Jackson Kayak promotes Cronin to VP of Sales

By Canoe & Kayak - November 16, 2009 - 17:13

Jackson Kayak Photo Shoot-PLEASE READ COPYRIGHT NOTICEJackson Kayak promotes Cronin to VP of Sales


Rock Island, TN – In a move aimed at improving dealer service, Jackson Kayak recently promoted Marty Cronin to Vice President of Sales for both the whitewater and recreation/touring divisions. Cronin, who has been with the company since its inception, formerly held the post of Vice President of Sales and Marketing of Jackson Kayak’s recreation/touring division.

The move is aimed at helping Jackson Kayak increase the dialogue with its dealers. “Dealers can expect a heightened level of sales support,” said Jackson Kayak founder Eric “EJ” Jackson. “Marty has shown his ability to identify the needs of our dealers and now we’re empowering him with the power to make decisions to respond to those needs more effectively.”

“My goal is to maintain our position as the leading whitewater brand, while also focusing more on the needs of our customers especially as we expand our product offerings,” Cronin said.

Cronin clearly relishes the challenge in front of him and believes he starts his new role with some clear advantages. “Our dealer base is the cream of the crop, our dealer programs provide solid profits, and our product development schedule is in high gear,” he said. “What an exciting time!”

Jackson explained that Cronin’s expanded role in sales would free up time in his own schedule to focus more on big picture directions and marketing for the company. Jackson was quick to point out he will still be accessible to dealers for staff and consumer trainings and events while adding Cronin to the Jackson whitewater sales staff so that dealers will have all the support and service they need to succeed with Jackson Kayak.

Founded in 2004, family owned and operated Jackson Kayak is the leading manufacturer of whitewater kayaks. In 2008, the company launched the Day Tripper, the first in an ever-expanding lineup of recreation/ touring boats. To learn more, visit the company website JacksonKayak.com <http://www.jacksonkayak.com/>

Ryan Hanegan joins the SEA-LECT Designs Family

By Canoe & Kayak - November 11, 2009 - 10:41

sealect-designs-logo Ryan Hanegan joins the SEA-LECT Designs Family

SEA-LECT Designs is pleased to announce the addition of Ryan Hanegan to its sales staff.

Hanegan, who resides in Sultan, Washington, brings more than 20 years of paddle sports experience and knowledge to help introduce and market the SEA-LECT Designs’ product line to paddle sports dealers nationally and internationally.


“I am really excited to join the SEA-LECT Designs’ team, and look forward to promoting a great selection of accessories designed to fill the needs of dealers and end consumers,” Hanegan said. “I’m very impressed with their design expertise and manufacturing capabilities, as well as their ongoing commitment to customer service and growth of the product line. “Ironically, I traveled more than 6,000 miles to Kanumesse — the European paddle sports show in Nuremberg, Germany — to connect with SEA-LECT Designs’ Matt Poischbeg. This is an outstanding opportunity just a few miles from my home.”


Based in Everett, Washington, SEA-LECT Designs manufactures innovative gear solutions for outdoor enthusiasts.

THE 2009 GREEN RIVER RACE

By Canoe & Kayak - November 9, 2009 - 10:36

Sometimes the Monkey Spanks Back

By Harrison Metzger


The kayaker flips brutally as her boat twists off the launching pad of Gorilla. Upside down beneath the heavy curtain of whitewater, she plummets 18 feet into the deep rocky vortex, her boat impacting the underwater shelf below with a deep THUMP!

That noise is heard dozens of times throughout Saturday’s 2009 Green River Race, but with a scary difference in this case: the paddler is upside down upon impact. Yet before three tethered rescue swimmers can reach her boat, she rolls upright and paddles out of the swirling eddy at the base of the falls, apparently uninjured by the crash.

