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(e)revolution and The Big Gear Show Complete Successful First Year In Denver

Yamaha Staff demonstrating an e-bike on the test track. | Photo Credit: Billy Michels
Yamaha Staff demonstrating an e-bike on the test track. | Photo Credit: Billy Michels

Denver, CO: Lost Paddle Events announced the successful execution of The Big Gear Show and (e)revolution e-bike show at the Colorado Convention Center in Denver. The combined show had over 250 exhibitors and attracted close to 4,000 attendees during the four-day event, including two trade show days and two consumer show days. Many exhibitors appreciated the unique B2B2C show format in which they engaged with retailers and consumers at one show.

A woman riding a bike on an indoor boardwalk
Yamaha Staff demonstrating an e-bike on the test track. | Photo Credit: Billy Michels

In its inaugural year, (e)revolution showcased over 40 global e-bike brands across categories like commuter, cargo and mountain e-bikes. A significant feature of the show was the 28,000-square-foot e-bike demo track. It offered every attendee the opportunity to test any e-bike on display at the show and experience the power-assist features on inclines and various rollers, ramps, and zigzags. Many brands worked directly with local retailers to assist riders on the test track, allowing retailers and brands to collaborate on developing potential consumer sales leads.

“This has been a fantastic show,” said Ryan Spinks at Yamaha Power Assist Bicycles, discussing (e)revolution. “We loved the mix of the B2B and consumer aspect; we had really good conversations with all our retailers, and then we had our local retailers assist at the demo track where we have been able to feed them leads all day long.”

Now in its third year, The Big Gear Show demonstrated its leadership in producing an inclusive outdoor industry show. The show featured companies and gear representing a wide range of outdoor activities from several well-established brands and numerous innovative startups, like supporting sponsor Acacia. As one of the newer overland brands at the show, they exhibited their new three-in-one, portable, modern outdoor dwelling system.

“The show helped put Acacia Outdoor on the map,” said Ryan Hayter, president of Hayter Industries, Acacia’s PR and marketing firm. “The fledging brand was inundated with partnership and retail inquiries. The level of interest in the product helped shed light on new and creative opportunities within the industry that will ultimately shape the brand.”

Among the many startups were companies led by underrepresented communities within the outdoor industry, including Tough Cutie, Northside Bags, and over two-dozen young companies hosted by the show’s inclusivity partners. For many of these new brands, The Big Gear Show was their first time to experience an industry trade show, offering them the chance to be discovered by retailers and consumers.

Muna Mohamed of Kalsoni agreed, stating, “What I really loved about this event was to network and connect with folks during the industry days, share my story and showcase my products.”

Arwen Turner, founder of WNDR Outdoors added, “As an entrepreneur at The Big Gear Show, I was not only able to meet with people interested in my product but also network with other businesses. It was spectacular.”

Two women talking at a booth
Muna Mohamed, founder of Kalsoni, showing her technical apparel line to a customer. | Photo: Billy Michels

In addition to access to retailers and consumers, the dual show event provided exhibitors access to local media leading up to and during the show. On day two of the industry trade show, local TV stations WDVR FOX 31 and KWGN CW 2 broadcasted eight times from the show floor, highlighting many brands at both shows.

Many exhibitors appreciated this exposure and acknowledge it was an added benefit of attending. “During the B2B days, the thing that really stood out to us was the media exposure. We met with all types of media from many platforms,” said Aaron Cupps, customer experience manager at Lifestraw. ”We were able to showcase many of the new products we just released.”

The show wrapped up on Sunday after the two-day consumer show in which many brands reported positive experiences, from gaining new customers to product sales that ultimately covered their show costs. Adam Saplin from Handlestash said, “We had a lot of consumer sales during the two days, which helped us pay for the show.”

For More Information Contact
Dave Petri
Lost Paddle Events
336-429-6860
Dave@lostpaddle.com

About The Big Gear Show

The Big Gear Show is redefining what an outdoor industry trade show should be. By embracing a wide range of outdoor recreation activities, this new B2B2C experiential model prioritizes meeting the needs of specialty retailers and their customers. The Big Gear Show features the gear that gets people outdoors, amplifying the stories of innovation and access for a new outdoor consumer base. Now in its third year, the event will not only gather professionals from the top outdoor recreation specialty retailers, brands, and media but will also be the first of its kind to invite consumers to attend.

About (e)revolution 

(e)revolution is the world’s first B2B2C e-bike expo focused solely on the needs of e-bike brands, dealers, suppliers, and consumers. A four-day event that provides brands and suppliers opportunities to engage directly with e-bike retailers and cyclists, providing education, demonstrations, and industry networking and social events. The show takes place in Denver, Colorado at the Colorado Convention Center in June 2023.

About Lost Paddle Events

Lost Paddle Events is the leader in retailer and consumer-focused trade shows. Led by a team of industry trade show experts across multiple outdoor recreation categories, Lost Paddle Events produces outdoor-focused events across a range of outdoor recreation categories. Its events include the premiere multi-category trade show, The Big Gear Show, the first of its kind e-bike trade show, (e)revolution, and consumer-centric sports shows, including the Saltwater Fishing Expo, Chicagoland Fishing Travel & Outdoor Expo, and World Fishing & Outdoor Expo.

 

Stand Up For Great Lakes Completes Last Lake Crossing

Jeff Guy, Kwin Morris and Joe Lorenz on the shores of Lake Ontario by Fort Niagara after 35 mile 13 hour paddle from Toronto on Friday June 9, 2023
Jeff Guy, Kwin Morris and Joe Lorenz on the shores of Lake Ontario by Fort Niagara after 35 mile 13 hour paddle from Toronto on Friday June 9, 2023

TORONTO, ON – Last week three Michigan men completed an eight-year quest to cross all the great lakes on a standup paddleboard.

They finished the final leg by crossing Lake Ontario paddling from Toronto to Fort Niagara in a 13-hour, 35-mile journey. The trio battled one- to three-foot waves with some rollers at five feet, winds gusting to 16 knots, rain and lingering smoke from the wildfires directly upwind from the group.

Jeff Guy, Joe Lorenz and Kwin Morris successfully paddled Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Superior and Lake Erie and now they can add Lake Ontario to their conquests.

“Our original goal was to go there and back but that changed due to weather,” says Morris. “We fought some of the biggest waves on any of our paddles. This time they were from the west so we had to paddle on the right side of the boards for seven hours.

“When we got to shore, we looked at the forecast and saw the winds would be even higher overnight so we decided one way was enough, not to mention the first crossing kicked our butts. We made our Great Lake crossing, so mission accomplished.”

Corey Adkins, the Emmy Award winning documentarian said, “I’ve been on five paddles with these guys and this was the toughest, roughest, most intense I’ve ever seen—these guys dug deep. It was even hard for me to film from the safety boat. In the end, they made the right call for safety’s sake and did cross all five Great Lakes. I’m proud to be a part of these guys.”

Three men on standup paddleboards with Toronto skyline in background.
Joe Lorenz, Jeff Guy and Kwin Morris after departing from Toronto on Lake Ontario heading for Fort Niagara.

The paddlers were accompanied by two safety boats from Orange Force Marine Ltd., a Canadian commercial marine services company based in Port Stanley, Ontario.

“We cannot thank enough Captain Derek Niles and his team who provided maritime expertise and on-water safety support,” said Jeff Guy. “It was great to know they were by our side the entire trip both on the water and in the planning stages.”

Guy, Morris and Lorenz founded a non-profit called Stand Up for Great Lakes whose mission is to preserve and protect all Great Lakes by inspiration, education, awareness and action. They have now raised more than $105,000 for various Great Lakes non-profit organizations and have captured the imagination of many who have been inspired by their mission and support their cause. The Lake Ontario goal was to raise $25,000 and they already surpassed it.

“We’re working with the Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research (CIGLR),” said Lorenz. “CIGLR is a non-profit housed in the University of Michigan. They do spectacular work with algal bloom research and their efforts to safeguard the Great Lakes ecosystem. They are experts in Great Lakes issues, it was good to have them on board our team once again.”

