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Wolfgang
March 27th, 2005, 04:56 AM
It's ten o'clock in the morning, the sun is shining and the temperature is
already at an astonishing 40 degrees! The van is overdue for an oil change,
last year's garden needs to be plowed under, the windows need
reglazing........and the kayaks are sitting in the garage. Hm.......what's
a boy to do? :(

Heh, heh, heh. :)

Hey, Becky, you've never done the river from the dam at Thiensville to Brown
Deer Road, right?

The river is awash with foam below the dam, making it look more malignant
than it ever really is. The effect is heightened by the eddies below a
couple of old snags and Becky's fear of water (no more unusual than a fear
of heights among rocks climbers......and she's been there too) but we press
on. Within seconds we are slowly drifting in the mild current and I suggest
that she back up a bit so that I can get a picture of her with the mouth of
Cedar Creek, spilling in from what looks like it could have been......should
have been.....an old mill as a backdrop.

We chat idly as we watch the odd buildings people have erected streamside
(what is it about rivers that unleashes so many architectural demons?)
slipping slowly into the past as they pass us by.

Ducks. Becky, like so many others, has never really paid much attention to
ducks. At one point, she confesses that she grew up thinking that a
"mallard" was the green headed duck.......it never occurred to her that the
drab colored ducks so often seen in their presence were of the same species.
Today, we saw woodies, hooded mergansers (Becky got them in the
binoculars.......amazing!), the ubiquitous mallards, and what may have
been.....probably were......green winged teal; a different mix (of course)
than I saw out on the big lake three weeks ago, but fun for this early in
the season and impressive for a neophyte. She got a good look at most of
them, as well as cedar waxwings, a cooper's hawk, a rough legged hawk, the
inevitable Canada geese, and a flicker through the binoculars.......which
were never passed back to me during the course of the float. That's
o.k........I've been there many times. We heard but never saw downy and
hairy woodpeckers, cardinals, robins, possibly a red headed woodpecker off
in the distance somewhere, chickadees, and a host of other LGBs. We saw but
never heard a number of gulls, doves, pigeons, blue winged olives and other
unidentified flying objects.

The highlight of the trip for Becky was the discovery (aided a bit by an
experienced observer) of a substantial number of bugs trying valiantly (if,
at least apparently, in vain) to get airborne off the surface of the
stream......no mean feat from all appearances. They were stoneflies. We
saw several dozen, all of them evidently in the same plight. All were
moving slowly across the surface, beating their wings frantically. It
looked like they were trying their damndest to get off the water and get
airborne. In fact, this may have been the case, but it is also at least
possible that they were trying to generate a little bit of heat which would
then allow them to do what it is that they do. Becky decided to rescue the
first one that got close enough. Approaching slowly and carefully from
upstream, she pulled up next to it and crowed delightedly when it scrambled
up the side of her kayak and sat there absorbing heat from the sun. A
minute or so later, she insisted that I perform the same service for
another. I got close enough to slip the blade of my paddle under this one
and then gently deposit it on the bow rope coiled on the forward deck of my
boat. Within a few minutes, both had flown off with Becky's cheers as
accompaniment. Ne'er were stoneflies.....or their spectators......so
blessed. Um......well, the waxwings got some of them. :)

A couple of side channels, overlooked on my only previous trip on this part
of the river, beckoned.......and I heeded the call. There are several small
seasonal feeders that enter the river in this area and, what with the
mystery and the opportunity to do a bit of icebreaking, I couldn't resist.
Becky, being less experienced (as well as considerably more sensible)
declined my invitations to scoot on up there and see what's to be seen.
Turns out it wasn't much.......just culverts passing under the nearest road,
no more than a couple hundred yards from the main current. Still, it was
fun to get out of the mainstream for a bit.

The rest of the two hour trip was a uneventful as that already described.
What a wonderful day!