Applause erupts from hundreds of spectators perched on mist-blasted rocks above Gorilla and its brethren in mayhem: Green Scream Machine, Nies’ Pieces, Power Slide and Rapid Transit downstream; and upstream, Pencil Sharpener, Chief, Zwick’s, Go Left and Die, Boof or Consequence and Frankenstein.

Yells of “yeaaahh!” and gasps of “whoah!” reverberate throughout the coliseum of hotel-sized boulders lining the shore, announcing the procession of racers as they boof, splat and plunge down the Class V Green River Narrows.

About 1,000 people, mostly young and clad in fleece and hiking boots, have climbed 600 vertical feet down into the thundering cleft of spurting granite for the show. They’ve come to cheer more than 150 kayakers, a handful of C-boaters and two open canoeists dropping the vertical rapids.

Photos: Matt Fields-Johnson


The Green River Race has exploded as the East Coast’s biggest extreme downriver attraction since 1996 when Leland Davis organized a group of 16 friends for the first race.

“It’s the most exciting outdoor event in the world for me,” says Al Gregory, 38, a five-time Green racer who won the championship in 2000. “This is about the essence of kayaking, about us chasing each other down the river at dark and turning it into a race.”

Gregory, known to all as “Al G.,” is the guy who calls Duke Energy to make sure there is water released for the race. This year Duke is dumping water round the clock as it draws down Lake Summit upstream. Combined with natural inflow from recent healthy rains, the Green is running a respectable 9 inches or so.

“We have a little higher water — it’s really ideal because people can practice,” Gregory says.

Gregory is not racing although the race lineup lists him as the sole rafter, paddling a “long R-1” a 13’11’’ Shredder. It sounds like a joke, but the day before the race Gregory strided the Green standing up in — and getting repeatedly ejected from — a Thrill Seeker IK.

Green Reunion

This year is special because it’s the first time all the past champions have gathered at the Green. This year’s race includes past champions Clay Wright (inaugural winner), Jason Hale, Gregory, Pat Keller, Andrew Holcombe, Chris Gragtmans, and Tommy Hilleke who has won six times. Only Gregory and Keller are not racing this year, due to injuries.

Hale, “the original inspiration and fuel behind (the race)” lives in San Francisco and wasn’t going to attend this year. Gregory and his other friends got together and sent him a plane ticket.

“I called him and politely told him he had come and to get his days off from work,” Al G. says. “He and Tommy ran the Green four times yesterday practicing and I think they ran it once this morning. They want a crowd showing.”

A show the crowd got, not just from the top ranked paddlers but from all the racers daring to paddle the East’s most difficult dam-controlled class V river at top speed.

More than any other river in the East and perhaps the U.S., the Green has shaped the nation’s top creek boaters, their boats and their attitudes. Running on average more than 200 days a year, the Green is the reason this area is home to Liquidlogic Kayaks, Watershed and Green River Adventures, hundreds of creek boaters — and one Sasquatch.

The hairy-looking fellow taking a break behind a boulder above Go Left and Die is Alex Ohman, 23, of nearby Johnson City, Tenn. He’s wearing a Gorilla suit he borrowed from a friend for a mountain bike race.

“Since I went over the monkey upside down about a month ago, I just had to wear it,” he says.

Flipping in the notch and rolling partway up, Ohman had better luck than some other Gorilla-swimmers in Saturday’s race.

“I was right where I needed to be and I didn’t hit anything — well I must have hit something because my helmet got scratched,” Ohman said. “It was luck. And even though I had that incident, it was one of the most fun days on the river for me. I got to the takeout and completely forgot everything that went wrong.”

Although most of Saturday’s lines were fast, clean and skillfully landed, there were a number of tense moments that paddlers involved would probably rather forget.

Seconds after Ohman loped off downstream in his gorilla suit, a kayaker in an army green kayak pinned on the sharp rock splitting the flow at the bottom of Go Left and Die.

For a few seconds, only the bottom of his boat was showing. Then he fought his head to the surface and, bracing furiously, tried to wiggle off as the crowd above yelled and safety boaters scrambled to toss ropes.

