“All happy families resemble one another, but each unhappy
family is unhappy in its own way.”
Tolstoy
There exist so many ways to go with your yearly trip report when you start with a quote like that. I suppose Tolstoy would follow the unhappy family, they do sound more interesting. All I know is that this year’s blog is late and my editors are constantly bugging me to get it done, so maybe I don’t have time to contemplate which perspective to take on the modern social family structure. But haven’t I read before that cliques and social groups are quickly replacing our traditional family and religious affiliation groups? Because I choose my kayaking social group, the act of choosing should make it a happy family group. And since my editors are entirely figments of my imagination, shouldn’t their insistent prodding and suggestions make me happy? But my lawyer is telling me to stop playing philosopher and start writing a record of this year’s kayaking.
“It is said, once Tolstoy had said it first, that all happy
families are alike, and there is really little more to say about them. It would seem that the same is true of
happy elephants.” Jose Saramago
As I write this entry it is Spring Break 2012 and I’m at the
coast, so it makes sense to start last year’s journal entry at Spring Break
2011. Niki, Jesus John, and I
drove to Port Orford to visit our friend Roger. We did a long scouting mission on a roadless class 2 section
of a tributary of the Alsea River called Drift Creek. I’m sure it was good to go and we would have made the take
out before dark, but it would have been pretty embarrassing to have to
accidentally camp overnight on class 2.
John and I looked at the lower run on the Elk River, but it
looked too high for my taste of low water runs. We had never run the upper section and decided to give it a
go, finding it a surprisingly nice section of river on a cold, cold spring
break. (We both portaged the biggest
rapid). Our real plan had been to
run the North Fork of the Smith, but the weather didn’t cooperate. If you could hear the wind outside the
window at the moment, you would understand why I have decided to sit in front
of this computer and write instead of boat over spring break 2012.
While we are on the topic of the beautifully cold Oregon
Coast, Spring 2011 also included a trip down the North fork of the Trask and
the Salmonberry. Jason Boyok,
mixologist at the Mint, and recently parodied on Portlandia, was our guide down
the North Fork Trask. The only
problem is when he guided us to the put-in; I started reading the description
of the run in Soggy Sneakers and realized that we were actually at the
take-out. Turns out Boyok had
mistakenly done the wrong run the last time he did the north fork (“Dude, I
thought it was a bit mellower then the book mentioned”). After several hours of driving down
logging roads we had it all figured out and did both runs this time. A surprising good run that is very
isolated and hence spectacular, we just recently tried to hit it again, but the
road was washed out and we ended up on what we shall call the Boyok (IE lower)
run. Just talked to the forest service and the road shall be fixed for the 2013
season, as long as the Mayan Calendar is wrong.
While we are on the theme of washouts and coastal runs, we
also hit the Salmonberry last spring.
I hadn’t run it since the railroad was washed out, but it really is a
classic class 4 wilderness run. I
traded Niki shuttle bunny status for help with dirt and bark dust in her
garden: quite the hard bargain.
The run was great as always and a little extra eerie with the old
railroad tracks overhanging and “crashing into” the river. The old put-in bridge acted as a log choke
and kept the rest of the run pretty log free. But be careful out there.
“I could blame this on the constant state of rivalry we
lived in, but I suspect that on the Final Day of Judgment, when my good and bad
actions are placed in the balance, it will be the weight of that ear of corn
that sends me down to hell…”
Saramago
My favorite author, a person who I consider a family friend
since I’m always reading his books at family functions, has passed away. You will have to forgive me if the
quality of Saramago quotes that I now use are a little less average; since he
has passed away I only have a finite number of words to choose from. I have read all his works except one. I
almost feel like leaving it so that it may someday entertain me as a new work
of art.
A group of 8 of us drove to the classic Smith Rivers in the
northern corner of California in April.
I have been known to say that I want my white water heaven to include a
run down the North Fork of the Smith on a bluebird day, and that is what we
got. (And so much more). While
scouting a non-mission of the Oregon Hole Gorge I found a broken DVD titled Red
Neck Porn Volume 8. Boyok tried to
super glue it back together. In
our search for soggy firewood in the rain forest, we ended up buying some from
the guy who carves bears with a chain saw. Our shuttle driver told us a story about when Big Foot ate
one of the local’s chickens overnight and she is sure she will get to see one
soon.
My favorite bar in Crescent City is currently closed for
problems with the California Liquor Commission. So many stories lost and now there aren’t any hard liquor
bars in Crescent City. Hope they
get that fixed soon. Finally we
got to do the class 1 Mill Creek run through the redwoods.
