July 15-19 2008: MR340
There were 145 canoes and kayaks competing in the third running of the worlds longest continual river race. tandem racers, solo paddlers and now kayaking teams raced from the starting whistle at KawPoint park in Kansas City for a ramp 340miles downstream in St Charles. 44 hours, 27min was the fastest time last year, in the second running of the MR340, but contestants have 100hours to complete the race.
I was invited to volunteer with the MissouriRiver Relief on a safety boat. Boats would support paddlers throughout the race with first aid if it were needed. I met my fellow river rats and their boat at Kaw point for the beginning of the race. I cant help but wonder how many people got lost in search of the ramp- Its a mess down there!
There was a mass of boats pacing along the Kaw anxiously for the start of the race. Kayaks and canoes of every shape and color- the ramp and bank of the river swarmed with family members and friends. Music played and the start was sounded.
Two of the team boats, of six men each, paddled in the lead- though not by too far! They were off the kaw in a flash, but there was a oblong cluster of paddlers following them close behind. The group sped towards the Kansas city morning skyline and the last of the boats trickled onto the big muddy and off the shore for several minutes. following the boats towards downtown and the skyscrapers paddlers and their onlookers were blinded by the risen sun, but it was not long at all before the bend of the river turned them from the east. Safety boats led and followed the paddlers and supporters and media rushed to their vehicles and downstream to ramps and the first of the checkpoints in Lexington and Waverly.
A boat must stop at each checkpoint and initial (or have a groundcrew sign) a sign-in, but do not have to exit their boat.. Volunteers record the time a boat arrives and departs a checkpoint.
I joined RiverRelief-ers Steve and Mel on a trip towards Columbia- to the races half-way point at Coopers' Landing. We hauled one of our largest boats- it was in the water by early afternoon and we juggled trailers and vehicles until we had a plan for shuttling boats and volunteers throughout the race. I had some time and took a stroll down the Katy trail- only a few hundred feet from the checkpoint. Once I told him of my plan, Steve suggested I visit a 'boat henge'- a little up the trail. He would not tell me what it was. I went over the first creek and looked to my right- as Steve had said to. A line of dead boats stood on their nose's and tails and a pink flamingo guarded the art. I took some photos and continued the bank of the river was steep and muddy in most places. I ran into Cooper who told me of some of the treasures he'd found on the river. He showed me a set of arrowheads and rock tools he'd discovered in a nearby field. Some were really cool!!
When I returned to the Landing, they fed us. Dino made us some brisket and I was introduced to the rest of the Landing's crew. Steve spent a lot of time on the phone; the racers were to encounter the barge that we had driven over on I-70. Once all of the boats and volunteers were informed and the safety of the racers was ensured, the three of us discussed our checkpoint and the procedures that we were to follow.
We drove across the river and downstream a bit to join a friend on an exposed sandbar. We returned at sunset-which wasn't a nice as it shouldve been! Kim, a local woman, built a fire and folks stayed up to discuss the race and the river. Coopers landing seems to be a community of the friendliest river rats and fisherman in the area. It hosts it's own culture of youthful, spirited, relaxed folks who live with the river. They continuously told stories of giant fish, old boats, farms and military time. I got to know several of them well and enjoyed all of the stories and bs-
Steve and Mel got to sleep around 11 and the Landing was quiet by midnight. It was dark and cool- the moon lit the river and trees. We expected the first of the racers to arrive around 3:30am. I stayed up and fed the fire for a few hours. Kim returned to the fire and we talked for a while. We walked down the trail for a few minutes and back- It was cold once we left the flames. Steve and Mel sat by the fire, though they were not exactly awake. It was no time before I spotted the first light in the distance.
A bright light shown off the river and quickly disappeared as it turned a bend in the river. Again, the light broke the dark on the far river- followed quickly by a second. Steve woke the group's ground-crew in the campground and was surprised to find the progress that the two team boats had made. Steve shouted at the boats- warning of the dangerous wing-dike which blocked the checkpoint. The second boat sped to the first. And in seconds the ramp was filled with shouts and yells of orders and reports from the boats. "ROCKS!- hard right, hard right, Now!"
