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Ben October 12th 03 06:52 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
After much debating, I've decided not to paddle tomorrow... A
two-and-a-half hour drive each way, with a forecasted high of about
12C (54F) and possible rain, with the river flowing at the very bottom
end of the guide book's "low" range. It's got me wondering... Do
most WW paddlers keep going till the ice forms, pack it in as soon as
the leaves turn, or what? I'd probably still go if it was closer,
but...

Ben

Larry Cable October 12th 03 02:21 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
In article ,
(Ben) writes:

After much debating, I've decided not to paddle tomorrow... A
two-and-a-half hour drive each way, with a forecasted high of about
12C (54F) and possible rain, with the river flowing at the very bottom
end of the guide book's "low" range. It's got me wondering... Do
most WW paddlers keep going till the ice forms, pack it in as soon as
the leaves turn, or what? I'd probably still go if it was closer,
but...

Ben


Well, in my old age I've gotten soft. I now only paddle in the winter if the
air temperature is going to stay above freezing. Fortunately, here in the
Southeast US,
that generally lets me paddle during most of the high water winter months. Last
year was an exception. Snow and Ice Storms kept me off the rivers almost all of
January and Febuary.

SYOTR
Larry C.

rick etter October 13th 03 12:17 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 

"Ben" wrote in message
m...
After much debating, I've decided not to paddle tomorrow... A
two-and-a-half hour drive each way, with a forecasted high of about
12C (54F) and possible rain, with the river flowing at the very bottom
end of the guide book's "low" range. It's got me wondering... Do
most WW paddlers keep going till the ice forms, pack it in as soon as
the leaves turn, or what? I'd probably still go if it was closer,
but...

Ben



Just returned from the Noire in Quebec last week.(this week would have been
great!) Snowed on us one night/day. Rained all the rest. The weather did
have us portaging/lining some of the rapids that we typically would have run
for a couple of reasons. One, the cold and wet air made drying out if you
dumped somewhat imperative. Plus, the water levels were very high. Much
higher even than when a couple of our members ran it on a spring trip. We
still ran WW, we just made sure it was within the capabilities of every
group member. We will do very late fall trips, where we have had to break
shore ice in the mornings, but we are primarily trippers, not WW fanatics,
so WW isn't really a necessity to us.



Mary Malmros October 13th 03 02:07 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 

Depends on the year. Used to be, I'd keep it going but just paddle
less frequently, but now I'm all about skiing once the season
starts (around mid-November).

--
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mary Malmros
Some days you're the windshield,
Other days you're the bug.

[email protected] October 13th 03 01:51 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
I'm also in the SE and am able to paddle through out the year. I draw
the line when the air temp drops below freezing though. I'm hoping to
get in alot of paddling this fall and winter since I haven't been able
to boat for two summers.

Richard, if you're reading this, it was nice to finally meet you in
real life.

debra

William R. Watt October 13th 03 02:22 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
people drive two-and-a-half hours for an afternoon of paddling? and here
I am wondering why gasloine is in short supply and prices are high. thanks
a lot.

when I moved to Ottawa I looked around to see what was available locally
in recreational persuits and chose from among them. fortunately we have
plenty of outdoor stuff here, paddling and skiing being two. but hey,
there's always cyling and backpacking and lots of other things. why drive
hundreds of miles for one afternoon of paddling? its just recreation.

I've paddled until mid December. There's always a gap between freeze up
and build up. You can't just stop paddling and start skiing unles you have
some sort of plastic pleasure dome. I mean real skiiing, not that downhill
only stuff on fake snow.
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network
homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm
warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned

Ben October 13th 03 09:23 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
Well, here's the thing: I live in Edmonton, and the closest
whitewater IS two-and-a-half hours away (Near Rocky Mountain House),
so long drives are part of any WW paddling we do around here. Usually
we try to make a weekend out of it, but one doesn't always feel like
dragging out the camping gear and giving up the whole weekend every
time they feel like paddling, ya know? As for it being "just
recreation"... Well, I think a lot of people would take exception to
your trivialization of recreation! For many of us, it's through
recreation that we achieve real spiritual fulfillment. Anyhows, be
very glad you live in Ottawa... And I'm not even going to start to
describe the seething envy I have for those paddlers who get to paddle
almost year-round!