“I beg you, friend, be happy. I have the vague sense that on your capacity to be happy
hangs our only hope.” Kundera
And now let’s talk about my real non-boating family, though
they boat as well, I just mean to say my real family, not my social group of
kayakers that I also call family.
And my editors also boat, but that is in their (my) imagination. This recession that we are going
through really ends up hitting home.
Both of my parents are now unemployed and it is hard to find any work
out there. Oregon’s nurses are
becoming more educated and Salem Hospital no longer had a need from my mom’s
2-year degree, even though 30 years of experience would seem to make up for her
educational deficiencies. On the
good side of news and family, Josh and Roxanne have added a new Horner to the
boating family. I suppose it will
be a few years, but we will certainly be getting Cassie out on the river
soon. She has already braved out
her first flood when my brother’s house was surrounded with water from an
overfilled Mill Creek. Don’t worry,
the cataraft was all filled up and ready to go should the house start to go
under. Portlanders got to see
images of my brother boating the weather team around the flooded town on
television.
Already has the Horner sense of humor. |
Used without permission. In my defense it is on the photographers Facebook Page. |
“Perhaps it is as an infant that one first experiences the
illusion of being elect, because of the maternal attentions one receives
without meriting them and demands with all the more determination. Upbringing should get rid of that
illusion and make clear that everything in life has a price. But it is often too late.” Kundera
And speaking of great floods, some quack in Roseburg
convinced a number of people that the world was going to end and plastered the
area with billboards and even made national news. Our group decided that it was time to head for the Owyhee
River and have an end of the world party on our 4-day adventure. Jesus John (our friend with a godly
nickname) got too busy at work and had to cancel. The joke was we lost Jesus before our adventure even
began. My brother’s friends Monty
and Brian cooked up 17lbs of meat for 21 people and we had a regular feast and
sipped often from the wine. I seem
to remember a drunk Michael Glass dressed as a catholic schoolgirl reading a
pretend diary of a love affair with Christ. I should keep some of Michael’s upbringing as a Baptist
Minister’s son out of my blog/diary.
Speaking of Baptist Minister’s sons, my best friend Mike
Ross and his wife Cindi couldn’t join us this year. But their son William did for his first overnighter without
his parents. I really don’t know
how he puts up with us, but he did spend a lot of time in his tent during camping
time. At the put-in I was told by
the river ranger that our group was over the 20 person limit, that we need to
start bringing our own firewood down the Owyhee, and that he was leaving for a
trip on the Grand Canyon and we should start following these new rules next
year. He failed to mention that a
good cop and a bad cop would visit us.
I do know that the police do patrols down the river and I actually do
appreciate it. It all started when
someone pulled a firearm out during a dispute over a campsite years ago. What I forgot was to renew our Oregon
Boater tags, costing us three $145 tickets, but the court did eventually reduce
them back to $8 bucks each. The
best part of our talk with the cops was we eventually got good cop to wear a
halo from the end of the world party.
The only reason that picture isn’t on Facebook is because we promised
him we wouldn’t put it up. We
could have done without bad cop, though; unfortunately we couldn’t get him to
put the devil horns on. He had a gun so we didn’t push the idea.
I’m amazed that after all these years, 20 to be precise, of
running the Owyhee, I discovered something new this year. I found a location where Native
Americans sat and chipped spears and possibly arrowheads. The age of the artifacts in this area
made it extremely special to me.
Our editors would like me to remind the audience that the
world didn’t end while we were on the Owyhee. That did open us up to attend professor paddle on the
Wenatchee River the following weekend.
John, Jen, and I drove out.
About half of the Portland boating community met us there this year. I completely messed up the rafting line
on Snow Blind. Jen flew out and
Jacky, Carol, and I paddled the raft in circles and endos, but didn’t
flip. By the time we cleared the
hydraulic, Jen was a very long way downstream floating lazily. Conversation between Jen and Melissa
Brokenfoot who kayaked up to her:
“What are you doing in the river?”
“I fell out of the boat.”
“Where is the boat?”
“Oh, it’s still stuck up there in the rapid.”
“Oh my, are you OK?”
“Yes, just fine, thanks for asking.”
From my dizzying vantage point up in the spinning raft I was
really hoping that Melissa would eventually paddle Jen to shore before she had
the awful experience of swimming Grannies rapid as well. They did eventually get over the
English formalities and move to shore.