The six-man "Texas" team hit the rocks hard. They rammed their black boat onto the wing dike; the Belize boat tried to avoid the hazard by turning to shore. They hit hard, but not as bad as the other. Men poured out of the Belize boat and I asked a paddler to sign in. Steve had the other boat to sign- I did not pay much attention to them- there was so much happening in the huge canoe just in front of me! The Texas team got louder and then disappeared a few feet downstream. The Belize team seemed confused and unorganized- There were people everywhere around the boat and many folks were talking. My brain wasn't quit working at that point in the morning- I cant image how they were able to communicate as well as they did!
Steve noticed that a member was missing and teammates, when asked, told us that they had dropped him off at a ramp upstream. He had been in pain and was useless to his teammates.
The Belize team split with folks still jumping on and off of the boat... They left with only three of the 5 that they had arrived with. Two of their paddlers sat with us at the fire- one suffered a bloody nose and felt week and the other had become too frustrated to continue. He told me, in a thick accent, that he "did not come to finish, but to win..." and he did not think that they could do it. They were very friendly and shared stories and listened to ours. The two of them spoke Spanish, creole and English and told of exotic creatures and wild rivers in their homeland. Compared to Belize, they said, the Missouri river was extraordinarily long, dirty and boring. "A deer, two fish, and only a single turtle" is all that they spotted on their trip.
When we told them that they had reached the half-way point (Cooper's) they were shocked! One of the paddlers became distracted by a leftover hamburger given to him by a ground-crew member and the other ranted on how ridiculously long the race was. The team had paddled in the Texas Water Safari- ~260 someodd miles- just a month earlier and drove up in the bed of a pickup to compete in our race.
At 5am, a pair of Fish and Wildlife officers came to relieve us. Dino served us another meal and we packed and were on the water again by 8:30- for Jeff City. The plan was to take it easy and watch for paddlers on the way.
We stopped at a sandbar- Mel swam for a second and Steve and I paced in search of any good rocks. I was on the hunt for any arrowhead-lookin things I could fine. Picked up a pair of nice Carnelian crystals and Steve collected all of the glass he could before a phone call required us to pick up our pace. We jumped in and started for Jeff City- I think he said 28miles? downstream-
Another phone call, just as we were passing Claytown island gave us some time to relax- we pulled into the back of the giant island. I jumped out- Steve and Mel stayed in the boat for a few minutes. The island was like a giant sand dune sticking out out the river with a clay cap covered in trees. There were a few good rocks in the water- I headed towards the tip of the island in search of my arrowhead. It wasn't there either! --returning to the boat, I tried to chill out with Steve and Mel for a second but the water at my feet was far too tempting. I stripped off my shirt and began to wade into the water. About 30 feet off of shore, the water reached to my thighs before It became ankle-shallow again. The little ridge was about 5 feet wide- we'd run over it on the way in. On the other side of the ridge, I walked until The current left me swimming upstream to stay with the boat. I ended up sitting in the water between the ridge and the island- where the water reached the base of my neck when I sat on the sandy bottom. If I did not plant my feet or hands in the substrate, the current would push me down- Steve played his guitar for another few minutes before I found him in the river. I dunked my head and walked to shore and up to the ridge of our sand-dune. The fine sand scorched the bottoms of my feet until I found that odd sensation where your not sure if it is hot or cold- I laid on the top of the ridge and the sun felt awesome!
I laid for a few minutes before I started to drift off in sleep. A while later I woke to Steve- He told me I'd been laying shirtless in the sun for a while and he feared I would be sunburned. Ooops. (never did burn)
We got to Jeff city around 3pm- Only ever saw one paddler on our float from Coopers landing! ! There were a lot of people on the ramp and in the adjacent park, but not so many boats! Jeff city is where we encountered the first problem with fishing boat traffic. Several boats put in and pulled out and even more passed us on the river. An older couple manned the sign-in duty; we were there as back-up.
We set up a shade tent and a trio of chairs. The ramp was nice! It was wide and fresh and there was a small park just to the right. The park had a nice flower garden with a small windmill and a set of bird feeders. There were paths through the raised beds made of river gravel and some of sand. A giant post at the top of the ramp displayed mileage signs (via the river) to everywhere from Hermann to a town in Montana and one on the gulf coast! I met an nice old cowboy- Joe Wilson- who claimed he was in the process of building the park and maintaining the ramp. He was retired and the park had been his hobby for four years! He visited it almost daily and said he got the greatest pleasure when he watched folks enjoying his park. The city, he said, has been opposed to his fantastic work throughout the process and was trying to shut him down. the conservation department, too, had written him letters telling him to stop working on or near the ramp, but gave no clear reason why. I think it looked great!
the boats began to trickle in about an hour after our arrival and the traffic picked up dramatically just after sunset! Steve, Mel and I visited the best sandbar of the trip just above the ramp for a dramatic, beautiful sunset and a full-moon rising over the capitol! an eagle was on the point when we arrived!
