Archive for the ‘Canoeing’ Category

Long Pond Jackman Maine

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With fall quickly approaching we wanted to take a quick getaway before it was too late.  After a very busy summer we decided that a camp on a lake was what we needed.  We did a few searches and came up with some ideas and narrowed it down to the somewhere on the Moose River in Jackman with plans of climbing Kineo on Moosehead Lake and paddling some of the Moose river.

Recently we got a dog that did not have the best past and we’ve been working with him to give him the good life he deserves and he’s been doing fantastic.   We had plans to board him for the couple of days we’d be gone but we were ambivalent about doing it.  Then we talked with someone who had a bad experience where we were planning to take him and that sealed the deal – we were going to have to scale back our plans and the dog was coming along on vacation.  I’ve done my fair share of canoeing and camping in Jackman, but I had never heard of The Last Resort, which you can check out here   and that’s the place we decided on.  You can also find them on facebook here. As far as a remote Maine camp on a lake goes this place is idyllic.   The cabins are on Long Pond and spaced well with good vegetation buffers so you barely know there are people next to you.  There are lots of trails to explore, canoes/kayaks to rent, and the log cabins are very nice with porches overlooking the water.  If you’re looking for the log cabin on a lake Maine remote vacation this is the place, and we’ll be returning at some point in the future.

 

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Evolution of a Canoeist

Who can long watch the ceaseless lapping of a river’s current without conceiving a desire to set themselves adrift?

Mark Hubbard

   I could hear the sound of the rapids ahead as the current of the river pulled us forward against all my instincts to be heading in the opposite direction. We were on the upper West Branch of the Penobscot River on a boy scout canoe and camping trip and I was all of 11 or 12 and about to experience my first quickwater.  It was late July and of course the little rip we were about to run was probably barely quickwater, but I was terrified and to my young mind this was the equivalent of some first descent class V drop and it took everything I had to steel myself and steer us around the little rocks poking above the river as we went thru, watching the bottom whizzing by.   I also however remember the immense feeling of satisfaction after looking back at the rip and thinking Wow…we just put a canoe thru that.  Thinking back now it really was a big boy trip that we took that year.  Hitting Chesuncook Lake in record time, we extended the trip by going up to Caucomgomic Lake – upstream  to Round Pond and is a trip I hope to repeat one day. That year the call of the rugged north country was awakened in me.

Then suddenly, as easily as jumping into a swimming pool I fell in up to my waist.  The canoe scraped down my back bending me in half and shoving my face into the mud.   The boat ends rested on the ground completely covering me. I yelled out in pain but also from the indignation and humiliation.  I kept yelling hoping for help but mostly raging against the canoe, the camp, my parents for sending me, and the whole god-forsaken, bug infested, nation of Canada.  I yelled for 5 minutes but no one came.   When finally I’d yelled myself out something has changed.  I’d accepted the indifference of the canoe and wilderness and was resigned to the fact that if I was going to get across the portage I’d better just do it myself.  I rolled the canoe off me dug my boots out of the quagmire and straining with everything I had flipped it back onto my head.  When I arrived minutes later at the lake I was well on my way to self reliance.

I was introduced to paddling at a very early age by my parents, I can remember lots of paddling, fishing, and camping trips as a kid, and once I got into the boy scouts I was taught paddling in earnest and got to go on lots of canoe camping trips which were always my favorite.  Scouts taught me what a canoe could do – before our West Branch trip we all had to tip a canoe in the cold water and successfully get it back to shore swamped, dump out the water and re-float it.  We learned as well the techniques to get the water out of a canoe that has swamped in the middle of a lake by using a second canoe for the task.  We also learned gunwhale  pumping which  taught me balance, and what the limits of a canoe are.

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After graduating college I started to get the itch to do a big river trip like we had done in Scouts, and I decided on the Allagash as the river I wanted to do.  All that summer I worked a side job painting and saved up enough to walk into the Old Town Canoe factory and get myself a boat and a couple of new paddles, and spent the winter planning my adventure on the Allagash.  My big concern was the whitewater, and whether or not I’d be able to handle it.  I ran the river in ’97.

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Running the Allagash was amazing, and I remember feeling that the whole world was now open for me and shortly thereafter I entered my first Kenduskeag Stream Race, and I was instantly hooked.

