Monday, August 1, 2011

Blessings abound

Great news to share this Monday morning, thanks to the gifted and energetic young people in my life. The silent auction finished up around noon on Saturday, bringing in a whopping total of $700. The top bids were $100 each for Jane Tedrow's colorful batik quilt and $100 for a night's stay and gourmet breakfast at the Inn at Round Pond. Thanks continue to go out...to Skidompha Library and its giving staff for hosting the auction, to Megan for her leadership, and to all the willing donors and bidders.


Last night during the concert intermission, Kathy Malatesta surprised me with a very special and meaningful gift...a quilted wall hanging of the Paddle for Hope logo, which I plan to display with some of my favorite photographs from this summer.  I don't know when I have gotten so excited over a surprise...surely a gift that I will treasure for many years.



Last evening's concert was fabulous, featuring a broad mix of classical and original compositions, on the organ, piano, and marimba, as well as much entertainment from Timm Gormley and Mitch Boucher in introducing their selections.  It turns out that Mitch is the son of friend Deb Boucher, who has worked with the Sunday School at the Edgecomb Church...a fun connection.  My concert favorites were both composed by our musicians: Spring Meditation by Timm and Ocean Prelude by Mitch.  As I sat listening, my mind filled with memories from the trip...fog rising in the early morning, the deep green vividness of the firs against a pure blue sky, a snowshoe hare reaching up to nibble some leaves, totally relaxed in our presence.  An evening of joy and especially so when we added up the donations and realized that we were 559 dollars closer to our goal. Bill Bausch has shared some photos, as my camera has still not recovered from its swim in Chase Rapids on the Allagash.

Honored to be with two very generous friends, Timm Gormley on the left and Mitch Boucher on the right.  This concert was their idea, a surprise for me when I arrived home, and yet another example of trail magic, as Appalachian Trail hikers have named all of the unsolicited help that kindly people provide along the trail.

Timm in action on the marimba, which we learned has been played for thousands of years, often for background music in religious settings.  Among other offerings, Timm played a violin sonata for us on this instrument that shares the same overtones as the violin, viola, and cello. 
 
 

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Big fundraising weekend

Tomorrow evening, July 31, Timm Gormley (left) and Mitch Boucher (right) are giving an evening of their time and considerable musical talent to Paddle for Hope.  Their benefit concert will be held at our church, Second Congregational UCC in Newcastle, beginning at 7 p.m.  Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and admission is by donation; checks should be made out directly to "MCCP" with "Paddle for Hope" in the memo line.

Timm has been a friend for a long time...you have seen him here in the blog as the artist for the PFH logo and also as the author of the note I found in the Hurricane Island journal on Flagstaff Lake.  Mitch is the latest in a large group of people who I have met through this effort and who have given generously of themselves to help children with cancer.

Here's some more information on what is in store tomorrow evening (from Mal Gormley's press release).  The concert will feature music from all periods, as well as original compositions for xylophone, piano, and organ.  Timm Gormley of Damariscotta has played the marimba/xylophone since his early childhood.  He has received musical recognition at regional and state honors festivals and currently studies with Portland composer/teacher Brad Ciechomski.  Mitch Boucher of Edgecomb is newer to the musical scene, learning to play the organ and piano in just the last few years, largely on his own.  Now a student of noted pianist Sean Flemming, Mitch brings an insatiable passion and talent for his musical performances.

Megan's silent auction at Skidompha Library is in its final hours and the bidding on many of the items has been spirited.  When the library closes today at 1 p.m., we will tally up the results and start calling the lucky winners.  A special thanks to Jane Tedrow, who donated a very colorful batik quilt just prior to the auction start...the highest bid on the quilt was $100 when I visited the library yesterday.  The night at the Inn at Round Pond was also at $100, another very generous gift.  Well, off to Saturday errands... 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Safely home

Home now for a day or two and busy with the many details that were put on hold during the journey, among them finding a new vehicle to drive and catching up on all the work responsibilities.  Thought I'd quickly share a few more favorite photos from among those that have been uploaded so far.  My camera (which took all of these) met a tragic end in Chase Rapids on the Allagash.  And it wasn't in MY pocket at that moment!  
 
Early morning merganser with large family of little ones

Our fundraising thermometer stands at $7,850 currently, and I have some contributions here and around town that I will be gathering up and sending in tomorrow.  Exciting news also that there are three more fundraisers to support Paddle for Hope, thanks to the Bremen Union Church and the amazing young people in my life.  My daughter Megan will be holding a silent auction at the Skidompha Library July 26-30, with lots to bid on (dining out, electric trimmer, mini golf, lodging, and much, much more).