We returned just as dusk fell and I spent a few hours doing what I could at the ramp. I took many pics here- the bridge and capitol building were awesome in the dark!
Steve was asleep by 1030 and was there not too much later. (stayed in my tent!) Mel stayed up with the ramp until some horrible hour in the morning.
I woke just before sunrise and got to watch the morning mob of Canoes and Kayaks come and go. Paddlers were sleeping everywhere- on the ramp and park benches, in the sand and family cars or tents...
Steve was up at sunrise and I did what I could for another few hours. Cooked a quick meal on my little stove and mingled with the paddlers and media who ran up and down the ramp. There where a million different conversations being tossed around the ramp with food, water and supplies. Exchanges were often brief, though most paddlers did not seem to be in any sort of a hurry; I guess there was a general sense of excitement and rushing on the ground.
Steve took over the sign-in for a while and continued to help out on the ramp after I left. I met Tuesday- an Americorps volunteer trying to raise money for similar projects with a small food/beverage booth at the top of the ramp. She asked me to watch the booth for a few minutes while she ran to the airport on a coffee run.
By the time she returned the was a large group of people with empty mugs waiting for her precious drink. I watched the booth again while she made an ice run and helped he with a few other chores.
Steve woke Mel around 8am and we packed up our small camp.
The race was starting to take it's toll on racers by the tome they reached Jeff city! Blisters and a nasty lack of sleep shown on every paddler, but everyone seemed to be in a good mood and the excitement of the race was still in the air. Boats disappeared towards the capitol building- in pairs most of the time. Rumors of everything from injured paddlers to sea monsters circulated through the group of racers.
the little town of Hermann was next on the list of checkpoints and we recorded boats on the long drive to the Osage confluence- where we stopped for a quick break. A pair of gorgeous Giant Swallowtail butterflies flittered around the mud flat we were on- they were huge and looked almost surreal1!!
At the confluence, and again at the confluence of the Gasgonade river near Hermann, the water level (and, therefore, the speed of the current) increased dramatically. Steve turned up the Gasgonade river- It spilled into the Mighty Mo with a great force! We got about 1000ft up the river and began finding giant, clear green bubbles of water breaking the nasty brown water of the Mo- Over about a hundred feet, the waters of the two rivers mixed and suddenly we were driving over an emerald-green Ozark river! It was SO cool!- like something out of Huck Fin!
Herman was busy with boats and they came at a steady pace until just after sunset when we saw a mob of them arrive until midnight-ish. While the sun was up, I wondered through town. Most of it was closed up for the evening, but the dairy and an antique shop let me in. The town was built up in the early and mid-1800's and had a Strong german look. I tagged along with Steve and Mel on their jont through town. They ate at the dairy and told me stories of their October visit to the town during a river-relief scouting event a few years back. I would love to spend more time here! Steve and Mel chilled out at the ramp and I wondered around with my camera.
Sometime just after midnight we decided to go downstream- Hermann was just to bright and loud for our taste. Steve drove until he was sure we would be okay- then he shut the engine off. We drifted past a cool bluff system above the river and an odd set of wing dikes- the moonlight exposed just enough detail.! It was beautiful!
The newhaven ramp (not a checkpoint) was swamped with boats and tents. It was a little more peaceful than Hermann. Mel and Steve wondered off to find a good spot for their tent. I wondered around for an hour and fell asleep on the warm cement of the ramp. when I woke, just before the birds started going,. I was the only one up. It was almost creepy how quiet the town was! I stayed at the ramp and helped a few boats launch when that pre-dawn light woke the birds. It was a spectacular, pink sunrise and the first clouds of the race made it all the better!
I strolled through town sometime around six and ran into a local man who gave me a short history on it. He'd lived there all of his life and knew of a complex tunnel system under the town. The tunnels, he said, led from a few basements in downtown and led across the countryside. The town was a player in the Underground railroad, but most tunnels are being sealed up now. How cool is that! He pointed out an abandon blacksmith's shop from the late 1800's. and told me of his plans to purchase the building and make it into a museum.