The paddlers of these skinny racing canoes must take on everything the river throws at them including standing waves, rock gardens, big drops, and portages.   Most importantly they have to do it all while paddling fast and remaining afloat.  The fastest canoe will usually be the one that has paddled closest to the edge of disaster without sinking.  Welcome to the world of downriver racing.

Peter Heed and Dick Mansfield

I enjoyed everything about canoe racing – you needed to be tough, both mentally and physically – paddling your lungs and heart out of your chest hoping for enough energy for the upcoming rapids – running the portage so hard you just plain old ran out of air.  It’s tough to describe the allure of the paddle.  I think that part of it is downriver racing boils life down to it’s simplest most intrinsic form.  It’s primitive, competitive and primeval tying us into our basic roots of travel.   And where else in life are you availed of the opportunity to know instantly if you have made the right decision?  You read the river, make your choice based on what you see, and then instantly know whether or not you were right (made it through) or wrong (swamped).   I think a quote from RM Patterson in The Dangerous River sums it up well-

There is something beautifully final in certain phases of river travel; you make your decision and pick your course and after that the rest is all action.  You are committed and there is no turning back – you must make it or swamp.  The result is a supreme peak of physical effort and a split-second awareness of changing water.  A mentally sort of cold excitement and exhilaration – a high point of living.

RM Patterson

After a race when everything is packed up and the canoe is back on the truck and you’re sitting down for a big steak and a large beer, there is not much that compares.

I tried kayaking a couple of times, but I’ve always been a bit of a canoe purist for a couple of very simple reasons – first being if I want to get a better glimpse of the rapids ahead to see the perfect route I can just stand up and take a look.  Second, my wet exit is pretty easy – if the canoe flips I fall out..I don’t have to do an eskimo roll, or worse, undo a spray skirt and try to extricate myself from the craft.

Knowing what to do in a canoe opens up all of Maine and it’s vast network of canoe routes and history.

The above is all a preface to say this; For years I have wanted to make a short film about canoe racing in Maine for  the Banff Film Festival.

Here is a trailer if you’ve never been;

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I truly think that a canoe racing film that is done right would have an excellent chance.  The problem that I ran into was financial…Banff has certain submission requirements and the camera to satisfy those requirements was out of reach for me.  I sent letters to a few businesses that I thought might be interested asking for sponsorship in exchange for advertising – there was some interest, but money was largely an issue for them too.

This past winter I also came to the realization that I was mortal and not getting any younger when I started having some pretty bad back spasms, and although I’m much better and on the mend, I realized that the day I’m not able to do this anymore is coming, hopefully much later than sooner, but it’s coming.  I further realized that the dream of making, producing, and submitting a film is probably not going to materialize into reality.   So this year I researched and purchased a contour headcam and a bottle of advil, and made a movie for myself.  I was so looking forward to capturing the usual heavy water in the Kenduskeag Stream Race in Bangor that it’s rather ironic that when race day came the water levels were at historic lows.  LOL – after all the races I did when the water was high.  That’s the way life goes though eh? …make the best of it.

So, a caveat about the film.  I made it for me, something I can watch and enjoy.  Some of the clips are older and some of them new.

So, here is what I came up with – this embodies what downriver racing means to me – in the words of RM Patterson – A high point of living.

Update – I discovered the National Paddling Film Festival which will accept the format I can provide – I’ve sent them a copy of my film, and I hope it makes it through the pre-screening process – judging is in February…fingers crossed.

 

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Water Walker

Bill Mason (1929-1988) was a award winning author, filmmaker, and artist.  “Water Walker” has always been one of my favorite films documenting a journey along Lake Superior and nosing up some of the streams that flow into it.  If you hear the calling of the Wild and enjoy river travel you will surely love this film.

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You can learn more about Bill Mason here.

 

Voyageur Tales

Two Voyageur tales, La Chasse-galerie and The Werewolves written by Honore Beaugrand (1848-1906).

Honoré Beaugrand – Fantastic tales.

 

Fuck Yeah Maine!!

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Short video of living and thriving in Maine.

Union River Race 5/20/12

Union River race  from the Graham Lake dam to the Ellsworth docks.  Perfect Maine day for a canoe race with lots of fun water.   Towards the end of the video it gets a little “hitchy” for a few seconds – My software doesn’t like a lot of editing :) Good excuse for an upgrade I guess.

