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  1. riverstrider

    Coffee Press

    Okay, I can't resist. Boil water, instant coffee, add some sugar, done. Works for me. (ducks for cover) Instant coffee drinkers unite! -rs
  2. riverstrider

    ​What have you forgotten on a trip?

    I've always used lists for packing, so I haven't forgotten anything critical. Of course, the problems with lists is that if something is not on the list, it won't get packed. Consequently, I have occasionally added things to my lists. Or created entirely new lists, such as when it became...
  3. riverstrider

    Your best (favorite?) paddling partner...

    That's easy: Mrs. Riverstrider! She's not the strongest of paddlers, and her endurance is not great...and she doesn't do cold weather or portages (for such trips I usually go solo)...but when she is in the bow I have total confidence in any water we tackle since she knows what to do as well as...
  4. riverstrider

    How many times have you ended up in the drink?

    I've gone swimming about a dozen times in whitewater, while kayaking difficult water, but that doesn't count. Plenty of times over the side horsing around in the boyscouts. One memorable trip down the narrow, muddy Chipuxet River there were no survivors...we all went over at least twice or...
  5. riverstrider

    Arthritis increase linked to lack of physical activity...

    I just started getting attacks of gout last year. Doc wanted to put me on drugs, but I hate taking that sort of stuff. So rather than cut down on beer or seafood (my triggers as well) I started significantly increasing my water intake. No attacks since. Your mileage may vary. I am happily...
  6. riverstrider

    What are your favorite accessories when paddling?

    Quality craft beer in cans. Also, I just recently began using those bungy deelie-bob things to wrap around thwarts that I then clip a carabiner to...makes a great quick-release way to secure odd items in the boat that I may want to get at quickly. -rs
  7. riverstrider

    Adirondack Gathering October 6,7,8 & 9th- 2017

    My GPS reading from the put-in to Site 12 (close to the end of the lake) was 4.1 miles. This was staying close to the north shore but cutting across a couple bays. We had mild chop paddling in and it took a little over an hour, paddling loaded boats (two Hornbeck New Tricks and an 18' Wenonah...
  8. riverstrider

    Adirondack Gathering October 6,7,8 & 9th- 2017

    For what it is worth, I was out to LTL this past week, and stayed at Site 12 (one suggested earlier in this thread by Robin). Nice site, but could be a little crowded with 8 tents. I'm willing to bet a lot of the sites are like that. Sites 10, 11 and 12 are pretty spread out. The most...
  9. riverstrider

    Maine NFCT Holeb Pond and Bow trip 7/27/17 - 8/4/17

    You're one of my heroes. It takes a lot of volunteers to maintain and improve that trail, and the NFCT couldn't do it without folks like you. And folks like me who use the trail appreciate every little thing done. One of these days I hope also to attend one of their volunteer maintenance...
  10. riverstrider

    Bowron Lakes here we come!

    STARTING to get a LITTLE nervous? I'd be a wreck by now, lol! I wouldn't be able to go 15 minutes without trying to get an update on line! I hope the weather patterns send some rain over there to take care of business for you. -rs
  11. riverstrider

    Hello from New Hampshire

    Welcome to the forum, Mr. Grizz, I second the Adirondacks suggestions. I'm up there close to every August to take advantage of the paddling, and a September or October canoe camping trip after the summer crowds are gone can't be beat. Another of my favorite August trips is the West Branch...
  12. riverstrider

    Thwart bag suggestions?

    I'm assuming you're looking for an easily accessible storage solution that also keeps things dry. Most drybags don't really fit that description, and I've found that most thwart bag options have the same issues that Mike McCrea noted. I think his suggestion of a soft-sided cooler is a good...
  13. riverstrider

    Poling on the NFCT

    You must have had higher flows than I experienced when I poled up that stretch a few years back. Near the top of Little Spencer, where there are a few wide pools, the water was so low there was no route through the rocks. So we had to step out and drag the canoes over a few to get into deeper...
  14. riverstrider

    Hello from Rhode Island

    Welcome, New England Canoe, from a fellow Rhow Dyelander!
  15. riverstrider

    Composite or strip plank Old Town Penobscot 16?

    I know TommyC1, and he and I have talked about paddling the Souhegan as a tripper. His conclusion was as Steve said...a decent day tripper, but primarily in moving water or rapids, and a far better poling boat. I think it has more rocker than the Coho, and less capacity, so it isn't really...
  16. riverstrider

    EPA will re-evaluate which water bodies will receive federal protection

    The protection of streams in the US at the Federal level actually is pretty standardized, even without WOTUS. WOTUS just further clarified matters and may in fact have reduced the number of miles of rivers and streams protected, IMO. That being said, such Federal protection isn't that great...
  17. riverstrider

    EPA will re-evaluate which water bodies will receive federal protection

    I'm not sure it is as bad as this makes it sounds. The new "WOTUS" Rule, which got a lot of pushback from farmers (who didn't understand it) and builders (who are typically bloody-minded about any regulation anyways), was originally intended to clarify and better define what is regulated as a...
  18. riverstrider

    Composite or strip plank Old Town Penobscot 16?

    Having done most of the trail in sections, and most of them downhill, I'm not sure I'm the best source of opinions, but if I had to through-paddle the NFCT, my boat of choice would be a Kevlar MR Explorer set up to paddle solo, and also with a kneeling thwart. It doesn't do anything...
  19. riverstrider

    History book recommendation?

    I just started reading a book last night that already has me fascinated and ready to devour the rest of it. It is "The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World" by Andrea Wulf. This guy Humboldt changed the world as we know it, and most of us have forgotten who he was. He was one...
  20. riverstrider

    Caterpillar outbreak

    We had a bad gypsy moth caterpillar infestation last year. 75 percent of the State was defoliated. This year looked to be just as bad or worse (and in some spots it has been), but a very wet spring has seemed to slow them down a little and allowed the spread of the Bacillus thuringensis...
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