That night Portland was out-partied and out-microphoned by the Seattle
crew. God, we are really getting
old. It was good to watch the fun
though. Next we ran the Chiwawa
where a member of our crew had a bit of an issue with a piece of wood. We got it all figured out though. Then 3 of us put in below Fresh
Squeezed for a run on the Peshastin on Monday. Then it was the somewhat long trip home.
2011’s high water had also kept the Clackamas River
high. My annual student Clackamas
trip had 27 boaters and at Toilet Bowl it had 14 swimmers. I suppose that is a good math problem,
but it was a mess and not usually what we like to have happen on our student
trips.
It is always nice when a
few weeks after Memorial Day grades are entered into the computer and it really
does become Summer 2011! We had a
permit for the Middle Fork of the Salmon, but the road was snowed in and the
river was high with the possibility of rising higher.
The student crew with our mess of random boating gear |
Somehow this convinced me that a high water trip on the
Jarbridge-Bruneau was a good alternative plan. It for the most part was a good idea, but we don’t ever
intend to run it that high again.
The flow rose from 2400 to 2900 CFS during our trip and we were hoping
for decreasing water levels. That
is another good math problem, something about range and domain that I have used
in my math classes. We spent $420
shuttling the cars to the put-in just to realize that the river was too high to
realistically take a cataraft down it.
I did think at the time that a $420 dollar shuttle is an odd number for
something that is too high. The
visible eddies from the road were tiny.
Mike Glass, Alex Dey, Christy Glismire, Melissa DeCarlo and I decided to
give it a go. It was fast down to
the first camp with no troubles.
Any misplaced piece of wood would have been dangerous.
We lightened our boats overnight (drank all the beer and ate
all the Ramen Noodles), and the first obstacle for the second day was the
landslide at Sevy Falls. It did
actually pool the flooded river and make a definite difficult but doable
portage for our group. Christy took the mountain goat route on the left, and
the rest of us took the frog route on the right over the slide. The rapid was intense. Next, Christy styled Wally’s Wallows
and the rest of us portaged.
In retrospect i didn't need an entire bottle of Tech-nu, but we used it |
Nervously entering the river at the put-in |
The new rapid (portage) |
Carrie dropping the Tacoma off the side of a cliff |
Devil's Holy Rock Pile |
The real danger was the next two miles. Nothing was all that big, but a mistake could add up quickly. We needed to eddy out before Jarbridge Falls and we needed to be safe getting there. If you haven’t seen it, just know that walking out of the Jarbridge really isn’t an option. Our group was very slow and very cautious. Melissa and I portaged part of John’s Jollies, only to launch right into the most difficult hole. She pulled a crucial roll and within minutes we were portaging the falls. The high water made us start our walk farther upstream and the longer portage route had its place in another adventure in Tasmania. Carrie, Niki, and Steph Glass drove the Tacoma into the canyon at the confluence. Sounded like my sister driving down the road (off the cliff) was as much of an adventure as ours. Thanks to Larry the shuttle driver and ex off-road racing dude for not only letting my sister drive into the canyon, but taking a day off from his family supporting regular job as a furniture salesman to help us out. The beer and food was very much appreciated. The next day we all continued down the river with the three recently converted Baja driving enthusiasts in a cataraft. The Bruneau at the higher flows was doable, but much scarier and pushy big water then I like in a deep canyon. That said we where all smiles when we finished Devil’s Holy Rock Pile, or whatever the name is for that last rapid. Some of us then drove to the Owyhee River for another 4-day trip (Oregon Boater permits in hand). The sun and mellow rapids were appreciated by us recently converted beer-drinking-slackers.
I worked two days a week over the summer, but it still left
plenty of time for boating. We had
a large trip planned on the Middle Fork of the Salmon in Idaho, but the water
levels were high and we canceled the trip. Four of us picked up the cancellation and went on the
mellowest Middle Fork trip to date.
Fourth of July was on a Monday, so all I had to do was get a substitute
for Wednesday and I was boating.
The level at the put in was still 5.5 feet but it was dropping
fast. The group that launched in
front of us was massive and the trip leader had a very long nearly fatal swim
and was saved by a fisherman. On
these high water trips, a compact group is much safer. Because of our group’s small size, we
got campsites the first 3 nights near hot springs. Nice and relaxing trip with Brett, Carrie, Jesus John, and
I. Because the flows had dropped
so much, the last day was much mellower then I had expected.