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Do It Yourself Fish Taxidermy

It was a drizzling, blustery, and too cold mid-April day to be fishing,  and I decided to put on a ridiculous looking yellow lure I found in the bottom of my tackle box,  troll back to the truck and call it a day.  About halfway across the pond something solid hit the lure and I set the hook and wondered what was on the other end of the line, as it felt way to heavy to be a typical brookie.  After playing it enough to get it into the boat I was shocked and surprised to see the biggest brook trout I had ever caught, and it tipped the scale at over three pounds.   It was, in my opinion, a fish that deserved to be mounted.   Being a young working Mainer however, the cost of having that done was prohibitive and at the time there was no way I could swing it.  So, I used a little Maine ingenuity and some backwoods engineering and figured out a way to do it myself for next to nothing, and the picture above is the mount of the fish I caught that day.

Here’s how you do it;  get a container that is bigger, wider, and deeper than the fish – I used a tupperware container that my mom used for cookies, and fill it half full with beach sand ensuring everything is level and even.  Put your fish into the sand so that half of the fish is in the sand and half is out of the sand keeping everything level and even.  Arrange the fins and mouth to your satisfaction – you can use small pins for this to get the desired effect.  Next mix some plaster of paris per instructions on the box and pour over the fish ensuring you’ve got everything covered plus enough on the sides to have something to attach it to your wall with after.  Allow the plaster to harden and carefully remove it from the sand and fish.  You can take a break and clean your fish at this point and come back to the project whenever you’re ready. What you have now is a negative mold of your fish.  From any hobby store you can get a mold release spray and spray or brush your mold with it ensuring good coverage.    At any local hardware store pick up some fiberglass and resin/hardener.  Cut the fiberglass into small strips, the smaller the better, and (wearing gloves)  gently start filling your mold with the fiberglass strips/resin, ensuring coverage everywhere.  Allow plenty of time for everything  to dry/harden, and carefully remove the mold from the glass being careful of the fins and other delicate areas.  This part can be tricky but have patience and keep working at it, and it will come off.  You now have your fish.  From the picture above you can see the detail that the plaster/glass provides  – including seeing the fishes lateral line.  The glass of course will be resin colored, I’m not good at painting detail so my Dad painted the colors on the fish you see above to try to get it as the original  – but you could get artsy with it and spray or paint it any color you want.

So, the next time you have a fish you’re thinking is worthy of mounting give it a shot – all it takes is some time to do it yourself  fish taxidermy.

Kenduskeag Stream Race 2012

 

 

Photo credit to Miriam Kates-Goldman.   Kenduskeag Stream – shopping cart.

A bit of an adventure this year with historically low water levels. We got hung up a bit at the start, made up lots of time after we got into some better water, only to get hung up again below 6 mile falls. At one point walking the canoe I slipped on a rock and went for a swim flipping the canoe on top of me. I turned the camera off and forgot to turn it back on – however, if you take this 6 minute video and multiply it by 4 hours, that’s pretty much what it was like the whole way.

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Souadabscook Stream Canoe Race 4-14-12

 

 

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Still images and some footage shot with a contour roam;

The Coureurs-De-Bois

I have now been forty-two years in this country. For twenty-four of those years I was a light canoeman. I required but little sleep, but sometimes got less than I required. No portage was too long for me; all portages were alike. My end of the canoe never touched the ground till I saw the end of it. Fifty songs a day were nothing to me. I could carry, paddle, walk and sing with any man I ever saw. I pushed on – over rapids, over cascades, over chutes; all were the same to me. No water, no weather ever stopped the paddle or the song. I was once possessed of five horses and six running dogs trimmed in the first style. I was then like a bourgeois, rich and happy. I wanted for nothing. Five hundred pounds twice told have passed through my hands, although now I have not a spare shirt to my back nor a penny to buy one. Yet, were I young I should glory in commencing the same career. I would spend another half-century in the same fields of enjoyment. There is no life so happy as a voyageur’s life; none so independent; no place where a man enjoys so much variety and freedom as in the Indian country. Huzza, huzza! Pour le pays sauvage!

(As told to a Hudson Bay interviewer)

Self Reliant Living,Canoeing,Musing, and Surviving in Maine. Huzza Huzza! Pour le pays Sauvage!!! Follow us Twiter YouTube RSS