Showing posts with label Michigan kayaking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michigan kayaking. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Win a Werner Whitewater Kayak Paddle

Werner's 2019 whitewater paddles have just dropped and to celebrate, we're giving one lucky paddler the opportunity to win a Werner Surge or Werner Strike. Enter now >>

The post Win a Werner Whitewater Kayak Paddle appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Paddling Magazine Staff via Paddling Magazine
Win a Werner Whitewater Kayak Paddle posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Poem: The Shuttle

The Shuttle Back of a pickup Crushed bodies down low Catching a ride to the top, sometimes below Why I love the shuttle? Wind in your hair, a river coming into view Sometimes an old one, sometimes new Laughter; nerves for some if bigger water than before Butterflies fluttering in their core Companionship of kindred […]

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by JoAndra Parsons Proia via Paddling Magazine
Poem: The Shuttle posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Kevin Hart On Whitewater Rafting

Kevin Hart’s talk about whitewater rafting will be sure to make you laugh. The American comedian, actor and producer talks about a show that he is preparing to film. The film is based on him doing things that “black people are typically afraid of doing.” He gives examples like bungie jumping, skiing, sky diving, and […]

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by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Kevin Hart On Whitewater Rafting posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Kalob Grady’s 2017/2018 Highlight Reel

  1) Where did your paddling take you in 2017/2018? The past 2 years have bought me to some tremendous places. Highlighted by trips in 2017 to Hawaii, Chile, Uganda and Zambia and in 2018 to Mexico, Bolivia, Chile, Uganda, and India. In addition to all the incredible kayaking closer to home throughout North America […]

The post Kalob Grady’s 2017/2018 Highlight Reel appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Kalob Grady’s 2017/2018 Highlight Reel posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Gear Review: SPOT X Two-Way Satellite Messaging Device

In May of 2018, SPOT released its newest device called SPOT X which is their first venture into a two-way satellite messaging system. I had an opportunity to test this device while doing a 10-day canoe trip circumnavigating Algonquin Park on a route known as The Meanest Link. On this challenging 424-kilometer route it was […]

The post Gear Review: SPOT X Two-Way Satellite Messaging Device appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Gear Review: SPOT X Two-Way Satellite Messaging Device posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Kayak Explodes In The Middle Of Waterfall

Wade Harrison has a video posted on his Youtube channel showcasing a kayak that explodes while going down the last drop on Avalanche Falls. An experience that would have likely been terrifying for the individual inside the kayak. Great to see that the paddler was wearing a helmet and PFD and had the support of […]

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by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Kayak Explodes In The Middle Of Waterfall posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Press Release: Canadian Canoe Museum Receives $10 Million For New Building

On April 1, 2019,The Honorable Pablo Rodriguez, Minister of Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism announced that the Canadian Canoe Museum would be receiving $10 Million in funding towards their new building in Peterborough. The location for the new facility will be at the Peterborough Lift Lock on the Trent Severn Waterway. The existing location was heavily […]

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by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Press Release: Canadian Canoe Museum Receives $10 Million For New Building posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

A Lesson to Live By

Sean Danielson is a lucky man. After nearly three hours in the frigid waters of Chesapeake Bay, the kayak fisherman was hypothermic and barely conscious. The sun had just set, and if Lana Lohe hadn’t put her camera down at that instant and caught the unusual streak of green in the corner of her eye, […]

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by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
A Lesson to Live By posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

YETI Unveils New Rambler 24 oz Mug and new Color Collections

YETI Holdings, Inc., a leading premium outdoor brand, announces a new addition to its tried-and-true stainless steel Rambler Drinkware line—the Rambler 24oz Mug. In addition, the company also reveals three new color collections, Reef Blue, Sand, and Canyon Red. “We are committed to expanding our product lines while continuing to lead with innovation, durability, and […]

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by Press Release YETI via Paddling Magazine
YETI Unveils New Rambler 24 oz Mug and new Color Collections posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

