Recently I have been thinking a lot about getting back to canoe racing/training and reviving the blog. We've been gone from the blog for a LONG time!! Our last post was at the end of the 2011 season. The following year we were lucky enough to welcome our daughter Tess into the world as well as a brand new beautiful canoe "The Tess Express" We bought this Wenonah Jenson 18' boat with the hopes that it will be our family cruising vessel and the boat we teach our kids to paddle in as they grow. Paddling has taken a back seat for us the last 5 years as we grew our family and welcomed our son Tejay in 2015. Now that the kids are bigger we are excited to get back in the boats with them and share the fun.
Waxing up the "Tess Express" for vacation
A little Mad River Lady slipper Travis restored.
Now that the kids are bigger we have had more opportunities to get back in the boat this past year and even made our way back to the Run of the Charles Canoe Regatta where we had the pleasure of racing in a Wenonah C-4 with Mary Kay and Scott Ide. Scott made a pretty cool video of our race that day which you can see in the link below.
Paddling that C-4 made me desperately want to find one to add to our fleet of canoes of course. The Wenonah C-4 is an amazing boat, if you haven't had the chance to paddle one I highly recommend it handles like a dream!!
In a couple of days we are headed up to Sebec Lake for a vacation with plans to do a lot of exploring and playing in the canoes. This is what got me thinking about bringing the blog back and continuing the T & T Canoe Adventures as the expanded T & T & t & t canoe adventures!!!
Practicing her stroke
The kids love this little boat
Lots of discussion on how they are going to sit, paddle, and use the boat on vacation
We decided to do a little leisure paddling as opposed to our normal racing/training paddling this weekend. Early Friday afternoon Travis, Ed and Dan were sitting on the patio talking about the plans for the upcoming holiday weekend. Well it just so happened that Dan had his canoe already strapped to the roof of his jeep with all his fishing tackle in the car. Naturally they came up with the plan to float down the Nashua River starting at Rt. 117 and ending in Harvard where we normally put in for our training runs. This was an idea Travis and I had talked about a million times while we hammered up and down the Nashua in the spring time this year so it was awesome to finally get a chance to do it. The weather was perfect and the whole entire weekend was ahead of us so why not have a friendly fishing competition from the canoes? The teams were Ed and I in our “barge” and Dan and Travis in Dan’s canoe. Travis and I navigating the river, while Dan and Ed fished. The river was up nicely so the paddling was easy and slow and the fish were in there even though Dan and Travis couldn’t seem to find them. Ed and I on the other hand were nailing those tiny suckers, by the end of the excursion Ed caught 5 and Dan caught zilch!!! Not only can I read rivers but I also know where the fish are hiding, ok, that might be an exaggeration but you wouldn’t have known it this day.
First catch of the day, a baby pickeral!! Hey I mentioned above that these things were tiny alright!
Its not a leisure trip if you aren't taking photos of the beautiful flowers
Dace # 1
Dace #2
In Dan's defense he did decide to quit fishing for awhile and just relax in the boat.
Dace #4 was a fiesty one!
Sunday afternoon after sitting around and talking about all the fish Ed and I caught I think Dan wanted a rematch. We packed all the gear up again and headed over to another training favorite of ours South Meadow Pond. This time we had more company and more vessels but the same amount of fisherman. Jess (Ed’s wife) and Jen with Roxy her little Chihuahua (Dan’s girlfriend) came along and paddled with their significant others while Travis and I paddled around in the pro boat. Now anyone following the blog knows we spend a lot of time on this pond. We have been bragging that we know where all the fish like to hide because we are constantly scaring them up as we speed over the top of them chilling out in the coves. The water was warm and the pond was down about two feet from what it normally is so the fish seemed plentiful to me. The water level was down so much because some knuckle head in town accidentally ruptured a 150 year old cast iron pipe that feeds water from the adjoining pond, Coachlace , down to the Main St factories. This accident caused quite a bit of water to drain from both ponds in no time at all. Luckily enough no properties were damaged in town even though the fish and any other wildlife are a little constrained now. The draining has slowed since volunteers from town went out with sandbags and plywood and built make shift dams till they figure out a real fix for the issue. We had such a great time paddling around with everyone and enjoying the lake and the fish even though we weren’t reeling them in ourselves. Ohh yes, just in case your wondering Jess and Ed were victorious over Dan, Jen and Roxy’s fishing abilities with a whooping score of 8 to 3. Sorry Dan, better luck next time buddy.