Wolfgang

Bob Patton
March 27th, 2005, 05:19 AM
"Wolfgang" > wrote in message
...
> It's ten o'clock in the morning, the sun is shining and the temperature is
> already at an astonishing 40 degrees! The van is overdue for an oil
> change, last year's garden needs to be plowed under, the windows need
> reglazing........and the kayaks are sitting in the garage.
> Hm.......what's a boy to do? :(
>
> Heh, heh, heh. :)
>
//snip//

Great report - sounds like a marvelous day. Good for you!
Bob

DaveMohnsen
March 27th, 2005, 01:54 PM
"Wolfgang" > wrote in message
...
> It's ten o'clock in the morning, the sun is shining and the temperature is
> already at an astonishing 40 degrees! The van is overdue for an oil
change,
> last year's garden needs to be plowed under, the windows need
> reglazing........and the kayaks are sitting in the garage.
Hm.......what's
> a boy to do? :(
(snip)
> Wolfgang
>

Nice day! Thanks for getting me out of the house.
BestWishes,
DaveMohnsen
Denver

Mike Connor
March 27th, 2005, 02:08 PM
"Wolfgang" > wrote in message
...
> It's ten o'clock in the morning, the sun is shining and the temperature is

Very nice. Nothing quite like such an uneventful day! :)

TL
MC

Frank Reid
March 27th, 2005, 02:53 PM
> The rest of the two hour trip was a uneventful as that already described.
> What a wonderful day!

Thanks Wolfy. I'm a bit under the weather right now, but I knew someone
here would get me a virtual trip outdoors. Again, thanks for sharing not
only with Becky, but with the rest of us.

--
Frank Reid
Reverse email to reply

Tim J.
March 27th, 2005, 03:03 PM
Wolfgang wrote:
> It's ten o'clock in the morning, the sun is shining and the
> temperature is already at an astonishing 40 degrees! The van is
> overdue for an oil change, last year's garden needs to be plowed
> under, the windows need reglazing........and the kayaks are sitting
> in the garage. Hm.......what's a boy to do? :(
>
> Heh, heh, heh. :)
>
> Hey, Becky, you've never done the river from the dam at Thiensville
> to Brown Deer Road, right?

Nice TR, and it sounds like a great day. Being on the water gives
another perpective to otherwise mundane things, although I've found
nothing about stream-life mundane.

As an aside, Happy Easter to all my roffian friends. The garlic-laden
lamb roasts are just heading for the oven, the table is set in typical
Easter fashion, and all the family we have nearby is coming over later
today. My low-carb diet is a distant memory until tomorrow. :) I'm
heading out soon with camera in hand - no rods or reels - to inspect my
local fishing places. If any of the scenes are worthy, I'll share.
--
TL,
Tim
---------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/

Jeff Miller
March 27th, 2005, 03:17 PM
Wolfgang wrote:
> Still, it was
> fun to get out of the mainstream for a bit.
>
>
> What a wonderful day!
>

indeed! thanks...

jeff

Wayne Harrison
March 27th, 2005, 05:06 PM
"Wolfgang" > wrote

> What a wonderful day!

you betcha. thanks.

btw: last weekend, ms. speight and i made our maiden (loosely speaking)
voyage in my new mad river adventurer. just flat water at my cousin darius'
small lake, but fun just the same. i had forgotten how cool moving through
water in a canoe can be. the hardest part was getting in and out of the
damn thing.

next time, the mighty yadkin river.

yfitons
wayno

Stan Gula
March 27th, 2005, 05:09 PM
Wayne Harrison wrote:
> <snip> i had forgotten
> how cool moving through water in a canoe can be. the hardest part
> was getting in and out of the damn thing.

Try putting the canoe in parallel to the shore. Lean a bit to the water
side and you should float free pretty easily. Reverse this to land...
--
Stan Gula
http://gula.org/roffswaps

Larry L
March 27th, 2005, 06:52 PM
"Wolfgang" > wrote

> What a wonderful day!
>


Thank you, I enjoyed your day

Russell D.
March 27th, 2005, 08:36 PM
Tim J. wrote:

>
> As an aside, Happy Easter to all my roffian friends.

And to you and yours, Tim.

My kids are still young enough to enjoy the hunt for the Easter eggs my
wife and daughter painted yesterday. Lucky for me. I enjoy it, too. We
will have a house full of family and friends this evening. Lots, of good
food and company.


Happy Easter,

Russell

Sitting at 53 degrees and sunny--but snow forecasted for the coming
week. Oh, well, we still need the water.

Cyli
March 28th, 2005, 01:22 AM
On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 16:06:06 GMT, "Wayne Harrison"
> wrote:



> the hardest part was getting in and out of the
>damn thing.

Step as far over to the other side as your foot / leg will reach.
Seems it'd make it tip, but most of your weight will still be on the
side you're entering from. Far side balances the weight better.