New Paddle Event on Upper Sacramento River

The California River Quest today announced that it has registered more than 60 paddlers from six U.S. states, Canada and the United Kingdom. Participants range in age from 25 to 75 and include a group of 11 wounded veterans from Team River Runner. Paddlers’ crafts include kayaks, canoes, surfskis, outrigger canoes, standup and prone paddleboards. […]

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by Press Release; California River Quest via Paddling Magazine
New Paddle Event on Upper Sacramento River posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Paddlingmaps.com Announces New Partners For Stage Two Development

Paddling Maps announced this week its partnerships with paddlesports market leaders Aqua-Bound, Kokatat and Northwest River Supplies (NRS). Paddling Maps is a crowd-sourced paddling location website created by Aquabatics, Rapid Media and Apero Creative Development. These new industry partnerships assists in funding further development of both Paddling Maps desktop site and mobile app. Aqua-Bound, Kokatat […]

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by Press Release; Paddlingmaps.com via Paddling Magazine
Paddlingmaps.com Announces New Partners For Stage Two Development posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Monday, April 1, 2019

Wilderness Systems Pro Team to Compete in Kayak Bass National Championship Challenge Cup

Premium kayak brand Wilderness Systems’ professional team will be going up against the best in the nation in the Kayak Bass Fishing National Championship. Highly decorated fishermen Craig Dye, Tim Perkins, Dwayne Taff, Cory Dreyer and Lance Coley will all be heading down to Louisville on the weekend of March 28th to compete in this […]

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by Press Release; Wilderness Systems via Paddling Magazine
Wilderness Systems Pro Team to Compete in Kayak Bass National Championship Challenge Cup posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Gearlab Announces Collaboration With Sea Shepherd

Gearlab, design company of high-performance kayak paddles, and global nonprofit Sea Shepherd have just announced a collaboration to make a limited-edition collection of painted paddles embossed with the Sea Shepherd logo. A preliminary launch and pre-order date will be set for January 2019. The paddles will ship early March 2019. For more than 40 years, […]

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by Press Release; GEARLAB via Paddling Magazine
Gearlab Announces Collaboration With Sea Shepherd posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Alpacka Raft Continues Innovation Legacy with 2019 Packraft Line

Alpacka Raft, the industry leader in research and development of modern packrafting, today announced the release of their 2019 packraft lineup highlighted by the Classic, Expedition, Wolverine, and two-person Oryx. Alpacka’s iconic original model, the Classic delivers adventure driven fun from the backyard to the backcountry. All of the quality materials and USA made workmanship […]

The post Alpacka Raft Continues Innovation Legacy with 2019 Packraft Line appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Alpacka Raft Continues Innovation Legacy with 2019 Packraft Line posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Nova Craft Canoe Changes Ownership

After nearly 50 years in the canoe making business and over 30 years under the direction of Tim Miller, Nova Craft Canoe hands the paddle to a new owner. The new owner and president of Nova Craft Canoe, Chris Rath, purchased the company effective January 31st, 2019. “With the solid foundation built by Tim and […]

The post Nova Craft Canoe Changes Ownership appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Press Release; Nova Craft via Paddling Magazine
Nova Craft Canoe Changes Ownership posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Video: The Evolution of Level Six

Last month, Level 6 released a five-minute video called “The Story of Level 6,” which shares the origin and evolution of the paddlesports gear brand. Paddling Magazine caught up with Level Six co-founder and owner Stig Larsson to dive in deeper into the story behind the video and why 2019 was the right time to […]

The post Video: The Evolution of Level Six appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Press Release; Level Six via Paddling Magazine
Video: The Evolution of Level Six posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Paddlesports Retailer 2019 Show Updates

Paddlesports Retailer 2019 Registration Information Paddlesports Retailer, the official national trade show of the paddlesports industry, opened registration via email for returning exhibitors on Monday, January 28, offering booth preference priority for exhibitors in the hall and at Demo Day in the order exhibitors register. Registration for other exhibitors opens on Monday, February 4 and […]

The post Paddlesports Retailer 2019 Show Updates appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Paddlesports Retailer Press Release via Paddling Magazine
Paddlesports Retailer 2019 Show Updates posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

REI Introduces Adventures for Pets

REI Adventures has been guiding people on adventure travel trips for more than 30 years. Whether it’s cycling the winding roads of Zion National Park, exploring the unique flora and fauna of the Galapagos Islands or trekking through the Himalaya, REI guides have earned a reputation for delighting wanderers with excursions across the globe. Today, REI Adventures is announcing a new offering: REI Pet Ventures—global adventure travel just for pets.