Grasses on Umbazooksus Stream

My aunt, Sue Sefcik, celebrates the successful crossing of Moosehead Lake on a windy morning


The Bremen Union Church had a nice surprise for me when I got back to my computer and their weekly news.  They have been holding a bottle drive on our behalf, which is ongoing.   Returnable bottles and cans may be dropped off in a big barrel at the church.  (And I'm excited to see you all tonight at Bible study!!)
Dad and Taylor with the locomotives at the Eagle Lake tramway


Bumble bee on lupine
Here is a link to this week's Lincoln County News article, which we wrote in the truck on the way home Tuesday.  Thanks to LCN for extending their deadline for our late-breaking story.  The article has a photo of me at the kiosk marking the eastern end of the NFCT, a moment that was certainly full of gratitude and accomplishment.


The final(?) fundraiser will be an organ, piano, and marimba concert at our church, Second Congregational UCC in Newcastle, on Sunday, July 31 at 7 p.m.  This musical evening will feature Timm Gormley and Mitch Boucher, both talented young musicians and students at Lincoln Academy.  (Timm is a good friend and did the artwork for my logo.)  There is a heart-warming, overwhelming feeling to think of how many, many people have helped with Paddle for Hope, probably almost everyone I know and quite a few that I didn't know! 

And, speaking of meeting new people, we arrived in Fort Kent at the Northern Door Inn to find that Team Moxie had finished the entire NFCT on the same day as I did.  Check out their blog, Moxie's Great Adventures, to read more - http://moxiesgreatadventures.blogspot.com/.  We spent a long time on Tuesday morning sharing stories and I even had my picture taken holding Moxie (their 4-pound Yorkshire Terrier and the first dog to complete the entire NFCT).  Those pictures are not available yet, but look for them sometime soon.  Justine and Tom had seen the note I left for them in the Hurricane Island journal on Flagstaff Lake and we had such fun meeting in person.  Well, off to another busy day, but more soon.


Rounded a curve on the Moose River coming into Long Pond, to see this darling baby with its mother


Saturday, July 16, 2011

The end is in sight

This is an update from me myself...first chance on a computer in 28 days.  Thanks to the amazing hospitality of Sue and Wade at Two Rivers Lunch in Allagash, where we are renting a cabin for the night, I have some time on a laptop.  Also, a shower, and a bed, and a kitchen to cook in, with running water and a stove...I could go on and on.  Enough to say that for now we are safely here, after many adventures and much beauty and we will be home on Tuesday, July 19.  Thanks go out to all who have been working to support Paddle for Hope and to all of the new friends I have made all across Maine.  Look for much, much more as I start writing in earnest in the days ahead, as well as sharing some of my favorite photos.  From the banks of the Allagash,  Laurie.  (Just have to add that I walked back to the cabin and Sue had delivered some warm brownies to our cabin.  People have been so friendly!)

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Wilderness beauty and companionship – Spencer Lake Dam to Jackman

My adventures on the Dead River have taken some of my confidence, for better or worse, and I have decided to alter my route… same mileage, but going around the upstream section. Rode to the top of Fish Pond to camp at the wonderful campsites there. I would have felt better if I had a reservation, although it was deserted.

                The following 17 – mile day took me down to the Spencer Lake dam and back, after sharing my breakfast time with a moose, the second of my trip. This dam has been rebuilt and is 20 feet high, requiring a scramble of a portage over high granite rock. These lakes are pristine and the epitome of Maine wilderness. The last few miles were a portage out of the Fish Pond campsites, across the Fish Pond bridge, and just past the POW campsite, which was full! Hid my boat well (wonder why?) and camped on a lovely woods road.

                There followed two fun days with a good balance of weather, adventure, food, and even a very satisfying shower. Portaged to Spencer Rips fairly easily, met my daughter Megan, who brought some wonderful stir fry, and tales of life in the real world. We camped at my favorite, Attean Falls, and completed the rest of the trip to the Jackman bridge without incident, leaving Megan at Attean landing. Our time together was all I wished for: great video of her running Attean Falls, a moose that she spotted, and no rain (no sun either!) And here I am camped at Moose River Campground about to venture in solitude again.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Danger and discoveries – Rangeley to Grand Falls


                As you will read, many of my camping nights have not found me exactly where planned. The Rangeley Logging Museum made for an easy start to Section 9, packing up nice and dry under the pavilion before an early-morning rolling portage to the Dead River. My wheels have performed superbly. The frame still looks new. It has solid tires, and the thin traffic often allows me to roll on the road for good stretches.
                The Dead River… what a challenge, made more uncomfortable by much rain. As you start, the river is calm. Saw a spotted fawn and spared some time for fishing – trout after trout on a grey Rooster Tail. There the easy ended. From a mile past Dallas Bridge, to about 3 or 4 miles before Kennebago Road Bridge, there were lots of shallow spots, some areas of strong current, and a number of rapids, which my boat handled fairly well. (On the Fansanger Falls portage, the beginning of Quill Brook Rd. was 0.4 to 0.5 miles along on Rt. 16, but there was no road sign.)

