowing and often hilarious experiences, he is subjected to grueling challenges in the most unique and compelling classroom on earth: the rivers and jungles of Africa.

Recognised for his unique approach to extreme adventures, Johannes Hendrik (Hendri) Coetzee was a true African explorer; a modern day incarnation of the nineteenth century mould of Livingston, Stanley, Baker, Burton and Speke. A South African, born in 1975, he ventured into the depths of Africa evoking the legacy of his predecessors when he jokingly referred to himself as a “Great White Explorer.” Coetzee spent more than a decade risking his life on the riverine veins that pulse thorough the heart of Africa, only to discover an intangible way to feel most alive.

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No Barriers: The Young Adult Adaptation

By Erik Weihenmayer

Erik Weihenmayer has a long history of turning obstacles into adventures. Born with a rare condition that blinded him as a teenager, he never let his diagnosis hold him back from a full life. As an athlete, explorer, speaker and activist, he has opened the eyes of people around the world to what’s possible. In 2001, he became the first blind man to climb Mount Everest, the highest point on Earth. In 2005, he co-founded his nonprofit organization, No Barriers, to empower others to overcome adversity and achieve their biggest goals.

This special edition of No Barriers introduces kids to the incredible true story of Erik’s most terrifying journey: solo kayaking the thunderous whitewater of the Grand Canyon. Erik and his friends form a courageous crew to do battle with some of the harshest elements nature has to offer. Along the course of Erik’s journey, he meets other trailblazers: adventurers, scientists, artists, and activists who show Erik the way forward and teach him the meaning of No Barriers―“What’s Within You is Stronger Than What’s in Your Way.”

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Paddling Pacific Northwest Whitewater

By Nick Hinds

Paddling Pacific Northwest Whitewater is the definitive guide to the best rivers and creeks for kayaking and rafting in Washington and Oregon—home to some of the most fun (and challenging) whitewater in the world. Including over 240 detailed run descriptions from local area paddlers who know these rivers and creeks better than anyone else, this is the only book you’ll ever need for a lifetime’s-worth of paddling in the Pacific Northwest.

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cover of Soggy Sneakers: A Paddler's Guide to Oregon's Rivers

Soggy Sneakers: A Paddler’s Guide to Oregon’s Rivers

By Willamette Kayak & Canoe Club

Soggy Sneakers has been Oregon’s primary source of information for whitewater enthusiasts for 35 years. Members of Willamette Kayak and Canoe Club―who have run all of Oregon’s rivers―share their expertise and detail rapids and landmarks found on each run. There’s something for everyone, from Class 1 (flatwater) excursions to Class 6 (most challenging) rapid-filled adventures.

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cover of The Emerald Mile: The Epic Story of the Fastest Ride in History Through the Heart of the Grand Canyon

The Emerald Mile: The Epic Story of the Fastest Ride in History Through the Heart of the Grand Canyon

By Kevin Fedarko

From one of Outside magazine’s “Literary All-Stars” comes the thrilling true tale of the fastest boat ride ever, down the entire length of the Colorado River and through the Grand Canyon, during the legendary flood of 1983.

In the spring of 1983, massive flooding along the length of the Colorado River confronted a team of engineers at the Glen Canyon Dam with an unprecedented emergency that may have resulted in the most catastrophic dam failure in history. In the midst of this crisis, the decision to launch a small wooden dory named “The Emerald Mile” at the head of the Grand Canyon, just fifteen miles downstream from the Glen Canyon Dam, seemed not just odd, but downright suicidal.

The Emerald Mile, at one time slated to be destroyed, was rescued and brought back to life by Kenton Grua, the man at the oars, who intended to use this flood as a kind of hydraulic sling-shot. The goal was to nail the all-time record for the fastest boat ever propelled—by oar, by motor, or by the grace of God himself—down the entire length of the Colorado River from Lee’s Ferry to Lake Mead. Did he survive? Just barely. Now, this remarkable, epic feat unfolds here, in The Emerald Mile.

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cover of The Last River: The Tragic Race for Shangri-la

The Last River: The Tragic Race for Shangri-la

By Todd Balf

It was the ultimate whitewater adventure on the Mount Everest of rivers, and the biggest challenge of their lives….

October 1998 an American whitewater paddling team traveled deep into the Tsangpo Gorge in Tibet to run the Yarlung Tsangpo, known in paddling circles as the “Everest of rivers.” On Day 12 of that trip, the team’s ace paddler, one of four kayakers on the river, launched off an eight-foot waterfall and flipped. He and his overturned kayak spilled into the heart of the thunderous “freight training” river and were swept downstream, never to be seen again.

The Last River: The Tragic Race for Shangri-la is a breathtaking account of this ill-fated expedition, a fascinating exploration of what propelled these kayakers to take on the seething big water and perilous Himalayan terrain of the deepest gorge on the planet. This was the magical Shangri-la of legend, a 140-mile-long canyon framed by 25,000-foot snowcapped peaks, a place of unimaginable beauty called Pemako in ancient Buddhist texts that was rumored to contain mammoth waterfalls.