“We branched out into family adventures over a decade ago, to much success, getting parents and young children experiencing nature and travel together,” said James Rodgers of REI Adventures. “For many of us, our pets are a valuable member of our family, sometimes even more than a child or spouse, so expanding into REI Adventures trips for pets felt like the next logical step.”

The inspiration for Pet Ventures—active adventures designed with pets in mind—began with REI customers. For the last few years, customers traveling with REI Adventures raved about the trips, but consistently told trip leaders that they wished they could expose their pets to the same level of adventure. “Our first thought was to have folks bring their pets along on the adventures, but to be sensitive to those allergic to or fearful of animals, we thought, why shouldn’t the pet be able to travel on their own?” explained Rodgers. “There’s many a turtle or goldfish who would prefer to leave their humans behind and have an adventure.” From there, Pet Ventures was born.

Longtime REI member Laine Cherashore was one of the first people to send her cat on a Pet Ventures pilot trip, Great Smoky Mountains Glamping for Cats. “I've felt guilty about keeping Tosh indoors from the beginning,” Cherashore said. “She's always longed to be an outdoor cat. I couldn't be happier that REI finally provided a safe and fun environment for her to live out her best adventure cat life!” Tosh, the cat, came back with a glossier coat and improved fitness levels. Cherashore was thrilled, she said.

Curious? Pet Ventures is starting with four unique offerings:

Great Smoky Mountains Glamping for Cats

In Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the valleys are dotted with homesteads where cats can mew for milk and trees tower tall, making them perfect for getting stuck in. This four-day adventure brings your kitty face-to-face with this iconic park’s most beloved trails, including the Appalachian Trail. Cats wanting to tread outside their comfort zone can sign up to raft the rollicking Class III rapids of the Nantahala River, while others can choose to fly high above the forest floor on a mountaintop zip-line tour.

Best of all? Each night a private, deluxe REI Signature Camp awaits. Your cat will nibble farm-to-table kibble lit by campfire and pad their way into down-filled sleeping bags made from claw-proof nylon. It’s the purrfect balance of comfort and connection to nature.

Long haired cat looks skyward as it majestically walks out of a glamping tent.

Yellowstone Kayaking Escape for Betta Fish

Abundant wildlife, unearthly geothermal features and an array of wide-open landscapes epitomize Yellowstone. Designed specially for the betta who prefers to travel solo, this private adventure offers four days spent paddling the lakes of the United States’ first national park in the world’s only kayak made to accommodate fish bowls.

Local guides lead the way to high-altitude lakes in the backcountry, far from the crowds. Your pet will be welcome to proceed at their own pace and even extend their days with solitude-filled trips along the lovely waterways surrounding the lakes. Each evening, they’ll be offered a flavorful bloodworm meal before being lulled to sleep by the vast, star-speckled night sky.

Betta fish swims in bowl in a kayak with a helmet resting on the top of the fish bowl.

New Zealand Country Cycling: Mini-Donkey Route

Nine days, two quintessential New Zealand trails and one 35 percent grade street (the steepest in the world): It’s the trip of a lifetime. Your miniature donkey will pedal the car-free Alps 2 Ocean Cycle Trail and Otago Central Rail Trail to discover towering mountain ranges, awe-inspiring glaciers, picturesque lakes and historic towns. Between two-wheeled tours they’ll savor local, ass-approved brews and carrots and meet fellow four-legged cyclists who are sure to become their new friends.

Each day brings vibrant scenery and challenge, from Lake Tekapo to Queenstown. Their free day will be spent in Dunedin, a sweet city with Victorian and Edwardian architecture and plenty of nearby trails, to discover city life and wildlife, including the albatross, sea lion and rare yellow-eyed penguin.

Mini donkey in a helmet and jersey standing in front of a bike.