                Back on the river and about 5 miles before the Kennebago Bridge, after the rapids were behind me, I had begun to relax after so many times in and out of the boat. Rounding a curve to the left,  a wide sand bar, the current carried me into a large dead tree. Although I was safe, my boat flipped and was pinned under water and upside down against the tree. The afternoon was growing late and I had been trying to reach the bridge. Now I knew I would be grateful just to free the boat without having to use 911 on my Spot. I tried sawing on one of the branches, I pulled, I strained, and I certainly prayed one of the more desperate prayers of my life. Trying another angle, I heaved straight up into the force of the current and it began to give…. inch by inch until it was free.
                Taking stock, I was cold and numb and had lost my GPS (tied to the boat), Tevas, a water bottle, a sock and the foam in the bow of the boat had been torn loose. I camped right there on the sand, finally getting warm in my sleeping bag. The next morning, sore and battered, I finished that section, and began portaging to Stratton to avoid the rapids below.
                Mom and Dad were headed home that morning and I sent them a “help” message. They caught up with me halfway to Stratton. Leaving my boat for a couple of hours, we rode to the White Wolf Inn for lunch and to reserve me a room. Their helpfulness and hospitality abounded, especially after we found that the boat was GONE when my parents brought me back to where we had left it! After a 911 call, deputy report, and facing the fact that my trip was most likely through, the news came that two “helpful” fishermen had picked it up and called a game warden. After all that excitement,  my shower, dinner, bed, and sleeping-in in the morning were life savers. I will be eternally grateful to my parents for all of their help… Dad even loaned me his GPS.

                Well, this was supposed to be the short version of events, so here are the highlights of the rest of Section 9 to Grand Falls. Flagstaff Lake could be reached by a small stream behind the inn. My day and a half on the lake saw a return of the sun, a surprise message for me in the Hurricane Island journal (where I camped), watery foundations, and friendly couple, Carly and Charlene, who were staying at the Flagstaff hut.
                The takeout for the Long Falls portage (short carry, then good road) is very close to the dam, not the path you see first on the left. Put back in at Big Eddy campsite. Dead River is wide and calm after the tumult of Long Falls – heron, mergansers and a family of river otter squawking and popping up and down to look at me. Muscle spasms in my back were very painful by the time I camped at Philbrick Landing. The mosquitoes and black flies for the next several days were terrible!

                The beginning of the Grand Falls high water portage is before the island. The first 0.3 to 0.4 miles is a carry, which my tired body took slowly. After that, there are yellow signs on every road! The correct route is: trail, then left on a dirt road which is marked with a portage sign, right at first intersection in spite of signs, and continue to the river. Grand Falls was impressive; then came lunch, a swim and a relaxed wait at Spencer Stream parking lot for my loyal support team.

Monday, June 27, 2011

All that I dreamed it would be...

The Rangeley section (Map 8) of the NFCT certainly lived up to my expectations... 46 1/2 miles - 41 by water and 5 1/2 by land. For now, here are just a few highlights. More later, as I plan to post a daily journal when I get home. I started on the Magalloway River at the Umbagog Wildlife Refuge Headquarters. Crossing Umbagog Lake in a strong NW wind, my boat handled well, sliding over the waves and getting me to Cedar Stump, where I camped at the bottom of the Rapid River. It was rapid, with some serious rapids! I, however, was portaging upstream. My cart worked fine, with all but the first 1/2 mile wheelable. I had so been looking forward to Forest Lodge and arrived just in time for a wonderful home-cooked breakfast. Chuck Ward was fly-fishing there and gave me my first on-the-water donation.

The Richardson Lakes are connected by the Narrows, where I saw the first moose of the trip (a young one), and camped the second night. Then it was on to Mooselookmeguntic, where I enjoyed the hospitality of Paul and Janie Hartman, son Jeff and grandson Joshua, who rode in the the kayak on the Oquossic portage. Boy, did I love their hot outdoor shower with a view of the lake. Paul Hartman kept me company the next day all the way to Rangeley State Park, where Mom and Dad were waiting with the first resupply. Crossing the rest of Rangeley Lake was a combination challenge and a breeze. The weather, after several days of gorgeous sun, turned rainy the night before, but I made it into Rangeley and the end of Section 8, feeling blessed by the weather and good friends along the way.

