Showing posts with label Nathaniel Hawthorne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nathaniel Hawthorne. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2018

NOVEMBER SKIES


 

I cannot endure to waste anything so precious as autumnal sunshine by staying in the house. So I have spent almost all the daylight hours in the open air. --Nathaniel Hawthorne 


"We seldom think of November in terms of beauty or any other especially satisfying tribute," wrote American author and naturalist Hal Borland, "November is simply that interval between colorful and dark December."

Paddling in November is an anomaly for many. The cool temperatures just seem to out-weigh the beautiful fall colors and golden light from the autumn sun. In my recent trips to both the Lower American River and my neighborhood lake, Lake Natoma, the waterways have been virtually abandoned by the summertime crowds, leaving an empty view of the glistening water. The refreshing clear and crisp autumnal air and sky and uncrowded shores make me wonder why November paddling doesn't get its homage and due.

When I look back on my last paddling day. I did nothing special. There was no grand trip to a lake or river I had never paddled before. There wasn't a thrilling ride through rapids or ocean waves. Sorry folks, but to celebrate my own personal record of the most paddling days ever in a calendar year, like always, as of late, it was a simple trip to the lake. One hundred and thirty-five days of paddling was spent floating in the twilight listening to the sounds of city and nature intermingle along the sloughs and islands in Lake Natoma.
It's an accomplishment for me to get to 135 days of paddling in the calendar year. In the past, vying for 100 days took some serious effort. This year has been mostly confined to local waters. Lack of money but mostly time with a very active work schedule has kept me away from exotic trips to faraway rivers and lakes. But I'll keep dreaming.
I'm content to enjoy my time on the water when some are locking their kayaks away for the season and with almost two months remaining in the year, I'll keep chipping away at my own personal record.

Paddling Forward, The 2018 Mid-Term Election
While the results can’t be called an unqualified victory for environment and climate advocates gained crucial purchase to push for clean air and water. Voters passed or defeated 10 state ballot initiatives favoring the environment to curb greenhouse gas emissions (Washington), increase the use of renewable fuels and increase spending on land preservation (Georgia, California), protect wildlife habitats (Alaska), limit fracking (Colorado). Montana voters, however, shot down an initiative that would have helped regulate new rock mines.
Leaders from environmental groups said they're thrilled with the election's outcome and Democrats reclaiming the House of Representatives to rebuff President Trump's most egregious environmental policies.

“In the last two years, we’ve seen the most anti-environment president in history and most anti-environment Congress in history—and the voters said, ‘Enough,’” Gene Karpinksi, the president of the League of Conservation Voters told Sierra the national magazine of the Sierra Club, “The green firewall in the Senate is still intact. We have new leadership and a pro-environment majority in the House, and that’s a big step forward. As we’ve said, if we’re going to make progress in the short term, it’s going to come from the states. And we have many, many new governors and statehouses that are committed to fighting for clean energy and action on climate.”

In water-related initiatives, Alaska voters turned down a measure that would have forced the state’s Department of Fish and Game to hand out permits for projects and activities that might harm fish. In Florida, voters came out against offshore drilling and will put an end to oil and gas mining on lands under state waters. While in California, voters have rejected an initiative would have allocated close to $8 billion in funds for surface and groundwater storage, watershed protection (habitat restoration) and water infrastructure.

This past election brought out a lot of ugly rhetoric about persons of color and both immigrants and refugees, women, and the LGBT community. But as American Rivers President William Robert (Bob) Irvin wrote after the 2016 election, "Rivers don’t care where you came from or where you’re going, what you believe and what you don’t believe, who you love or who your parents were. At American Rivers, we respect the dignity of every human being who works for us, who works with us, and who we see on the river."


I Boated

And major kudos to Relise Design Company of Knoxville Tenn, for creating the I Boated, #GoBoatTN emblem during this year's election as a way to show off Tennessee boating pride. We should all exercise our civic duty and get out there and BOAT!

Want to see more photos? Follow me on Instagram
@nickayak
The official feed of Outside Adventure to the Max. Follow us on river trips along the American River and the lakes of the Sierra with Current Adventures as we count my paddling days of the year.

Friday, September 22, 2017

KAYAK SUMMER 2017

We do not want merely to see beauty... we want something else which can hardly be put into words- to be united with the beauty we see, to pass into it, to receive it into ourselves, to bathe in it, to become part of it. That is why we have peopled air and earth and water with gods and goddesses, and nymphs and elves. -- C. S. Lewis

Negro Bar boat ramp on Lake Natoma.
I have to admit it after four years in California it's hard for me to notice the change of the season. Other than football on TV, new skis arriving at Any Mountain and with my wife's allergies the change of the season goes by without attention.  So you can tell me summer on the calender and in some people's minds. The water is still warm but boat ramps and inputs are empty except for only a few. The sun is setting faster giving us even less time to get out.
Current Adventures Kid's Classes on Lake Natoma.

Summer has always started out with pretty high hopes for me. At its start, I think like most of us. I'm going to paddle more, camp more and take big fun trip
"Summer means promises fulfilled, objectives gained, hopes realized." wrote canoe guru Sigurd Olson more than 50 years ago,  "The surge of doing and achieving, of watching and enjoying is finally replaced by a sense of quiet and floating and a certain fullness and repletion, as though one cannot absorb any more."

Current Adentures RK1 Classes.
Those long summer days seemed to come to an end much quickly than before in out high paced world. In the end, I only accomplish half or even a quarter, of what I thought I would do and resign to the thought of maybe next summer.  Then substituted that with what Olson promised, that, --- a sense of quiet and floating and a certain fullness and repletion,--- while enjoying little adventures on my neighborhood lake and river.

Eppies Training Night.
I did work most of the summer for Current Adventures Kayak School & Trips as kayak guide and instructor took a few trips to some mountain lakes and got over hundred paddling days for the year. So I have plenty great memories of my time on the water. But I'm always a little resistant at first to the change of the season. I'm being greedy I know, but I just want more. The sun is setting earlier and earlier just as it did in the fall of 1842, when American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote,"I cannot endure to waste anything so precious as autumnal sunshine by staying in the house. So I have spent almost all the daylight hours in the open air."

Debbie on Lake Jenkinson.

So ready or not summer is over and fall is here.The start of this new season provides us an opportunity to renew and review. So find your cozy sweater, enjoy the bright colors of the leaves and embrace that nostalgic chill of the air.

"I begin to secretly long for the cooler days and deeper colours that the autumnal arrival hails. I hear the geese calling overhead as they begin their journeys southwards," wrote fellow kayaker Kate Hives in her blog "At home on the water, "Without wishing too hard for the rain and the cold of winter, I welcome the transition between them. I ready my being for a gentle slowing, while still staying focused on the task at hand and the vision that motivates it... It’s time to get out for sunset paddles and kick the leaves underfoot, finish that one last project and shine brightly before the simple stark renewal of winter is upon us."

The Tea House on Fannette Island
Here are a few of our favorite kayaking images from this past summer that will help us keep those memories burning brightly while heading into the days of fall.
Moonlit Paddles on Lake Natoma.
Current Adventures Kid's Class on the river.
Lake Natoma.
The Lower American River.
Loon Lake
Bayside Adventure Sports at San Juan Rapids.
Current Adventures 50+ class.
Lake Tahoe

Paddling Day 100 on Lower American River.