Riverkeeper Pick |
Welcome:
This is the 20th instantiation of Paddle Oregon, a 100-mile 5-day luxury camping/paddling trip down the Willamette river from (around) Junction City to (around) Salem. The trip has been on hiatus for the last 2 years because of Covid but was revived for 2022. There have been a few changes made necessary by the pandemic (we lost our caterer) but the river is still the same ever changing presence and people and boats remain as predictably unpredictable as ever.
Instead of my usual blog about a sequence of events and a per day diary, I decided to divide this entry up into a series of thoughts and observations, more occupation oriented than time oriented. So feel free to skip around if that floats your canoe.
I am looking back over my pictures from the trip and realize the I wasn't a very good photographer this time around. Part of that may be the heat.... just not thinking so well, but the real issue is that when fun exciting things are happening on the river, like some fast moving water or some obstacles to maneuver around, you don't really have opportunity for pulling out your camera. I guess I need one of those head mounted cameras that all of the cool kids have. So I may have to borrow pics from Riverkeeper, but I will credit them. So please don't sue me.
Participants:
Paddle Oregon is not an event that attracts the young. Perhaps it is too expensive. Perhaps it is not a destination vacation event. Perhaps it is not enough excitement. Whatever the cause, the result seems to be a multi-day river paddling and camping event populated almost entirely by retired old white folk. Take our ‘Pod’ for instance. 14 people. 6 women and 8 men. Youngest person was a 57 year old woman. Oldest was a 80 something man. Average age was probably around 68. Everyone was retired or mostly retired. Many occupations, though they seemed to lean toward the medical profession and/or school teacher. (I guess this makes sense, one is used to taking the summer off or working at ‘camps’ and the other has a lot of money).
We discussed this phenomena in camp whilst hiding in the shade of the dinner truck and having a cold drink (The sun was killer that afternoon). Where are the young people? There was one 14 year old in a canoe, but he spent the day reading his book. There were some young women volunteers, it was unclear if they had been begged to come along or had sought out the experience. The only young man I remember was the guy who was running the baggage transport service. We old people all agreed that we needed more young people to get involved on this trip else in 10 years we wouldn’t have anyone available to help us carry our boats.
But how to promote such an activity. Start a scholarship fund? Make a ‘bring you grandkids on the paddle’ discount? Develop the event into some massive online game? Hide virtual pokemon along the river? It is a poser.
Of course, the other thing we talked about was how to make the event more interesting to us. I think that Travis (The WR Executive Director) is already talking about doing some things. I heard him mention things like:
1) Straddle a weekend with the event, so people don’t have to take off so much time.
2) Make the days a little shorter paddles (some are pretty brutal at 22 miles).
3) Fewer days.
I would prefer things like:
- Better food (I think this is a glitch they are working on).
- Better access to showers (at least every other night)(This is a logistics problem, finding a place to camp that has access to the water and electricity necessary).
- A glamping option. Perhaps rides to a local hotel after dinner instead of being in a tent on the rocks.
- Shorter days (I like that one) with more planned places to stop and swim and/or skill learn.
- Skill classes in safe places on the river. There may not be enough safe places for this.
The Staff and Volunteers
Choose Your Read:
For some strange reason this picture is NOT on the Riverkeeper FaceBook page. Go Figure. |
Now is your chance to choose your reading experience. Pick a link to more about Paddle Oregon 2022
Getting Some Wood - obstacles on the river.
On Global Warming - dealing with unusual heat on the river.
Off River Activities - what you do when you are not paddling
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