Archive | June, 2009

Canoeing.com Celebrates Canoe Day

29 Jun

As we reported HERE, Canoeing.com celebrated National Canoe Day on Friday, June 26, with a paddle down the St. Croix River. Bright, sunny day with calm waters, a sand bar picnic and a swim in the river – not bad for a day’s work! Perhaps most surprising? Canoeing.com founder Tim Eaton actually duffed (evidence at […]

Happy Canoe Day!

26 Jun

It’s National Canoe Day in Canada today.  Although Canoeing.com is based in the United States, let’s just say, today, we’re all Canadians. (And, indeed, most of our office is out paddling today!) To help celebrate Canoe Day – for those of us not actually on the water, anyway — we offer today’s piece by Toronto Globe and Mail columnist Roy […]

Canoe Day: Geography Explains Canoe’s Endurance

24 Jun

As Canada anticipates its annual National Canoe Day on Friday, June 26, the London Free Press in Ontario finds that the importance of the canoe in aboriginal, historic, and present-day Canada owes much to the northern nation’s geography. In William Wolfe-Wylie’s story, HERE, Canadian Canoe Museum executive director James Raffan explains that in a country […]

Chief Wants Museum for “Grandfather Canoe”

22 Jun

Candance Paul, the chief of the Maliseet First Nation of New Brunswick, Canada, wants to build a museum and heritage center that will feature the “Grandfather Canoe,” built by Maliseet craftsmen 180 years ago. The canoe is thought to be the oldest birchbark canoe in existence.  CBC News published THIS story about this matter today. […]

Local Prisoners Paint Paddles for Trippers

18 Jun

We’ve written previously, HERE, about St. Cloud, Minnesota’s Les Voyageurs program which sends area high school students on paddling trips deep into the wilds of Ontario, Manitoba, and Nunavut. Recently, we noticed THIS story about how the program — in its 39th year — has gotten inmates at the nearby Minnesota Correctional Facility to paint artistic designs on some of […]

Not Just a Canoe Race, a Water Safari

17 Jun

We’ve been intrigued by the reports coming out of south Texas about the Texas Water Safari, billed “The World’s Toughest Canoe Race.” The race, which originated in 1963, runs 260 miles and is contested non-stop. A six-man team headed by Andrew Stephens and which included some “ringers” imported from Belize won the race down the San Marcos […]

University of California Cements Victory

15 Jun

The University of California – Berkeley won the American Society of Civil Engineers’ 22nd Annual National Concrete Canoe Championships last weekend in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The Cal Berkeley team, with its 20 foot-long, 230-pound boat dubbed Bear Area, topped Ecole de Technologie Superieure of Canada and Golden State rivals California Polytechnic – San Luis Obispo, which […]

“Fearful Fishing:” Angling for Muskie by Canoe

11 Jun

We enjoyed THIS Minneapolis Star Tribune story by outdoor writer Dennis Anderson about a pair of anglers who fished last weekend’s Minnesota muskellunge opener from an aluminum canoe. Heartier than their brethren in larger boats, Brian Gardner and Lori Schwartz admitted that seeking a 40+ inch muskie in a 16-foot boat can be “fearful,” however.