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Part of the sport is finding good spots
BY JOE KAY | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The bright red paddlewheel smacks the Ohio River in a rolling cadence, = churning a path through the mud-hued water. Trailing the riverboat is a solitary = blue kayak, riding the waves. Steering with a double-ended paddle, a mustachioed man in a weathered = baseball cap dartKayakers stir up waterwayss through the froth. Passengers on the paddlewheeler are intrigued by this meeting of Mark Twain-era = transportation and jet-age recreation. "You can get on one of those big waves, and it is unbelievable in terms = of the thrill of the ride," said Brewster Rhoads, a political consultant who = kayaks the river most days. "You can just surf it like with a surfboard. My record = is 43 minutes on the same wave." There aren't many waves like it around these parts. Paddlers in the = Midwest have to be inventive to enjoy one of the country's fastest-growing = recreational activities. They are. Wherever there's water - pristine or polluted, in the heart of = a city or out in the hinterlands - there's likely to be a paddle stirring it. Annual surveys indicate that kayaking has doubled in popularity since = 1998. The Outdoor Industry Foundation, which encourages outdoor activities, = estimates that 12.6 million people got into a kayak last year. About 2 million of them = kayak regularly. Most kayakers live in the West and Northeast. Lately, more women have = been taking up the sport - a 5 percent increase in the latest survey. About 45 percent of kayakers are female. Although kayaking appeals to all age groups, it is particularly = attractive to those from 16 to 24. "The younger generation is looking for more risky-type sports, something = to test their limits more," said Kara Lorenz, a 21-year-old Northern Kentucky = University student who has two kayaks. "That's what attracts a lot of young people = to kayaking and snowboarding." In the Midwest, part of the fun is finding unusual places to test the = limits. Only a few strokes from downtown Cleveland, a guide directs five kayakers= clear of the barges and ore freighters in the working harbor on the Cuyahoga = River. Guide Mark Pecot explains the history of the six moving bridges and = riverside businesses they pass. The group also touches a sore spot in the city's history - the place = where industrial discharge on the river caught fire in 1969. "We're paddling through our industrial past," said Pecot, co-owner of 41 = North Coastal Kayak Adventures. This three-hour "Burning River Tour" is one of several river and Lake = Erie excursions offered by the organization, which provides kayak lessons as = well. The trips are popular - business has increased in each of 41 North's four= years. "People find it fascinating," said Pecot, who also teaches history at St.= Edward High School in nearby Lakewood. "When you're in a kayak surrounded by = huge industrial bridges that lift and lower and you get tugboats and barges = and the other traffic moving, it has a way of making you feel very small. It's an exciting feeling." Exciting may not be the best word for this tour. ENDANGERED TO SPORTING SPOT The 28-mile Mill Creek divides Cincinnati down the middle. An industrial = dumping spot for generations, it got so polluted that the conservation group = American Rivers designated it North America's most endangered urban river in 1997. Bruce Koehler knew all about its reputation. An environmental planner for= a regional council of governments, he sat through dozens of meetings about = the roiled creek and heard the horror stories. "I wanted to go down and see what we were talking about," Koehler said. In 1994, he first dipped a keel into the sewage and industrial waste. As = he paddled along, he saw a construction company bulldozing material into the= creek. An abandoned easy chair jutted from the middle of the channel. Since then, he has taken more than 300 people on the creek for a = firsthand look at work that needs to be done. He dubs this hardy group the "Mill Creek = Yacht Club." Paddlers receive a health warning and a liability disclaimer before = setting off. They try to avoid touching the water. Germicidal gel is available. "Thank goodness I have healthy immunities," Koehler, 55, said. "I think = going in the creek is like getting a flu shot. I get mild exposure to most every = germ known to man. So far, no one has claimed they got seriously ill from it." And, the paddlers are seeing noticeable improvement in the creek because = of the Clean Water Act. "The stream doesn't stink to high heaven or change colors like it did = when I was a kid," Koehler said. POPULARITY OF PADDLING The slender boats stand at attention in their piped-off rows, the taller = ones poking their curved snouts above the others. Blue. Yellow. Green. Red. = The polyethylene shells are dry and unblemished. =46or now. Kayaks are high-tech and can be high-priced. They're also feeding the = growth in the popularity of paddling. "They look very cool," said Bernie Farley, standing in the middle of his Whitewater Warehouse a few feet from the banks of the Mad River in = Dayton, Ohio. "On the recreational side, the boats are a lot less expensive. They're = more basic, and they stay pretty similar year after year. With the whitewater = boats - the more expensive boats - they're popping out a new design every year." =46arley, who has kayaked for 35 years, sees a growing interest in = playboats that allow riders to surf and do tricks, such as spins and cartwheels, in the = water. Communities are tapping into the growing interest. A Dayton park board is considering adding a whitewater course to the Great Miami River. In South Bend, Ind., the East Race Waterway has attracted more than = 200,000 kayakers and rafters since it opened in 1984. On a busy weekend, about = 500 paddlers from Indiana and nearby states will line up to challenge the = region's only whitewater course. "We're all kind of amazed when we see where the kayakers are from," said = Paul McMinn, assistant recreation director in South Bend. "For them, to drive = two or three hours is no big deal." Anything to catch a wave. 