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All things paddling

Pretty smart, although I remember a Tom Clancy novel where the metal cover of an outboard motor was picked up on radar of a similar Ukrainian vessel. Swing that oar!
 
If anyone is fascinated by long arduous trips, this series is worth watching. It's well shot and edited, and the participants are pretty likeable. I am trying to do more canoe trips, but something like this is inconceivable.

Watching another series with the main guy doing 30 days in Northern Quebec.

 
If anyone is fascinated by long arduous trips, this series is worth watching. It's well shot and edited, and the participants are pretty likeable. I am trying to do more canoe trips, but something like this is inconceivable.

Watching another series with the main guy doing 30 days in Northern Quebec.


Canada? This is from Ontario. Be prepared:

 
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Canada? This is from Ontario. Be prepared:



I did two nights in the Algonquin Park backcountry right before Labour Day. No issues with bugs. Two nights later I'm back in the city and get absolutely swarmed while pumping gas.

As an aside, found a great site this year. Had a beach with a fire pit. Full moon came up over the bay behind us after the sun set across the lake at the front. Nearest campsite to us was about half a mile. Just perfect.
 
Not paddling, but the long arduous description triggered something. I caught an NPR story a couple of weeks back about a female marathoner who ran the Appalachain Trail in forty days, end to end. Mind, blown. I can't imagine doing that.
 
As much rough terrain and uphill and downhill slopes as she had to traverse, 40 days just absolutely blows my mind. Roots, stumps, loose rocks, so many chances to twist or break an ankle covering that sort of ground so quickly. Amazing. No way I could cover 54 miles on foot in one day, let alone do it 40 times.
 
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