Finally the broached kayaker managed to fight his way around one side of the rock and drop into the pool below. There his boat floated upside down for an uncomfortable second before, looking spent, he rolled up and paddled off to face the ape (the rapid, not the guy in the monkey suit).

Winning Premonition

Top-seeded Chris Gragtmans, in the poll position because of Keller’s injury, was smiling, but he said he was not too happy. Mistakes at Go Left and Neece’s Pieces had cost him precious seconds. Although his long boat time of 4:35 tied his winning finish from last year and was only one second off his personal best, it wasn’t good enough to win first.

“The course is really fast this year and everybody is in really good shape,” he said. “The caliber of paddler is just increasing every year too. It’s a pretty crazy event to be involved in.”

More than an hour before the final racers splashed down at the finish line below Rapid Transit, Gragtmans made his prediction of the winning order:

“My guess is the order will be Andrew Holcombe, Isaak Levinson and Eric Deguil. Fourth could be me or a couple other people.”

Gragtman’s prediction was uncanny in its accuracy. In the long boats, Holcombe repeated his first place long boat championship from 2007, setting a new course record 4:18 that broke the old one by nine seconds. Levinson was second, also breaking the old record with a finish 4:25. Eric DeGuil took third at 4:29, followed by Eric Hurd, who tied with Gragtman’s at 4:35. Adriene Levknecht shattered a record in the women’s long boat class with a 4:59 finish.

Despite the disappointment of not winning first place, Gragtmans was charged up to race before the enthusiastic throng of supporters lining the shore. They included his mom, his sister and his girlfriend. “They are always down to come out and watch the mayhem that goes on,” he said.

He has competed in many sports, but “there is nothing like this race,” he says.

“I compare it to going into battle. There is nothing else in my life that gets me going like this race.”

Broken paddles, bruised egos

Back down at Gorilla, boats are getting looped and endered in “Speed Trap,” the hole formed by the horizontal jet of water at the bottom of the main vertical drop. Kayaker Curt Lamberth grins gamely as he rolls up holding a paddle with one blade snapped off. It takes about 50 seconds for the crew on shore to toss him another stick.

It’s closing in on 3 p.m., three hours after the starting gun, and the sun has long since crossed the narrow gorge top above, leaving the crowd in chilling shadow and spray from the rapids. In quick succession, two kayakers are thrashed: a hand paddler who swims the main drop from the top and another boater who gets vacuumed out of his cockpit at the bottom. The safety crew is on the ball and doing their best to keep swimmers from washing into the class IV+ drops below.

Throughout the crowd, people keep asking: Where are the canoes? They crane their necks as the ringing of a bell announces each boat coming through the Notch above Gorilla, hoping to see that rarest feat: an open canoe running a Class V waterfall. They wait for Eli.

Eli Helbert, multiple world champion rodeo canoeist, is running his eighth Green Race. For only the second time, he has a competitor in canoe — gutsy young Wes Gentry.

Eli has styled the course many times including clean and dry landings at Gorilla. But today things go awry for The Canoe Guru.

Eli lands a great boof off the Pencil Sharpener, the first entrance drop to Gorilla. But instead of ferrying river left to get a right angle through the narrow Notch, he tries to cut through with less angle. His Esquif Prelude catches a rock in heinously undercut Notch and flips him just above the main drop. He rolls up, but flushes down the beast sideways, backwards, full of water.

Ejected upon impact, Eli is out of reach before rescuer Chris Harjes can grab him. After a bruising swim through the mammoth slides downstream, he gets to shore. His canoe stays stuck in Speed Trap for more than a minute until the tethered rescue crew pulls it out.

As hundreds of spectators start clearing out, hopping over massive boulders and climbing fixed ropes up the steep ravine out of the gorge, Eli watches Gentry, the other open boater, launch his canoe off Gorilla.