Ed pretty excited about his first catch, a large mouth bass
Dan's first catch of the day, also a nice large mouth bass
Floating about
Ohh look a Crappy!
This ones as big as Jen's head
Ohh and this ones as big as the dog!
Pretty Heron we always chase around the pond, he thinks we are chasing him anyways
Roxy was pretty cozy for the trip, she even passed out here for a while
Another nice one, at least these fish were actually measurable
Rafting up to float and enjoy the views on the lake, what a great paddling weekend!!
This week’s blog post will be a joint effort. I (Travis) got voted to write most of this week’s blog post because I had a pretty good weekend racing last week. Terese added in some tidbits of info along the way also.
Saturday we headed out to Charlemont Mass for the Deerfield River race.The Deerfield is another home river for me.I grew up, and my parents still live, about 25 minutes from the river.I have been paddling on this river since I was a little kid.I always look forward to racing down this river every summer.Terese and I were racing together in preparation for the Downriver Nationals which will be held on part of the Deerfield course in a couple of weeks.
We had an “incident” prior to the start.I had to pee so I figured I would jump out on the shore and go.When I went to step out of the boat I lost my balance and felt myself falling over the side of the boat.In an attempt to save the ship I tried to jump out.This didn’t work; I ended up flipping us over.We were right next to shore and the race was a not starting for a bit so other than our pride taking a hit we would be fine.Our heat started shortly thereafter and we were off.We shot off the line right from the start and tried to keep a nice hard tempo, I think the extra adrenaline rush from the cool dip in the river might have helped with our explosive line speed.The river level was up nice and high due to all the recent rain, that day the water was running at approx 2500 CFS compared to the normal 850 CFS.We had an uneventful run, finishing with the fastest canoe time of the day in 34:16. Any run under 40 minutes is a good time during regular water levels.This may be the fastest time I have ever had at this race, certainly the fastest time ever in a plastic recreational canoe.When I was about 15 years old I raced with another junior male in a Whitewater XX (a very fast racing whitewater racing canoe) we had a similar time but I can’t remember exactly how fast it was. We dont have any photos from the Deerfield race since its tough to bring cameras with you and race and no one was with us who had a camera. You will just have to imagine the beautiful river.
We spent the night out in Western Mass at my sister and her husband’s place.We had a great pizza at Roberto’s in Northampton, highly recommended!!!
Sunday we went to Jack’s NECKRA Race (great name) at Holyoke Rows.Jones Ferry Boathouse (the actual name of the building where they store the rowing sculls) is a “green” rowing boathouse with great facilities on the Connecticut River. They have a beautiful spot right on the river and the building itself is very pretty to look at from the water. The roof of the facility is part of a government funded “greenroof project” where they have eight different varieties of sedum thriving happily on the slightly slopped roof tops. Below is a photo of the roof from the race day, the plants almost looked like they were in bloom but it was tough to tell from the angle I was standing at.
You can just see the plants on the roof in this shot
Solar panels on the portion of the roof that wasnt covered with plants
I was racing with Del Cummings.I have wanted to race with Del for years.I have always thought our paddling style would mesh well.Terese was racing with Jeff Defeo.The course was a 9.5 mile double loop course on the Connecticut River (even though Jack said it was 8 miles we heard otherwise from paddlers with a GPS at the end of the race).The gun went off and Del and I pulled away and cruised to a 2 minute victory over all the other canoes racing that day.Terese and Jeff had a great race also holding off the Warner’s right at the finish line for a third place finish. The river was up nice with all the recent rains we have been having so the downstream section of the race was a quick ride and the upstream portion wasn’t so bad either with the shallows being deeper than normal for the Connecticut river this time of year.
Connecticut River view from the Jones Ferry Boathouse
View of the start, yep its that white barrel out there in the middle of the river
Post race lunch/awards Jack and his family put on. The prize at this race, homemade maple syrup!!