The route on Lake Ontario from Toronto to Fort Niagara. For more information or to make a donation, visit http://www.StandUpForGreatLakes.com
The route on Lake Ontario from Toronto to Fort Niagara. For more information or to make a donation, visit http://www.StandUpForGreatLakes.com

According to Mary Ogdahl of CIGLR, “Lake Ontario faces coastal flooding and water level issues, for which we are developing experimental models to prepare coast communities for future flooding.”

Learn more

For more information or to make a donation, visit StandUpForGreatLakes.com and follow the team on Facebook and on Instagram.

Watch the award-winning documentary about their Lake Superior crossing here and Lake Erie crossing here.

Past crossings

Their first crossing was Lake Michigan in 2015, a 60-mile and just under 25-hour journey in 38-degree water. They raised $10,000 for the Great Lakes Alliance. In June 2017, they crossed Lake Huron and raised $7,000 for Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Their 90-mile paddle journey took over 28 hours to complete.

In 2018, they paddled across Lake Superior in 21 hours. Their 60-mile trip began at Sinclair Cove, Ontario and ended at Whitefish Point, Michigan and raised $15,000 for the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum. The trip across Lake Erie began in downtown Detroit’s Belle Isle and ended on the shores of Catawba Island, Ohio and raised $16,000 for the Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research.

About the team

Jeff Guy, 37, is a financial advisor with Merrill Lynch. He also enjoys golf, hockey and fishing. He lives in downtown Traverse City, Michigan.

Joe Lorenz, 37, is a personal trainer in Traverse City. When he’s not helping people achieve their fitness goals, he’s up for almost anything involving water, travel, sailing, adventure and fitness.

Kwin Morris, 36, was born and raised in Northern Michigan, making him a keen waterman, traveler and adventurer. He is a middle school science teacher in the Elk Rapids School District and the owner of Twin Birch Golf Club.

Corey Adkins, 52, is the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society’s communication and content director. Though he doesn’t standup paddleboard, he has captured the guys’ adventures across four of the five Great Lakes and two rivers, producing a series of five documentaries garnering him multiple awards including two Emmys. Adkins lives in McBain with his wonderful wife, Stephanie, who also helps produce these stories.

About Stand Up for Great Lakes

Stand Up for Great Lakes is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and protecting all Great Lakes by inspiration, education, awareness and action. It began with a love of water, over a beer. The group has crossed all five great lakes by standup paddleboard and has now raised more than $105,000 to help raise awareness of the issues facing the Great Lakes.

The lakes are under threat, namely by oil pipelines of questionable integrity, invasive species, sewage leakage, pharmaceutical pollution, agricultural runoff, and those who choose to throw beer cans and cigarette butts wherever they please.

The list of threats to these majestic and vital bodies of water is endless. We’re asking others to stand up for Great Lakes and provide support and encourage us on this important mission.                                                            

To donate visit: standupforgreatlakes.com and click “donate.”

12 Incredible Camping Destinations In Québec Paddlers Will Love

Camping in Cote-Nord, Quebec
Camping in Cote-Nord, Mer et monde ecotours

Québec is a province of wild landscapes and cultural hubs, from its Arctic far north to its biodiverse St. Lawrence coast, ancient mountains cut by gorges, and historic cities.

The trip possibilities are vast. The pressing question is where in Québec a paddler should make camp. There are a million lakes and more than 15,000 water courses—not to mention the gulfs and bays battering up against its edges. Narrowing down your list is an almost impossible task. Fortunately, no matter which corner of the province you explore, there’s no shortage of remarkable spots to pitch a tent.

Here are 12 recommendations for camping destinations a paddler will love in Québec to set you on the right course.

Camping in the Saguenay Fjord, Quebec
FjordEnKayak, Saguenay

12 camping destinations in Québec paddlers will love

Person in a canoe taking a photo of a lake.
Exode Batisseur, Abitibi-Témiscamingue

1 Sleep under the stars where the waters divide in Abitibi-Témiscamingue

If there ever was a place meant for paddlers, it’s Abitibi-Témiscamingue. The two territories’ Anishinaabe names quite literally translate to “where the water divides” and “deep water,” respectively.

There are 22,000 lakes and rivers in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region, with the divide of rivers running north to James Bay and south to the St. Lawrence. The region is also home to prolific canoe tripping rivers, the Kipawa and Dumoine. So where should a paddler set up shop? As far from the main current of travelers as you’d like to go. An excellent place to start is embarking on Kipawa Lake.

Kipawa Lake is often touted by locals as one of the loveliest lakes in the entire province. For canoe trippers of all abilities there are few better places to get lost under the Milky Way for a night.

Exode Batisseur D’Aventures provides canoe tripping experiences across Abitibi-Témiscamingue including on Kipawa Lake and other favorites including the Kanasuta River and Raven Lake. Simply let them know where you want to trip and they’ll make it happen.

Kayaking with Aventures Archipel in Bas-Saint Laurent.
Aventures Archipel, Bas-Saint Laurent

2 Find a kayak touring haven in Bas-Saint Laurent

The Appalachian Mountains roll toward their northern terminus as the St. Lawrence River widens in Bas-Saint Laurent. Stunning maritime landscapes, minke whales, seals and lighthouses make this region a touring paddler’s dream.

Havre du Bic is a haven for marine life taking refuge from the exposed St. Lawrence, where you can take a guided sea kayak tour with Aventures Archipel. When it comes time to snooze, camping along the rocky coastlines of Bas-Saint Laurent is the cherry on top. The coves and cliffs of Parc national du Bic will provide a bingeworthy backdrop to kick back and enjoy from the comfort of your campsite. (Note that Québec’s provincially operated parks are called “national parks” but are not affiliated with Parks Canada. They are instead overseen by Sépaq.)

3 Enjoy accessible adventure in Centre-du-Québec

You don’t need to go far from the bustle to find a little adventure in Québec. The hills and valleys of Centre-du-Québec are right between the cities of Montreal and Québec City, yet their quaint forests and soothing rivers provide enough of an escape to satisfy the soul. It’s the perfect place to have the best of both worlds by experiencing the cultural centers while also enjoying the outdoors.

Your weekend detour should start with setting up a campsite. Parc Regional de la Rivière Gentilly is a centrally located choice. The riverfront park’s 50 tent sites are a favorite for unwinding with a bit of fishing on the Gentilly River (just make sure you obtain the proper fishing license first). Or, if you’d like a bit more luxury, they have 20 ready-to-camp A-frames and small cabins to stretch out in.

Recreational kayakers will especially enjoy a float on the Saint-François River. On the mellow run, you can pull your boat up on a rock outcrop, take a swim, enjoy a river picnic and perhaps even spot a wading heron.

[ Discover More Québec adventures in the Paddling Trip Guide ]

4 Camp among soaring gorges in Charlevoix

Charlevoix is home to the one million-hectare UNESCO Charlevoix Biosphere Reserve, two Sépaq parks, and some of the most dramatic mountainscapes in the province of Québec butting against the St. Lawrence River.

When it comes to camping, few places can compare to the soaring gorge of Parc National des Hautes‑Gorges-de-la-Rivière‑Malbaie, the cornerstone of the UNESCO biosphere.

Paddlers won’t have to travel far from a campsite around the park to enjoy the best of the Charlevoix region. You can challenge the whitewater of the Malbaie River by inflatable canoe with Descente Malbaie. River kayakers seeking experiences suitable for all levels can take a trip to Katabatik – Adventure in Charlevoix and the Gouffre River for a family-friendly recreational kayak trip on the stream with wild salmon.

kayaking in Cote-Nord
Noryak Aventures, Cote-Nord. Image: Heliconia, Paddle Tales

5 Find big adventure and multiday camping in Côte-Nord

The Côte-Nord region of Québec is a place of big adventures.

In Tadoussac, where the Saguenay meets the St. Lawrence, touring paddlers can launch with Mer et Monde Ecotours for a three-day trip along the St. Lawrence in search of unspoiled beach campsites, whales and rock outcrops, while spending the evening feasting on local flavors.

