...we should be splashing in salt water and celebrating the end
of an epic journey. Instead, we’re enjoying (as always) the sights and
sounds of Las Vegas and the desert Fall while waiting for more medical tests. (Right. Not
test results… TESTS! The gears of medicine grind slowly. Or, perhaps,
the paddles of medicine get snagged in wild rice bogs…)
Moods are certainly better than ten weeks ago, but symptoms linger and all the important questions remain unanswered.
(Of the two pairs that we shared a campsite with in MN, the Mississippi Challenge 2014 kayakers finished on October 4, and the Crazy Critters are making progress in their canoe)
Two in Blue
A 2013 2014 2015 tandem kayak journey down the Mississippi River
Friday, October 17, 2014
Thursday, August 7, 2014
DAY 5 (AND OUT) - ANOTHER RAIN-CHECK YEAR (WITHOUT RAIN)
We decided to pull off the river last night.
B1’s health was mildly off when we launched, and his energy was waning, not improving, with all the exertion--even with a slow pace and extra rest (plus fresh air and sunshine). The decision is to return home for medical attention and recuperation. We’re resigning ourselves to yet another Mississippi attempt in 2015.
The decision was super easy... what is more important than enjoying the trek and feeling healthy? I am still stunned, of course. The decision had one particularly hard moment... when a pair of kayakers and a pair of canoeists shared the campsite our second night, portaged the beaver dam and continued to the Gulf.
B1’s health was mildly off when we launched, and his energy was waning, not improving, with all the exertion--even with a slow pace and extra rest (plus fresh air and sunshine). The decision is to return home for medical attention and recuperation. We’re resigning ourselves to yet another Mississippi attempt in 2015.
The decision was super easy... what is more important than enjoying the trek and feeling healthy? I am still stunned, of course. The decision had one particularly hard moment... when a pair of kayakers and a pair of canoeists shared the campsite our second night, portaged the beaver dam and continued to the Gulf.
Sunrise on our sunset |
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
DAY 4 – BEAVER DAMS AND DAMN EVENTS
Felt Bridge to Coffee Pot Landing - approximately 4.5 miles [BTW: Most
people seem to make it from the Headwaters to Coffee Pot in one day—it’s
taken us three days… B1 noted that if we kept on this pace, we'd finish in 6-1/2 years instead of 2-1/2 months...]
The first half of the day’s journey was characterized by kayaking languidly through an area of butterflies, dragonflies, and flowers, punctuated by humping the boat across beaver dams. Beautiful, but (unfortunately for us today) NOT FUN.
The second half of the day consisted of twisting open-river boating, learning to paddle in actual currents (remember that we have practiced in chop and wind, but always with pedals on open water), so steering together without a rudder and with short turning radii had us bouncing off the banks for a while). B1 is not feeling well, and I ended up often handling the boat by myself--I'm proud of this, but the effort is tremendous for both of us in our own way. The gorgeous weather—and a deer wading in front of us—is not enough to make any of this truly enjoyable. We spill gratefully out of the boat at Coffee Pot Landing. B1 naps all afternoon (after throwing up what little he'd eaten earlier, seemingly from exhaustion). STILL NOT FUN.
I have not seen b1 smile in two days; the exertion is hard on him. His condition is hard on me...
The first half of the day’s journey was characterized by kayaking languidly through an area of butterflies, dragonflies, and flowers, punctuated by humping the boat across beaver dams. Beautiful, but (unfortunately for us today) NOT FUN.
The second half of the day consisted of twisting open-river boating, learning to paddle in actual currents (remember that we have practiced in chop and wind, but always with pedals on open water), so steering together without a rudder and with short turning radii had us bouncing off the banks for a while). B1 is not feeling well, and I ended up often handling the boat by myself--I'm proud of this, but the effort is tremendous for both of us in our own way. The gorgeous weather—and a deer wading in front of us—is not enough to make any of this truly enjoyable. We spill gratefully out of the boat at Coffee Pot Landing. B1 naps all afternoon (after throwing up what little he'd eaten earlier, seemingly from exhaustion). STILL NOT FUN.
I have not seen b1 smile in two days; the exertion is hard on him. His condition is hard on me...
Traversing a dam |
A beaver dam at Coffee Pot Landing (we didn't cross it; most portage it) |
Shot over my shoulder mid-afternoon - Gorgeous day! |
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
COOL COOKING
Brought along a very fun backpacker stove that burns wood. It is of double-wall construction, so the heat of the fire creates convection currents that blast the flames right up at the pan. We can boil water super fast with about one 4-foot stick just slightly thicker than a pencil (snapped shorter than a pencil--Chapstick-sized pieces are optimum). It fits inside our camp pans (a deeper pan with a lid that's also a frying pan), along with the matches and a tiny bottle of dish soap. I love how cleanly it burns (the ashes are like confetti) and how quickly it cools off for repacking.