At the close of the twentieth century, an end-to-end descent of the gorge filled the imaginations of some of the best boaters in the world, who saw in the foam and fury of the Tsangpo’s rapids the ultimate whitewater challenge. For Wick Walker and Tom McEwan, extreme whitewater pioneers, best friends, and trip leaders, the Tsangpo adventure with Doug Gordon, Olympic medal-winning paddler Jamie McEwan (Tom’s brother), and Roger Zbel was the culmination of a twenty-five-year quest. Fueled by narratives of early explorers, Walker and McEwan kept their dream alive and waited until the Chinese government opened the gorge to Westerners. With financial backing from the National Geographic Society, the group was finally good to go in 1998.

Swollen to three times the size they had expected because of record rains and heavy snowmelt, the Tsangpo lived up to its fearsome reputation. On numerous occasions the team questioned whether to continue, but chose to press forward. The Last River probes beyond the extreme sports clichés and looks at the complex personal and intellectual reasons for the seemingly irresistible draw of Tibet’s Great River. For Walker, Gordon, Zbel, and the McEwans—husbands, fathers, friends, and brothers—the Tsangpo wasn’t a run toward death but a celebration of life, adventure, and the thing that tied them to one another—awe-inspiring rivers. The Last River is also a riveting journey to one of the world’s wildest and most alluring places, a thrilling book that invites us into the Himalayas of Jon Krakauer’s classic, Into Thin Air, but from a totally new perspective—on a historic river so remote that only the most hardy and romantic souls attempt to unlock its mysteries.

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cover of The River

The River

By Peter Heller

From the best-selling author of The Dog Stars comes the story of two college students on a wilderness canoe trip—a gripping tale of a friendship tested by fire, white water, and violence.

“A fiery tour de force … I could not put this book down. It truly was terrifying and unutterably beautiful.” –The Denver Post

Wynn and Jack have been best friends since college orientation, bonded by their shared love of mountains, books, and fishing. Wynn is a gentle giant, a Vermont kid never happier than when his feet are in the water. Jack is more rugged, raised on a ranch in Colorado where sleeping under the stars and cooking on a fire came as naturally to him as breathing. When they decide to canoe the Maskwa River in northern Canada, they anticipate long days of leisurely paddling and picking blueberries, and nights of stargazing and reading paperback Westerns. But a wildfire making its way across the forest adds unexpected urgency to the journey.

One night, with the fire advancing, they hear a man and woman arguing on the fog-shrouded riverbank; the next day, a man appears on the river, paddling alone. Is this the same man they heard? And if he is, where is the woman? From this charged beginning, master storyteller Peter Heller unspools a headlong, heart-pounding story of desperate wilderness survival.

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cover of The Ultimate Guide to Whitewater Rafting and River Camping

The Ultimate Guide to Whitewater Rafting and River Camping

By Molly Absolon

The Ultimate Guide to Whitewater Rafting and River Camping introduces new rafters to the skills, equipment, and knowledge required to mount a multi-day whitewater rafting trip. Rafting equipment, skills, and techniques have changed drastically in recent years, and this book provides the latest information on equipment selection, care, repair, and use; whitewater rafting techniques; reading rivers; hazard evaluation and basic rescue; camping techniques; river cooking and living; and expedition planning.

Written in a clear and comprehensive manner by outdoor educator and whitewater veteran Molly Absolon, The Ultimate Guide to Whitewater Rafting and River Camping is a great tool for novices and an excellent resource for experienced rafters.

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cover of The Whitewater Wars: The Rafters and the River Trip that Saved the Ocoee and The Gauley River Battle

The Whitewater Wars: The Rafters and the River Trip that Saved the Ocoee and The Gauley River Battle

By David Brown

The Whitewater Wars is an entertaining and at times funny story about the twists and turns in the battle with two federal agencies to save the Ocoee and Gauley Rivers. These were not conventional environmental battles. Living close to the edge at times with relatively little money, rafting and kayaking pioneers in river shorts and sandals were seemingly no match against powerful federal agencies. They were grossly underestimated.

Here is what Marc Hunt, one of the first Ocoee River paddlers, has to say about The Whitewater Wars. “Successful advocacy efforts for the environment are always uphill battles, and winning them requires leaders with vision, grit, and integrity. David Brown brought those qualities in spades to the efforts to save the Ocoee and Gauley rivers. Anyone with passion for protecting America’s rivers, and for that matter anyone who just enjoys hearing about political brawls with powerful federal bureaucracies, will love the quick read that The Whitewater Wars delivers through David’s gifted storytelling.”

David Arnold, a cofounder of Class VI River Runners, in Lansing, WV said, “This book does much more than describe how an industry started and grew in the mountains of Appalachia. It is the behind-the-scenes account of the power of passion to make change happen. This ‘David and Goliath’ story gives hope to anyone committed to changing the way we do things.”

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Whitewater Awakening

By Rita Potter

Can two lost people find themselves, and possibly each other, halfway around the world?

After a tragic accident, Quinn Coolidge leaves everything behind, hoping to find solace in a secluded life in the Ozarks. Her solitude is disrupted when her best friend unexpectedly shows up with a proposition she may not be able to resist.

Faced with a series of failed relationships, Aspen Kennedy is left wondering why she can’t find true love. With each new partner, she immerses herself in their interests, hoping to find the connection she’s been missing. That should make her the perfect girlfriend, shouldn’t it?

Come along with Quinn and Aspen as they travel to Africa to take on one of the most grueling whitewater rafting courses in the world. With the amazing Victoria Falls as their backdrop, the pair will have to look deep inside to discover what holds them back. Will the churning waters of the Zambezi River defeat them, or will it lead them to a whitewater awakening?