Two races, two top finishes, it was a good weekend!We are enjoying the shorter races.I think they fit us better than the long stuff.We have a few low key races over the next couple weeks before the Downriver Nationals on the Deerfield River.Terese and I are looking for some revenge, in 2006 on the same course we were 4th, a mere 8 seconds out of 1st.We are fit and optimistic about the challenge ahead of us this year. I also have secured a Mad River Screamer (A fast whitewater C-1) for solo race and a ringer for the Men’s race (Peter Heed).It should be fun. Terese is planning an attempt at the woman’s C-1 championship as well.
So we have had some good and bad racing weekends behind us that I should catch up on. 6/11 was the Goose Chase Race on the twisty, shallow, Housatonic River out in the beautiful Berkshires of Western MA. We didn’t have the best race here to say the least, the Housatonic river is very challenging and technical and I (Captain Terese) wasn’t feeling my best at all. Normally we love a good technical river but when you aren't feeling well its just tough to keep it together when every corner is almost a 180 degree turn. After about an hour of racing we ended up pulling out early as we cruised past the start/finish line. We needed to make an unscheduled pit stop at the sani-cans. I won’t bore you with the details but I think the DNF had something to do with the drink of choice that day, Powerade. I will say one thing, the local racers in this area put a good whooping on everyone and really ran away with the race. Great job to all the Housi paddlers, they know their pretty little river well!!
The following weekend found us on the Nashua River for a really great little race. We spend A LOT of time on this river but we paddle a different section of it upstream in Harvard. The race course was on the lower section in Groton, and it’s a fun little course because you paddle upstream at the start of the race, turn around a bridge abutment, paddle downstream to the start/finish line and buoy turn around the finishing buoy and head upstream a short while to turn around another buoy and come back down and finish where you started. Kelly Zablonski was at the race once again doing another fantastic job capturing the whole event with her camera. I can basically tell the story of the race through her photos because she was able to catch us at a few different spots. We finished out this race 1st in the mixed category and had a great time drafting back and forth with the ladies pictured below Carina Peritore in the stern of the boat and Christina Wilson in the bow. These gals are a force to be reckoned with and nabbed us at the end as you can see. It was nice to win the mixed race this year because we have always been the bridesmaids so to speak in previous years coming in 2nd and 3rd.
Great turnout at the 2011 Nashua River Race
All the C2's on the starting line
Waiting for the gun!
And were off!! Not one of our best starts this year. There was a little ramming going on here
First buoy turn on the bridge abutment, Carina and Christina are right there with us. I love this photo cause you can really get a great view of how much you can lean a pro boat without actually tipping over.
Us coming into the second buoy turn which is also the finish line after the second loop is completed
Sneaking in on the inside
Headed back upstream for the second loop
Sprint to the finish with Carina and Christina
And they happened to get just ahead of us at the end. Nice job ladies!!!
So after a fantastic day on the mighty Susquehanna river for the Aluminum mixed relay on Sunday we were awake and ready at the butt crack of dawn to paddle the 70 Miler on Memorial Day.
There is some history behind the General Clinton Canoe Regatta that I feel like sharing, sorry if this bores anyone but history always interests me. The first time I ever made the trek out to Cooperstown for the regatta we paddled over to this old plaque that is at the start of the Susquehanna River, the plaque was there to memorialize Brigadier General James Clinton and Major General John Sullivan. The story I heard from the folks I was with was that the two Generals devised a plan back in 1779-1780-ish to dam up the trickle of a river that was coming out of Otsego lake and once there was a big enough pool of water they would break the dam and ride the wave down attacking the Iroquois Confederacy along the entire section stretching from NY to PA. At first thought this sounds amazing but once I got down to researching this whole thing it was pretty sad to read of the devastation these two guys brought onto the Iroquois Confederacy. Many areas in Upstate NY are full of interesting battle stories between the Native Americans and the White men and canoeing is of course a huge part of that since it was an easy way to transport supplies for troops back in the day before we had hummers and tanks. I won’t bore you with anymore of the sad details of their campaign. If you’re interested just Google it, there is tons of info out there on it.