When I got back, Steve and Mel had packed up and the last two canoes that were there when I left the ramp were gone. we drove down to Washington where we met a small group of volunteers who had bought us needed gas. Washington looks like a larger town that should have been a checkpoint if it were not for some dangerous currents. We drove down to the last checkpoint at Weldon Springs- 20miles upstream from the finish line!~
Mel and I both drifted in and out of sleep and Steve got us there before we knew it! There were some cool bluffs along the way- lots of paddlers- several of which were not in the race. Mel jumped in the water about a quarter mile before the ramp and drifted down to the ramp-
At Weldon, which was only a ramp and gravel parking lot, we met up with more of our river relief crew. They were manning the checkpoint- as they had been for almost 24hours! they told us stories of swamped boats, crazy hallucinations that the exhausted paddlers had been having, and an extraordinary number of racers dropping out of the race due to the nasty heat. I swam with a few others- the ramp created a swift eddie that would take us down a few hundred feet and whip us back up to the ramp.
By the time a racer relaxed at the last checkpoint, he or she would be begin to get excited again about the race. The frustration of the horribly long paddle from Hermann to us wore off and the realization of the end of the race would bring a sense of accomplishment and relief to a paddler that gave them a sort of second wind. Folks arrived grumpy, frustrated and exhausted and, with the support of their friends, family, and our crew, leave refreshed. The boat traffic on the ramp was the worst here, and the boaters were not friendly at all! We were not welcome at their ramp and they called the cops on us. One large rec boat weaved dangerously in between our racers.
After a few hours at Weldon springs, I took off with another half of our crew towards st charles- the finish line!
We passed a large number of paddlers on the way and I was given a chance to drive the boat- That was way cool!
On our arrival, members immediately sought cold drinks and a shower, but there was still work! Folks unpacked the boat and made the necessary calls- I picked up five meals for our fellow crew members that we had left upstream and stayed at St charles with crew member Anthony while the other half of us drove back to Weldon to deliver the meals and get a shower.
Those boats that we had passed floated to the finish line and each got to experience their own brief moment of fame from the large crowd of ground crews and public. Everyone of them had a huge smile on- seeking only their family and friends at the ramp.
I walked the shore and picked up dozens of fishing weights- collected the head of a cement squirrel sculpture and the action and barrel of a sawed-off 20ga. shotgun that laid rushed on the shore. (They are my souvenirs for the trip and are now decor in my small garden out back)
Folks ate and celebrated- boats were set onshore as displays- everyone seemed happy- no matter how much sleep they needed. There was an awards ceremony, but I did not attend for too long- walked the shore instead.
Anthony took me out on the boat for a few minutes- just to float.
We met up with another group of our people and within a few hours our enitire crew and the three boats had landed safely. The time of the last paddlers was something like 87hours! the sun set and our crew socialized and celebrated late into the night- I found a bed of coals in the mud and built up a large fire with all of the driftwood on the beach. I ended up sleeping next to the fire.
Our fleet slept on boats, wrapped in tarps- or in tents in a nearby park. I was on shore- woke several times and fed the fire. Sometime around 4am it began to rain- then again at 6 and at 7. Once it was light enough to see, I walked the shoreline and picked up all of the trash I could find. Around 7 people began to emerge and I tagged along for a coffee run.
We packed up and droe the boats down a mile or so to a ramp where we loaded them- Shaved anthonys' head in the parkinglot, dorve through town for a meal and onto coopers where we did the final boat exchange.
The last of the good stories were told- paddlers who claimed to have seen mermaids and sea monsters, elephants in trees, fuzzy creatures dancing on the water, or a beaver or a small bear splash into the water... Boats that were swamped by odd currents, braving large waves, or those that just spilled over 'cause of a tired paddler... and those paddlers who encountered our killer flying carp.
It was a GREAT trip! I got to fulfill my own Huck finn fantacy and learned a load of the river, the race and my comerades! I dont think I would have been able to paddle in the race this year- I cant believe how many boats did!- but I would like to inthe future! Maybe I will take my kayak next year !