“I’m good, just sort of a bruised ego,” says Eli, who has never before not finished the race. “I was lucky I was wearing a lot of padding.”

As he walks upstream to get his canoe and paddle out, a fan yells out: “Hey Eli, you’re amazing!” It’s a good word for anyone willing to brave the Green at top speed in front of a giant crowd.

Kokatat Attains International Standards Organization 9001:2008 Certification

By Canoe & Kayak - November 5, 2009 - 10:22

kokatat-logoArcata, Calif., (October 20, 2009) – Kokatat, a 38-year-old, independent paddlewear and accessories company, recently attained an International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 9001:2008 certificate.

Kokatat manufactures approximately 90 percent of its product collection in Arcata, Calif., making this domestic ISO 9001:2008 certification highly unique in the outdoor industry.

The certification validates Kokatat’s commitment to quality product and to providing industry-leading customer satisfaction under the guidance of a quality management system. ISO is the world’s largest developer and publisher of international standards.

“The investment and commitment necessary to successfully implement a formally recognized quality management system is a reflection of how seriously we regard Kokatat’s founding mission: to design and manufacture the highest quality products for our paddle sports, rescue and government customers,” said Kokatat founder and president Steve O’Meara.

Following a nine-month implementation process, the British Standards Institution (BSI) conducted an intensive audit on behalf of ISO. BSI examined all of Kokatat’s quality standards and relevant processes to determine compliance and the intent to make effective improvements in the future.

Kokatat was founded on the principles of innovation and quality and is known for producing technical garments and accessories for entry-level users as well as professionals in the field. “The ISO certification is a natural extension of the way Kokatat does business”, says O’Meara, “and it will allow us access to new markets as we prepare for the future.”

Changing the World of Paddle Surfing

By Canoe & Kayak - October 29, 2009 - 10:57

changing-the-world-of-paddle-surfing

Boulder’s Adventure Film Festival— Showcasing award winning mountain films from around the world.

By Canoe & Kayak - October 29, 2009 - 09:48

adventure-film-festivalSeptember 1, 2009, Boulder, CO—The Fifth Annual Adventure Film Festival will be held in Boulder, November 12-14th, 2009. We’ll kick off the festival, presented by Patagonia, on Thursday, November 12 with an opening evening show at the Boulder Theater. The next two days and nights will feature adventure film-making workshops, photography exhibits, live music, and over 30 award winning films at the best venues in town.
After the Boulder Festival, Adventure Film will bring further exposure to these amazing films by taking them on road to cities around the US, and internationally to Chile, France, and South Africa.
Each year, over 200 entries are submitted from around the world. The top 30 films are hand-picked by the Adventure Film Selection Committee. These films feature exploration, surfing, climbing, biking, skiing, and more. Also included in the line up are films that tackle topics as broad as the environment, global awareness, and social issues, yet always maintain a distinct theme of adventure.

There will also be an Adventure Filmmaking Workshop, designed to inspire the audience to make outdoor films of their own. Top outdoor filmmakers will lead discussions on equipment and techniques.

This year’s festival is especially significant as we continue to pay tribute to Jonny Copp, one of Adventure Film’s visionaries who died in an avalanche while climbing in China this spring. Jonny’s passing reminds us all of the spirit of Adventure Film—belief in the power of the story, especially the narrative of adventure and awakening to change and challenge the world we live in. It is with this focus that Adventure Film goes on. Climb. Ride. Fly. Slide. Fight for your environment. Inspire. Go higher than you’ve ever dared to go.

WHERE
Boulder’s Adventure Film Festival takes place at the historic Boulder Theater, the B-side Lounge on 14th Street, and other select venues downtown.

TICKETS
For tickets, schedules & details about the Festival please visit: http://www.AdventureFilm.org

BENEFITICIARY
Adventure Film has partnered with Leave No Trace, an international non-profit dedicated to conscious recreation and environmental education. Adventure Film and Leave No Trace’s missions and direction have coincided to promote “Activism through Adventure.”