* This photo is from Paul Gruber on Facebook, I do not know him but I know this is one of the best shots of the start!
So back to the whole point of the trip, to race a canoe 70 miles! We had one of our best starts I can remember at the race this year. The 70 begins in Cooperstown NY at the base of Otsego lake as I mentioned in earlier posts. After the national anthem is sung we are off charging full steam ahead towards a pontoon boat lying out in the fog of the lake. We made it to the boat without any issues at all which is pretty amazing considering there were around 60 racing canoes on the starting line with us. The buoy turn around the boat was clean and we were on our way towards the mouth of the river, we entered the mighty Susquehanna in 8th place overall and second mixed, which is about the best I can recall us doing, great way to start the day!! The first thing shortly after entering the river is a short portage around the dam at the hospital. This portage is so fast that you barely have time to think about running with the boat before you are back in the water about ready to enter “the swamp” We were lucky enough to have Neil my father in law pitting for us (bringing us fresh drinks and anything else we need throughout the course), not only is he a great pit person since he is a racer himself he also managed to get some awesome video for us. Below is a clip of the start out to the boat and then a clip of us coming down the lake into the swamp.
*Just a note at the beginning of this video we are the team to the left of the bright neon green guys, we are wearing white. Just as the gun goes off a team pulls in back of us for a few seconds but we pulled away nicely once we were under way
We had paddled this section of the course on Saturday but nothing really prepares you for the mayhem you can run into on the fast moving currents as you whip through S turn after S turn. They release water from the dam at the hospital so what debris was once pinned securely the Saturday before the race can be wedged lose and sent floating along with the 60 other boats and yourself, exciting!! Not only are you watching out for everyone else as you paddle at top speed but you have large floating and attached obstacles to contend with. After some good jockeying back and forth with a few other mixed teams and some men’s teams in the swamp I was proud to see that we were in 1st place in the mixed division at our first pit stop which was about 2 hours into the race.
We continued down the river drafting men’s teams where we could hoping we could somehow make it up to the leading men’s pack and pull away from the other mixed teams behind us. It was about 3 hours into the race when Dennis and Emma caught up to us, this meant we had 1st and 2nd place together, or so we had hoped. It was nice to have them to chat with and the draft was great at this point in time. Dennis and Emma were good company for us through the wider section of the river known as Goodyear Lake. Neil happened to get some more good video here of us drafting along together with Carina and Andy not far behind.
We had a great portage at the Goodyear Dam, it is pretty steep and was a little slick since the ground was pretty well saturated from the thunderstorms they had been having the week leading up to the race. We made it down to the Oneonta portage without any issues at all. Now from this point on in the race its gets to be a little tough mentally, 4 hours into the race and about 4 hours to go for us. As I mentioned before we changed places quite a few times after the four hour mark going between 1st and 3rd place with Jeff & Kristin, Dennis & Emma. I was surprised how well I felt because I have been prone to stomach issues in these longer races but I think I have finally found out the perfect fuel for the long distances, I could tell you my secrets but then I would have to kill you.
We were now into familiar territory on the river since we had spent a lot of time on the lower 35 the day before by participating in the relay. Believe it or not it helps to come up to something that looks familiar so you can say to yourself “ok I only have X amount of miles till the next relay exchange” It doesn’t mean anything in the 70 but it’s sort of a way to notch off the miles in my head.
The next video is a clip about 4 miles before the finish of the race, we made a great move on the other two teams in the Green Acres shortcut and we gained some distance on them. We decided it was time to make a move with the short distance we had left in the race and the big distance we had on the other teams. This is the toughest part in any canoe race from what I have experienced, knowing when to make a go for it or save enough energy to hold off the other guys is a fine art, we are still perfecting this whole thing but I swear it’s something you can only learn thru experience.
As you will be able to see from the last clip we blew up and did get reeled in by Jeff & Kristen at the very end and Dennis & Emma were not far behind us at all. I was really happy with our finish and the whole race in general. As I mentioned in the beginning of the post its pretty amazing that after 8 hours of racing and a dog fight at the end we finished just as we started going into the river, right next to Jeff & Kristen!
Finishing times on the link below but the first four teams were all from New England and the first three teams were only 8 seconds apart!!!