'IT'S A CALMING FORCE' Back on the Ohio River, Rhoads paddles up to a dock across from downtown Cincinnati. It's a sunny afternoon. A steady stream of traffic rumbles across a = nearby bridge that links Ohio and Kentucky. Sunlight glints off tinted office = windows looking down on the river. A 30-minute kayak trip has revitalized Rhoads. "Every day is different," he said, after changing back into a dress shirt= and pants for a business meeting. "The wind conditions. The water conditions.= The sun angles. When the sun is reflecting off the downtown skyscrapers, it's= just stunning. So impressive." He's not surprised to find more kayakers sharing the river these days. = The sport is growing, in part because it can be so captivating. "There's something about water," Rhoads said. "It's a calming force. It's= deep in my blood." Activity is gaining speed=20 The Outdoor Industry Foundation released annual surveys with information = about kayakers. The 2005 survey will be released to the public later this year.= The Outdoor Industry Foundation based its estimates from its 2005 survey on = the results of an annual telephone survey using scientific sampling. The = foundation interviewed 2,000 people older than 15 and gauged their participation in = 22 outdoor activities. An estimated 12.6 million people got into a kayak at least once last = year. About 2 million of them kayak regularly. Those figures represent an increase from the foundation's first survey. = In 1998, about 4.2 million people had kayaked, and about 400,000 did it regularly. Kayakers tend to be young. Roughly 31 percent are in the 16-to-24 age = group. About 20 percent are 25-to-34, 21 percent are 35-to-44 and 28 percent are= 45 or older. More women are kayaking these days. About 45 percent of the total were = female, a 5 percent increase from the foundation's 2004 survey. Kayakers tend to be affluent. Roughly 44 percent of them made at least = $80,000 per year, and 33 percent made from $41,000 to $79,000. More kayakers are found in the western and northeastern states than any = other regions of the country. --The Associated Press =20 What they're saying=20 Comments about the popularity and attraction of kayaking, one of the = country's fastest-growing outdoor activities: "Has it been a success and have we gotten more out of it than we ever = expected? You put all those things together, and it's more than we ever promised or expected. It's been a huge success." Paul McMinn, assistant recreation director in South Bend, Ind., on the = East Race Waterway park that has sparked an estimated $58 million in economic = development and attracted more than 200,000 kayakers and rafters since it opened in = 1984. "When I was a kid, it changed colors and stunk to high heaven. There's = still an odor of sewage now and then. A lot of times, it's in pretty good shape." Bruce Koehler, an environmental planner for a Cincinnati-area council of governments, on improvements he notices when leading tours of the = polluted Mill Creek.=20 "There's a growing number of people who see the Ohio (River) as a place = not to just avoid or turn their back on, but as a wonderful recreational = activity, especially for canoeing and kayaking. There's a growing number of people = who daily or three days a week put their boat in the river and paddle it." Brewster Rhoads, a Cincinnati-based political consultant who paddles the = river almost daily "You look at the gear they wear, you look at the kayaks, you look at the surroundings, and the whole thing is just a paradise, a wonderland. = That's what attracts people. I don't know anybody who doesn't like to be on the = water. These kayaks make it possible. The little shorties are 6 to 8 feet long and you= strap yourself in and you can roll over and play like a little otter. I think = they've done a good job pushing their equipment." Mike Fremont, an 84-year-old canoe racer from Cincinnati "It's our fourth season of business. Every year it's been moving up in = terms of people's interest and skill level. We introduce people to the sport, they= come back for training, take a class and go on a trip." Mark Pecot, co-owner of 41 North Coastal Kayak Adventures based in = Cleveland. "I like the fact that it also gives you a good workout. It's more fun = than going to a gym and being trapped indoors. On a beautiful day, I'd much rather = be out on the river kayaking." Kara Lorenz, a NKU student "I've been doing this for 35 years, and I am still learning.... I can = still go out there and learn something new tomorrow. That's what's so exciting = about kayaking." Bernie Farley, who runs a kayak business in Dayton, Ohio --The Associated Press=20 http://news.nky.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ar.../NEWS0103/606= 190328 |
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