Never did find my arrowhead, but I got alot of cool pics! LET ME KNOW IF YOUD LIKE ANY PRINTS! enjoy! I took 900+ photos this trip; if there is a boat you'd like the photos of, I could find it in my photos- just gimme a description and boat #. THANKS
There were 145 canoes and kayaks competing in the third running of the worlds longest continual river race. tandem racers, solo paddlers and now kayaking teams raced from the starting whistle at KawPoint park in Kansas City for a ramp 340miles downstream in St Charles. 44 hours, 27min was the fastest time last year, in the second running of the MR340, but contestants have 100hours to complete the race.
I was invited to volunteer with the MissouriRiver Relief on a safety boat. Boats would support paddlers throughout the race with first aid if it were needed. I met my fellow river rats and their boat at Kaw point for the beginning of the race. I cant help but wonder how many people got lost in search of the ramp- Its a mess down there!
There was a mass of boats pacing along the Kaw anxiously for the start of the race. Kayaks and canoes of every shape and color- the ramp and bank of the river swarmed with family members and friends. Music played and the start was sounded.
Two of the team boats, of six men each, paddled in the lead- though not by too far! They were off the kaw in a flash, but there was a oblong cluster of paddlers following them close behind. The group sped towards the Kansas city morning skyline and the last of the boats trickled onto the big muddy and off the shore for several minutes. following the boats towards downtown and the skyscrapers paddlers and their onlookers were blinded by the risen sun, but it was not long at all before the bend of the river turned them from the east. Safety boats led and followed the paddlers and supporters and media rushed to their vehicles and downstream to ramps and the first of the checkpoints in Lexington and Waverly.
A boat must stop at each checkpoint and initial (or have a groundcrew sign) a sign-in, but do not have to exit their boat.. Volunteers record the time a boat arrives and departs a checkpoint.
I joined RiverRelief-ers Steve and Mel on a trip towards Columbia- to the races half-way point at Coopers' Landing. We hauled one of our largest boats- it was in the water by early afternoon and we juggled trailers and vehicles until we had a plan for shuttling boats and volunteers throughout the race. I had some time and took a stroll down the Katy trail- only a few hundred feet from the checkpoint. Once I told him of my plan, Steve suggested I visit a 'boat henge'- a little up the trail. He would not tell me what it was. I went over the first creek and looked to my right- as Steve had said to. A line of dead boats stood on their nose's and tails and a pink flamingo guarded the art. I took some photos and continued the bank of the river was steep and muddy in most places. I ran into Cooper who told me of some of the treasures he'd found on the river. He showed me a set of arrowheads and rock tools he'd discovered in a nearby field. Some were really cool!!
When I returned to the Landing, they fed us. Dino made us some brisket and I was introduced to the rest of the Landing's crew. Steve spent a lot of time on the phone; the racers were to encounter the barge that we had driven over on I-70. Once all of the boats and volunteers were informed and the safety of the racers was ensured, the three of us discussed our checkpoint and the procedures that we were to follow.
We drove across the river and downstream a bit to join a friend on an exposed sandbar. We returned at sunset-which wasn't a nice as it shouldve been! Kim, a local woman, built a fire and folks stayed up to discuss the race and the river. Coopers landing seems to be a community of the friendliest river rats and fisherman in the area. It hosts it's own culture of youthful, spirited, relaxed folks who live with the river. They continuously told stories of giant fish, old boats, farms and military time. I got to know several of them well and enjoyed all of the stories and bs-
Steve and Mel got to sleep around 11 and the Landing was quiet by midnight. It was dark and cool- the moon lit the river and trees. We expected the first of the racers to arrive around 3:30am. I stayed up and fed the fire for a few hours. Kim returned to the fire and we talked for a while. We walked down the trail for a few minutes and back- It was cold once we left the flames. Steve and Mel sat by the fire, though they were not exactly awake. It was no time before I spotted the first light in the distance.
A bright light shown off the river and quickly disappeared as it turned a bend in the river. Again, the light broke the dark on the far river- followed quickly by a second. Steve woke the group's ground-crew in the campground and was surprised to find the progress that the two team boats had made. Steve shouted at the boats- warning of the dangerous wing-dike which blocked the checkpoint. The second boat sped to the first. And in seconds the ramp was filled with shouts and yells of orders and reports from the boats. "ROCKS!- hard right, hard right, Now!"