We just came off of one the best paddling racing weekends of the year this past Memorial weekend. The General Clinton Canoe Regatta is out in beautiful upstate NY on the Susquehanna river. The mighty Susquehanna makes its start at the base of Otsego lake in Cooperstown, NY, yes the baseball hall of fame town. The small baseball obsessed town becomes a canoeing mecca for one weekend a year and we are lucky enough to get to enjoy the weekend with some of the best paddlers and friends we’ve got. Teams come from all over North America to compete in tons of races starting on Friday with the shorter races going on both Saturday and Sunday ending on Monday with the 70 mile canoe race, yep that’s 70 miles all in one shot!
We arrived on Saturday morning to the most beautiful summery weather anyone could ask for. After picking up our race number and chicken dinner tickets for the 70 miler on Monday we headed up to our favorite spot in Cooperstown, Cooley’s Irish pub, to wait for the rest of our friends to show up. After a relaxing cocktail and some chicken wings the rest of the Berkshire Outfitters Mixed Nuts (our aluminum relay racing team) arrived in town. We have a tradition every year to paddle “the swamp” the first section of the race which is windy, pushy and full of nice big strainers for practice on Saturday. This section of the river becomes much faster with the water release they have for the actual race day so it’s fun to float thru at a nice pace chatting it up with our friends who we haven’t seen since the winter months.
After finishing up our float we decided we would head back up to Cooley’s pub for some food, now this is in integral piece of the weekend. As we were hanging out in Cooley’s having some dinner, I received a text from one of the other Mixed Nuts teammates saying his partner who would be doing his leg of the relay tomorrow morning wouldn’t be able to race with us. This was a bummer so we all sat and starting texting other paddlers we knew hoping we could fill the spot last second. We jokingly mentioned our problem to our waitress, Hannah, whose ears perked right up, we said “you busy tomorrow? Interested in doing a canoe race?” Now this waitress was not a paddler but she seemed to be in good shape, we found out later she was a big track star and coach, perfect!!! After waiting for all other prospects to answer our texts we decided that the waitress was as good a fill in as anyone and she was more then happy to help us out and super excited that we asked her. Berkshire Outfitters Mixed Nuts team was complete and ready for the race tomorrow!!!
left to right : Travis, Hannah, Terese, Julie, Jessie, John, Terry, Marge, Jeff, Neil
Now this year we are high tech so I was able to video tape all the exchanges of the relay legs so you can really get a firsthand glance at a well-oiled machine known as the Berkshire Outfitters Mixed Nuts aluminum canoe racing team!! We finished out the 35 mile race on Sunday with a time of 4 hours, 14 minutes and 28 seconds, 6th place out of 31 teams, not too shabby at all!!!
Here are just a few photos from the Ashuelot river race up in Keene NH from 5/7, kind of old but finally getting them up here on the blog. They were taken by a spectator Kelly, and she does a great job with catching the race. This river is one of the most beautiful spots to paddle on and even more fun to race on. It starts out nice and windy and a little shallow up in the center of Keene NH, and then opens up down below to a wider still shallow river that meanders through fields. We did the pro race which is a 20 mile course mostly downstream with a buoy turn at the finish, then you paddle upstream for a good while, turning to finish downstream at the place where the buoy turn was made earlier.
Waiting patiently at the start of the race
Good portage for TnT shortly after the start, 2nd place at this point in time
Just after the portage we are about to head under the bridge with people hot on our tails!!!
After 2 hours and 19 minutes of paddling it was neck and neck for 4-5th place with Dennis and Emma
They got us right at the end!!!!
GPS view of the course but only the down stream portion, you turn and paddle back up in the pro race and then turn at the red covered bridge to head back down.
So we finished out the race really happy with our effort (even those Dennis and Emma nabbed us at the end haha) and decided to paddle back up stream to town where our car was. I cant recall the exact time but it was about a 4 hour day on the water total with 2 of the hours at racing pace. Great training day for the soon to come 70 Miler we just completed this past Memorial day weekend.
*Just a note on this blog post, all of these awesome photos of the race came from other paddlers or paddlers significant others. Thank you for the blog materials!!! :)