Posts Tagged ‘winter paddling’

Winter Paddling Wonderland

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

The crew at Columbia Bottoms deserves a big shout out for the fine work they did clearing the roadways of snow so that the few folks who braved the “snow day” could get to the river. Of course, I was the only one with the intention of actually getting on the river. The others seemed content to sit in their running cars, heaters blowing, radios blaring.

Using methods perfected by modern North Pole explorers, I turned the canoe into a sled and pulled it pulk style down the portage to the river. At the end of the trail, the opportunity to climb aboard and ride the canoe / sled down the bank was too much to resist. For just a moment I thought I would actually be launched into the river, but my thrilling ride fell 20 feet short of the open water. As four eagles alighted, I turned to admire the trail I carved, then shoved off into the unusually tranquil Old Man River. It resembled a white russian cocktail, ice bergs turning ever so slowly in circles at the edge of the channel, while slush and broken sheets moved downstream mid channel towards the Chain of Rocks.

Three very rotund beavers appeared as I paddled upstream along the Duck Island bank. Like Hollywood movie stars facing an unexpected paparazzi, the look they gave me said it all. “Are you kidding me? We’re dining. It’s private. Do you mind?” It wasn’t until I was well past them that they decided to break away from the dinner table, a selection of willow sticks strategically placed at the waters edge. They nonchalantly slipped into the frosty river. One tail slap from each, a good day salute or a middle finger protest, I’m not sure, then I was back to the paddle, watching the amazing sunset and the flocks of gulls and geese, so many that an air traffic controller would have been nervous about a potential mid air crash.

I approached the top end of Duck Island with relative ease. The river, slow and thick, moving just enough to prevent freezing in place. The eagle’s nest was empty. I wondered about the need for the eagle family, who’s year round residence it is, to remain on guard at all times, protecting their turf from the hundred or so eagles that are now in the area. As I began to ferry cross into the channel and the ice, I watched as the young one, the third year eaglet found his way home. He sat just off the nest, whistling. Replies from mom and dad or maybe the new neighbors began to ring loud and clear. The eagle’s call as a soundtrack…sweet. I floated back downstream, tea cup in one hand, paddle in the other pushing the icebergs away. Yes, indeed a happy hour of winter paddling!

100 Billion Plastic Bags!

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Not a day trip, overnight or expedition is concluded without some recognition that our waterways are the conduit for which an unbelievable amount of the “throw away society’s” discard travels, then collects itself. Winter paddling trips provide the most glaring view of this. This annual low water season combined with frozen banks and bottomlands enable us to get out and explore places that are normally mud sucking morasses. Thursday’s short journey to the bottom end of Maple Island provided just such an example. At three different locations along the three mile stretch, large rafts of driftwood, pushed above the bank during this past year’s flooding, resembled nothing less than a land fill. Above all, the plastic bottles, barrels and bags revealed an eyesore of epic proportions.

Jon Bowermaster, one of the world’s foremost explorers, recognized this same phenomenon recently in Antarctica, believe it or not, on an island where penguins, seals and birds are the only inhabitants. In a follow up post, he notes the shocking truth about plastic bags.

In the U.S. alone, more than 100 billion cheap plastic bags are distributed every year, bags which never really go away, many of which end up in our waterways. Less than one percent are recycled.

1 % of 100 billion annually! That means 99 billion bags are not being recycled. Outrageous! Jon then shares his personal resolution to “go cold turkey” on plastic as much as he possibly can, beginning with a commitment to carry his cloth shopping bags on all shopping trips. Certainly, this is something that we can all integrate into our own stewardship plan. Big Muddy Adventures certainly is, and moreover, we are taking this a step further by carrying and filling large trash bags (albeit plastic ones) with the plastic we find on all of our trips.

Maple Island and Pelicans

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Yesterday, we paddled from the Alton Dam-Maple Island access, where the free flowing Mississippi begins, to the Confluence Canoe and Kayak Access in the late afternoon. Truly Audubon’s delight! 50 + Amercian Bald Eagles, 25 Great Blue Herons, 2 flocks of twenty or so American White Pelicans, a few large flocks of Canadian Geese, a thousand or more sea gulls, and towboats making busy, busy, while we moved downstream into a magnificent sunset meets river horizon, all that and the remnants of the ice pack lingering about, making some of the route seem like we were paddling through a slushy.

The pelicans have been a pleasant surprise these past two weeks. I hadn’t seen them since the middle of the Fall. Their graceful glide in the air is one of my favorite bird flight sights. At the Maple Island channel entrance, we came upon a flock. They flew off in a ruckus. All but one, a poor pelecanus americanus whose right wing was damaged beyond repair. I watched with much sadness as this great bird flapped furiously. We slid silently by as he swam slowly in the eddy, warily watching us, a castaway, destined to remain there until its circle of life is complete.

Eagle Days

Saturday, January 17th, 2009


John Ruskey created “Wanbli on Branch” pastel in icy conditions on the 2002 Ruskey and Clark Expedition.

Around here at the Confluence, the winter paddling season provides unique opportunities to witness eagles. In fact, “Eagle Days” are celebrated all winter in the Upper Mississippi and Middle Mississippi River valley. Today, Trailnet is the lead organization for such an event at the Chain of Rocks Bridge. The “feels like” temperature is rising from the depths of double digit minus, that is from frozen to very cold. Ice bergs are predicted. And eagles to be sure. A good day for extraordinary river time.