Farther down the St. Lawrence, you can find one of the Côte-Nord’s most unique camping destinations for sea kayakers—Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve. The archipelago has the highest concentration of erosion monoliths in Canada, and the islands provide dramatic camping for multiday excursions within a few kilometers of the mainland with a permit from Parks Canada. Or better yet set up basecamp on the Big Island with Noryak Aventures, and let them handle the logistics while you set out to see the geologic wonders day after day from the island’s protected bay.

Noryak’s wilderness camping excursions don’t limit paddlers to the coast though. The outfitter also runs multiday river trips down the remote and word-class Magpie River in the North Shore’s interior.

cooking on campfire.
At camp with Nature Aventure, Gaspesie

6 Stay at the edge of the Earth on the Gaspésie Peninsula

On the Gaspésie Peninsula, 1,000-meter peaks reach down to meet the sea, while Cape Gaspé stretches like a finger into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, before being sheered abruptly at 95-meter limestone cliffs. This place makes it feel as if Québec is located at the far edge of the Earth.

Sea kayakers and standup paddleboarders can camp out on a sandy beach with a view of the cape at tent and RV sites available with Cap Aventures just outside Forillon National Park. Cap Aventures also guides paddling tours throughout the cape and Gaspé Bay.

In a place like Gaspésie, the cliffs and arches of the sea aren’t the only marvel in town. Traveling farther south on the Gaspésie Peninsula, canoeists can admire the unbelievably clear water of the Bonaventure River draining the Chic-Choc Mountains. You can find a campsite right alongside the crystal clear Bonaventure at Cime Aventures and take a trip with the outfitter to gaze over the side of your canoe into pools full of Atlantic salmon swimming in plain view.

Kayaking on lake in Kiamika Regional Park
Kiamika Regional Park

7 Find secluded camping on the lakes of the Laurentians

Hundreds of lakes and streams dot the serene landscape of the Laurentian Mountains. Many know of Mont-Tremblant National Park and its various camping options, from wilderness sites to treehouses, just a two-hour drive from Montreal and Ottawa. But when we load the canoe, we’re heading farther west into the Laurentians to Kiamika Region Park.

In Kiamika paddlers will find secluded campsites. The park remains an overlooked secret in the Laurentians, featuring dozens of lakes and islands, meaning you have your pick of the forest or a sandy beach.

Matawin River
Centre Aventure Mattawin, Maurice

8 Pitch your tent and experience pristine river tripping in Mauricie

La Mauricie National Park is sprinkled with lakes and cut along its edges by rivers. On its eastern border is its namesake Saint-Maurice River, and to the north, a major tributary, the Matawin. Up the Matawin, paddlers will find riverside campsites at Coop Aventures Mattawin, the perfect place to set up camp and explore the region.

Coop Aventures Mattawin’s 18 campsites provide sights and sounds of the Matawin flowing through the northern forest. The outfitter’s base also has eco-tents and cottages with electricity if you’re looking to upgrade from the tent.

With the Matawin River right in front of you, and the Saint-Maurice nearby, you won’t have to take the canoe far for a river experience. Coop Aventures Mattawin also offers guided canoe-camping trips to immerse paddlers in a complete Mauricie experience.

If you’re looking for more excitement, the Matawin also offers class IV whitewater, which the adventure center would gladly steer you and a crew through in their rafts. Heading out of the Matawin Valley you can take the canoe to one of La Mauricie’s many lakes or take a day trip to Maïkan Aventure in Trois-Rivières, where they have everything a paddler could need, from new boats to the piece of gear you forgot at home. You can also book a guided trip with them to float the lower Saint-Maurice River.

Standup paddleboard on St. Lawrence River
KSF, Montréal © TQ / Clark Matthew

9 Find remote adventure within a stone’s throw of a Canadian metropolis in Montreal

Montreal may be one of Canada’s largest cities, with a metropolitan population of over four million, but that does not mean the city lacks adventure for paddlers. To the contrary, the St. Lawrence offers everything from wild water to wildlife.

Rafters can tackle some of the largest volume whitewater on the planet on the Lachine Rapids with Rafting Montréal.

Or you can take a kayak tour of Montreal’s Old Port on the renovated Lachine Canal with Aventures H2O. Kayakers on the tour will cross Saint-Gabriel Lock and paddle through the Peel Basin, meeting at the intersection of the city’s industrialization and the river’s natural world as you head for Old Port.

You may be surprised to find the city’s best kayak camping is not far from Old Port, in Parc National des Îles-de-Boucherville. The Sépaq national park is made of five islands inaccessible by car and offering on-island campgrounds for remote accommodations without leaving Montreal.

Whitewater rafting the Ottawa River
Rafting Momentum, Outaouais

10 Set up camp in Québec’s whitewater capital of Outaouais

When we think of Southwest Québec, it stirs images of the whitewater of the Outaouais region. The Ottawa River and its tributaries, like the Gatineau, are places of thrill-seeking. Warm, slow-moving pools of the voluminous rivers reach fall lines where they drop into thunderous rapids. Whitewater kayakers and rafters from all over the world descend upon the Outaouais region to get their fix from these dopamine-producing rapids.

The place to camp in Outaouais is right where the action is—at the outfitters serving these impressive rivers.

Rafting Momentum offers camping at their base but, more importantly, rafting trips on the Rocher Fendu section of the Ottawa. You’ll have a hard time leaving the post-trip camp celebration after a day conquering the crashing waves and churning hydraulics of mythical rapids, including McCoys Chute and the Lorne.

Up on the Gatineau, you can listen to guides at Bonnet Rouge Rafting spin tales of the river’s 150-year transition from log drives to whitewater paradise before going on to tackle the river’s infamous class IV-V rapids like Lucifer and High Voltage.

parc national de la jacques-cartier homme sur hamac - ete
Québec, City and Region © TQ/Jean-François Frenette

11 Take in the stunning views surrounding every campsite near Québec City

There are few cities in North America as stunning as Québec City. It’s known for its atmosphere and architecture as Canada’s oldest European burg, and equally so for the parks, forests and waterways surrounding it. The Jacques-Cartier River, Montmorency Falls and St. Lawrence surround Québec City, to name a few such water courses.

Camping near Québec City is just as diverse and magnificent. On Île d’Orléans just outside the city on the St. Lawrence River, you can camp with Quatre Natures on enchanting riverside sites at the island’s east end. Then take a kayak excursion along Île d’Orléans’ historical maritime shores where the St. Lawrence turns tidal.

Or head inland, 50 kilometers north of Québec City to canoe-camp with Quatre Natures within the gorge of the Jacques-Cartier River in the Sépaq national park. There is no better way to explore the park than from the seat of a canoe where you can witness the majestic valley floor rise up the mountain slopes to their round peaks covered in coniferous forest. For another unique experience on the Jacques-Cartier River head downstream of the park to Donnacona and take a packraft micro-adventure down Jacques-Cartier whitewater with Rivière Concept.

Canoe camp in Quebec
Canoeing the Mistassini River near Lac Saint-Jean with Aventuraid.

12 Get colossal water views from your tent in the “Land of Giants”

From the sandy shores of Lac Saint-Jean to the 300-meter-high cliffs of Saguenay Fjord, no view in this “Land of Giants” is anything short of showstopping.

Canoeists, paddleboarders and kayakers will find the perfect place to set up base camp in the numerous campgrounds circling the shores of the warm, relatively shallow 35-kilometer-long Lac Saint-Jean. A standout is the campsites near the beaches of Parc National de la Pointe-Taillon on the lake’s north shore.

Once you’re settled in, head off in any direction for the paddling opportunities that make this lake a destination. You can paddle the lake itself or sign up to navigate the class IV-V rapids of the Mistassibi River with H2O Expedition & Adventure.

Adventurous sea kayakers are drawn downstream from the lake to the Saguenay River and the rugged allure of the Saguenay Fjord. The fjord has 300-meter-high walls cut by glaciers above and water depths of 210 meters below, where social pods of beluga whales swim throughout. Fjord en Kayak offers guided outings to best experience the chiseled bay. For experienced paddlers, try out their kayak-camping expedition on the Fjord with a taste of local gastronomy.