Brett, all packed and ready for the trip. |
The hike to Loon Creek, the site of many a story about horses. We didn't see Mary this year. |
We don't always eat this good, but damn it was good. |
Carrie, posing for the picture. |
Um, yeah. |
Writing this year's blog and thinking about what my editors might be up to. |
Over the next few weeks we finished painting my mom’s new
house. The garden and lawn were in
and we were done with the 2-year project!
That left time for Niki, South African Dave, and I to head to Shambala,
a 4-day rave near Nelson British Columbia. The festival has grown a lot since Brett and I visited it
ten years ago. We had fun nights
dancing and people watching, with mellow days in the sun near the river, ogling
the inappropriate nudity and people.
The festival has grown so big that you can no longer realistically leave
during the day to go boating and have any chance of getting back into the
festival before nightfall. On our
way home on Sunday, Dave and I did a new class 3 run down the local Little
Slocan River. Well worth the side
trip to bag a new-to-us river.
Gave finals for summer term and headed to the Lower Salmon
River in Idaho for the kid’s trip.
Four new kids joined us this year: Reid, Aida, Kadance, and Sandra
brought Timothy for his first trip.
Somehow during the first night Reid hurt his foot and was limping for
the rest of the trip. Made for
some funny stories including him crawling up to Cindi very early in the trip to
ask for help getting to the river to go pee, and a very last minute downstream
paddle to get him to a toilet at a campground. “I have to pee and I can’t walk.” The rest of the trip had the usual kid’s trip themes,
jumping rock, glow sticks, frog beach, theme night, kids cook and clean night,
etc. The theme this year was
children’s book characters. Some
good Harry Potter and some great Dr. Seuss costumes. At one point Timothy had fallen asleep and fell into the
river from the back of a cataraft.
Sandra immediately jumped from the boat and rode out the rapid with him,
a bit scary but funny in the end.
Ah, my editors are pushing me to move on to more adventures. Who wants to hear about a kid’s trip
anyway? I do promise that we still
have some of the same old drinking and fun times as always.
I’m not quite sure how a fishing trip can end up in these
journals, but this year included two fishing trips. The first was a guy’s get-away weekend while my sister-in-law
had a traditional baby shower. I’m
not sure my sister Carrie knows how to plan a women’s only shower, but the
rumor is, things went fine. My
brother, our uncles, and friends spent some quality time out at the Oregon
coast. Highlights include, Tony
from the farm making the camp host pick up leftover dog-poo from our site and a
B.Y.O.B. chartered fishing trip with crab nets. The quote of the trip, “I paid to live here.” The second trip was to the newly
purchased Homfray Lodge that our friends, the Macey’s, picked up at a well
below market steal that is located off the B.C. sunshine coast.
The original Montana owner lost his shirt on the place
spending millions on the infrastructure.
We got to hang out and feel like the elite Bill-Gates-With-A-Sailing-Boat
type, and all we had to do was some minor chores. The rumor is the entire place has been booked out for all
the biggest parts of next summer.
While sitting on the deck one afternoon we saw a medium sized whale
swimming up the channel.
It is apparent when you hang out in the area for a while why
some of the strongest and most sophisticated Native Americans called the area
home. You can still see
pictographs on the walls from your boat just a half-mile from the lodge.
Niki, Sara Pool, and I and fit in a nice weekend on the
Rogue River. I need to remember to
do more small trips, especially to the Rogue, because it was very
relaxing. On the drive home we
visited Niki’s friends in Roseburg, and learned the fine art of Jell-O
shots. The mint julep from scratch
is amazing.
“When the mind wanders, when it carries us off on the wings
of daydreams, we do not notice the distances traveled, especially when the feet
carrying us are not our own.”
Saramago
And so let it be said that Niki and I hopped in a car to
meet Audrey and Brian for a 6-day trip on the Selway River. The season for the Selway River this
year was ridiculously long. My
sister and friends had run the river three weeks prior, but Niki and I had to
work. So we pieced together a crew
at inflatable kayak flows. It was
a great trip and the 6 days were needed to really enjoy it. Even though it was
work dragging the boats at times, it was actually not all that bad. Brian did some excellent catch and
release fishing. On the last day
we paddled next to an active slow burning forest fire = pretty cool.