Thailand Beach Climbing Adventure: Hedgehog Route

Spend nine days climbing near the sun-drenched beaches of Thailand. Your hedgehog will begin in Chiang Mai, the hub of the north. Zip-lining gives a taste of what’s to come and a view of the jungle canopy. The evening allows for the option to wander Chiang Mai’s famous night markets, browsing  handcrafted silk, paper and textiles, and indulging in fat worms. Next up are tropical beaches with giant pillars of karst limestone.

This introductory course will allow beginners a chance to learn or practice rock climbing at a premier destination. All the technical equipment is provided, so your hedgehog can simply focus on gaining skills and enjoying the journey. They’ll return home with plenty of stories, friends and newfound confidence on rocks.

Hedgehog climbing a rock with crashpad and rope nearby.

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Editor’s note: All animals belong to a co-op employee or are a friend of the co-op. No animals were put in harm’s way in the making. Please remember to take your beloved pets on adventures that are suitable and safe for them!

The post REI Introduces Adventures for Pets appeared first on REI Co-op Journal.


by Aer Parris via Paddle – REI Co-op Journal
REI Introduces Adventures for Pets posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Thursday, March 28, 2019

From Source to Confluence, Heather Hansman’s Solo Paddle Down the Green River

The Green River flows 730 miles from Wyoming to Utah—through ranches, cities, Native American reservations, endangered fish habitats, and sought-after whitewater. According to Downriver: Into the Future of Water in the West, a new book that hit shelves on March 22, the Green River supplies water to 40 million people. The legislation that governs how the Green is used is deeply complex and fraught with politics.  

So when Heather Hansman set out to write Downriver, a book about water rights on the Green River, she knew she was signing up for a challenge. Quickly, she realized the task would demand that she see the whole river herself—as she says, from a “bank level.” In May 2016, Hansman embarked on a three-month-long paddle that took her from the Green’s headwaters in Wyoming all the way downriver to its confluence with the Colorado River.

Hansman is a 36-year-old writer and journalist based in Seattle. She was once a river raft guide, which she credits for kickstarting her passion for water in the West. Her rafting days also gave her the know-how to paddle the Green. During the trip, she often had company. Friends and family joined her for certain sections. But for the most part, Hansman paddled the Green solo.

Along the way, she met ranchers whose families have worked their land for generations and government employees who bridge the divide between the dense legalities outlining water policy and the rural communities who are anxious the river will dry up. She ran rapids and toured colossal dams. She slept on the river’s edge, and at the end of the day typed notes on an iPad that she stored in a waterproof bag. During one stretch, she spent nine days without seeing another person.

Hansman’s book Downriver, published this month by the University of Chicago, is a blend of personal narrative, water policy research and on-the-ground reporting in the rural West. It’s about her growing comfort with solitude, the technicalities that define a water right, and the people she met along the way. But it’s also a testament to how recreation can serve as a door to learning and an opportunity to engage with big issues that paddlers—and all outdoorspeople, including climbers, skiers, hikers, surfers—tend to be passionate about.

“I decided I wanted to run the length of the Green, to see if I could understand the complexity of the way rivers are used,” writes Hansman in her book, Downriver. “I wanted to mesh my point-source understanding, couched in recreation and my narrow idea of conservation, with reality to see what drought and overuse were really doing.”

The following interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Downriver: The Future of Water in the West

Why did you feel the need to paddle the Green yourself?

To me, being out on the ground with people was something I wanted to do. It was a venue to say, OK, what does this actually look like? How do you take [the story] out of the policy notes and [out onto the river]. Here is what people are fighting about. I wanted to actually get on the ground and look at it. I wanted to be out on the river and that felt like the only way to tell the story.

It was scary. I was like, I’m going to run the river and write a book. And then [the University of Chicago Press] bought it and I signed up for it. And I was like, Oh, I have to do this thing I said I was going to do. I didn’t really know how. I had done week-long river trips with a group before, but I had never done big, solo trips.

How did you figure it out to do a trip like this?

There are some guys who paddled the Green through its confluence with the Colorado down to the ocean a few years before I did. So I reached out to them and called them. And I started looking at maps.