Friday, June 17, 2011

The wilderness is calling

Planning, purchasing, and packing continue to fill my days.  Although my goal was to travel light (within the bounds of safety), it is hard to keep the pile from growing.  One fun purchase yesterday was a 4-piece pack spinning rod, which will fit easily in the boat.  I have gone back and forth about bringing fishing gear, but now the decision is made.  I'll add my license, of course, and a variety of lures, my favorite for trout being Rooster Tails.  To be honest, though, virtually all of my fishing success in Maine over the years has been with bass, rather than trout, which have rather eluded me.  Dad is bringing a pack fly rod on the Allagash and St. John.
Another publication, The Free Press in Rockland, this week published both our initial press release and an insert about the dog biscuit baking (see link below). http://www.freepressonline.com/main.asp?Search=1&ArticleID=13156&SectionID=57&SubSectionID=84&S=1

Halfway to the fundraising goal!!!  Our thermometer stands at $5,320, as of Wednesday's update, but the generous outpouring of support continues.  I am awed, humbled, inspired...and very ready to hit the water and get going.  Did I ever mention that the business cards arrived weeks ago?  Nice color combination, very professional looking, and I will no doubt leave a trail of them across the state in the coming weeks.  More news and pictures soon...

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

The best part of waking up...

Wow...long time, no blog post!  However, my trip planning is now at the do or die stage, both in the final organizing of gear and food and the challenging task of getting the rest of my life at a good stopping place to leave for a month.  These last few days have been a flurry of activity, including an amazing youth-led worship service to conclude our church school year.  I have also been dealing with a pulled muscle/muscle spasm in my shoulder and back, which just simply must go away soon.  Aleve seems to be helping, luckily.

Another highlight of the weekend was selling our dog biscuits in downtown Damariscotta.  Pam Gormley and the staff at Skidompha Library graciously allowed us to set up out front and even publicized the event in their weekly news bulletin.  Sales were steady throughout the morning...we brought home $118 and had much fun meeting both pirates and puppies.  The annual Pirate Rendezvous brings many visitors to our community to see pirates take over our town for a day, all for the great cause of raising money for Family Holiday Wishes.  The smiling pirate on the left is our school nurse, Sunny Kirkham.  Her costume and her ability to "talk pirate" were impressive.  The rest of our scrumptious Cheesy Bones and peanut butter treats will go on sale at school today.  Special thanks to Taylor Briggs, Heather Greene, and my mom, Joan Apgar, for baking with us and to Deb Walder and Rob Trial for helping on Saturday.  I have the best friends!


The food for the trip is just about ready, bagged and boxed by section.  My blog title today is a tribute to Folgers individual coffee bags, which made delicious coffee when I tried them this week.  What an easy way to have freshly brewed coffee.  Becoming familiar with my new gadgets is also an ongoing process.  SPOT is now set up to send an email to all and a text message to some of my SPOT Team members, when an updated location is transmitted.  Dad is programming some of the tricky and/or critical waypoints into the GPS and I have been practicing with some of the features on my camera, such as the self-timer and the macro feature.  It is always a shame to have a piece of equipment that can do many things, and you only understand how to do a few. 

The webpage thermometer stands at $4,205 and, with the contributions steadily arriving, we will officially hit the halfway point this week.  I will leave you with two pictures from my most recent paddle, which unfortunately was the only one over the weekend.  I am discovering that preparing for a long journey does not leave much time for short ones.  This is egg-laying season for Maine's turtles.  Here are a snapping turtle heading across the road from the cemetery into my woods and an Eastern painted turtle, at the edge of Webber Pond, both photographed on Friday.



Thursday, June 9, 2011

Visit us at the Skidompha Library Saturday

This will be a quick one.  Look for our article in the Lincoln County News today, with Logan Kaler and our homemade dog biscuits.  Our GSB students have been busy baking homemade dog biscuits in two flavors, cheese and peanut butter, to benefit the Maine Children's Cancer Program and add to the Paddle for Hope thermometer, which stands at $3,755.  We are working hard to reach our halfway point for next week's news article.  That would be $5,000, thanks to the amazing generosity and hard work of many.  These delicious treats (already sampled and proclaimed excellent by some of our kids) will be available for sale inside the Skidompha Library in the weeks ahead.  And...this Saturday, June 11...you can be among the first to purchase some, from the bakers themselves, at our table outside Skidompha from 10 am to 1 pm.  See you there!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Paddling Monday in the evening sun