ABOUT ADVENTURE FILM
Adventure Film was created in 2004 by adventurers and filmmakers wishing to spread the creativity, enthusiasm, and activism inherent to outdoor adventure. Adventure Film celebrates, supports and “ties in with” those who wish to inspire and fire the creative kilns of transformation and awareness. We believe in the power of the story, the narrative of adventure and awakening. We believe we have an opportunity and responsibility to challenge and change the world we live in.

Point 65 Sweden launches innovative take-apart kayak

By Canoe & Kayak - October 27, 2009 - 09:08

point-65-12point-65-22

The Pacific Angler Fishing Seat by Danuu Kayak & Canoe Accessories

By Canoe & Kayak - October 22, 2009 - 09:47

pressreleasedanuupacangler1

October 2009 Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival

By Canoe & Kayak - October 15, 2009 - 13:55

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The nation’s premier canoeing and kayaking destination is set to explode with activity in mere days. The Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival is two weekends of happenings plus fun in between – Oct. 23 through Nov. 1.

Check it all out at www.CalusaBluewayPaddlingFestival.com

CHECK OUT THE SPEAKERS

There’s something for everyone all week long.

Saturday, Oct. 24, free at Mound House, Fort Myers Beach:
10 a.m.: Theresa Schober, Cultural Resources Director of the Mound House - “Paddling through the Past” - Between the high rises and golf course communities of southwest Florida, another landscape is revealed which expresses the complexities of a society that occupied this area for at least 2,000 years. Archaeologist Theresa Schober will compare the built landscape of the past and present and interpret these cultural symbols on the land in terms of the social history of the powerful Calusa Indians who controlled these waters through Spanish contact.
11 a.m.: Gene Toncray, storyteller, A Pack of Great Tales - “Folklore and Legends of Florida’s Wildlife” - An exploration of our flora and fauna through the oral tradition of storytelling. Enjoy tales of How Possum Got His Skinny Tail, Alligator’s Rough Back, and much more.
Noon - Don McCumber & Mike Devlin of 21st Century Kayaks - “Step forward in history with 21st century kayaks” - Building a 21st century kayak kit frame in less than one hour. The history of kayaks and the building process.
1 p.m. - Ed Engel, paddle maker - “Greenland paddles … how to make and use” - Open discussion and demonstration on design, making, and using traditional kayak paddles.
2 p.m. - David Loger, kayak fishing guide with Adventure Kayak Fishing - “Kayak fly-fishing” - Focusing on fly-fishing including a casting seminar.
3 p.m. - Matt Keene, of the “Sunshine Expedition” - “Paddling around Florida” - A presentation on the first successful circumnavigation of Florida on the C.T., focusing on the successes and failures of the trip, lightweight gear and long-distance adventures.

Sunday, Oct. 25
, at San Carlos RV Resort, Fort Myers Beach… speakers/demos included with $19 ticket for food, music and more (Call 800-525-7275 to reserve your spot.)
2 p.m. -  Kayak Rescue Demonstration and Practice by Pat Owen, with the Southwest Florida Paddling Club and an ACA Level I Certified Instructor, will demonstrate/practice the paddle float rescue, stirrup rescue, 2-man and 3-man rescue.
3 p.m. - Kayak Rolling Demo by Rick Storsberg, an ACA open water sea-kayak instructor working for Sarasota County Parks.
4 p.m. - Doug Alderson presentation: Paddling from Orlando to Lake Okeechobee through the Kissimmee Valley, highlighting the restoration of the Kissimmee River. To learn more, log onto: http://www.dougalderson.net/new-dawn-kissimmee-river.html also a presentation by Ed Schessel on ‘Paddle Surfing the Web.’

Thursday, Oct. 29, free at Hilton Garden Inn, Fort Myers
6:30 p.m. - Terri Krass with the SW Florida Paddling Club will present her hands-on “Camping from a Kayak” clinic.