If you’re looking for a place to stay, Parc Aventures Cap Jaseux is a camping experience as wild as the fjord. Their accommodations of hanging spheres and treehouses are just across the water from Parc National du Fjord-du-Saguenay.


Once you’ve dipped your paddle in the waters of Québec, you’ll discover there is always another perfect camping option right around the corner. Finding these new places is part of the fun of any paddling trip. You can learn more about every outdoor experience la belle province has to offer by visiting Quebec Aventure Outdoor.

 

The Fascinating Story Behind The Drone Pilots Chasing Kayaks At The GoPro Games (Video)

Drone shots have taken over the latest whitewater edits. But there are drone shots and then there are drone shots. Considering the title sponsor commands the outdoor action cam market, you expect to see some of the most remarkable and creative aerial cinematography on display at the GoPro Mountain Games.

GoPro went a step further though at this year’s event. The brand turned the lens on professional RC race drone pilots Jay Christensen and Patrick Conroy to tell the story of how they’ve become the guys taking the controls on crazy video rides we can’t stop hitting replay on.

 

Best Kayaking Books To Read

Whether curling up with a book to await ice-out or looking for a book to bring on your next kayak trip, this list of the best kayaking books promises to enthrall readers with stories of adventure, friendship, courage and skill. Spanning tales of daring open ocean crossings, circumnavigations and self-exploration, celebrate the timeless allure of adventure by paddle with this list of some of our favorite kayaking reads, as well as the best new releases.

Best kayaking books: New releases

cover of A Complex Coast: A Kayak Journey from Vancouver Island to Alaska

A Complex Coast: A Kayak Journey from Vancouver Island to Alaska

By David Norwell

A soul-searching personal account of a young man’s 1,700-kilometre kayak journey from Victoria, BC, to Gustavas, Alaska, illustrated with whimsical watercolour maps and illustrations of local flora, fauna, and landscapes.

In 2014, twenty-four-year-old geography student David Norwell set off on a daunting kayak journey in search of purpose in his life. A jigsaw puzzle of jagged mainland and over 50,000 islands—stretching from southern Vancouver Island to Alaska—lay in front of him. A self-described ordinary kid from small-to-medium-town, British Columbia, David had paddled through the Gulf Islands and guided youth groups on a nine-day journey from Nanaimo to Victoria. But nothing could prepare him for this.

For the next several months, David navigated the waters off the coastal British Columbia, recording his observations, musings, and daily activities in a notebook. The result is this one-of-a-kind travelogue, filled with more than 700 whimsical watercolour illustrations of coastlines, local plant and animal species, camping supplies, and portraits of people he met along the way. He wrote about the nature of solitude, the search for meaning and adventure, the wildlife he encountered, the survival skills he acquired, and the existence of his own privilege. A Complex Coast is an unforgettable coming-of-age story that will appeal to kayakers, naturalists, and anyone looking for adventure.

Buy from:

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


cover of The Girl Who Touched the Stars

The Girl Who Touched the Stars

By Bonnie Hancock

254 days, 12,700 kilometres, sea sickness, sharks, crocodiles and ocean. Bonnie Hancock broke numerous records on her fastest ever circumnavigation by paddle around Australia but that wasn’t the achievement she is most proud of. Testing the limits of her mental and physical toughness, she learned what it means to overcome adversity and how important teamwork and perspective truly are. What looks distressing from the rocky shore or storm-tossed waves can be inspiring when you look to the heavens.

The Girl Who Touched the Stars is a love story, a travelogue and an exhilarating exploration of human ambition coming face to face with the beauty and power of nature. But most of all it’s a lesson in overcoming self-doubt, trusting others and finding your true self. Bonnie demonstrates vividly and honestly the resilience of the human spirit and the importance of reaching for the stars.

Buy from:

AMAZON BARNES & NOBLE


cover of Maybe a Whale

Maybe a Whale

By Kirsten Pendreigh (Author),
Crystal Smith (Illustrator)

After Grandpa dies, a girl and her mother take the trip he had planned for her, kayaking along the Pacific west coast to look for the whales that he loved.

The trip will do them good, Mom says, but the girl isn’t sure. How can that be true when Grandpa isn’t there? And how will they find a whale in all that water, anyway?

There is so much to see as they paddle through white-tipped waves and calm coves: glowing moon jellies, fluttering anemones and slippery seals. All the while, the girl watches for whales. Could one be swimming beneath their kayak or along the shore of their camp? Are the whales even there?

Finally, in the dark of night, they hear them—pushhhhhhhh, pushhhhhhh—humpbacks breathing in the bay.

In this lyrical story, luminously illustrated by Crystal Smith, mom and daughter find the space to grieve Grandpa and reconnect with each other in the wild beauty of nature. And they come to realize that—perhaps like whales—those we’ve loved are always with us, even if we don’t see them anymore.

Buy from:

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


cover of Iceland by Kayak: The First Circumnavigation of Iceland by Kayak

Iceland by Kayak: The First Circumnavigation of Iceland by Kayak

By Nigel Foster

In 1976, Nigel Foster had no idea he would attempt to circumnavigate Iceland by kayak the following year. A chance meeting with a well-known expedition kayaker in the Scottish Isles changed all that. While others scoffed, he made plans, using the technology of the day: calling people on rotary dial telephones, visiting public libraries, consulting travel agents, folding letters into envelopes to be stamped and carried to the mail box. Slowly, as Foster learned about Iceland, he began to realize the difficulties ahead.

Nobody had circled Iceland by kayak before. So, was it a foolhardy escapade? Possibly, but Foster describes how his earlier adventures made him optimistic. When the small team he first envisions dwindles to two, he has misgivings, but the project seems to take on an energy beyond his control. In June of 1977, he finds himself with Geoff Hunter on the heaving deck of a ferry bound for Iceland with snow dashed mountains rising before them.

Despite contrasting personalities, Foster and Hunter have compatible goals. Together, they enrich their adventure, forgoing speed of travel to better experience Iceland. Icelanders welcome them with touching generosity. Their encounters are often outright hilarious. Ashore, the two hike up steaming volcanic peaks, not missing the opportunity to bask in mountain hot springs, or in contrast explore glaciers and ice-filled lakes. They camp on black sand beaches, eat seagulls and puffins, and deal with malfunctioning gear. Afloat, it is the moody ocean that pervades all, with its heaving shore-breaks and numbing chill. Here are towering cliffs, cacophonous seabird colonies, whales, driftwood logs from Siberia, and storm-whipped islands. As they forge ahead, their story becomes interwoven with threads, historical and geological, that enrich the narrative, making it a valuable resource for any traveler to Iceland.

This is a story of Iceland as experienced in the 1970s. It reveals the atmosphere and character of the land and people at that time. There is a freshness untouched by high tech, which makes the recounting of this major accomplishment, the first circumnavigation of Iceland by kayak, a delight to read.

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Best kayaking books to read

cover of AMC’s Best Sea Kayaking in New England

AMC’s Best Sea Kayaking in New England

By Michael Daugherty

This concise guide, written by Registered Maine Guide and inveterate paddler Michael Daugherty, features 50 of the best sea kayaking adventures along the New England coast, from Maine’s Bold Coast south to the mouth of the Connecticut River. These are trips that can be done in a day or turned into an overnight, perfect for beginner to intermediate kayakers looking to explore the storied coastlines of Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine. The book includes day trips near large northeastern cities like New York City and Boston. Each of the trips features a full description and map of the route, plus bullets on distance and time, where to launch, tide and currents, “plan B” routes, and nearby attractions. An at-a-glance trip planner and a selection of nature and history essays round out the offerings in this essential sea kayaker’s guidebook.

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cover of Dare to Do: Taking on the Planet by Bike and Boat

Dare to Do: Taking on the Planet by Bike and Boat

By Sarah Outen

On 1 April 2011, rower and adventurer Sarah Outen set off in her kayak from Tower Bridge for France. Her aim was simple: to circle the globe entirely under her own steam—cycling, kayaking and rowing across Europe, Asia, the Pacific, the Americas, the Atlantic and eventually home. A year later, Sarah was plucked from the Pacific ocean amid tropical storm Mawar, her boat broken, her spirit even more so.