There are some parts that people paddle pretty frequently, like the Gates of Lodore and Desolation Canyon, so I knew how long that would take and what permits I would need.

And then there were some stretches that basically nobody does. There was a nine-day stretch above Desolation Canyon and the only guy I knew who had done it before was this guy George Wendt, who ended up dying of cancer when I was on the river. But he was like, ‘Yeah, I did it in the ’70s. I don’t really remember much, but I think it was super buggy and flat.’ I was like, ‘OK cool. We’ll see what happens.’

A lot of it was guessing: I think this is how many miles a day I can do. I’m going to give myself a little bit of a margin of error on either side for how long I think that stretch is going to take.

I lucked out. The water was pretty high, The river basin had a wet spring, so the river was really moving when I was on it.

I think a lot of things worked out in my favor. People were able to help me. I got hurt [just before the trip], I had a shoulder blow out right before, which was scary. I was like, OK, is this a bad idea? Did I sign up for something stupid? But it worked out. People really helped me.

A lot of the stuff, like food and logistics, was just once I was there on the ground. Like: Here’s what I have for breakfast. I just adapted to it.

The author on the Green River. Photo Credit: Heather Hansman

Throughout the book, you write about reconciling your own opinions with the perspectives of people who you meet on the river, many of whom look at the world from a different angle than you do. What was your viewpoint about water in the West going into this trip, and how did that change?

I had this liberal, lefty, environmentalist, raft guide perspective. Keep water in the rivers. Use as little as possible. Don’t touch it. Nature is better. And that is a naïve perspective. It’s not realistic, because everybody needs water. At this point, you can’t tell people not to move to L.A. or Denver. We have this system in place already for how water is used, how it’s divided—and it’s so embedded in what we’re doing. It’s so naïve to think, let’s just do less and it will be OK.

I think change is going to come from really minor adjustments in a lot of places. It’s not going to be this idealistic Keep the rivers flowing free and it will be great! I think I had that. It gets way more subtle once you get into it and way more complicated.

That’s part of why I wanted to write about water. I knew it was really complicated and tricky. But I think I didn’t even know how complicated it was until I really got into it. And I was like, Oh, people who are way smarter than me have been thinking about this for a really long time and they don’t have great answers yet.

At first, you wrote that the solitary nature of paddling down the river was unnerving. But the farther downriver you got, the more comfortable you were with the isolation. That’s unusual in our culture and society to have such long spans of time alone. How was that for you?

I think I’m somebody who needs a lot of alone time anyway. I hadn’t really realized that. At first, I was really scared that I wasn’t capable of doing it, or I couldn’t figure it out, or I was going to get hurt. The first week, I was like: My boat is deflating, my boat is deflating, every day.

It’s like muscle memory. You just keep doing it. And then you’re like: OK, I did it. And then you normalize it.

The parts that were the hardest were the transition points, where I was coming back into reality and it was a culture shock. Or I would have people with me for a chunk and then they would leave, and that would feel really lonely. But when I was just in it and rowing along, it didn’t feel lonely.

There were definitely some nights. I did that nine-day section alone. It was the first or second night, and I was camping on the sand bar because there weren’t really any good beaches. There were oil and gas rigs around. I could see lights a little bit. And I heard this big splash in the middle of the night, and all of a sudden, I was just awake. I was like: Someone is going to come kill me. I was up the whole night. Because, they could have. You never know. And then I got up in the morning and I was paddling along, and I heard the same noise. And it was a beaver.

But, basically, everyone I interacted with—I locked my keys in my car and some stranger drove me 30 miles out of his way to go get it—like, pretty much every interaction I had with somebody was good.

The Green River's Flaming Gorge. Photo Credit: Heather Hansman

You also wrote a lot about social justice, from the standpoint of the river. How the Green is a common ground, but also a divider and a tool for control.

Totally, yeah. I think that water is really going to be one of the biggest social justice and equity questions of the future. You’re seeing that in Flint [in Michigan]. You’re seeing that in California, when there’s drought. That’s something where the market won’t support society. You can’t just be like, whoever can pay for it gets it. There’s zero equity in that.