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cover of Whitewater Kayaking: The Ultimate Guide

Whitewater Kayaking:
The Ultimate Guide

By Ken Whiting

Whitewater Kayaking: The Ultimate Guide has become the established, definitive guide on the sport. Drawing on the combined 30+ years of experience of world-renowned paddlers and instructors Ken Whiting and Kevin Varette, this comprehensive guide covers everything from the most basic skills and concepts to the most advanced, cutting-edge paddling techniques.

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ABE BOOKS ALIBRIS AMAZON BARNES & NOBLE BETTER WORLD BOOKS BIBLIO BOOKSHOP.ORG THRIFTBOOKS WALMART

 

Kokatat Provides Support To Tongait Expedition Around Labrador Peninsula

JF in Ungava Bay on a previous trip | Photo Courtesy of CackleTV Productions
JF in Ungava Bay on a previous trip | Photo:

ARCATA, CA (July 7,2023) – Late last week four sea kayakers set off on a 1,000-kilometer kayaking journey to the ‘Place of Spirits’ in the Canadian Arctic. Over the next four weeks, Justine Curgenven, JF Marleau, Frank Wolf and Larry Chomyn will paddle around the Labrador Peninsula unsupported from Kangiqsualujjuaq, Quebec to Nain, Newfoundland. Along with documenting the expedition through film and text, the group will be piloting a polar bear sighting/encounter app for Polar Bears International.

“This is an amazingly accomplished group of explorers and paddlers with over 50,000 kilometers of wilderness travel between them,” said Lisa Kincaid, Kokatat’s promotional marketing manager. “This expedition is wrought with danger between icebergs, polar bears, and massive tides, and so it’s no surprise so few people have attempted this route.”

Map of Labrador with red line traveling along the coast.
The route the team will be completing.

Nigel and Kristen Foster were the last to complete the route 20 years ago. The trip starts in Ungava Bay, home to the world’s largest tides, and travels around to the exposed Labrador coast. They’ll then traverse through Torngat National Park, which comes from the Inuktitut word “tongait,” meaning “place of spirits.”

There are a handful of hunting cabins along the way, but for most of the journey the paddlers will spend nights in the rugged landscape where they will set up an alarm fence and take turns holding night watch to keep an eye out for polar bears and other predators.

Man standing beside red tent pitched on rocky shore. Two sea kayaks on either side and a pile of gear in front.
JF in Ungava Bay on a previous trip.

Long-time adventurers Wolf and Curgenven have produced award-winning films and published many articles for national and international audiences. Marleau is one of the most experienced and highly qualified sea kayak professionals in Canada. Chomyn rounds out the all-Canadian team and has a long expedition resume and is passionate about paddling in dynamic water.

Kokatat has provided the team with Odyssey drysuits, Maximus Centurion and Neptune life vests, Tributary Hydration systems, and Slimstream waist tow systems for on-the-water, all-day comfort and safety.

Curgenven is frequently posting updates on the trip on her blog at cackletv.com/justines-blog/.

About Kokatat Inc

Kokatat has been manufacturing paddling gear in Arcata, California for over 50 years. At a time when many technical apparel brands were moving manufacturing offshore, Kokatat continued to invest in infrastructure in the United States. Kokatat founder Steve O’Meara was committed to the development of the finest and driest paddling apparel in the world and recognized the need to control and continually evolve the development of our dry wear.

In the early days, Kokatat worked closely with W.L. Gore & Associates, makers of GORE-TEX, to refine the sewing and sealing techniques required for full immersion suits and tops. Today, our hands-on approach to manufacturing continues to set the standard in paddling apparel. Into the water with Kokatat! Learn more at kokatat.com.

2023 Yukon River Quest Runs In July For First Time Ever

Photo: Jason Wolsky // Yukon River Quest

With 44 out of 54 teams crossing the finish line in Dawson City, the 2023 edition of the Yukon River Quest has officially come to an end. This was the first time in the race’s 23-year history it ran in July; teams normally paddle the 715-kilometer route from Whitehorse to Dawson City in the middle of June.

The change in tradition came after mass flooding threatened to cancel the event two years in a row. With these types of high water events predicted to increase in frequency, race organizers decided pushing the event to July in 2023 would eliminate uncertainty for racers and the need for last-minute decisions to be made by the organizing team.

The river at the 2023 Yukon River Quest was considered a low to normal level for early July, allowing the race to take place without a hitch.

While last year’s floodwater conditions presented challenges such as debris, sweepers and large waves, this year wasn’t without it’s obstacles. Racers faced irregular waves from the west on Lake Laberge and daytime high temperatures of 30 degrees Celsius, making proper hydration an essential component for success.

Finishing first overall was Team #21, the Golden Lake Crew, made up of Seb Courville and Jen Courville from Golden Lake, Ontario. They finished the race in 46 hours, 17 minutes, and 12 seconds.

No race records were broken this year. The list of top finishers is published below.