But that wasn’t the end. Despite ill health and depression, giving up was not an option. So Sarah set off once more to finish what she had started, becoming the first woman to row solo from Japan to Alaska, as well as the first woman to row the Pacific from West to East. She kayaked the treacherous Aleutian chain and cycled the Americas, before setting sail on the Atlantic, despite the risk of another row-ending storm…

Dare to Do is more than an adventure story. It is a story of the kindness of strangers and the spirit of travel; a story of the raw power of nature, of finding love in unexpected places, and of discovering your inner strength. It is about trying and failing, and trying again, and about how, even when all seems lost, you can find yourself.

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Dying Out Here is Not an Option

By John Connelly

On June 25th, 2016, John Connelly became the first to both canoe the Northern Forest Canoe Trail and kayak the Maine Island Trail, but went a step further connecting them with the Saint John River and Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick, Canada; 1500 miles in 75 days. This solo expedition launched in the Adirondack Mountains on April 16th proved challenging, rewarding, eye-opening and was tracked in real-time by satellite and was followed by thousands online. Find out how he met the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and survived violent storms. Be inspired to seek out these water trails and experience portions of them for yourself.

Connelly’s 75-day trip took him through 2 countries, 4 states, 22 streams, 58 lakes and the North Atlantic. Check out his trip at paddlequest1500.com. The trip was inspired by Connelly’s recognition of a growing body of evidence that confirms the physical and mental health benefits that come from communing with nature at a time when EPA reports suggest that Americans spend 93% of their lives indoors.

Connelly hopes that his trip can inspire others to increase the time they spend outside, citing research that suggests the profound sense of personal stewardship for natural resources that such contact inspires. “This was a physical and mental challenge; an adventure of epic proportions living out of my boat experiencing wild rivers, the volatile ocean, unpredictable weather, diverse wildlife, unique people, quaint backwoods towns and rugged working-waterfront villages along the way; all in one extraordinary 1,500-mile canoe and kayak journey.” –John Connelly

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cover of Escaping the Madness: A Circumnavigation of Ireland

Escaping the Madness: A Circumnavigation of Ireland

By Paul Alexander

Do you ever long to escape the monotony and modern day madness of long distance commuting to a stressful job? The daily rat race, driven by materialistic possession’s shallow friendships and social networking. In a media driven world where false news, celebrity and sensationalism have become the norm. Is greed and avarice consuming and obscuring all the things that really matter in a life well lived? Escaping The Madness is the story of Paul Alexander’s journey to discover the richness of true human kindness and the beauty of nature while kayaking solo and unsupported 1200 miles around the island of Ireland. The book follows his adventure as he battles mountainous seas, treacherous headlands and swirling currents to discover hidden caves towering sea stacks and isolated beaches. The people he meets and the beauty of the natural world he encounters provide proof that a simpler more sustainable existence is the answer to true happiness. (All proceeds from the sale of this book will be donated to Muscular Dystrophy Society Ireland Ltd Reg Charity 20012038.)

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cover of Fearless: One Woman, One Kayak, One Continent

Fearless: One Woman, One Kayak, One Continent

By Joe Glickman

Freya Hoffmeister, a forty-six-year-old former skydiver, gymnast, marksman, and Miss Germany contestant, left her twelve-year-old son behind to paddle alone and unsupported around Australia—a year-long adventure that virtually every expert guaranteed would get her killed. She planned not only to survive the 9,420-mile trip through huge, shark-infested seas, but to do it faster than the only other paddler who did it. As journalist and expert kayaker Joe Glickman details the voyage of this Teutonic force of nature, he captures interminable days on the water and nights camped out on deserted islands; hair-raising encounters with crocs and great white sharks; and the daring 300-mile open-ocean crossing that shaved three weeks off her trip. For 332 days Glickman followed Freya’s journey on her blog—along with a far-flung audience of awestruck, even lovesick, groupies—as she took on one terrifying ordeal after the next. In the end, he says, “her vanity and pigheadedness paled next to her nearly superhuman ability to master fear and persevere.”

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cover of Fifty Places to Paddle Before You Die

Fifty Places to Paddle Before You Die

By Chris Santella

In Fifty Places to Paddle Before You Die, the newest addition to the Fifty Places series, Chris Santella explores the best destinations for the diverse sport of paddling. The book features the world’s top spots for kayaking, rafting, canoeing, and stand-up paddleboarding. Destinations include the Grand Canyon, Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula, Baja California, Indonesia’s Komodo Islands, and the Antarctic Peninsula, as recommended by paddling experts. Compelling travelogues are complemented by beautiful and vibrant photographs of the locations and travel tips to help readers experience the destinations for themselves.

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cover of Kabloona in the Yellow Kayak

Kabloona in the Yellow Kayak

By Victoria Jason

During the summers of 1991 through 1994 Victoria Jason and two companions—Fred Reffler and Don Starkell—set out to kayak from Churchill, Manitoba to Tuktoyaktuk on the Beaufort Sea. When she set out in 1991, Victoria, already a grandmother of two, had been kayaking for only a year and was still recovering from the second of two strokes.

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Kayak Across the Atlantic

By Pete Bray

“I confess to several moments of mixed excitement and apprehension … It was a clear night, the wind and tide were in my favour. I felt really up for it.” Kayak Across the Atlantic is an extraordinary first-hand account of the first ever single-handed crossing of the North Atlantic, achieved against all formidable odds. Former SAS sergeant Pete Bray’s solo unsupported voyage in a flimsy twenty-seven-foot kayak is one of the most courageous feats undertaken by man through one of the most inhospitable oceans in the world. For seventy-six days in 2001, the indomitable Cornishman paddled relentlessly across more than 2,000 miles of sea, enduring extremes of fatigue, equipment failure and foul weather before finally making landfall on the west coast of Ireland a few days before 9/11. Written in an approachable and matter-of-fact style, this is an incredible true adventure story.

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cover of On Celtic Tides: One Man’s Journey Around Ireland by Sea Kayak

On Celtic Tides: One Man’s Journey Around Ireland by Sea Kayak

By Chris Duff

Expedition kayaker Duff strikes a highly readable balance between the external and internal elements of a long paddling trip. Vivid descriptions of stormy crossings and explorations of ancient abandoned island monasteries are balanced by the beautifully expressed philosophical musings born out of the challenge and purity of a long solo quest.

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cover of Paddle to the Arctic

Paddle to the Arctic

By Don Starkell

Don Starkell decided to paddle a kayak from Hudson Bay 3,000 miles through the Northwest Passage.

Paddle to the Arctic is Don’s diary of his journey from Churchill, Manitoba, north and then west all the way to Tuktoyaktuk, close to Alaska. The voyage took him three Arctic summers. Each attempt almost cost him his life.

The first year, aged fifty-seven and “very scared,” Don paddled north through the thawing ice-fields. How he survived a spill in frigid waters miles from shore before fighting his way home is in itself an incredible story. On his return to Churchill he was greeted by a local with the words “I was hoping you wouldn’t make it back.” Why? “If guys like you are successful, it will encourage others to try, and the whole west shore of Hudson Bay will be piled deep with bodies.”

Undeterred, Don tried again the next year with two companions. Fred soon gave up, but Victoria gamely survived their jousts with polar bears, walrus, and other hazards all the way to Repulse Bay. (For most readers, one of the book’s pleasures is learning the geography of the North as Don visits each community in turn.)

The third year was the big test. Dragging their sleds across the peninsulas proved to be too tough, and snowmobiles had to be used to get to Spence Bay. Then it was straight across the frozen sea, hauling their kayaks on sleds.

Although Victoria had to give up (“My God, he’ll kill us both,” she told a Winnipeg paper), Don kept on, not seeing another human being for weeks, and risking his life as he waded across the thawing ice (“Fell through the ice up to my neck at least ten times yesterday …”). At Cambridge Bay he abandoned the sled and threaded his way through the breaking ice by kayak, out into open water. There he confronted storms, giant Arctic seas, and (“August 19 – snow!”) the growing threat of freeze-up.