Ben

(William R. Watt) wrote in message ...
people drive two-and-a-half hours for an afternoon of paddling? and here
I am wondering why gasloine is in short supply and prices are high. thanks
a lot.

when I moved to Ottawa I looked around to see what was available locally
in recreational persuits and chose from among them. fortunately we have
plenty of outdoor stuff here, paddling and skiing being two. but hey,
there's always cyling and backpacking and lots of other things. why drive
hundreds of miles for one afternoon of paddling? its just recreation.

I've paddled until mid December. There's always a gap between freeze up
and build up. You can't just stop paddling and start skiing unles you have
some sort of plastic pleasure dome. I mean real skiiing, not that downhill
only stuff on fake snow.


Dan Valleskey October 14th 03 05:01 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
On 13 Oct 2003 13:22:18 GMT, (William R.
Watt) wrote:

people drive two-and-a-half hours for an afternoon of paddling? and here
I am wondering why gasloine is in short supply and prices are high. thanks
a lot.


two and a half hours would be a treat. I used to try to keep within a
4:1 ratio; four hours driving time needed to get me an hour on the
water. I have not always done that well, sorry to say.

I live in Indiana, we have very little whitewater. I don't mind long
drives, and I am not bitching about the gas prices. In fact, I've
used the RV for most trips this past year. 10 MPG, but you always
have cold beer at the take out!

The quicker we use up the gasoline, the sooner I'll get back on my
bike. Until then, as long as the pols want me to have cheap gas, I
intend to burn all I want to burn.

-Dan V.

William R. Watt October 14th 03 07:52 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
Ben ) writes:

Well, I think a lot of people would take exception to
your trivialization of recreation!


only because its non-productive activity. feeds nobody. houses nobody.
adds nothing of practical use to the body of human knowledge. take away
whitewater paddling, and all non-transprotation paddling, and the world is
no worse off. reintroduce non-transportation paddling and the world is no
better off.

... For many of us, it's through
recreation that we achieve real spiritual fulfillment.


sorry, whitewater paddling is a testoterone thing, not a spiritual thing.
like sex and love. sex only feels like love. for a true spiritually
fullfilling recreational activity I recommend dog walking.

Anyhows, be
very glad you live in Ottawa... And I'm not even going to start to
describe the seething envy I have for those paddlers who get to paddle
almost year-round!


It is hard to be spiritual in the freezing dark while slogging through
knee deep snow. There's something that feels spiritual about sitting by a
warm fire.

I certainly envy Albertans who don't pay provincial tax on gasoline or much of
anything else.

--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network
homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm
warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned

Larry Cable October 15th 03 02:35 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
(William R. Watt)

typed in Message-ID:

Ben ) writes:

Well, I think a lot of people would take exception to
your trivialization of recreation!


only because its non-productive activity. feeds nobody. houses nobody.
adds nothing of practical use to the body of human knowledge. take


way
whitewater paddling, and all non-transprotation paddling, and the world is
no worse off. reintroduce non-transportation paddling and the world is no
better off.


Sorry, I'm productive some 60 hours or so a week, were I am housing people, so
I don't feel guilty about being non-productive
when I paddle. I'm being purposely non-productive. BTW, is there anything
particularly productive about building a wooden boat that some one is going to
recreate in?

sorry, whitewater paddling is a testoterone thing, not a spiritual thing.
like sex and love. sex only feels like love. for a true spiritually
fullfilling recreational activity I recommend dog walking.


You don't paddle whitewater, do you? Isn't that like being celibate and telling
me about sex? WW rivers take you to some of the last truly unspoiled places,
often within in a couple of hours of civilization. And Yes, I like the rush
that WW gives me too.
Don't buy your definition of spirituality, Ghandi.


SYOTR
Larry C.

Ben October 15th 03 04:56 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
Sorry, I'm productive some 60 hours or so a week, were I am housing people, so
I don't feel guilty about being non-productive
when I paddle. I'm being purposely non-productive.


Thanks for jumping in, Larry. I'm going to bow out of this on-line
squabble after this posting, but I did want to add one more thing:
Even IF the only activities worth putting any effort into should be
"productive" ones, what about the simple fact that people who
regularly get out and do things they enjoy are overall happier and,
therefore, more productive?

Ben

Michael Daly October 15th 03 05:15 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
On 15-Oct-2003, (Ben) wrote:

Even IF the only activities worth putting any effort into should be
"productive" ones, what about the simple fact that people who
regularly get out and do things they enjoy are overall happier and,
therefore, more productive?


Also healthier, which allows more productivity and less dependence
on health care systems.

All work and no play...

