My first canoeing was in a tandem Grumman at my grandparent's summer camp on North Pond, Oxford County, Maine, when I was eight years old, but I don't have a specific memory of a first time.
I do, however, have a vivid memory of my first canoe trip on a river. I was 12. It was on the East Branch of the Penobscot River in northern Maine, beginning about 15 miles north of Grindstone and ending at Grindstone. I paddled bow, my grandfather sat in the middle, and the fellow who we were visiting guided us down the river and through some rapids from the stern. We took out at his house in Grindstone.
I thought the river paddling was exhilarating—the sun, wind, wilderness, bouncy waves . . . and the physical and mental chess match of avoiding rocks and aiming for downstream Vs. This thrill was imprinted into my young lizard brain, and exploded into an immediate whitewater addiction 25 years later when I took paddling lessons in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of northern California.
I do, however, have a vivid memory of my first canoe trip on a river. I was 12. It was on the East Branch of the Penobscot River in northern Maine, beginning about 15 miles north of Grindstone and ending at Grindstone. I paddled bow, my grandfather sat in the middle, and the fellow who we were visiting guided us down the river and through some rapids from the stern. We took out at his house in Grindstone.
I thought the river paddling was exhilarating—the sun, wind, wilderness, bouncy waves . . . and the physical and mental chess match of avoiding rocks and aiming for downstream Vs. This thrill was imprinted into my young lizard brain, and exploded into an immediate whitewater addiction 25 years later when I took paddling lessons in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of northern California.