Seb and Jen Courville, the winners of the 2023 Yukon River Quest, standing beside the Yukon River after finishing the race.
The winners of this year’s race, Seb and Jen Courville. | Photo: John Howland // Yukon River Quest

Solo Classes

Women’s Solo Canoe C1
1. Team #78 Shut Up and Paddle (Tania Halik | Invermere, BC, Canada) 65:20:31

Men’s Solo Canoe C1
1. Team #69 Matt@newwestdesign.ca (Matthew Smith | Calgary, AB, Canada) 54:13:16

Women’s Solo Kayak K1
1. Team #74 Team Lootas (Kelly Watson | Port Townsend, WA, USA) 54:09:20

2. Team #68 Rough Cut Diamond (Patricia Jones | Delta, BC, Canada) 57:00:41

3. Team #61 Stroke of Serendipity (Kimberly Dodds | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 59:36:06

Men’s Solo Kayak K1
1. Team #85 Vini Vidi Vici (Thomas de Jager | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 51:53:46

2. Team #76 The Waterman (Robert Gill | Vancouver, BC, Canada) 52:00:05

3. Team #73 CaCoCa (Jake VanLue | Granby, MO, USA) 57:07:48

Women’s Stand Up Paddleboard
None raced in 2023

Men’s Stand Up Paddleboard
1. Team #80 Yster Sweden (Goran Gustavsson | Halmstad, Halland, Sweden) 57:04:04

2. Team #64 Airboard (Thomas Schillig | Dietlikon, ZH, Switzerland( 57:32:28

3. Team #72 RGP (Christoph Weber | Chelsea, QC, Canada) 59:20:16

Tandem Canoe Classes

Mixed C2
1. Team #21 Golden Lake Crew (Seb Courville & Jen Courville | Golden Lake, ON, Canada) 46:17:12 – 1ST OVERALL

2. Team #40 Planned Grit (Mike De Abreu & Sophie Coupal | Arnprior, ON & Cantley, QC, Canada) 47:00:05 – 2ND OVERALL

3. Team #26 Broderson (Chris Broderson & Emily Broderson | Maple Grove, MN, USA) 48:53:04 – 5TH OVERALL

Women’s C2
None raced in 2023

Men’s C2
1. Team #34 Free Animal (Ragnar Robinson & Scott Fraser | La Ronge, SK, Canada) 48:15:12 – 4TH OVERALL

2. Team #31 Pangal Norte by Kilrich (John Philip Apostol & Joshua Apostal | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 49:02:33 – 6TH OVERALL

3. Team #23 Watch Our Wake (Brian Groves & Shane Ringham | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 49:53:49 – 8TH OVERALL

Tandem Kayak Classes

Mixed K2
1. Team #29 Spirit of America (Josh Friedman & Julie Kirk | Moyie Springs, ID, USA) 51:43:27

2. Team #38 Power Couple (Madison Power & Jeremy de Kroon | Victoria, BC, Canada) 66:15:00

Women’s K2
None raced in 2023

Men’s K2
1. Team #30 Yukiwis (Graham Sutherland & Greg Lloyd | Christchurch & Martinborough, New Zealand) 51:20:08

2. Team #36 The Revenant (Ben Lott & Scott Worthington | Wanaka & Tarras, New Zealand) 51:35:26

4-Person Canoe Classes

Mixed C4 (2 men, 2 women)
None raced in 2023

Women’s C4 (all women)
None raced in 2023

Open C4 (all or predominantly men)
1. Team #14 Spirit of the Yukon (Francis Soenen, Peter van den Berg, Danny Veys, Holly Crouch | Roselare, Essen & Marke, Belgium and Sherburne, NY, USA) 49:09:00 – 7TH OVERALL

2. Team #13 Usain Boat (Adam Strand, Michael Johnson, Giovanni Allevato, Douglass Endrizzi | Urbana, IL, Rapid City, SD, Kaneohe, HI & Monona, WI, USA) 54:51:01

3. Team #12 Mix Match (Martin Like, Anthony Ellis, Shawn Warren, Jerome Libecki | Powys & Shrewsbury, United Kingdom, Ft. McMurray, AB, Canada, & Springville, USA) 56:59:14

Boats being paddled on Yukon River during the 2023 Yukon River Quest.
Photo: Jason Wolsky // Yukon River Quest

Voyageur Canoe Classes (6 or more persons)

Mixed Voyageur (1/3 of team must be women)
1. Team #3 3-2-1 Go 2023 (Tina Hoeben, Kathy Jensen, Cindy Lee, Margaret Caudle, Andrew Lane, Cheance Adair | Penticon, BC, Canada, Wallace, MI, Newark, Alameda & San Diego, CA, and Lena, WI, USA) 47:36:03 – 3RD OVERALL

2. Team #4 Ts’alvit (James Boyde, Pam Boyde, Midori Kirby, Peer Kirby, Marina McCready, Marianne Douglas | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 49:56:02 – 9TH OVERALL

3. Team #1 CAP Warriors (Donna Johns, Bruce Jobin, Wes Kemble, Prezley Jobin, Dominic Johns, Shane Schinkel, Ethan Boucher, Barb Dawson | Carcross, Whitehorse & Haines Junction, YT, and Atlin, BC, Canada) 52:51:31

Women’s Voyageur (all women)
1. Team #2 Stix Together (Cheryl Rivest, Carolyn Relf, Kirsti de Vries, Susan Hamilton, Anna Peacock, Natalie Haltrich, Kathy Burden, Jennifer King | Whitehorse, YT, Canada) 49:57:34 – 10TH OVERALL

2. Team #7 Team Whoa (Tunde Fulop, Lisa Robertson, Patricia Clune, Noreen Schaefer, Danielle Boisvert, Tracey Hutton | Whitehorse, YT, Toronto, ON, Wynndel & Victoria, BC, Canada) 54:03:57

