The Raquette River in the Adirondacks at 18 years old. After that, the next one was the Owegatchie (many times).
Sounds like a good time was had by all!The upper Potomac River in 1961 with the Boy Scouts. I was hooked.
In 1968 I graduated high school and came up with the idea of the Senior Class Canoe Trip. We followed the same route up the C&O canal with 60 guys to a designated camp site. We had around 75 girls show up for the party. It was the 1960s so the girls left by midnight, but they came back to make us breakfast the next day . People still talk about it.
Small world. I paddled Whitestone whilst staying at a family cottage there. Went out solo for an explore and really enjoyed it.The first was an unnamed river, that ran from a lake I'd camped on as a child for a decade or so. For years, we camped at a private teacher's campground in Ontario (we still do - in fact, my mother is buried in that lake). We were around 14 years old when I and a cousin of mine got this idea in our heads to go down the river into Whitestone Lake, the next lake over, for a three or four day trip.
It was a lot of beaver dams and a lot of wading, and we got to the end of it after the better part of a day into a ferocious rainstorm. Soaking wet and padling against the wind in a $300 fibreglass canoe, bailing the boat, we sang and chanted old army songs to keep us going until the weather broke. On that trip I bellyflopped from a 30' cliff and we almost started a forest fire. Good memories.
The first "real" trip was a few years later on the Missinaibi. I traveled with someone I had met just a few weeks prior who wanted to come along after seeing my plans. We got along famously. We didn't take enough food and we starved, but we got through it, together and cohesively. Also good memories.
Hi Will,Upper Potomac River. In pursuit of the canoe 50 miler merit badge, as 12-13 yo Scouts we paddled Spring Gap to just short of Hancock. Multiple nights of camping on the river just added to the enjoyment. Made me a canoe enthusiast at a young age.