Archive | September, 2008

Women’s Team Sets Record in Outrigger Race

30 Sep

Team Bradley, winners of the Na Wahine O Ke Kai Canoe Race for the fourth straight year, established a new record with their victory last weekend in the 30th annual, all-women’s, open-ocean outrigger canoe race between the Hawaiian islands of Molokai and Oahu. The team crossed the 42-mile Kaiwi Channel which separates the two islands […]

Yukon 1,000 Race Opens Registration

26 Sep

Do you remember the Seinfeld episode where Kramer, learning that the New York City Marathon is a few days off, slaps himself on the forehead and says, “I keep forgetting to enter that!” Well, if you mean to enter the first annual Yukon 1,000 Canoe and Kayak race — at 1,000 miles, the world’s longest […]

What Reinforces Your Concrete Canoe?

24 Sep

If the winner of the Daytona 500 drives on Goodyear tires, you expect to hear about it. If Usain Bolt, the world’s fastest human, races to his gold medals in Puma shoes, you expect the folks at Puma will let you know about that, too. So is it all that surprising that the folks at Chomarat, a South […]

Good Paddling, Close to Home

22 Sep

In an age of four-dollar gasoline, finding exciting, inspiring places to paddle close to home is more important than ever. Greg Breining, writing for the Minneapolis Star Tribune, found that the St. Croix River, an hour-and-a-half from his home in the bustling Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area, offered the same wilderness values of farther-away, more remote […]

Historic Trek Commemorates Discovery of Howes Pass

18 Sep

Howes Pass may not be a familiar name to many, but its discovery 200 years ago by Canadian fur trader and explorer David Thompson was critical to the fur trade. Knowledge of the pass made it possible to paddle from the heart of Canada to the Pacific Ocean at a time when the fur trade […]

Canoeing.com Feature: The Decline of Northeastern Minnesota’s Moose

17 Sep

A Minnesota Conservation Volunteer article on the moose of northeastern Minnesota recently caught our eye. A DNR study has confirmed what, until now, had been rumor and speculation; the area’s moose herd is in decline. Of the study’s radio-collared moose, 21% perished. That’s nearly double the national average, and over half of them died from […]

A Journey on the Northern Forest Canoe Trail Shows Waterway is More than an Historical Route

15 Sep

We enjoyed Paul H. Heinz’s recent story in the Boston Globe about his canoe journey along the 740 mile Northern Forest Canoe Trail. Traveling from Old Forge, NY to Fort Kent, Maine, Heinz bills it as a paddle through time. Yet as we follow him through the communities that line the trail, his story quickly […]

Fire Restrictions Lifted in BWCAW Blowdown

11 Sep

Thanks to cooler temperatures, more precipitation and shorter days the Forest Service has lifted fire restrictions in the blowdown area of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Campers may now use campfires, charcoal, and wood-burning camp stoves, and the Border Route Trail system and the Kekekabic Trail have re-opened for public use. As always, the […]