Open Voyageur (all or predominantly men)
1. Team #5 Good Company (Charlie Bodkin, Sam Horsley, James Samuels, Louis Hugh-Jones, Piers Haskard, Harry Horsley | South Coogee, High Range, Bondi Beach, Mosman, Manly, & High Range, NSW, Australia) 53:57:51

YRQ 300 (half quest to Carmacks)

Women’s VC Half
1. Team #8.5 Paddlers Abreast (Lynn Rice-Rideout, Asa Berg, Dawn Fralick, Rachel Zral, Stella (Mooney) Martin, Amy Miller, Monique Levesque, Jay Cherian | Whitehorse, YT & Atlin, BC, Canada) 26:00:05

 

6 Pieces Of Gear These Multiday Guides Won’t Launch Without

Raft full of trip gear on the Owyhee River
Add these items to your packing list before loading up for an Owyhee river trip. | Feature photo: K.M. Collins

Forgetting a critical piece of gear from your packing list runs the risk of ruining an entire river trip. On the other hand, learning about a new piece of gear you didn’t know existed can completely change your perspective on a weekend or weeks-long float.

We polled a whitewater jury far and wide to see what powerhouse female guides considered their most important piece of gear—the one item they would simply not leave the launch without.

6 pieces of gear these river guides always have on their packing lists

1 Wear a sun protection layer that doesn’t stink

Ibex Indie Hoodie

Ibex Indie Hoodie

$170 | ibex.com

“I get sunburned and cold easily, so for fall whitewater rafting on the Rogue River, my favorite piece of multiday river gear is the Ibex Indie Hoodie. It’s lightweight enough to wear for sun protection but it’s warm enough to keep the chill off on the water and in camp. Plus, because it’s wool, it’s still warm when it’s wet and doesn’t smell even when I wear it multiple days in a row. It’s not cheap but I’ve had mine for about seven years and despite a few holes, it’s still going strong.”

—Ashley Drake, Co-owner and guide for Arrowhead River Adventures on the Rogue River, Oregon

2 Never skimp on a good camp mattress

Jack’s Plastic Welding Paco Pad

Jack’s Plastic Welding Paco Pad

$190–$493 | jpwinc.com

“My Paco Pad is my favorite piece of camping gear because I love sleeping. My sleep setup is actually the only thing I never ‘downsize’ on. I have a cute Mexican blanket I put down first, then sleeping bag, then pillow, and finally a puffy blanket to top it off. Sometimes I have little fairy lights depending on the trip. I also love my Paco because it floats and when it’s really hot outside I’ll attach it to my boat and lay on it in the water. It’s the definition of luxury.”

—Sarah Magley, professional raft guide for Momentum River Expeditions on the Rogue, Owyhee and Illinois rivers, Oregon

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AMAZON BACKCOUNTRY

3 Go beyond the basics for a good night’s rest

Nemo Equipment Tempo Synthetic Sleeping Bag

Nemo Equipment Tempo Synthetic Sleeping Bag

$159 | nemoequipment.com

“My Nemo sleeping bag has a flap you can tuck into the neck if it’s cold, or basically flop it on your face to keep the moon or sunlight off your face. The Nemo is also nice because it’s spacious for side sleepers.”

—Katie Blanchard, 11 combined seasons guiding on the Middle Fork of the Salmon and the Section 4 of the Chattooga River with Northwest Rafting Company and Wildwater

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4 A pair of votes to protect the hands

NRS Axiom Gloves

NRS Axiom Gloves

$29 | nrs.com

“I could not live without a pair of NRS Axiom gloves and I always have a back up. My hands look like working hands. They are calloused, dry and peeling though they are still sensitive to blisters. Even one hour of rowing without gloves will develop blisters and then the rest of my trip will be more difficult than it needs to be.

“I like the Axioms because they have padding on the palms, open fingers for dexterity to tighten PFDs and use zippers, plus, the velcro strap helps fit to your wrist perfectly.”

—Alaina Foster, seven seasons on West Water & Cataract Canyon on the Colorado River and Desolation & Grey on the Green River. Current Operations Manager with OARS.

[Editors note: NRS no long produces the Axiom gloves and currently offers the Boater’s gloves.]

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“Gardening gloves are perfect for rigging. They are the number-one least obvious piece of gear that I can’t do without for multidays. Saves the fingers from cuts, strap burns and getting dried out. Cheap and grippy.”

—Rylin Dale, professional raft guide for Oregon River Experiences on the Rogue River, Oregon

5 Get a game-changer for nature’s call

pStyle P.U.D.

pStyle P.U.D.

$11 | thepstyle.com

“My fave gear piece is the pStyle brand pee funnel. It makes peeing outside convenient and accessible for female bodies and, though I was skeptical at first, it’s been a real game-changer. So cheap and so worth it. It’s also made of recycled ocean plastic.”

—Rachael Healow, professional raft guide for Oregon River Experiences on the Clackamas River

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AMAZON

6 Bring an ever versatile utility bag

Jack’s Plastic Welding Collapsible Bucket

Jack’s Plastic Welding Collapsible Bucket

$40 | jpwinc.com

“The JP bucket is the perfect place to store my Dewalt blower/inflator plus extra batteries en route to the put-in, stray canned drinks rolling around the cooler, boat or car, a post-trip dry pair of clothes, the TL binder, snacks and virtually everything else. It’s essentially a large purse with an open mouth. More malleable and lighter than a bucket, the welding and plastic is waterproof, although the top doesn’t actually close. I own two and use them constantly. On the Owyhee River this spring, it was the perfect sack for my head lamp, towel and warm clothes on a trip to the hot springs. The JP bucket is my hottest item of the season.”