Solo Stove |
DAY 3 – WALKING THE BOAT
Wanagan Landing to Felt Bridge - approx 5.5 RM
Today was quite the day for walking.
Today was quite the day for walking.
After a short wind through somewhat clearer grasslands (OMG, the FLOWERS), our first
portage took us around Vekin’s Dam (an early-twentieth-century wood dam,
built for logging purposes). The portage was a trail through the woods,
where we carried all the equipment, including the boat; then had lunch
before repacking and shoving off again. It took somewhat longer than an
hour and was energy-intensive, but not entirely unpleasant.
After the dam, we encountered a long stretch of “rapids” with low water. The boat kept grounding on sandbars, so we had to lift ourselves out of the boat and drag it, bumping into rocks and submerged logs. For a brief time this seemed fun; African Queen slogging through ankle-deep then thigh-deep clear bubbling water--after all, people spend a lot of time and money to hike the length of the river narrows in Zion! But energy was already at a premium, and it took a lot of focus to maneuver. B1 was getting particularly bunged up and clumsy with exhaustion (although both of us were bruised). Occasionally optimism set it and we’d climb back into the boat, only to grind to a halt a couple of turns down the river. Grrr. The afternoon was getting along when we spoke to a man on the bank, and he recommended a camping spot quite a few miles before our planned take-out. Relief again to have a place to pitch our tent on this strange river trek.
We found the Felt Bridge (a reproduction nineteenth-century wooden design, no longer connected to a regular roadway) where we tied up to a signpost, let the boat float against the abutment, and passed the gear directly overhead from boat to bridge. We set up early enough that b1could get some much-needed rest and we could cook a “real” dinner on our awesome stove. We feasted on mashed potatoes with bacon, cheese and chipotle, with a dessert of oatmeal. It’s amazing what boiling water can accomplish. (It’s also amazing how little we were actually eating, considering the extent of our physical accomplishments.)
Quiet splashing at the river in the night after bedtime--maybe otters.?
Post-portage launch site |
Walkin' the boat |
Meadow flowers on the riverbank |
Felt Bridge campsite |
Peeking out from under its overnight roof |
Monday, August 4, 2014
DAY 2 - WANAGAN LANDING
Woke up and consulted about the schedule. It took no time at all to determine that we needed/wanted a day to rest (from our weekends, not from our two miles) and repack. So b1 rested and I repacked! And then I rested, too!
So much was accomplished, and we got to meet a number of really nice people who kayaked through (a pair from Missouri, out for the day only) or locals who stopped in by car or ATV to view the river.
We had beautiful weather again, too.
So much was accomplished, and we got to meet a number of really nice people who kayaked through (a pair from Missouri, out for the day only) or locals who stopped in by car or ATV to view the river.
We had beautiful weather again, too.
Minnesota River Trail campsite shelter and our tent |
Frog in the grass by the boat |
day 2 - wanagan landing, MN -- MT 2
hard day yesterday.
dropped in just before sunset. I was thinking that I might have to african queen it for 2 miles and walk the boat downriver (which is actually N here, which is weird in its own right) ... but the river was deeper than that so tons of rowing with my accomplice occasionally poling with a kayak paddle from the back.
the river is thin, shallow, and occasionally boggy here ... a couple different times we had to back out and re-direct to a more major channel, all the time in ever-more-thinning light.
we finish I'm the dark at 22:30, and don't get to bed until 00:30.
a let start had us packing the boat haphazard. a late arrival had us disgorging equipment willy nilly. there's no such thing as a "free slug" in endurance travel and clumsy packing technique qualifies. almost certainly we'll pay the price for that tomorrow.
dropped in just before sunset. I was thinking that I might have to african queen it for 2 miles and walk the boat downriver (which is actually N here, which is weird in its own right) ... but the river was deeper than that so tons of rowing with my accomplice occasionally poling with a kayak paddle from the back.
the river is thin, shallow, and occasionally boggy here ... a couple different times we had to back out and re-direct to a more major channel, all the time in ever-more-thinning light.
we finish I'm the dark at 22:30, and don't get to bed until 00:30.
a let start had us packing the boat haphazard. a late arrival had us disgorging equipment willy nilly. there's no such thing as a "free slug" in endurance travel and clumsy packing technique qualifies. almost certainly we'll pay the price for that tomorrow.
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