The six-man "Texas" team hit the rocks hard. They rammed their black boat onto the wing dike; the Belize boat tried to avoid the hazard by turning to shore. They hit hard, but not as bad as the other. Men poured out of the Belize boat and I asked a paddler to sign in. Steve had the other boat to sign- I did not pay much attention to them- there was so much happening in the huge canoe just in front of me! The Texas team got louder and then disappeared a few feet downstream. The Belize team seemed confused and unorganized- There were people everywhere around the boat and many folks were talking. My brain wasn't quit working at that point in the morning- I cant image how they were able to communicate as well as they did!
Steve noticed that a member was missing and teammates, when asked, told us that they had dropped him off at a ramp upstream. He had been in pain and was useless to his teammates.
The Belize team split with folks still jumping on and off of the boat... They left with only three of the 5 that they had arrived with. Two of their paddlers sat with us at the fire- one suffered a bloody nose and felt week and the other had become too frustrated to continue. He told me, in a thick accent, that he "did not come to finish, but to win..." and he did not think that they could do it. They were very friendly and shared stories and listened to ours. The two of them spoke Spanish, creole and English and told of exotic creatures and wild rivers in their homeland. Compared to Belize, they said, the Missouri river was extraordinarily long, dirty and boring. "A deer, two fish, and only a single turtle" is all that they spotted on their trip.
When we told them that they had reached the half-way point (Cooper's) they were shocked! One of the paddlers became distracted by a leftover hamburger given to him by a ground-crew member and the other ranted on how ridiculously long the race was. The team had paddled in the Texas Water Safari- ~260 someodd miles- just a month earlier and drove up in the bed of a pickup to compete in our race.
At 5am, a pair of Fish and Wildlife officers came to relieve us. Dino served us another meal and we packed and were on the water again by 8:30- for Jeff City. The plan was to take it easy and watch for paddlers on the way.
We stopped at a sandbar- Mel swam for a second and Steve and I paced in search of any good rocks. I was on the hunt for any arrowhead-lookin things I could fine. Picked up a pair of nice Carnelian crystals and Steve collected all of the glass he could before a phone call required us to pick up our pace. We jumped in and started for Jeff City- I think he said 28miles? downstream-
Another phone call, just as we were passing Claytown island gave us some time to relax- we pulled into the back of the giant island. I jumped out- Steve and Mel stayed in the boat for a few minutes. The island was like a giant sand dune sticking out out the river with a clay cap covered in trees. There were a few good rocks in the water- I headed towards the tip of the island in search of my arrowhead. It wasn't there either! --returning to the boat, I tried to chill out with Steve and Mel for a second but the water at my feet was far too tempting. I stripped off my shirt and began to wade into the water. About 30 feet off of shore, the water reached to my thighs before It became ankle-shallow again. The little ridge was about 5 feet wide- we'd run over it on the way in. On the other side of the ridge, I walked until The current left me swimming upstream to stay with the boat. I ended up sitting in the water between the ridge and the island- where the water reached the base of my neck when I sat on the sandy bottom. If I did not plant my feet or hands in the substrate, the current would push me down- Steve played his guitar for another few minutes before I found him in the river. I dunked my head and walked to shore and up to the ridge of our sand-dune. The fine sand scorched the bottoms of my feet until I found that odd sensation where your not sure if it is hot or cold- I laid on the top of the ridge and the sun felt awesome!
I laid for a few minutes before I started to drift off in sleep. A while later I woke to Steve- He told me I'd been laying shirtless in the sun for a while and he feared I would be sunburned. Ooops. (never did burn)
We got to Jeff city around 3pm- Only ever saw one paddler on our float from Coopers landing! ! There were a lot of people on the ramp and in the adjacent park, but not so many boats! Jeff city is where we encountered the first problem with fishing boat traffic. Several boats put in and pulled out and even more passed us on the river. An older couple manned the sign-in duty; we were there as back-up.
We set up a shade tent and a trio of chairs. The ramp was nice! It was wide and fresh and there was a small park just to the right. The park had a nice flower garden with a small windmill and a set of bird feeders. There were paths through the raised beds made of river gravel and some of sand. A giant post at the top of the ramp displayed mileage signs (via the river) to everywhere from Hermann to a town in Montana and one on the gulf coast! I met an nice old cowboy- Joe Wilson- who claimed he was in the process of building the park and maintaining the ramp. He was retired and the park had been his hobby for four years! He visited it almost daily and said he got the greatest pleasure when he watched folks enjoying his park. The city, he said, has been opposed to his fantastic work throughout the process and was trying to shut him down. the conservation department, too, had written him letters telling him to stop working on or near the ramp, but gave no clear reason why. I think it looked great!
the boats began to trickle in about an hour after our arrival and the traffic picked up dramatically just after sunset! Steve, Mel and I visited the best sandbar of the trip just above the ramp for a dramatic, beautiful sunset and a full-moon rising over the capitol! an eagle was on the point when we arrived!
