Skip to content

Posts from the ‘Whitewater’ Category

Asia Rivers Expedition Fundraising!

It’s official- the Asia Rivers Expedition is going to happen, and our fundraising page is up!  We need your help to bring this exploration into being, and to make sure that the story of wild rivers is told to as wide an audience as possible.  Please, whether or not you can spare a few dollars to help us make it to the Pacific, share the Indiegogo page on Facebook, Twitter, and by e-mail.  Text your friends.  E-mail your dentist.  Tell… everybody.  Spread the fire, and you can help make our dream a reality!  We are seeking $11,000 in funding to cover the substantial costs of executing an international expedition.  The vaccines alone cost $1900, not to mention flights, visas, gear, food, and communication technology.  Anything you can give is much appreciated, and rewarded with lots of cool stuff!

The Facebook book page is also live, so head over there for more updates and be sure to ‘Like’ the Asia Rivers Expedition!

 

 

 

Spring Paddling in Maine

Are you going in to sling it?

“Uh. Yeah… Are we bailing on this run?” I scratched my head, smiled, and reached down to unzip the duffel bag that held our rescue kit. “It would appear that is a strong possibility.” Forty minutes later I was post-holing through knee deep snow with a canoe on my head, chuckling at the day’s events. Portaging through two feet of crusted, old snow is a lovely way to warm up, however, and by the time we had walked out the whole crew was warm enough to laugh too.

We were on a five day college whitewater seminar I was guest instructing for my alma mater’s outing club, and the wrapped boat was only the beginning of a week of seemingly mystically aligned setbacks events. After seven months in New Zealand, this was really where I wanted to be: home, dealing with a classic outing club junk-show and driving the backroads of Maine looking for adventure.

The shoulder seasons have always been my favorite time in Maine; in Spring and Autumn there are no people, no bugs, the weather can do just about anything, and the skills required to travel safely move beyond the reach of the recreational and the novice. Want to train for a mountaineering trip out west? Climb in the Presidentials in March. Looking to hone your skills for a whitewater run in Alaska? Paddle a reservoir draw-down in November. It is in those times that the wilderness, normally far off in this middling eastern backcountry, comes rather close and one can feel to be in definitivie exploration. All that, and the breakfast sandwiches at the gas station on the way home help shirk the worst of just endured conditions.

Day one saw successful runs on the lower Nezinscot River, right through the famous organic farm of the same name, followed by an experts-only run on the Class III East Branch of the Nezinscot, a creek run through downtown Buckfield. It runs for about six days a year, mas e menos, and I was lucky to run it with the skilled woman I was teaching with.

Upper Sunday River at low water

Despite two chilled underclassman and one thoroughly broken boat, day two was a success if only for the story of the walk out and us getting to practice unpinning a boat. After the shuttle and discussing the prediction of sleet and freezing rain for the morrow, we absconded to front-country shelter and uttered the classic Bates motto… ‘F. it. Let’s go skiing’. So we did.

After days of snow, freezing rain, wrapped boats, no water up north, too much down south, and general early season shenanigans, our last day dawned clear and warm. We knew the Kenduskeag was running. Everything was perfect. Too perfect, as it turns out. Six miles outside of Belfast, the trailer tire blew out. Without a spare or a tire iron, much problem solving followed, enough to push us past a reasonable time to put-in outside of Bangor. We settled on a run on the way home but never made it- the truck died, the rear differential seized and smoking.

The trip just about over, my co instructor and I sitting the cab of Freddie’s beat up GMC wrecker, Freddie chuckling about our misfortune through his impressive beard, I reflected on my own past and realized how well this fit in with my own college experiences. Honing one’s hard skills is important, but I’d wager I learned more about problem solving and tolerance for adversity and uncertainty in four years of junk-show outing club trips that I ever did in more formal circumstances. We walk carefully, always aware that while our passion knows no bounds and our early adult stages inbibes us with physical invincibility, we are still learning. How much paddling did we do on the five day whitewater seminar? Very little. Was it a good trip? Aren’t they all?

Freddie

Boating Middle Earth

I am not unique, interesting, or worldly.  As proof, my first real exposure to New Zealand was when I saw the Fellowship of the Ring in the theater.  Sparked by the visual dimension of the film, I quickly covered lost ground by reading every scrap of history, science, and literature I could about the place, and eventually applied to study abroad there during college.  Although that did not work out, my job took me there last fall and I was able to explore the mountains and rivers of Middle-Earth for seven months.

Not surprisingly, most Kiwis I met were so over the Lord of the Rings thing- hordes of foreign tourists jetting in to wave a sword in the air on the Plains of Rohan, ignorant of the chuckling farmer in the background, himself bewildered at this display of idiocy.  While you cannot argue with the billions of dollars that tourism in general and the fantasy movies in particular have brought to the island, it is not hard to reject the notion of a land separate from its people.  Tourists are sometimes surprised that people actually live in the places they are visiting, not all tourists and not all places, but in New Zealand- a place famous for its natural beauty- locals are allowed a bit of frustration when Europeans or North Americans ask if they are part of Australia or as to why there are sheep and fences on that lovely hillside.

This is a dynamic I know well from living in Maine and from spending time in mountain towns across the American West.  People ‘from away’ mob the road-side sights and clog the cafes, all the while supporting the economy and putting bread in the proverbially basket for otherwise remote and depressed areas.  Localism runs rampant, and a clear social caste is established between locals, sumer people, and tourists.  Still, while localism exists all over the world, Kiwis seem to be benumbed to the point of acceptance.

While in country, I worked multiple three week runs on the Clarence River, a route occasionally run by tourists in rafts and kayaks in less than a week.  Going slowly was no hardship.  From sprawling tussock meadows to airy and otherworldly matai forests, a slow pace encouraged connections that otherwise would be impossible.  We paused for a day and picked rocks out of a paddock on a remote sheep station and in return were given a tour of the apiary operations, a jar of blue borage honey, a leg of mutton, and the change to see them run the dogs around skittish merinos.

As a technical canoeing river, it is -in the right season- a wonderful course area.  The put-in is far up in the mountains, and the river drops 2500 feet over 130 miles before reaching the take-out only yards away from Pacific breakers washing a gravel beach.  New Zealand is not a large place, but acre for acre few places can match as a boater’s paradise; the combination of rainfall, topography, enlightened conservation, and infrastructure is just right and it is no surprise that some of the world’s best come from such a remote corner of the globe.

If you interesting in boating in New Zealand, the best place to start is in Murchison, a tiny village in the northern South Island that is home to the New Zealand Kayak School.  The area is world famous as a paddling center, and the School has top-notch instructors to get you started with your skills and gear.  Farther south on the West Coast is Hokitika, a beautiful and artsy town that is the center for the heli-boating scene and worth checking if your skills are at the stage where you feel comfortable getting dropped by helicopter in the Southern Alps and paddling back to civilization.

One of the best parts about my job is people I get to work with.  Former Marines, teachers, Olympic rowers, adventurers, Brits, Mexicans, Canadians, Aussies, Kiwis and so on- many shades all there to fulfull a similar passion for teaching and wilderness travel.  I was lucky to work with a woman named Rachel Curtis for two courses in a row; a great learning experience, especially if you get along.  Rachel is a pro photographer and globe-trotting kayaker operating on the cutting edge of the sport, check out her great photos on her blog and the three below.

Someday, when I am a better paddler, maybe I’ll get a chance to go back and paddle some of the harder runs.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,359 other followers