Friday, Oct. 30, a
t Up River RV Resort, North Fort Myers … $1 admission. (Call 239-543-3330.)
9 am. Speakers from E.C.H.O., Manatee Park, Caloosahatchee Creeks Preserve and Paddle Creek Outfitters; followed by guided walking tour and/or paddle.

Friday, Oct. 30, at Tarpon Lodge, Pine Island … story telling and re-enactments included with $35 ticket for food, music and more. (Go to www.calusabluewaypaddlingfestival.com to reserve your ticket.)
7:30 – 11 p.m. with Calusa Ghost Tours at the lodge and on the mounds of Randell Research Center by moonlight

Saturday, Oct. 31,
at free Randell Research Center
10 a.m. - Michael Wylde, Randell Research Center Manager - “Current Research at Mound 5″ - Discussion on the current excavations and research on Mound 5 of the Brown’s Mound Complex at the Pineland site.
11 a.m. - Bill Richards, of Paddle Florida - “Go With The Flow” - A review of the recently completed paddle event on the Suwannee River and a look at next year’s schedule of events for Paddle Florida here in SW Florida.
Noon - Don McCumber & Mike Devlin of 21st Century Kayaks - “Step forward in history with 21st century kayaks” - Building a 21st century kayak kit frame in less than one hour. The history of kayaks and the building process.
1 p.m. - Morgan Palmer, NBC-2 Meteorologist - “Weather of Southwest Florida” - A look at the hurricane season, the winter forecast for Southwest Florida, and your weather questions answered.
2 p.m. - Scott Hoffman, writer/photographer/film maker - “Kayaking the World” - In pictures, film, and music, Scott will share his stories of kayaking in Alaska, China, South America, and Siberia’s Lake Baikal among other locations.
3 p.m. - Dominick Greco, Pro Angler-Kayak Instructor-TV Host - Kayak Charters - “Kayak Fishing & Rigging” - Everything kayak fishing from advanced rigging to the most effective lures and retrieves used. New and innovative gear and how to use it. How to read water and find productive water for fishing.

WHAT YOU CAN RESERVE NOW

Don’t miss out…
VIP Wristband – get extra value at 81 businesses and attractions plus keep the blue souvenir post-festival. $10 for all 10 days.
Paddlers Pig Roast Picnic – join kayakers and canoeists from the Florida Paddling Trails Association with live music, speakers and great food. $19; advance reservations only. 10/25 Sunday.
Calusa Costume Ball – dress as a conquistador or Calusa, enjoy food and drinks, win raffle prizes, including a new kayak. $35 in advance. 10/30 Friday.
Fish Fry – kickoff the blueway fest with southern charm. $15 in advance or at the event. 10/23 Friday.
Up River speakers’ series/tours – ever seen a manatee from a kayak? $1 in advance (or at the door if space available). 10/30 Friday.
Guided trips – paradise without a passport awaits you; let our blueway outfitters help. Various fees and times throughout the 10 days.
Hotels, motels, RV parks & campgrounds with special packages for festival attendees.

COMPETITIVE EVENTS

FISH: Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival catch-and-release kayak fishing tournament — $50; must be paid in full before Captain’s Meeting 10/30; fishing is 10/31.
RACE: Kayak races – we’ve got two for you to enter; both of them are challenging and fun. Varied entry fees; Imperial River Challenge 10/24 and Paddle of the Pass 11/1.
GEO: GeoPaddle Event – Come learn how to play in your kayak with your GPS. No entry fee but registration form required. 10/25.
OUR HUB EVENTS

Saturday, Oct. 24: Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival hub event. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Mound House, 289 Connecticut St., Fort Myers Beach. Free. Speakers every hour on the hour. Vendors and informational non-profits. Kayak demos. Headline speaker: Matt Keene on “Paddling around Florida” at 3 p.m. Ethnobotany tours at 11 a.m., noon and 1 p.m. Guided paddles to Mound Key with local paddling clubs; guided tours on Mound Key for self-kayakers at 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. (239) 823-6335 or www.calusabluewaypaddlingfestival.com.