The sun bathed the water with a golden glow, an osprey twice broke from the shore to flap strongly away, and the impossibly deep croak of a bullfrog provided the background noise.  Putting energy into the paddle, my kayak traveled smoothly down the center of the pond, far from the bugs.  At the south end, I slowed and turned, exploring my way back along the eastern shore.  Not a sign of the beavers tonight...they must prefer the fog.  A patch of bunchberry caught my eye.  These tiny members of the dogwood family have always appealed to me.  Well, there is much to learn about this diminutive plant, which was widely used by native tribes, including the Abnaki, for food and medicinal purposes.  The bright red berries, which appear later in the summer, can be eaten raw or made into jelly.  As with the flowering dogwood tree that I so love in Virginia, what we think of as the "flower" is actually four large white bracts or modified leaves that surround a cluster of the tiny true flowers.  In bunchberry, those small flowers have developed a powerful method of pollination.  Each has four petals that begin life tightly closed.  When triggered by wind or the touch of an insect, the petals explode open, shooting pollen into the wind or showering the insect.  Look closely at my photo.  The flowers with the black dots have already opened; the white ones are still tightly shut, biding their time.  This pollen explosion make bunchberry the fastest plant on the planet.



During my summer of paddling, I am sure I will find many ways to amuse myself.  Tonight the setting sun sent its last rays against the east shore, creating a shadow that travelled along with me quite clearly, moving across the palette of rocks, ferns, and trees.  Can you see the shadow paddler on the rock? 

A weekend of celebrating family


Blue-bead lilies bloom profusely in my woods


Friendly garter snake that calls my window well home



My thoughts and time over the weekend turned to family, as we celebrated my mother's birthday on Saturday and my step-son's high school graduation on Sunday.  The idyllic Maine weather that we long for through the cold of winter provided the perfect background for plant shopping with Mom, a birthday dinner overlooking the harbor, and the gathering of family for Andrew's graduation from NYA.  I even managed to buy gas for the lawnmower and tidy up the front yard and garden.  Snapped the above photos and will add one of our gorgeous lady slippers soon.

Much food and more sunscreen and insect repellent were added to the growing pile of supplies, as I shopped my way home yesterday.  I was excited to find several additions to the "supper" category...angel hair and herb pasta mix, small pop-top cans of chicken and some new dehydrated black bean chipotle soup and risotto mixes in paper containers.  Found the last two right at Hannaford.  And my kayak is missing me...it is back on Webber Pond for the week, where I hope to squeeze in a couple of evening paddles.  Look for another article in the Lincoln County News this week, about a special project that my kids at school are doing to support Paddle for Hope.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

It takes a village...

Ally, Phoebe, and Arielle having fun with Deb and her wonderful Mary Kay products

When Paddle for Hope contributions reach our $10,000 goal, children's lives will be changed, our message of caring will be heard, and there will be many, many generous people who will be responsible.  One of those is my good friend Deb Walder, who teaches with me in special education at Great Salt Bay School and is also a Mary Kay Director (go Deb!!!), an achievement she reached this week. 

Deb's Face Race in support of MCCP has been such a fun, creative way to involve a lot of women (and a few men) in Paddle for Hope.  Deb is collecting pledges, based on the number of new "faces" she can sign up for a Mary Kay consultation by the end of June.  Often she bustles energetically into our classroom in the morning, grinning and with another donation (or several) to add to our total.  Her goal was to raise at least $600, and I am delighted to report that, as of Friday, Face Race pledges total $605!

Six of the new "faces" belong to my daughter Megan and her friends, who gathered at my house to meet Deb and try lots of new Mary Kay skin care and makeup products.  The already-beautiful girls were certainly looking good and having fun and I thank them (and Phoebe's boyfriend Tyler who was a very good sport) for being part of the Face Race.  The thermometer climbed yesterday to $3,655...help us keep it going!

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Plans emerging, unfolding, growing...

 
Early morning...new life


 
NFCT newsletter photo taken
at the Fish Pond bridge near Jackman
Spring brings the unfolding of new life, as the woods are transformed from a tapestry of subtle pinks and greens to the intense foliage of summer.  So, too, are plans unfolding around here.  The website thermometer took a jump to $2,980!  $7,000 more to the goal... 

The Northern Forest Canoe Trail mails its printed newsletter, Currents and Communities, to 1,900 readers twice a year.  My Spring-Summer 2011 issue arrived in my mailbox yesterday...with our article called "Paddling Against Childhood Cancer" inside.  A rewarding and sobering moment!  Don't think I mentioned, either, that the NFCT has a link to this blog under their Paddlers section, right in there with Team Black Cat and the Rough Water Gypsies, the two thru paddling teams so far for 2011.  The former have finished the NFCT and are now on the AT heading to Georgia and the latter just finished the Saranac River and are on the shores of Lake Champlain, at the beginning of Map 4 of the NFCT.  (There are 13 maps in all for the 13 sections...I will be paddling across the state of Maine on Sections 8 through 13).