We returned just as dusk fell and I spent a few hours doing what I could at the ramp. I took many pics here- the bridge and capitol building were awesome in the dark!
Steve was asleep by 1030 and was there not too much later. (stayed in my tent!) Mel stayed up with the ramp until some horrible hour in the morning.
I woke just before sunrise and got to watch the morning mob of Canoes and Kayaks come and go. Paddlers were sleeping everywhere- on the ramp and park benches, in the sand and family cars or tents...
Steve was up at sunrise and I did what I could for another few hours. Cooked a quick meal on my little stove and mingled with the paddlers and media who ran up and down the ramp. There where a million different conversations being tossed around the ramp with food, water and supplies. Exchanges were often brief, though most paddlers did not seem to be in any sort of a hurry; I guess there was a general sense of excitement and rushing on the ground.
Steve took over the sign-in for a while and continued to help out on the ramp after I left. I met Tuesday- an Americorps volunteer trying to raise money for similar projects with a small food/beverage booth at the top of the ramp. She asked me to watch the booth for a few minutes while she ran to the airport on a coffee run.
By the time she returned the was a large group of people with empty mugs waiting for her precious drink. I watched the booth again while she made an ice run and helped he with a few other chores.
Steve woke Mel around 8am and we packed up our small camp.
The race was starting to take it's toll on racers by the tome they reached Jeff city! Blisters and a nasty lack of sleep shown on every paddler, but everyone seemed to be in a good mood and the excitement of the race was still in the air. Boats disappeared towards the capitol building- in pairs most of the time. Rumors of everything from injured paddlers to sea monsters circulated through the group of racers.
the little town of Hermann was next on the list of checkpoints and we recorded boats on the long drive to the Osage confluence- where we stopped for a quick break. A pair of gorgeous Giant Swallowtail butterflies flittered around the mud flat we were on- they were huge and looked almost surreal1!!
At the confluence, and again at the confluence of the Gasgonade river near Hermann, the water level (and, therefore, the speed of the current) increased dramatically. Steve turned up the Gasgonade river- It spilled into the Mighty Mo with a great force! We got about 1000ft up the river and began finding giant, clear green bubbles of water breaking the nasty brown water of the Mo- Over about a hundred feet, the waters of the two rivers mixed and suddenly we were driving over an emerald-green Ozark river! It was SO cool!- like something out of Huck Fin!
Herman was busy with boats and they came at a steady pace until just after sunset when we saw a mob of them arrive until midnight-ish. While the sun was up, I wondered through town. Most of it was closed up for the evening, but the dairy and an antique shop let me in. The town was built up in the early and mid-1800's and had a Strong german look. I tagged along with Steve and Mel on their jont through town. They ate at the dairy and told me stories of their October visit to the town during a river-relief scouting event a few years back. I would love to spend more time here! Steve and Mel chilled out at the ramp and I wondered around with my camera.
Sometime just after midnight we decided to go downstream- Hermann was just to bright and loud for our taste. Steve drove until he was sure we would be okay- then he shut the engine off. We drifted past a cool bluff system above the river and an odd set of wing dikes- the moonlight exposed just enough detail.! It was beautiful!
The newhaven ramp (not a checkpoint) was swamped with boats and tents. It was a little more peaceful than Hermann. Mel and Steve wondered off to find a good spot for their tent. I wondered around for an hour and fell asleep on the warm cement of the ramp. when I woke, just before the birds started going,. I was the only one up. It was almost creepy how quiet the town was! I stayed at the ramp and helped a few boats launch when that pre-dawn light woke the birds. It was a spectacular, pink sunrise and the first clouds of the race made it all the better!
I strolled through town sometime around six and ran into a local man who gave me a short history on it. He'd lived there all of his life and knew of a complex tunnel system under the town. The tunnels, he said, led from a few basements in downtown and led across the countryside. The town was a player in the Underground railroad, but most tunnels are being sealed up now. How cool is that! He pointed out an abandon blacksmith's shop from the late 1800's. and told me of his plans to purchase the building and make it into a museum.