Bonus: Saturday, Oct. 24
: Reception sponsored by Sea Kayaker and Canoe & Kayak magazines at Coconuts at Pink Shell Resort, Fort Myers Beach. Free. 5 -6 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 31:
Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival hub event. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Randell Research Center, 13810 Waterfront Drive, Pineland. Free. Speakers every hour on the hour. Vendors and informational non-profits. Guided paddles with local paddling clubs. Features Mote Marine Lab’s “Aquarium on Wheels,” a 1,200-gallon exhibit with touch tank and more. Kayak fishing tournament awards at 4 p.m. (239) 823-6335 or www.calusabluewaypaddlingfestival.com.

Bonus: Saturday, Oct. 31: Reception and barbecue sponsored by Costco and Sun & The Moon Inn at Sun & The Moon, Matlacha. Free. 5-6:30 p.m.

And don’t forget Bluegrass for a Blueway – A Taste of Matlacha from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1, at Matlacha Park.

FIND US
www.calusabluewaypaddlingfestival.com
Fan us on Facebook (Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival)
Follow us on Twitter (calusapaddle)

Please forward this to all your fellow paddlers!  Thank you.

Back to the Amazon

By Canoe & Kayak - October 9, 2009 - 10:22

When Canadian filmmaker Chris Forde paddled the Mississippi River with Don and Dana Starkell a few summers ago, he couldn’t help but feel he was part of the original 1980 father and son journey from Winnipeg, Manitoba to the mouth of the Amazon River. “They were pretty much using the same equipment they had on the original trip,” says Forde. “They had wooden boxes and a jury rigged tarp system for their gear. The stuff was archaic even by 1980s standards.”

In the spring of 1980, Don Starkell and sons Dana and Jeff portaged their homemade 21-foot canoe down the street from their home in Winnipeg to the banks of the Red River, boxed and tarped their personal effects and set off for South America. Two years later, after suffering from starvation, towering surf, getting arrested, kidnapped by pirates and being shot at countless times, Don and Dana completed the 12,250-mile epic (Jeff bowed out after one too many near misses) and found their place in the Guinness Book of World Records for the longest canoe trip. Don Starkell’s 1986 account of the journey, Paddle to the Amazon, ranks among the best adventure stories of all time.

Now, Forde is nearing completion of the first documentary of the Starkells’ journey, which he hopes to release next spring. The Toronto-based filmmaker says part of the reason for producing the film was to make the Starkells’ story better known, especially among North American youths. The other driving force behind the documentary, says Forde, was to determine what inspired Don Starkell to embark on such an ambitious trip. After spending eight days canoeing with the Starkells on the Mississippi, completing dozens of interviews and retracing and dramatizing parts of their Central American leg by land, Forde finally found the answer: Don Starkell wanted nothing more than to suffer, to bond with his sons, and to survive.

“It was as if he was saying, ‘what’s going to stop me?’” says Forde. “He wanted hardship. He liked it when people said, ‘you can’t do that, you’re crazy, you’re insane.’ And then he proved them wrong.”

At age 76, Don Starkell remains an active paddler, and with a lifetime total of over 75,000 miles is set to eclipse the late U.S. expedition canoeist Verlen Kruger’s distance mark in the Guinness record book. Forde, who manages Starkell’s FaceBook page and has sifted through all of his meticulous journals, says he’s still driven and ever eccentric. “He’s kind of like a drill sergeant in some respects…right down to planning the number of paddle strokes in a day,” says Forde. “At first when I was filming on the Mississippi Don had no time for me to stop the flow of his paddling…working around his schedule was tough.” – Conor Mihell

Watch Forde’s trailers online at: www.paddletotheamazon.com