The variety of Don’s adventures will astonish every reader. “So far on my voyage,” he writes, “I have seen polar bear, grizzly, caribou, reindeer, muskox, belugas, whales, seal, walrus, Arctic hare, siksik, lemmings, fox, and lots of Arctic birds.” Whenever his days seem about to settle into a rhythm, another crisis erupts. The landscape changes, from welcoming Inuit settlements or camps, to permanently smoking hills, and from an historic site where he finds an explorer’s sword hilt, to surf-lashed cliffs.

And as he closes in on his destination, his supplies running out and his ocean highway freezing over, we find ourselves sharing his blazing, driving determination to reach his goal, at the risk of his life. This compelling book makes armchair travel the ideal way to go.

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cover of Recreational Kayaking: The Ultimate Guide

Recreational Kayaking: The Ultimate Guide

By Ken Whiting

Whether your interest in kayaking stems from the desire to get outside and exercise, spend time with your friends and family, or explore the endless waterways that surround you, this easy-to-read guide makes paddling fun and safe for both new and experienced paddlers looking to broaden their horizons.

Inside this book, you’ll learn how to choose the right equipment, the essential strokes, maneuvers, and paddling techniques you need to know, information on capsize recoveries, paddling on the ocean, in surf zones, on rivers, on lakes, and in moving current. Plus, learn how to get the most out of your kayak, how to stay safe on the water, paddler’s first aid, and much more!

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Sea Kayak Rough Water Handling

By Doug Cooper

This is a practical guide that will help the reader to master the skills needed to manoeuvre a sea kayak efficiently. For beginner and intermediate paddlers. Doug draws on his personal and coaching experience to help the reader master sea kayak handling skills and techniques. Accurate sequential photos and simple concise language make the descriptions easy to follow and understand. The foundation skills of posture, connectivity (how your body is connected to the kayak), power transfer and learning to ‘feel’ how the boat responds, are explored initially. The author then goes on to tackle forward paddling, keeping the kayak on course, reverse paddling, edging, turning on the spot, forward turns on the move, reverse turns on the move, stern rudders, moving sideways, support strokes, and the use of skegs and rudders. Sea Kayak Handling is recommended as support material for the British Canoe Union 3 and 4 Star (Sea) awards. (The 1 star is a novice ‘encouragement’ award, the 2 star covers basic generic kayak skills, the 3 star basic/intermediate sea specific skills and experience, and the 4 star covers intermediate sea specific skills and leadership in moderate conditions.)

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cover of Sea Kayak Safety and Rescue

Sea Kayak Safety and Rescue

By Gordon Brown

Following on from his hugely successful book Sea Kayak, Gordon Brown brings his vast experience and unique style to this latest publication Sea Kayak Safety and Rescue. Each chapter begins with a real-life incident which sets the scene and helps to emphasize what follows. The underlying principles are highlighted, practical lessons learnt and the hard skills explored in detail. Numerous colour photos complement and illustrate the text. This book is essential reading for any sea kayaker, and will be enjoyed and valued by both novice and experienced paddlers alike.

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cover of The Complete Book of Sea Kayaking

The Complete Book of Sea Kayaking

By Derek C. Hutchinson

First published in 1976, The Complete Book of Sea Kayaking is a comprehensive guide for the beginner and an invaluable reference book for the experienced sea kayaker. Originally penned by the late Derek C. Hutchinson, an international authority on sea kayaking, it describes equipment, basic and advanced techniques, weather and navigation, and is illustrated throughout by the author’s own drawings and color photographs.

This new 40th anniversary edition has been completely updated in line with the latest sea kayaking developments by Wayne Horodowich, a longtime friend of Hutchinson’s and the founder of the University of Sea Kayaking.

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The Complete Sea Kayakers Handbook

By Shelley Johnson

The first edition of The Complete Sea Kayaker’s Handbook received immediate acclaim with its selection as the Best Outdoor Instructional Book by the National Outdoor Book Award group. Now this book boasts 352 pages with changes throughout to reflect the growth of kayaking as a sport. This book is your first step to adventure on the water, with everything you need to know, from buying a kayak to dressing for the water.

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cover of The Only Kayak: A Journey Into the Heart of Alaska

The Only Kayak: A Journey Into the Heart of Alaska

By Kim Heacox

In this coming-of-middle-age memoir, Kim Heacox, writing in the tradition of Abbey, McPhee, and Thoreau, discovers an Alaska reborn from beneath a massive glacier, where flowers emerge from boulders, moose swim fjords, and bears cross crevasses with Homeric resolve. In such a place Heacox finds that people are reborn too, and their lives begin anew with incredible journeys, epiphanies, and successes. All in an America free of crass commercialism and overdevelopment.

Braided through the larger story are tales of gold prospectors and the cabin they built sixty years ago; John Muir and his intrepid terrier, Stickeen; and a dynamic geology professor who teaches earth science “as if every day were a geological epoch.”

Nearly two million people come to Alaska every summer, some on large cruise ships, some in single kayaks—all in search of the last great wilderness, the Africa of America. It is exactly the America Heacox finds in this story of paradox, love, and loss.

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cover of The Pacific Alone: The Untold Story of Kayaking's Boldest Voyage

The Pacific Alone: The Untold Story of Kayaking’s Boldest Voyage

By Dave Shively

In the summer of 1987 Ed Gillet achieved what no person has accomplished before or since, a solo crossing from California to Hawaii by kayak. Gillet, at the age of 36 an accomplished sailor and paddler, navigated by sextant and always knew his position within a few miles. Still, Gillet underestimated the abuse his body would take from the relentless, pounding, swells of the Pacific, and early into his voyage he was covered with salt water sores and found that he could find no comfortable position for sitting or sleeping. Along the way he endured a broken rudder, among other calamities, but at last reached Maui on his 63rd day at sea, four days after his food had run out. Dave Shively brings Gillet’s remarkable story to life in this gripping narrative, based on exclusive access to Gillet’s logs as well as interviews with the legendary paddler himself.

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cover of The Sun Is a Compass: My 4,000-Mile Journey into the Alaskan Wilds

The Sun Is a Compass:
My 4,000-Mile Journey into
the Alaskan Wilds

By Caroline Van Hemert

For fans of Cheryl Strayed, the gripping story of a biologist’s human-powered journey from the Pacific Northwest to the Arctic to rediscover her love of birds, nature, and adventure.

During graduate school, as she conducted experiments on the peculiarly misshapen beaks of chickadees, ornithologist Caroline Van Hemert began to feel stifled in the isolated, sterile environment of the lab. Worried that she was losing her passion for the scientific research she once loved, she was compelled to experience wildness again, to be guided by the sounds of birds and to follow the trails of animals.

In March of 2012, she and her husband set off on a 4,000-mile wilderness journey from the Pacific rainforest to the Alaskan Arctic, traveling by rowboat, ski, foot, raft, and canoe. Together, they survived harrowing dangers while also experiencing incredible moments of joy and grace—migrating birds silhouetted against the moon, the steamy breath of caribou, and the bond that comes from sharing such experiences.

A unique blend of science, adventure, and personal narrative, The Sun Is a Compass explores the bounds of the physical body and the tenuousness of life in the company of the creatures who make their homes in the wildest places left in North America. Inspiring and beautifully written, this love letter to nature is a lyrical testament to the resilience of the human spirit.

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cover of Without a Paddle: Racing Twelve Hundred Miles Around Florida by Sea Kayak

Without a Paddle: Racing Twelve Hundred Miles Around Florida by Sea Kayak

By Warren Richey

As far as Warren Richey knew, his life was on course. A reporter with a beautiful wife and talented son, Richey couldn’t imagine how it could be any better…. Then his marriage falls apart and he can’t imagine how it could be any worse.

The divorce leaves Richey questioning everything, while struggling to find a way forward. To get his bearings, he enters the first Ultimate Florida Challenge, an all-out twelve-hundred-mile kayak race around Florida.