Lookin' good Megan

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Finally found the sun













Well, I will put in an order right now for one month of weather just like we had Monday and Tuesday...warm enough to swim, calm enough to paddle, breezy enough to keep the bugs away (mostly). This was my parents' first night of camping in their new trailer, so they were also experimenting with equipment. Here is my support team at our lakeside campsite at Colonial Mast Campground. Megan and Dad gave the thumbs up to the new camping chairs. And I'd like to put in a good word for the kind folks and clean grounds there.


After driving up Monday, Megan and I unloaded our kayaks at the Harrison public boat launch at the north end of Long Lake. (This is the Long Lake in Cumberland County...there are others, including a Long Lake we will paddle on the Allagash. I guess Maine has so many beautiful lakes that there aren't enough names to go around). My spray skirts cover most of my gear...the large bag in the stern and the rest of the small bags in the bow. Putting on the spray skirts quickly is a new-found skill. I struggled mightily with them last summer until a very helpful woman at Maine Sport showed me how to slide them on, rather than trying to snap them into place.


You probably have figured out that I have a very supportive family. Well, for my birthday in January they surprised me with a handheld GPS, which captured our route past Bridgton to the campground above Naples...nine and a half miles in almost four hours...average speed of 2.7 miles per hour...navigating accurately to the waypoint for the campground. This lake on Memorial Day was definitely not a wilderness experience, more of a test of our ability to weave among jet skis and power boats and safely cross their wakes. Late in the day, though, the waterfront was serene and beautiful...the perfect end to a lovely mother-daughter day of fun in the sun.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

A look at the equipment list and more

Thought you might all want a quick look at the equipment list as it is evolving...with a current weight of about 47 pounds, without the kayak itself and food and water.  Minimizing weight is critical, especially during portages.  Someone asked this week how many portages there are and I count 16 in my planning spreadsheet, of which 6 are short carries around dams.  The other ten range in length from 1 to 5.3 miles, with the most difficult being the 1.8-mile Mud Pond Carry to enter the Allagash Wilderness Waterway.  On that carry, my wonderful new kayak cart will simply be another 8 pounds of weight to haul, as the trail is actually worn down to a deep, muddy slog that is definitely not wheelable.  There is also a good possibility that I will walk around the section of the Dead River from the Kennebago Road bridge to Stratton, as Sherry and Ardie did, adding perhaps 10 miles to the portage distance.

Sherry and Ardie...known as Team Black Cat...have just finished the NFCT and are now on their way back south to Georgia on the Appalachian Trail.  Their blog is great and can be found under Paddler Blogs on the NFCT website and there is also a hilarious tribute to both their canoe and their speedy journey on the Northern Door Inn's website at http://northerndoorinn.com/canoeing.html

Anyway, I digress from the equipment list and should return to my topic.  
  • Kayak (48 lbs) - not counted in weight total in above paragraph
  • Kayak seat (7 lbs)
  • 2 spray skirts, kayak cart, 2 ropes, 2 tiedown straps for cart, paddle, PFD (14 lbs)
  • Large backpack dry bag with tent and footprint, sleeping bag and pad, tevas, dry socks and fleece (14 lbs)
  • I will be wearing or have handy: my bathing suit, shorts, t-shirt, fleece, rain jacket, river shoes, wool socks, river hat, headnet, knife, nalgene bottle of water, and a nifty combination whistle and compass with matches inside
  • Small dry bag with map and trip descriptions, SPOT, GPS, camera, binoculars, TP, space blanket, first aid kit, extra glasses, tiny AAA flashlight, sunscreen, insect repellent, chapstick, inhaler, epipen (3 lbs) - this bag will also carry snacks and my jacket/fleece if it is warm and dry
  • Small dry bag with cooking gear:  cookset with stove in bag, fuel can, and lighter inside; aluminum plate; mug; dish towel; zip bag with folded paper towels, foil sheets, matches, folding knife, and utensils; zip bag with camp soap and dish cloth; water filter; folding saw (4 lbs)
  • Small dry bag with personal gear: pack towel; book; quart zip bag with journal, pencils, tissues, watch, flashlight, AA lithium batteries, extra memory card and camera battery, extra maps, and matches; net bag with toothbrush, toothpaste, dental floss, mirror, TP, Benadryl, vitamins, antibiotics, chapstick, bandaids, nail clippers, money (2 lbs)
  • Small dry bag with clothing: underwear, wool socks, rain pants, warm hat, hiking pants, thermal tights, long sleeve top, t-shirt (3 lbs)
Added to this will be one more medium heavy duty dry bag to carry the food and an extra nalgene water bottle.  I would guess this bag might weigh 5 pounds, but that is a project for the weeks ahead.  Still unresolved or undone are the questions of whether to carry an extra paddle and what to bail with, and the addition of copies of trip descriptions and fire permit numbers.  Right now all of this is packed and will go along on tomorrow's trip, with the exception of the kayak cart, which will stay at home.  It will be educational to see how my paddling speed changes with the addition of 40 pounds of gear to the boat.  Back to the blog after Long Lake...have a great Memorial Day!