Niki's self support tent |
Our only portage, Wolf Creek |
A little carnage. |
Double Drop is a completely different rapid. |
Tango Bar |
Floating out past the fires on the last day |
Our Canadian editor has been missing so far from this story. He decided that his wayward ways in Nelson B.C. had gone unnoticed to the world, and that it was time to find a mate and settle in a fine cabin in the Kootenay Mountains. He is back with us of course; searching for a family on the Internet has its merits and significant downfalls. But I’m happy that this year’s blog theme of family can magically coincide with the Arab Spring. Please just stop and think for a minute that members of the Muslim Brotherhood were united for a moment with extreme democratic factions to stage coups and peaceful sit-ins that the governments turned violent. In that light it sometimes seems that any peer group can be made into a family for at least a moment with powerful consequences. But wait, we started this paragraph with our peaceful Canadian correspondent at heart, and he is back in our midst and ready to go travel, kayak, and edit poorly spelled blogs again.
Babcock at the bottom of Ranie Falls |
The Halloween Two Night Trip down the Rogue was a
success. The trip is always lots
of work and the weather is often starting to get cold, but we do have a good
time. The costumes on the last
night always make the trip, as do the pumpkins. I’m always happy to put the overnight gear away for the
winter and start thinking of easier-to-plan day trips for the cold season, but
it never takes long before I’m thinking about how nice it would be to spend an
evening next to the campfire along the river.
William Ross turns 18 in 2012. Soon it will be college and other dreams. While we still have him around and now that he has a driver’s license it has been fun to start ramping up his creeking skills. He hit the East Fork Lewis first and has since run a few other classics like Butte Creek. Spring 2012 should really bring out some great new runs for him.
William's first waterfall. Horse Shoe on the East Fork Lewis. |
“A glance at the map is enough to make you feel tired. And yet it looks as if everything were
so close, within easy reach, so to speak.
The explanation, of course, lies in the scale. It’s easy to accept that a centimeter on the map equals
twenty kilometers in reality, but what we tend no to consider is that, in the
process, we ourselves suffer an equivalent dimensional reduction, which is why,
being but specks on earth’s surface, we are still smaller on maps.” Saramago
If you bump into our editors sometime, you should ask them
about the Intermediate Value Theorem, IVT for short. So easy to state on paper, if a river is flowing at 1200 cfs
on Monday and 1600 cfs on Wednesday, there exists a time that the river was
flowing at 1320 cfs during the time period. The key point of the theorem is the
small phrase it contains, there exists.
As a consequence of this theorem, if you take a map of Texas, crumple it
up and drop it on the ground in Big Bend National Park, one of the points on
the map will be directly over its correct location in the park. While you are at it, please ask our
Canadian editor and our lawyer why they devised a plan to drive all the way to
Big Bend National Park over Christmas Vacation. I suppose things always look smaller on maps, even the bats.
Long Drive, check.
Pick Jesus John up near the Mexico border, check. Tie even more gear into and onto Niki’s
Sentra, check. Drive even more to
Big Bend National Park, check.
Drive even more all the way through Big Bend National Park to find
campsite, check. See coyote,
check. See strange native pig like
creature running around the campsite, check. Get drunk as shit and imagine things about the other
campers, check. Drive to park
headquarters to pick up permit to paddle upstream into St Elena Canyon on the
Rio Grande, check. Wait a minute,
did you say paddle upstream? That
is correct we decided to head to Texas during a drought that is so bad that the
local weather forecasters and environmentalists are comparing it to the drought
that forced the Anasazi out of the Grand Canyon and forced large Native
American groups to migrate from parts of the Rio Grande and Colorado area. Why the hell did we drive all the way
to Texas for a drought? I was
joking with the park ranger, “Actually, we usually paddle downstream in
Oregon.” If you saw the little
crack in the limestone Canyon walls that Niki, John, and I paddled up into, you
would understand our motivation.
The hiking into the side canyon at our campsite was Grand Canyon like,
speaking of the Grand Canyon native Anasazi. Stayed 2 nights and paddled back out to experience New Years
with the locals. Check.
Randomly a friend of a friend was playing at a local bar for
New Years. Had some Sotol with
him. What’s that, you’ve never
heard of Sotol? You so need to
visit me soon cause I have some in dad’s liquor cabinet at my house but it is
going fast. The bar was amazing
and would be quite hard to describe.
Kind of like a bunker that someone spent way too much time changing into
a bar. We finished the night of at
a bar called the Starlight and I literally stumbled back to our campsite
outside another bar/restaurant and fell into (onto actually) my sleeping
bag. Quite the cool town Terlingua
is; in the middle of fu@##ng nowhere.
Did I mention that it is a ghost town from the mining era?