The Challenge is less of a race than it is a dare or a threat. The thirty-day deadline sets a grueling, twenty-four-hour-a-day pace through shark- , alligator- , and even python-infested waters. But those twelve hundred miles are only a fraction of a journey that pulls Richey back to when he was embedded with troops in Iraq, reporting on missing children, and hiking the mountains of Montana with his son, and shows him where he went wrong, where he went right, and how to do it better the second time around.

Warren Richey’s memoir Without a Paddle is a remarkable physical and emotional journey that cuts to the heart of what it means to be a man, a husband, and a father.

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Two Iconic River Brands Release Sandal Collaboration To Benefit A Noble Mission

Person rowing raft wearing Chaco x NRS sandals
Feature Image: Ben Kitching / Courtesy Chaco Footwear

Nothing says river trip like a pair of Chaco sandals and a couple of NRS straps. Now, the two iconic brands have come together on a collaboration that celebrates their classics recognized by every paddler while benefitting an emerging advocate within the paddling community.

Person removing gear bin from raft.
Feature Image: Ben Kitching / Courtesy Chaco Footwear

Chaco x NRS Sandal—A Fitting Pair

On June 8, the two companies released a limited edition Chaco x NRS collaboration of the Z/1 and Z/2 sandals, featuring the unmistakable blue straps of NRS. Better still, $10 of each sale benefits Diversify Whitewater, a nonprofit organization charging ahead with the mission to promote diversity, equity and inclusion in paddle sports through free community paddling events.

This isn’t the first time Chaco and NRS have joined forces on a river shoe collab that goes together like a riverside peanut butter and granola wrap. The previous limited release hit shelves five years ago to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. Fans of both brands have been cheering for a reunion ever since.

“We first launched a collection with NRS in 2018 and our loyal Chaco lovers have wanted a relaunch of the iconic collaboration. We’re excited to give the ChacoNation what they’ve been asking for,” said Lauren Poole, Sr. Director of Marketing at Chaco, in a recent press release. “We’re thrilled to partner again with NRS, another iconic river brand, and support Diversify Whitewater to encourage more people to try paddle sports for the first time.”

Person rowing raft wearing Chaco x NRS sandals
Kayla Lopez, Diversify Whitewater Communications Director. Feature Image: Ben Kitching / Courtesy Chaco Footwear

A Noble Mission To Diversify Paddle Sports

Diversify Whitewater’s goal is direct—to get more people paddling. Their website shares that two significant barriers to the sport are cultural and material. The nonprofit organization is directly breaking down those walls by hosting free community events throughout the U.S., including river float trips and skills learning days, and providing all gear for the outings with help from sponsors.

“We are so excited to collaborate with Chaco and NRS on their limited-edition sandals, and we would like to thank both companies for their continued support of our organization,” Lily Durkee, Founder and President of Diversify Whitewater, shared in a statement.

In 2020, Durkee co-founded Diversify Whitewater with philanthropist and writer Antoinette Lee Toscano. During the Black Lives Matter movement, the duo wanted to find a way to make a meaningful impact within the outdoor community. Durkee, for one, has been a whitewater kayaker since the age of nine. While, following an intensive seven-month research project, Toscano, who left the organization in 2021, gathered conclusive evidence of the need for more diversity within the sport. Together, Diversify Whitewater set forth in the direction the organization’s name so concisely defines.

In the first year, Diversify Whitewater hosted two events in Colorado attended by 100 participants. The following year saw nine events and nearly 400 participants. Diversify Whitewater has held two of 12 events so far in 2023, hosting over 200 participants with the support of several outdoor brands, including the two river stalwarts of Chaco and NRS.

“Both organizations share our commitment to improving Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) and are key supporters of our mission to reduce barriers to entry to paddlesports for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC),” Durkee goes on to say. “Creating a safe, inclusive, and fun experience on the water starts with having the best gear, and Chaco and NRS are both world-class.”

Chaco x NRS sandals
Feature Image: Ben Kitching / Courtesy Chaco Footwear

More on the Chaco x NRS Sandal

The Chaco x NRS sandals feature everything paddlers expect in the Z/1 and Z/2, including fully adjustable straps and a podiatrist-certified footbed. The webbing straps are made of recycled REPREVE material, and the sandals are fully repairable through Chaco’s ReChaco facility.

[ Find timeless apparel for your river trip in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]

The limited edition Chaco x NRS sandals are available now, and you can learn more at their online stores: Chaco and NRS.

 

First Packraft Descent Of Little White Salmon (Video)

When Alpacka Raft launched their newest whitewater boat, the Valkryie, it instantly pulled eyes in its direction. The Valkyrie’s lines resemble more of a modern river-running hardshell than the shape of today’s inflatables. Kayaker Tyler Bradt showcased the capability of the Valkryie recently when he completed the first packraft descent of the Little White Salmon River, including Spirit Falls.

Bradt holds countless accolades in whitewater, most prominently the highest waterfall ever run in a kayak, 189-foot Palouse Falls. Bradt completed the descent in 2009, and the mark has held for nearly 15 years since.

[ Find packrafts fits for any adventure in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]

In the Pacific Northwest, the Little White Salmon is a revered proving ground for serious class-V paddling. The run culminates to 30-foot Spirit Falls, arguably the most photographed waterfall in whitewater. The Little White Salmon is run by local paddlers on the daily but continues to demand full respect. Bradt’s complete descent of the Little White Salmon in the Alpacka Valkryie packraft is as much a testament of paddler’s comfort on his backyard classic as it is to the capabilities of Alpacka’s latest whitewater craft.

 

Nikwax, the Global Leader in PFAS-Free Aftercare, has Developed a Factory-Applied DWR for Synthetic Outdoor Fabrics

Seattle, WA, June 1, 2023Nikwax, the international leader in technical cleaners and waterproofing products for outdoor gear and apparel, has developed a high performance, PFAS-free factory-applied Durable Water Repellent (DWR) for synthetic outdoor fabrics. Outdoor Research, Nikwax’s global launch partner, will unveil Direct.Dry on its series for Fall 2024.

“Nikwax Direct.Dry enables us to offer our customers a genuine alternative to conventional DWR treatments, providing them with a high-performing solution that aligns with the growing demand for environmentally responsible products,” says Alex Lauver, Senior Director of Materials Innovations and Sustainability at Outdoor Research. “Innovation fuels Outdoor Research’s product development, and our collaboration with Nikwax marks an industry breakthrough for PFAS-free outerwear and apparel.”

“Nikwax Direct.Dry enables us to offer our customers a genuine alternative to conventional DWR treatments, providing them with a high-performing solution that aligns with the growing demand for environmentally responsible products.”

With key states like California and New York mandating the elimination of PFAS in consumer goods by 2025, many brands are looking for a factory applied industrial DWR that can withstand the demands of outdoor consumers while eliminating persistent PFAS. Direct.Dry achieves 100, the highest possible rating on the AATCC 22 Spray Rating Test. With a high wash durability, Direct.Dry’s rating stays at 100 after five washes, 80 after 20 washes, and will return to 100 after being treated with Nikwax technical washes and waterproofers.

[ Find the toughest technical apparel in the Paddling Buyer’s Guide ]

“We have been perfecting PFAS-free waterproofing solutions for over four decades,” said Brian Davidson, President of Nikwax North America. “We are very pleased to be able to apply that expertise to an industrial DWR to help our partners make the transition away from PFAS in their manufacturing process.”

“We have been perfecting PFAS-free waterproofing solutions for over four decades.”

Sustainability and circularity are top-of-mind for many outdoor consumers and brands as recent legislation has accelerated the industry’s quest for PFAS-free solutions. In addition to seeking alternatives to harmful PFAS chemicals, brands are simultaneously looking for ways to maintain high performance while helping the gear last longer. For 46 years, Nikwax has offered brands and consumers a full range of aftercare solutions that are easy to use, PFAS-free, and durable. Now, Nikwax is offering a factory applied DWR that is complimented by a well-known consumer brand. Brands interested in exploring how they too can utilize Direct.Dry to comply with upcoming regulations can contact Brian Davidson at Brian.Davidson@nikwax.com.