Cyli
r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels.
Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless.

http://www.visi.com/~cyli
email: (strip the .invalid to email)

Cyli
March 28th, 2005, 01:23 AM
On Sat, 26 Mar 2005 21:56:51 -0600, "Wolfgang" >
wrote:

Nice trip report. Glad someone's getting out on the water. My water
is still pretty solid around here.

Cyli
r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels.
Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless.

http://www.visi.com/~cyli
email: (strip the .invalid to email)

riverman
March 29th, 2005, 01:14 PM
"Cyli" > wrote in message
...
> On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 16:06:06 GMT, "Wayne Harrison"
> > wrote:
>
>
>
>> the hardest part was getting in and out of the
>>damn thing.
>
> Step as far over to the other side as your foot / leg will reach.
> Seems it'd make it tip, but most of your weight will still be on the
> side you're entering from. Far side balances the weight better.
>


Hmm, beg to differ. Smoothly step into the absolute center, and imagine that
you are stepping onto a waxed, slippery floor with your socks on....no
sideways motion, and do not hesitate as you are getting 'in'.

Most folks step to the near side, the boat tips a bit, they grab the gunnel
and crouch down, the boat tips more, they grab the far side and drop to
their haunches, the boat tips back the other way, then rocks back and
forward until they stop rocking it, and they blame the boat for being tippy.

--riverman

Cyli
March 30th, 2005, 08:09 AM
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 07:14:56 -0500, "riverman" >
wrote:

>
>"Cyli" > wrote in message
...
>> On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 16:06:06 GMT, "Wayne Harrison"
>> > wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> the hardest part was getting in and out of the
>>>damn thing.
>>
>> Step as far over to the other side as your foot / leg will reach.
>> Seems it'd make it tip, but most of your weight will still be on the
>> side you're entering from. Far side balances the weight better.
>>
>
>
>Hmm, beg to differ. Smoothly step into the absolute center, and imagine that
>you are stepping onto a waxed, slippery floor with your socks on....no
>sideways motion, and do not hesitate as you are getting 'in'.


I have short legs and most of the newbbies I canoe with _will not_
step even to the center unless they're told (ordered) to step all the
way across.

I learned water in a rowboat, which may have a different point of
balance? But urging people to step all the way across in a canoe
helps a lot for most of them. I tend to stand in the water and hold
the canoe as steady as I can for them. Of course once they're in and
settled, it's much more balanced when I get in.

You don't want to start a newbbie out in anything but a nice shallow
beach anyway. Frequently best if they never try a steep landing from
deep water.

Cyli
r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels.
Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless.

http://www.visi.com/~cyli
email: (strip the .invalid to email)

Herman Nijland
April 7th, 2005, 09:55 AM
riverman wrote:
> Hmm, beg to differ. Smoothly step into the absolute center, and imagine that
> you are stepping onto a waxed, slippery floor with your socks on....no
> sideways motion, and do not hesitate as you are getting 'in'.
>
> Most folks step to the near side, the boat tips a bit, they grab the gunnel
> and crouch down, the boat tips more, they grab the far side and drop to
> their haunches, the boat tips back the other way, then rocks back and
> forward until they stop rocking it, and they blame the boat for being tippy.
>
> --riverman

Because they *are* tippy. I am capable of tipping any canoe, no matter
how stable the bloody things are supposed to be. How people can even
fish from them is beyond me, but whatever rocks your boat :-).

--
Herman, landbased fisherman

Charlie Choc
April 7th, 2005, 01:14 PM
On Thu, 07 Apr 2005 10:55:24 +0200, Herman Nijland > wrote:

>riverman wrote:
>> Hmm, beg to differ. Smoothly step into the absolute center, and imagine that
>> you are stepping onto a waxed, slippery floor with your socks on....no
>> sideways motion, and do not hesitate as you are getting 'in'.
>>
>> Most folks step to the near side, the boat tips a bit, they grab the gunnel
>> and crouch down, the boat tips more, they grab the far side and drop to
>> their haunches, the boat tips back the other way, then rocks back and
>> forward until they stop rocking it, and they blame the boat for being tippy.
>>
>> --riverman
>
>Because they *are* tippy. I am capable of tipping any canoe, no matter
>how stable the bloody things are supposed to be. How people can even
>fish from them is beyond me, but whatever rocks your boat :-).

Try a SOT kayak Herman. Very stable and, contrary to what *some* say, you can
cast from them just fine. <g>
--
Charlie...
http://www.chocphoto.com/ - photo galleries
http://www.chocphoto.com/roff