You went to a community meeting in Vernal, Utah, where stakeholders from all sides had come to discuss water rights. It was a controversial meeting, but it also felt like progress was being made, at least on a small scale. How can rivers help us communicate?

That whole experience was surprising. I was like: Sure, this meeting is going on, I guess I’ll just pop in. I got there and was like, Oh, this is the heart of all of it.

People feel really disenfranchised and they’re not being heard, and that feels really frustrating. I think even being heard makes a difference. When the woman from the Bureau of Reclamation got up and said, ‘Hey, we’re trying.’ People were like, ‘Oh she’s a real person, she’s trying.’ And I think that made a pretty big difference.

What role can recreationalists play? We go to these places and we are passionate about conservation and preservation and we have deep connections to water or the mountains. What advice do you have for people who go to these places to have a dialogue?

I think part of it is knowing and thinking about a bigger connection. I’m paddling the Colorado, where does that water come from? Where does it go?

It’s thinking about it more. At my house in Seattle, where does my water come from? I didn’t know that before. Dig in.

For me, having recreational experience was the thing that made me care. It can often be the the thing that leads people to advocacy or some kind of connection. Digging in a little deeper.

Echo Park. Photo Credit: Heather Hansman

What was the general reception you got from people who you met on the river?

There was a little bit of skepticism sometimes. I was coming from Seattle. I had to prove myself a little bit, for sure, and say that I’m not just a weird vegetarian hippie raft guide. I’m listening.

When you were off the river, where did your research take you?

Water rights vary state by state. So it was going to the state engineer’s office in Wyoming and in Utah and being like, ‘How do you divide up water rights?’ It was definitely a mix of [reading] history and legal documents, and also, ‘Hello, can you please explain this to me in the most basic sense?’

It would have been really hard for me to understand it and explain it if I hadn’t had the real life experience. I think just trying to drill into how water is sorted out and why people fight about it from a paper standpoint is impossibly boring. People talk about that—paper water rights and wet water rights—and I needed both sides of it to make sense of it to me.

What’s happened on the Green since you paddled down the river?

The Colorado River Compact [which dictates water usage rights among the states bordering the river including Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming]  has interim guidelines [which indicate what happens in drought years when the reservoirs get too low] that expire in 2026. So they’re talking about revising the [compact’s interim guidelines]. And for the first time, California and Arizona are offering to make voluntary cuts to the water they get, which is a big deal.

The [Lake] Powell Pipeline is a big part of it. There’s a proposed pipeline to pull water out of Lake Powell [via an approximately 140-mile buried pipeline] for [Washington and Kane counties in] southern Utah. Utah’s public suppliers use more water per capita than anywhere and water is super cheap in Utah. The proposed Powell Pipeline would pull the rest of the state’s water rights out [of the Colorado] for a big development in St. George.

They have 1.71 million acre feet a year of water legally allocated, through the Colorado River Compact, but it doesn’t actually exist. So if they end up piping that water out, the math doesn’t add up. We’ve been coming to a head on this, at some point, drought and fear make people act, and I think we’re coming to that point now, which is scary and necessary. It’s hard to motivate people to change things when things feel good.

So yeah, there’s a lot and this year, the Colorado River Basin is going back to 110 percent of average snowfall, so it looks good. But it is pretty fragile.

 

The post From Source to Confluence, Heather Hansman’s Solo Paddle Down the Green River appeared first on REI Co-op Journal.


by Julie Brown via Paddle – REI Co-op Journal
From Source to Confluence, Heather Hansman’s Solo Paddle Down the Green River posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Dane Jackson’s 2018 Highlight Reel

Dane Jackson had another year packed with kayaking adventures, sharing numerous video and photo teasers from India, Chile, Mexico, Zambia and pretty much anywhere else he had time to go. Those who follow Dane on Instagram would be familiar with the countless stories of him on the road heading to his next destination. All signs […]

The post Dane Jackson’s 2018 Highlight Reel appeared first on Paddling Magazine.


by Alex Traynor via Paddling Magazine
Dane Jackson’s 2018 Highlight Reel posted first on https://realpaddleandpole.blogspot.com