When I got back, Steve and Mel had packed up and the last two canoes that were there when I left the ramp were gone. we drove down to Washington where we met a small group of volunteers who had bought us needed gas. Washington looks like a larger town that should have been a checkpoint if it were not for some dangerous currents. We drove down to the last checkpoint at Weldon Springs- 20miles upstream from the finish line!~
Mel and I both drifted in and out of sleep and Steve got us there before we knew it! There were some cool bluffs along the way- lots of paddlers- several of which were not in the race. Mel jumped in the water about a quarter mile before the ramp and drifted down to the ramp-
At Weldon, which was only a ramp and gravel parking lot, we met up with more of our river relief crew. They were manning the checkpoint- as they had been for almost 24hours! they told us stories of swamped boats, crazy hallucinations that the exhausted paddlers had been having, and an extraordinary number of racers dropping out of the race due to the nasty heat. I swam with a few others- the ramp created a swift eddie that would take us down a few hundred feet and whip us back up to the ramp.
By the time a racer relaxed at the last checkpoint, he or she would be begin to get excited again about the race. The frustration of the horribly long paddle from Hermann to us wore off and the realization of the end of the race would bring a sense of accomplishment and relief to a paddler that gave them a sort of second wind. Folks arrived grumpy, frustrated and exhausted and, with the support of their friends, family, and our crew, leave refreshed. The boat traffic on the ramp was the worst here, and the boaters were not friendly at all! We were not welcome at their ramp and they called the cops on us. One large rec boat weaved dangerously in between our racers.
After a few hours at Weldon springs, I took off with another half of our crew towards st charles- the finish line!
We passed a large number of paddlers on the way and I was given a chance to drive the boat- That was way cool!
On our arrival, members immediately sought cold drinks and a shower, but there was still work! Folks unpacked the boat and made the necessary calls- I picked up five meals for our fellow crew members that we had left upstream and stayed at St charles with crew member Anthony while the other half of us drove back to Weldon to deliver the meals and get a shower.
Those boats that we had passed floated to the finish line and each got to experience their own brief moment of fame from the large crowd of ground crews and public. Everyone of them had a huge smile on- seeking only their family and friends at the ramp.
I walked the shore and picked up dozens of fishing weights- collected the head of a cement squirrel sculpture and the action and barrel of a sawed-off 20ga. shotgun that laid rushed on the shore. (They are my souvenirs for the trip and are now decor in my small garden out back)
Folks ate and celebrated- boats were set onshore as displays- everyone seemed happy- no matter how much sleep they needed. There was an awards ceremony, but I did not attend for too long- walked the shore instead.
Anthony took me out on the boat for a few minutes- just to float.
We met up with another group of our people and within a few hours our enitire crew and the three boats had landed safely. The time of the last paddlers was something like 87hours! the sun set and our crew socialized and celebrated late into the night- I found a bed of coals in the mud and built up a large fire with all of the driftwood on the beach. I ended up sleeping next to the fire.
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We packed up and droe the boats down a mile or so to a ramp where we loaded them- Shaved anthonys' head in the parkinglot, dorve through town for a meal and onto coopers where we did the final boat exchange.
The last of the good stories were told- paddlers who claimed to have seen mermaids and sea monsters, elephants in trees, fuzzy creatures dancing on the water, or a beaver or a small bear splash into the water... Boats that were swamped by odd currents, braving large waves, or those that just spilled over 'cause of a tired paddler... and those paddlers who encountered our killer flying carp.
It was a GREAT trip! I got to fulfill my own Huck finn fantacy and learned a load of the river, the race and my comerades! I dont think I would have been able to paddle in the race this year- I cant believe how many boats did!- but I would like to inthe future! Maybe I will take my kayak next year !
Never did find my arrowhead, but I got alot of cool pics! LET ME KNOW IF YOUD LIKE ANY PRINTS! enjoy! I took 900+ photos this trip; if there is a boat you'd like the photos of, I could find it in my photos- just gimme a description and boat #. THANKS
Dylan,
ReplyDeleteThanks, I feel like I was there from reading about your experience and seeing your photos.
See you soon,
Ruthie
Columbia
Dylan,
ReplyDeleteI think it was you who helped me take down the finish line and clean up the beach that rainy morning. Thanks again for helping us. I liked your story and pictures. You did a good job.
Russ Payzant
Rivermiles.com
Gardner, Kansas
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