Saturday, May 28, 2011


This evening I said goodbye to Webber Pond with a bit of sadness, after many fun days exploring its coves and islands and enjoying its plentiful wildlife. Thanks are due to friends Steve and Jo Laurich, who allowed us to conveniently store our kayaks down by the shore. As I waited for Dad to arrive, the fog began to creep over the water and a perky pair of chickadees kept me company. We loaded up the kayaks, tying them securely to the roof rack, in preparation for our paddling and camping trip at Long Lake on Monday and Tuesday.

My SPOT team is in place and has begun reporting in, after receiving the first "all is well" message, sent from Webber Pond today. The SPOT sends each of the six people on the list an email with a link to my position on Google Maps, which is shown by a symbol. Click on the symbol and a box pops up with the exact latitude and longitude and the time that the message was sent. The consensus is that my new friend SPOT is pretty cool. I know that I feel a bit like an explorer setting off on an adventure in the rainforest, especially when I look at that little symbol on the map.

Earlier today my house was filled with a whirl of Mary Kay...as my friend Deb Walder made my daughter and her friends more beautiful than ever, as part of her Face Race fundraiser in support of Paddle for Hope. Add in some gardening and buying my fishing license and you have a very satisfying day!

Friday, May 27, 2011

Warm welcome at Maine Children's Cancer Program

Yesterday I visited MCCP and discovered not only a bright, cheerful, caring environment, but an amazing group of people who work so hard to save the lives of children with cancer.  Lianna Doane, Development Coordinator, has been the one enthusiastically helping me plan Paddle for Hope, setting up the webpage, helping with news releases, and processing and acknowledging donations.  Walking through the clinic with Lianna, I was deeply touched by the photos of the children that adorn the walls, many of whom stay in touch for years after treatment. 

Daisy the therapy dog provides love and comfort to clinic patients...she's a Labradoodle.

Here I am in the counseling room, with a mobile created from a myriad of colorful paper cranes, representing the hopes and dreams of the children and families who meet within these walls.  Our contributions will go to three areas:  research funding, new equipment, and psychosocial services for children and their families.  I often think how siblings, as well as patients, must benefit from being supported through these programs.



Lianna in one of the colorful treatment rooms...this popular room includes a play kitchen to add fun to the day!
There weren't any children at the clinic this late in the afternoon, but all of the staff spent time sharing information about their jobs and answering my questions and also enthusiastically asking many of their own about the details of my trip.  And, as I paddle this summer, I know that the support and good wishes of the MCCP staff will go with me on my journey.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Bzzzzzzzzz!

A hint of the sun reflected in Webber Pond
Ah, the blackflies.  I haven't mentioned them, not being one to dwell on the negative, but they were out in full force last evening as I paddled the perimeter of the pond.  Perfect bug conditions, warm and calm, with even a hint of the sun through the clouds.  My combination of insect repellent and head net left much to be desired and the back of my neck is covered with bites.  I have a bug jacket still in its package, which I need to unpack (and quickly).  For those of you "from away" who are interested in a detailed bug report, we saw our first blackflies on April 30 and, as June progresses, they will gradually disappear.  No mosquitoes yet.

The residents of the two beaver lodges on the southern end of the pond kept me entertained and alert with one startling tail slap after another.  The powerful crashes resounded across the water, even when I was quite distant and paddling away.  Also saw red-winged blackbirds, a great blue heron, and my friends the loons.  Megan wondered Sunday how I could get excited anew at every loon, but I just do.

Our fundraising thermometer took a satisfying jump yesterday and now stands officially at $2,614, heading up toward our goal of $10,000.  And I have a bunch of money to take tomorrow on my visit to MCCP.  Please help us keep climbing!

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Rollin' along

A roller coaster is often used to describe the ups and downs of life, but the image of a roller coaster for me right now is that moment when the car starts to climb that first immense hill...you look up and up and realize that there is no stopping until the ride is over.  Then, of course, you scream and laugh and have the time of your life!