—The author, freelance raft guide on the Rogue, Owyhee in Oregon and Salmon River, Idaho

[ Browse the widest selection of boats and gear in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]
Raft full of trip gear on the Owyhee River
Add these items to your packing list before loading up for an Owyhee river trip. | Feature photo: K.M. Collins

Add these items to your packing list before loading up for an Owyhee river trip. | Feature photo: K.M. Collins

 

Astral’s 14th Limited Edition PFD Inspired By Pro Kayaker Nouria Newman

Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral
Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral

June 28, 2023– Asheville, NC – Astral is proud to introduce a limited edition GreenJacket Rescue PFD in collaboration with world-renowned athlete and Astral Archetype Nouria Newman. Dubbed the “Wild Things” GreenJacket LE, the design features abstract illustrations by California-based surfer, painter, muralist, and illustrator Bret Brown. This is Astral’s 14th limited edition life jacket since 2009, representing a unique effort to push the limits of innovation at the intersection of performance, design, and creativity alongside athletes, artists, and non-profits. This legendary vest was selected as one of the best life jackets for whitewater paddlers by Paddling Magazine’s editors.

Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral
Image: Regina Nicolardi/Astral

The Wild Things GreenJacket LE is inspired by Newman’s desire to pursue flow state experiences in nature and return home safely to her loved ones. On the front, back, and inside of the PFD, Brown’s artwork tells a playful and curious story of our innate call to the wild, using the colorful monsters and elements of nature he is known for. “I guess we all have our own monsters. Our own crazy dreams, fears, and doubts but [it is] also what motivates us. We tried to make friendly-looking monsters because going to places that scare you isn’t necessarily a bad thing,” shares Newman.

“This LE collab is a symbolic expression of returning. A returning to our human experience… [and] that inside each of us is a scary, wild, unpredictable calling that deserves being listened to,” shares Brown. “I’m all about supporting that call to the wild, the unknown, to the scary depths, and to be a part of a project with Astral and Nouria that spoke to that calling was perfect.”

Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral
Image: Regina Nicolardi/Astral

“This LE is inspired by Maurice Sendak’s children’s book ‘Where the Wild Things Are’. It’s about dreaming, overcoming fear, and going on all sorts of adventures, as well as coming back home to a warm meal and to your loved ones. For me that embodies a lot of what I love most in kayaking,” states Newman.

“Astral is honored to collaborate with Nouria and Bret to design a limited edition rescue PFD that champions having a present mind during wild experiences in Nature,” shares Philip Curry, founder and CEO of Astral.

[ Stay afloat and find your next PFD in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]

The Wild Things GreenJacket LE shares the same platform, architecture, and features as the industry-leading GreenJacket Rescue PFD. It is available online at astraldesigns.com and at select retailers.

Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral
Image: Regina Nicolardi/Astral

With all of Astral’s LE programs, a portion of proceeds will be donated to organizations and projects that protect soil and water or provide youth access to Nature. Astral will donate 5% of online sales from the Wild Things GreenJacket LE to Tri-Haut pour l’Everest, a sustainability project working to reduce the amount of plastics and waste that enter the soil and water of the Himalayas, that was selected by Newman as the recipient. “I’m stoked to support this student project because they need it,” says Newman. “They’re not just making noise and raising awareness, they are actually out there making a difference.”

Photo Courtesy of Regina Nicolardi/Astral
Feature Image: Regina Nicolardi/courtesy of Astral

About Astral

Established in 2002, Astral designs high performance wilderness equipment created in the least toxic, lowest impact ways. Built on decades of experience and experimentation, Astral has assembled athletes, artists, and craftspeople to build the cleanest, most beautiful, and highest performing gear. Astral has significantly reduced toxic PVC foam from the PFD industry, invented breathable life jackets, won awards for their paradigm changing footwear designs, and developed the stickiest rubber ever worn on wet rock.

New Rhode Island Law Requires Paddlers To Always Wear PFDs

two people wearing life jackets in accordance with Rhode Island's new law
Feature photo: Courtesy Old Town Canoes and Kayaks

Rhode Island has joined a short list of U.S. states requiring a life jacket be worn by all paddlers at all times.

On March 23, 2023, the state announced a new law that took effect in April, stating, “All operators & passengers of canoes, kayaks, sailboards, kiteboards, paddleboards, and any other paddlecraft shall wear a U.S. Coast Guard approved PFD at all times while underway regardless of age.” Paddlers not wearing a PFD may be subject to a $100 fine.

New Rhode Island Law Requires Paddlers To Always Wear PFDs

The state’s new law was motivated by the three fatal kayak incidents in 2022, as well as the state’s recognition that nearly half of its boating-related drownings occurring between 2018 and 2021 were paddlecraft users not wearing life jackets.

Rhode Island is only the second state currently requiring persons, in an all-encompassing range of paddlecraft, to be wearing a life jacket at all times, regardless of age. New Mexico was the first. A few additional states, including Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Massachusetts, have seasonal laws for all paddlers to be wearing a PFD during the colder months. It should be noted, in every U.S. state, children are required to wear a PFD while paddling, and in the vast majority of states that age consideration is 13 and under.

two people wearing life jackets in accordance with Rhode Island's new law
Save $100—and potentially your life—by always wearing a PFD while paddling. | Feature photo: Courtesy Old Town Canoes and Kayaks

The Providence Journal shared the opinion of a handful of paddlers as the new law went into effect. Some felt it is an overreach by their state government, while others, including members of area paddling associations, feel it is a net positive for safety.

