The Gift That Keeps Them Living…

Ok, so I took this idea from a paddleshop’s Facebook adver-post (My new word of the day), but I can’t deny a good idea. Each year paddle bloggers write about great holiday gift ideas and inevitably that means gear, but here’s a better idea.. give a lesson.
It’s natural (and wise) to feel a little apprehension when your friend or family member decides to take up kayaking as a new hobby. It’s not a particularly dangerous sport, but when things do go bad, it almost always involves folks who are very inexperienced. Continue reading
Boreal Shores Kayaking

Patty the Milkmaid was going to market carrying her milk in a Pail on her head. As she went along she began calculating…
Did I ever tell you the story of the day Nigel Dennis was late? It’s sort of like an Aesop’s Fable without a fox, crow, or nightingale to found. Now I could tell you that tale or I could send you to Boreal Shores Kayaking in Bayfield, WI., where the story is said to have taken place. Boreal Shores offers Sea Kayaking UK Kayaks, kayak gear and camping equipment at the gateway to the Apostle Islands on the southern shore of Lake Superior. Now if you go there be sure to sit in the pink Explorer when Chris tells you the tale.. and then maybe he’ll regale you with the one about when Derrick was really, really drunk and asked him to build a traveling, folding, skin boat.. I’m not sure, but I think there may be a donkey & a milkmaid in that story! – Visit Boreal Shores Kayaking Website right here.
Canoecopia Update – Remainders

This afternoon I head back to Canoecopia for my second day hanging out at the Door County Symposium booth. Yesterday was funny in that it seemed everyone that I had hoped to find later in the day seemed to all arrive at the booth instead. That was quite nice actually. Less walking for an old geezer like me!! Continue reading
go deep inside

So today I’m writing on a new computer. Well, not exactly. I am on a new computer, but it’s inside my old computer. Make Sense? Well to make it more clear, that is to say precise, my new computer inside my old computer is not a computer at all in a sense. While in a sense it is. But the big point is that if it all blows up, becomes infected or maladjusted, I just delete it. Then my old computer which is a real computer will still be happy as a lark while my new computer which isn’t but is, will just be replaced. Replaced by a new computer, which isn’t.
there’s a movie?

I feel like dancing – in the rain,
All I need is a volunteer
Dancing – what a damn jolly good idea
It’s such a jollification – as a matter of fact, so tres charmant my dear
-queen
When I was a kid Chicago was one of those far off quasi-exotic places. In Chicago there was a big blue ocean, an aquarium, planetarium, museums, giant buildings and all sorts of cool crazy stuff that sparks a small town Wisconsin kids imagination. Of course my parents weren’t the “family vacation” types so it all remained sort of a fantasy destination. Sure, we drove through Chicago, or around Chicago, got lost in Chicago, cursed Chicago traffic but never actually saw any of the cool stuff. Well, that’s not quite accurate. I can remember having my face plastered to the car window as we drove by the Sears tower on the interstate. . .
I did finally get to see a bit of Chicago when I was a young teenager. My father lived in Zion which is a town north of the city. When I was 13 or 14 I was finally allowed to go down and stay with him for a time. One weekend we took a trip down to the Natural History Museum (which was showing the “King Tut” Exhibition) & the Planetarium. I was in heaven. Well, I would have been if we’d actually gotten IN the museum. It was booked to capacity so we stood on the steps and watched the golden “Tut” banners fly in the breeze for a few minutes! The Planetarium was spectacular to a teenager though. I always remember that sense of my father thinking I was way over-excited and he was essentially board. But hey, you take what you can get. Since then I’ve been to the Windy City quite a few times. I’m not bothered by city traffic and frankly it’s not a complicated task to get around the city. Slow sometimes, but not difficult.
This afternoon we are heading back to the big city. Well, not exactly. We’re heading to a western suburb called St. Charles which is home to Geneva Kayaks and the location of tonight’s premiere of This Is The Sea 4 by Justine Curgenven. At this point I’m beginning to lose count on how many times I’ve actually watched the movie, so I have a feeling I’ll be sitting in the back corner making faces at anyone who happens to look my way. I watched T4 in Israel just last week in fact. Of course there we were sitting outside under star filled skies and caressed by a warm Mediterranean breeze. So you can guess that I’m not really going to Chicago to see the DVD.
What has me booking a hotel and driving 3 hours each way is simply the opportunity to see distant friends. Justine & Barry of course, Ryan Rushton who owns Geneva Kayaks, the whole crazy Bloyd-Peshkin family, and many others as well. This is why you end up traveling to so many symposiums each year. Paddling is great of course, teaching is a joy as well, but at symposiums you tend to be stuck in one spot and not really seeing much new. That crosses my mind each year when I think of the cost of attending. Heck, even as instructors we do end up paying to attend. The cost of travel, food, lodging, lost work, and such far out weigh the occasional stipend we receive. Yet each time I think I’ll cut down, I think about those people I wouldn’t see for another year or more if I didn’t go. In the end it’s almost impossible to shorten the list. In a way, that’s what is best about Justine’s videos. We get to see new places and share new adventures, but we also get to re-acquaint ourselves with some familiar smiles. It’s a bit like a Christmas family newsletter. . only wetter.
GKC Hosts “This is the Sea 4″ Premiere
I mentioned this before but GKC just sent out the details. So here they are: Geneva Kayak Center is hosting the Midwest premiere of the fourth installment of the popular sea kayaking videos “This is the Sea 4″. This film-maker, Justine Curvengen, will be in town, on Friday, November 14th for the premiere of the video. Preceding the video, Justine and her paddling partner Barry will give a presentation on their circumnavigation of the South Island of New Zealand. Immediately following the premiere, . Admission is 10.00 per person with 5.00 of the admission fee going to charity, and 5.00 towards the purchase of the DVD at the premier. More information will be available on the premiere soon.
Tricky, Touchy & Skunked
From the mailbag comes an advert from SWA. Small World Adventures tells us that they wrote the book on kayaking in Ecuador. . (No, actually they did) Apparently they have a few spots open on their November itinerary. Never having heard of Small World Adventures I clicked the link through to their website. “Whitewater!. . . oh.” I could feel that weird out-of-oxigen sensation in my chest. Class 1V+/Class V-. Yikes! I was just about to bail out when I saw the heading. . “Not Convinced?” I thought, “nope.” and clicked. . .
Right there under “We Know the Good Spots” was this. . . “It can be tricky picking the right run when the water levels get touchy. Don’t sweat the high water, we’ll help you not get skunked.” “Tricky”!?, “Touchy”!??. . . “Skunked”!??? I found myself looking for the next “still not convinced?” button. I kept having visions of Adriene Levknecht dropping into a giant caldron of white froth. . But then I found the lodging page. Suddenly I was thinking I could just hang out there with Eduardo & Lily. I could spend quiet days weeding gardens or pealing potatos while we prepared for the brave adventurers’s return. In the evenings I could sit in a corner nursing a beer while listening to paddlers share stories of near death experiences and use words like “Tricky”, “Touchy”, & “Skunked”. Now of course if you’re really into whitewater you may want to check them out. (As for me, anything over class III and I’ll just watch from shore.)
Here’s an interesting look at Kayaking in Ecuador from Canoe & Kayak Magazine.





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