My "roller coaster" of a life for Monday and early Tuesday included more packing and repacking of gear...attempting to make everything as compact as possible for portaging.  I am retiring my 10-year-old backpacking stove and yesterday tried out my new Optimus Crux Lite stove, which fits in its little cookset along with a 3.53 oz. can of the isobutane/propane mix fuel it uses.  Very cute and yet it blasts the flame when turned all the way up.  I will definitely make some coffee with it on our camping trip to Long Lake in Naples next week and give you the full field testing report.  Here are the contents of my cooking equipment bag...the to-do list still includes buying a tiny lighter and replacing the water filter cartridge with the brand-new one donated by my friends Steve and Kathy Maclachlan.


The photo below arrived just in time for submission to our local weekly paper, the Lincoln County News and I sent it off a little while ago, as we are trying to have something in the paper every week now.

Laurie Chandler (left), Youth and Family Minister at Second Congregational Church U.C.C. in Newcastle, recently shared her plans for Paddle for Hope with the church's Women's Fellowship at their May meeting.  The following Sunday, president Judy Jones (right) presented her with a $300 contribution from the group in support of her upcoming kayak trip across Maine to benefit the Maine Children's Cancer Program.  To date, Paddle for Hope fundraising totals $2,700 toward the goal of $10,000, all of which will be used for research, new equipment, and services at the Scarborough facility.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Technology and a new paddling partner

Safety concerns are a worry and I am trying to address as many as possible.  One major goal for the trip is to paddle/portage solo across Maine without help, except for resupplies of food and clean clothes.  To provide peace of mind and also allow for communication of my position on the remote sections, I will be using a SPOT Satellite Personal Tracker, which arrived this week and was activated yesterday.

Mine is a first generation model that weighs just over 7 ounces, floats in water, and runs on two AA lithium batteries.  There are several actions that SPOT can do for the basic subscription service I purchased, which costs $99 per year.  Most critically, it has a 911 button that can be used in an emergency to notify the GEOS International Emergency Response Center.  Once activated, appropriate emergency responders will be notified and, even on the move, your updated position will be broadcast every 5 minutes.  SPOT can also send your GPS coordinates as part of an "I am fine" message to your desired list of friends and family.  These waypoints are saved as a record of your journey.  The third feature is a call for help from family and friends only and would let them know that you have a non-critical need.  Here's a picture of my new friend.

On Memorial Day, my parents and I will leave for a short camping trip where they will use their new camper and I'll paddle of course and try out some of my new equipment.  So...this week I need to create my SPOTteam!  These are the family and friends who will receive messages during Paddle for Hope. 

Dad and Megan putting in
My daughter Megan arrived home from college and joined me for an evening paddle around Webber Pond.  I'm still exploring this pond, whose 220 acres include sections of undeveloped shoreline and a wild atmosphere, in part due to the limited (or nonexistent?) public access.  In researching the pond's size, I came across the interesting fact that sea-run alewives ascend Muscongus Brook to spawn in Webber Pond, providing a good food source for smallmouth bass.  Here are a few shots of the launching of Megan's rather basic kayak.  She plans to join me for a day or two of my journey, perhaps in the Jackman area.
 
First paddle of the summer (and I use the word summer very optimistically)
 

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Looking closely in the fog

 

Rhodora! If the sages ask thee why
this charm is wasted on the earth and sky,
tell them, dear, that if eyes were made for seeing,
Then Beauty is its own excuse for being:
Why thou wert there, O rival of the rose!
I never thought to ask, I never knew:
But, in my simple ignorance, suppose
the self-same Power that brought me there brought you.

(from Rhodora, Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834

The mood on the water this morning was tranquil, as fog softerned shapes and colors and the still waters created a mirror of reflections.  Fish rose gently to the surface and a trio of loons appeared near a misty island.  The lavender rhodora blooms punctuated the greens and grays of the wooded shore.  The atmosphere encouraged pauses to look deeply and appreciate nature.  Hope I remember to do that this summer.
My morning paddle started before eight and now I'm home, where the bright sun is a welcome sight.  The fundraising thermometer took a jump on Thursday and now stands at $1,989, almost a fifth of the way to the goal.  My friend Deb Walder has created an innovative "Face Race" with her Mary Kay business, to collect pledges toward Paddle for Hope, based on how many "faces" she does through the end of June.  How grateful I am for the support of my family and friends!  Well, the rest of the day beckons...with time for additional trip planning...and a trip to the Lincoln Theater to see the play, On Golden Pond.  Enjoy the sun!