Most states already require a life jacket to be on board paddlecrafts, but having every paddler wear their life jacket has not broadly been enacted at the legislative level.

In the Providence Journal article, Captain Michael Schipritt, the boating safety coordinator for Rhode Island’s Department of Environmental Management’s Division of Law Enforcement, puts the difference between having and wearing as such: “There is no time to put a life jacket on before a paddling accident. It’s like trying to buckle your seat belt before a car crash.”

New law dovetails with Coast Guard campaign

Getting paddlers to put on their life jackets has long been an educational mission of the U.S. Coast Guard.

The USCG 2022 summary of statistics on recreational boating incidents states, “Where the cause of death was known, 75 percent of fatal boating incident victims drowned. Of those drowning victims with reported life jacket usage, 85 percent were not wearing a life jacket.”

[ Paddling Buyer’s Guide: View all PFDs ]

Three out of every four drownings that occurred in the Coast Guard’s 2022 report were in vessels 21 feet or under, a category nearly all paddlecraft fall into. The Coast Guard also shares that in 2022, 21 percent of drownings involved a canoe or kayak.

The message the Coast Guard has resoundingly echoed over the horn is to put on a life jacket. In Rhode Island, this safety message has evolved the way of the seat belt and will now be enforced for paddlers to “click it or ticket” in their effort to make waterways safer for recreation.

Save $100—and potentially your life—by always wearing a PFD while paddling. | Feature photo: Courtesy Old Town Canoes and Kayaks

 

American Whitewater Announces Open-Source Safety Signage Toolbox

Photo Courtesy: American Whitewater

American Whitewater is all about open-source, river information sharing. This is the motivation and rationale behind American Whitewater’s recently released Open-source Signage Toolbox. The first of its kind in the river community, the Toolbox houses a database of templates for safety messaging regarding life jackets, caution messaging, river kiosk information, map content and river rapid classification info.

Several yellow triangular signs with different safety symbols on them.
Photo: Courtesy of American Whitewater

American Whitewater has taken on the challenge of streamlining universal whitewater and river signage. Think of the Toolbox as conveniently usable excerpts and content from a universal river sign guidebook. In the same way ski resorts have cultivated unified symbols, signage and color coding standards for downhill difficulty ratings (i.e. black diamond, green and blue, etc.), American Whitewater has curated universal signage for relaying important river safety information in the form of the Open-source Signage Toolbox.

Trail map sign at a trailhead.
Photo: Courtesy of American Whitewater

And who better to oversee the production of the first universal whitewater signage Toolbox than American Whitewater? American Whitewater has been recognized as the expert in whitewater and river safety for over 60 years and has been looked at to provide input and guidance on safety messaging for signage at river access points across the country. In contributing to countless signage projects throughout scores of years, American Whitewater noticed a need for more consistent messaging and improved accessibility to a range of river managers and users.

Comprehensive by design, the 83-page Toolbox indicates best practices for symbol and text combinations, color, graphic and spacing standards on panel imagery, acceptable pictograms and preferred dimensions of physical signs and posts, as well as proximal placement to access location. The Toolbox brings together the diverse input of over 200 river industry community members to the editing process.

The annual death toll on America’s whitewater rivers is filled with the names of people who were looking for a fun day on the water and blundered into a dangerous situation. American Whitewater’s Safety Signage Project is designed to alert people to downstream dangers and suggest simple safety practices. The Open-source Signage Toolbox will make it easier for river managers, landowners, and others to get the word out.”  American Whitewater safety chairman, Charlie Walbridge

American Whitewater communications director, Evan Stafford said, “The years of river safety experience that went into American Whitewater’s Safety Signage Project is hard to even put a number to, but suffice it to say it should be counted in centuries. Everyone from public lands agency river managers who’ve been working to educate river users for decades, to swiftwater rescue instructors who’ve been teaching courses for generations gave their input. The end result is a comprehensive, open-source toolkit, that will push river signage to be the most informative it can be, while maintaining consistent messaging that can be recognized across jurisdictions and from watershed to watershed.”

Little boy on a paddleboard.
Photo: Courtesy of American Whitewater

American Whitewater’s ultimate goal in the Open-source Signage Toolbox initiative is to reduce boating fatalities and accidents under the premise that more effective information at river access points will result in a greater percentage of individuals engaged in safe boating practices.

“As a professional rescuer and firefighter I know the nexus between information and prevention. With information people can make an informed decision about where and how they want to recreate on the river. That critical information will lead to safer experiences for people and help to prevent accidents in the river environment,” noted Sean Norman, team leader of the Water Rescue Team for Cal Fire in Butte County.