Mike

Charles Pezeshki October 15th 03 06:11 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
in article , Larry Cable at
ospam wrote on 10/14/03 6:35 PM:

way
whitewater paddling, and all non-transprotation paddling, and the world is
no worse off. reintroduce non-transportation paddling and the world is no
better off.


Sorry, I'm productive some 60 hours or so a week, were I am housing people, so
I don't feel guilty about being non-productive
when I paddle. I'm being purposely non-productive. BTW, is there anything
particularly productive about building a wooden boat that some one is going to
recreate in?


Hi Folks,

So by this definition, manufacture of liquor is productive, while actual
consumption is not? How does society have one without the other?

Hmmm... Troll, troll, troll...

Chuck
http://www.wildcountry.info


Mary Malmros October 16th 03 04:53 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
(William R. Watt) writes:

people drive two-and-a-half hours for an afternoon of paddling? and here
I am wondering why gasloine is in short supply and prices are
high.


Yes, it's all due to paddlers who make one weekly kayaking trip.
People who commute to work every day in SUVs have nothing to do with
it.

thanks
a lot.


You're quite welcome.

--
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mary Malmros

Some days you're the windshield,
Other days you're the bug.

Jim Michaud October 16th 03 05:06 PM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
In my case it's all play and no work. I'm retired. Oh yeh, I'm from New
England and I paddle all year unless the temperature drops down into the
teens.

Jim Michaud



"Michael Daly" wrote in message
able.rogers.com...
| On 15-Oct-2003, (Ben) wrote:
|
| Even IF the only activities worth putting any effort into should be
| "productive" ones, what about the simple fact that people who
| regularly get out and do things they enjoy are overall happier and,
| therefore, more productive?
|
| Also healthier, which allows more productivity and less dependence
| on health care systems.
|
| All work and no play...
|
| Mike



Wilko October 17th 03 12:45 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
(Ben) wrote:
It's got me wondering... Do
most WW paddlers keep going till the ice forms, pack it in as soon as
the leaves turn, or what? I'd probably still go if it was closer,
but...


Simple answer: temperature-wise, as long as the water is still moving,
you can find me on it, trying to paddle.

In practise, there are some limitations, one of them being a lack of
paddling buddies, or the amount of energy that it requires to get
paddling buddies to join me (I tend to prefer the company of others
when I'm paddling). Although sometimes my buddies don't like me to be
there with a camera when we paddle in the winter, just those wonderful
winter paddling pictures (if it doesn't snow too hard to take them :-)
) are sure worth it on their own, let alone seeing all of that live!
:-)

Some of my winter paddling pictures galleries:

http://wilko.webzone.ru/galler15.html

http://wilko.webzone.ru/galler16.html

http://wilko.webzone.ru/galler19.html

--
Wilko van den Bergh
Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe
Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.
http://wilko.webzone.ru/

Wilko October 17th 03 12:59 AM

How late into the fall do you paddle whitewater?
 
(William R. Watt) couldn't help himself and
spouted:

... For many of us, it's through
recreation that we achieve real spiritual fulfillment.


sorry, whitewater paddling is a testoterone thing, not a spiritual thing.
like sex and love. sex only feels like love. for a true spiritually
fullfilling recreational activity I recommend dog walking.


Wow, we have our own closed mind theorist here!

I hope you mind me saying so, but you sound a bit like the pope
talking about sex. Not very convincing...

As for (yet another of) your whitewater paddling assumptions: If
there's one thing I dislike, it's an adrenaline rush. I sure don't
paddle whitewater because of that, but because of things like
cameraderie, the feeling of being in touch with the river in so many
ways (definately spiritual as well), the feeling of concentrating so
hard on a line through a rapid and staying there exactly as I planned
it... There are many more reasons, but I doubt that you would be able
to comprehend those, seeing how much difficulty you already have
comprehending the basic reason why people enjoy white water paddling.

It is hard to be spiritual in the freezing dark while slogging through
knee deep snow. There's something that feels spiritual about sitting by a
warm fire.


Hmmm, you sure do not like to see outside of those blinders, do you
William? There is something very special about being out there in the
dark, and seeing the bright stars as well as all that snow everywhere,
that sure brings out something very spiritual inside me.

I certainly envy Albertans who don't pay provincial tax on gasoline or much of
anything else.


Coming from such a spiritual individual, I'm sure you can overcome the
envy of other people's monetary gains... :-)

--
Wilko van den Bergh

Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe
Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.
http://wilko.webzone.ru/


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