We weathered out the windstorm of the century that
night. Actually I hear that it was
a normal windstorm for the area.
Then we paddled into Boquillas canyon, again on the Rio Grande, for a
three-night adventure. We went
downstream this time, but the wind and low water made if feel just like we were
paddling upstream. The wind left
us alone the second day and we hiked up into Rabbit Ears canyon. Epic hiking adventure with it all: slot canyons, fossils, fun climbing
moves, etc. That one hike alone
made the trip. The next couple of
days were nice with great scenery.
On the last day I had my dry suit only half way on me, and was lazily
paddling down a class 1 rapid when I lost my balance fell out of the boat,
laughing and trying to save my whiskey.
I pulled to boat over to the Mexico side of the river so I could do a
quick clothing change. I couldn’t
believe it, but that is the exact moment that a border patrol helicopter buzzed
over us at 20 feet as I stood there in my boxers on the Mexico side of the
border. I could see they were
laughing and I didn’t get into any trouble. Seriously my T-shirt purchase from the gift shop says,
“Paddle faster, I hear border patrol.”
A small parody of the canoeing adventures of the movie Deliverance and
its banjo music. The guy who owns the take out gave us a tour of his Harley
collection (that he custom builds) and some cold beers. That beer tasted so good.
Headed home, check.
Ate best Mexican food on the planet, check. Dropped John off at the airport, check. Visited Mesa Verde cliff dwellings and
kick ass petroglyph site, check.
Drove the long ass back way home, check. Visited Mormon Temple with big ass statue of Jesus in Salt
Lake City with Niki dressed as a prostitute while we handed out fliers
advertising Mitt Romney’s super pack (for a better tomorrow, tomorrow)…not this
time, Niki is a college teacher, remember.
This year in review is drawing to a close, but I always need
to include at least one dream. In
the dream I’m driving up to our farm and am having a hard time finding a place
to park my pickup. That isn’t
unheard of at the farm, but the interesting thing is someone has painted
parking strips on the gravel lot, and all the cars are parked in neat
rows. The strangest thing is, all
the vehicles are cars and not the usual mix of trucks, jeeps, junkers,
etc. I finally find a place to
park and start walking up to the farm shop when I notice that a lot of people
are wondering around;: kids are playing fetch, couples are leaning against the
rusted out combines and talking, and everyone seems much more Portland than
Sublimity. My first thought is
that my uncles have made some new friends, or are maybe hosting a party for a
friend. Not an impossible scenario
for the farm at all. I’m about to
open the shop’s sliding door when I look to my right.
The old giant barn has been changed significantly. The entire thing has been converted
into a housing unit. It still
looks like a barn but it also looks like a row of skinny houses. It is one of those trippy illusions
that can only make sense in a dream.
I’m shocked and want to go check it out. I leave the shop doors closed and head off in the direction
of the barn. When I pass the
corner of the shop I recognize my dad is one of the people hanging down at the
end of the walkway, and I want to ask him some questions. I start walking straight towards him but
with each step I take, he is getting farther and farther away while at the same
time standing perfectly still and smoking one of his Marlboros. I’m able to walk past things like
chickens, intercity youth, a Toyota Prius, and tractors to mention a few things,
but my dad slowly and passively slips farther away.
To say that we here at The Sublimity Life are happy with our
family and social network is to state it bluntly, a complete
understatement. We have made a few
sacrifices to be the happy family, lost jobs, felt low pay and little time for
relationships, but we were handed these gifts: a love of the outdoors, vacation
time, understanding friends, and mostly forgiveness. Many of us are second-generation outdoors people that were
gifted this love and didn’t need to foster it ourselves. Those that are first-generation often
had guides and peers that helped.
Our editors add a level of sarcasm, and a fear of a god they don’t
believe in, but that is for the most part to add literary relevance to our writing.
Let us go then you and I, let us see our most irreverent editor sitting by a
hot spring pool in Canada. We shall roll our pant legs to make our skinny legs
seem stout, and let us picture him in his most sarcastic face, internally
dreaming of a blue bird day on the North Fork of the Smith in whitewater heaven
with his happy family.
Take care, Shane
Take care, Shane
“There you were, Grandma, sitting in the sill outside your
house, open to the vast, starry night, to the sky of which you knew nothing and
through which you would never travel, to the silence of the fields and the
shadowy trees, and you said, with all the serenity of your ninety years and the
fire of an adolescence never lost: “The world is so beautiful, it makes me sad
to think I have to die.” In those
exact words. I was there.”
Saramago
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