About Nikwax

For over 45 years, Nikwax has been the trusted global leader in environmentally safe cleaning and waterproofing solutions that extend the performance life of outdoor clothing, footwear, and equipment. Since 1977, the brand has been committed to clean chemistry, never using PFAS or aerosols, and not testing on animals. Its product line is water-based and non-persistent, and all product bottles and caps are made from 100% post-consumer recycled plastic that can also be recycled. Nikwax has carbon balanced all 45+ years of its operations and became an employee-owned trust in 2022. For media inquiries and more information, please contact Kate Ketschek at Revolution House Media, kate@revolutionhousemedia.com.

 

Bear Attempts Hairy Ferry (Video)

black bear swimming across rapid in California
Washington, California Fire Department / Facebook

California had one snowy winter in the 2022-2023 season. In fact it was one of the wettest on record, with a statewide average snowpack that reached 237%. All the water frozen in the mountains leads to juicy river flows this time of year. For whitewater kayakers, the river levels open up a long season and rarely runnable stretches. It also means high water to be cautious of.

Paddlers aren’t the only river dwellers having to bring their A-game. In a video flooding the internet, a black bear takes its shot at swimming a hairy ferry on the South Fork of the Yuba River.

A Bear Of A Swim On The South Yuba

The South Yuba is home to some classic California runs, including the class-V stretch known as Yuba Gap. The video of the black bear swimming across the river was taken in the town of Washington by volunteer fire chief Mike Stewart. In an interview with the Sacramento Bee, Stewart says the bear made it out of the river safely. The fire chief though was skeptical if a person could have successfully made the swim through the swirling whirlpools and pumping flow.

Stewart has reason to provide the cautionary tale as a first responder in the remote area. According to American Whitewater, the class-IV section of the South Yuba beginning in Washington reaches the high end of recommended flows at 2,500 CFS on the Jones Bar gauge. This spring, that gauge has read as high as 5,630 CFS.

The bear may not have had a better choice at the time, or maybe his comfort level in whitewater far exceeds our human capability. No matter the case, the video of a 300-pound animal getting thrashed in the runout is a humbling reminder. When rivers are running high, sometimes the safest choice is to save the hairy ferry for another day.

 

The Canadian Canoe Museum Launches The Final Portage Campaign

Photo Courtesy: The Canadian Canoe Museum
Neil Morton Mike Judson Portaging Hunter St | Photo Courtesy: The Canadian Canoe Museum

PETERBOROUGH, Thursday, June 1, 2023 – The Canadian Canoe Museum (CCM), home to the world’s largest and most significant collection of paddled watercraft, is embarking on an extraordinary journey as it prepares to relocate its entire collection from its current landlocked location to a new waterfront campus across the city.

To build excitement for its reopening and invite public support for this historic move, the CCM has launched a new fundraising campaign, Move the Collection: The Final Portage. The campaign is led by avid paddling enthusiasts and local community leaders Mike Judson and Neil Morton. As a symbolic gesture of the forthcoming move of the entire collection, the two will portage a symbolic canoe throughout Peterborough, from the current museum to its new 65,000-square-foot home, for the campaign’s duration, which will release videos at different milestones.

One man portaging a red canoe and another holding two paddles.
Neil Morton and Mike Judson portaging on Hunter Street. | Photo: Courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum

It is rare for a museum to build a new facility and move its entire collection to a new location, for it is a significant undertaking. Declared a cultural asset of national significance by the Senate in 2013, the CCM’s collection consists of more than 600 canoes, kayaks and paddled watercraft (ranging up to 53 feet long and weighing up to 1,500 pounds), hundreds of small artifacts, and a library and archive—making the move of this national asset a truly historical and remarkable accomplishment. McWilliams Moving and Storage has partnered with the CCM as its Official Mover of the collection.

The CCM has spent more than two years carefully preparing the collection for its upcoming relocation, diligently cleaning and packing each artifact to ensure the utmost care during the move. The Museum has been temporarily closed since September 2022 to allow staff to remove artifacts on exhibit for the past two decades. When the new museum opens, it will also feature new exhibits, promising an enhanced and immersive visitor experience, including canoes and kayaks that have never been on public display.

“Moving a collection of this size and scale in the span of months is no small feat for our team and supporters,” explains Carolyn Hyslop, executive director of the CCM. “This move represents a pivotal moment in our museum’s history. By relocating to the waterfront, we will not only enhance the accessibility and visibility of this extraordinary collection but also create a transformative experience for our visitors. We are inviting donors and sponsors to be a part of this monumental move and help us bring the legacy of paddled watercraft to a wider audience.”

As part of The Final Portage campaign, the CCM is releasing a series of videos and behind-the-scenes content this summer and fall featuring Mike Judson and Neil Morton portaging an iconic red canvas canoe past recognizable landmarks in Peterborough. This will allow the public to follow the fundraising campaign’s progress while building excitement for the Museum’s reopening, anticipated this fall. To view the first video, visit canoemuseum.ca/final-portage.

“Canoeing is one of my great passions in life, and seeing this national treasure move to the water’s edge in this community I adore is a dream,” says Neil Morton, one of the campaign’s lead portagers. “It’s fantastic to be a part of The Final Portage campaign and this historic moment with my fellow lead portager Mike Judson as we help carry this to the finish line.”

Two men standing beside a yellow canoe on a stand.
Neil Morton and Mike Judson next to the canoe featured in Gordon Lightfoot’s song. | Photo: Courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum

Surrounded by public parks, the Museum’s new home is located on a five-acre site at 2077 Ashburnham Drive that provides stunning west-facing views of Little Lake and a connection to the Trans Canada Trail along the water’s edge in Peterborough. The purpose-built facility on the water, with an array of indoor and outdoor spaces, will allow the Museum to deliver on its mission in inspiring new ways. It will become a vibrant community space for outdoor activities, including the Museum’s canoeing and outdoor programs and events.

“Supporting initiatives like the Museum’s historic move is an investment in preserving our shared heritage and cultural legacy. By contributing to this endeavor, we actively steward invaluable artifacts and ensure their accessibility to future generations,” shares Hyslop. “Institutions like ours serve as gateways to knowledge, inspiration, and understanding, and it is through your support that we enable the continued celebration and exploration of our collective history. Together, we can make a lasting impact and shape a vibrant cultural landscape for years to come.”

McWilliams Moving and Storage has joined The Final Portage campaign as the lead sponsor and Official Mover of the collection to ensure each piece is moved safely and with care. Their extensive experience and commitment to excellence make them the ideal partner for this significant endeavor.

Man portaging a red canoe
Portaging through downtown Peterborough | Photo: Courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum

“McWilliams Moving and Storage has been part of the CCM family since its inception with the first portage of museum artifacts from Dorset, Ontario to Peterborough over two decades ago. We are honored to continue this tradition as the Official Movers of the CCM and complete the final portage to a new architectural and cultural landmark in the city of Peterborough,” says Dan McWilliams, president of McWilliams Moving & Storage. “Having the opportunity to pack and transport these pieces of Canadian heritage allows us to be part of the journey and story of this national icon in our great city.”

The CCM invites donors and sponsors to join them in preserving history and shaping the future by supporting the Move the Collection campaign. Contributions will play a vital role in ensuring the safe and successful relocation of the world’s largest and most significant collection of paddled watercraft. Those joining as donors or sponsors of moving an artifact have the opportunity to leave a lasting impact on our nation’s cultural heritage.

“The McWilliams team’s dedication to preserving the integrity of each artifact aligns perfectly with our mission to steward and showcase the rich history of paddled watercraft. We are incredibly grateful for their support and expertise throughout this process,” notes Hyslop. “We are excited to see other sponsors and donors support the move similarly.”

Join the CCM in inspiring Canada by canoe, and support the collection in making its final portage to its new home at the water’s edge! To donate, visit canoemuseum.ca/final-portage. Businesses interested in sponsorship opportunities can contact Rose Terry, philanthropy associate, at rose.terry@canoemuseum.ca.