Mom and daughter in a whitewater canoe
Photo: Courtesy of American Whitewater

By building an Open-source Signage Toolbox that supplies designers and river managers with coherent signage elements and other visual assets with consistent messaging, iconography and graphic elements, American Whitewater helps improve river safety and standardize resources and materials used at river recreation sites. Supported by research and industry expertise, the Open-source Signage Toolbox has been developed to create a comprehensive signature and graphic program that will improve communication, safety and awareness. Specifically, this toolbox was developed to prevent, protect and improve the following:

Prevent deaths, emergencies, land-owner conflicts, harm to river and wildlife, and the environment, unlawful and unsafe behavior at the access sites and mistreatment of the river/sites. Protect lives, natural resources, rivers and the environment. And finally, improve communication, connectivity, safety, recreation experience, education, site infrastructure, river health and stewardship, dams, portage routes and hydraulics, equipment details, general river use and guidelines.

American Whitewater will evaluate the effectiveness of the project through outreach to state and federal agencies, dam operators, and other river managers who are responsible for providing recreational boaters with safety information. American Whitewater will work collaboratively with river managers and state boating law administrators to identify opportunities to install improved signage and evaluate effectiveness through actions of the public.

The Toolbox was developed over the course of one year in partnership with Tangram Design under a grant from Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund, administered by the U.S. Coast Guard. The original concepts for the project emerged from an effort by Snohomish County, WA to develop safety messages for communities along the Skykomish River.

Keep an eye out for an AW journal article and more press on the Open-Source Signage Toolbox. For more information, reach out to the American Whitewater Pacific Northwest Stewardship director, Thomas O’Keefe, 425-417-9012, okeefe@americanwhitewater.org.

Best Paddlesport Industry Recruiting Lines

Older photo of a rafting guide paddling a raft with a whitewater rafting group
“Can’t wait to get back to the bus and crush that can of chili.” | Feature photo: Rob Faubert

Remember the old days, when an employee loyalty plan sounded something like “Go clean out those coolers and y’all can eat whatever’s in them.”

We’ve come a long way since then. Or have we?

Covid and a squeaky-tight job market have flipped the balance of power in hiring, with retail and light manufacturing wages in North America increasing about 10 percent since 2020. Many outdoor guides could get a big bump this season if a federal court backs a Biden executive order setting the minimum wage for concessionaires on U.S. federal lands at $15, plus overtime.

Companies throughout the paddlesports industry are offering more benefits, perks and flexibility—in addition to more money and some intangible smoke.

Older photo of a rafting guide paddling a raft with a whitewater rafting group
“Can’t wait to get back to the bus and crush that can of chili.” | Feature photo: Rob Faubert

“Know and support their goals, enable them as best you can, treat them as people and peers,” advised industry veteran Roger Poor.

Reece Fabbro Jr., owner of The Backpackers Shop in Sheffield, Ohio, checked in with a dose of reality. Retail margins aren’t high enough to pay floor help $20 or $25 an hour, and they can’t live on less. Ouch.

Maybe that’s why paddlesports job postings now sound a lot like they did in the old days, just with better leftovers in the cooler.

Take this nugget from a kayak tour operator seeking guides: “As soon as you and your group are safely on the beach, you dig into the coolers and produce a spread fit for a king; three types of locally cured meats, multiple kinds of cheese, smoked salmon, house pickled green beans, fresh strawberries, macadamia nuts, sliced baguettes and crackers spill over the edges of the walnut slab.”

No word on who is going to pickle those green beans (you are), but guiding on Yellowstone Lake never sounded better. “You slip into the calm cold water as the cry from a loon sends shivers up your spine… you settle into your boat and shake your head in wonder, thinking to yourself, ‘I am getting paid right now!’”

But wait, there’s more! Here for your enjoyment are our top five paddlesports recruiting lines, the 2022 edition.

Best Paddlesport Industry Recruiting Lines

  1. “All recreational toys like mountain bikes, kayaks, SUPs and even horseback riding are available for free when not in use by our guests.”
  2. “The dates of employment run 5/10 to 9/15 and busy, full-season guides can gross $8k–$10k+ across the course of the season—that’s before taxes and after tips!”
  3. “Employee must be available to work all 18–20 nights of each schedule. Then you’ll have 10 to 12 days off—like having your weekends put together!”
  4. “Free glampsite housing provided!”
  5. “Better than working for your Uncle Dale driving nails back in Ohio.”

Paddling Business cover mockupThis article was first published in the 2023 issue of Paddling Business. Inside you’ll find the year’s hottest gear for canoeing, kayaking, whitewater and paddleboarding. Plus: Industry leaders on the post-pandemic landscape, 50 years of paddlesports, the rise and fall of ACK and more. READ IT NOW »


“Can’t wait to get back to the bus and crush that can of chili.” | Feature photo: Rob Faubert

 

Humpback Whale Swims Beside Kayaker (Video)

A kayaker in Australia had the experience of a lifetime when a humpback whale swam beside his surf ski. According to 7News Australia, the humpback whale followed paddler Glenn “Nish” Annear from Coogee Beach to Bondi—a distance of over two miles. In an interview with Annear, the paddler said the whale was so close to his surf ski he could nearly touch it with his paddle.

Drone pilot Jason Iggleden captured the footage of the humpback whale and kayaker sharing the ocean. Iggleden’s footage is credited to Drone Shark App, an Australian drone company monitoring beaches for shark and marine life activity.

This is an active time of year for humpbacks off the coast of Australia. According to the Guardian Australia YouTube post, “Up to 50,000 whales are expected to pass Australia’s east coast during the annual migration from Antarctica to the Great Barrier Reef.” Fortunately, North American kayakers don’t have to take a trip to Australia to spot a humpback whale. Humpbacks travel throughout the U.S. and Canada’s east and west coast during the summer months.