CANOEING.
I. IN GENERAL.
- "I've traveled all the world around,
- From China Seas to Puget Sound,
- In every Sort of craft that floats,
- From schooners down to jolly-boats;
- And for calm or storm my choice is made
- of a staunch canoe and a paddle blade.
- So I toast the man, whoever he be,
- That first shaped paddle from the tree."

is the art, pastime or science of the navigation of a
canoe. What is a canoe? That is your first question;
or if not, it should be. If you consult the dictionary
for the meaning of the word canoe, you will learn
something; but be very shy of a little knowledge on
any subject. In this case the facts obtained from the
lexicon will probably lead you to believe that the
canoe is only made and used by savages, and you may
think any further knowledge on the subject of no
practical use to you, personally. Well! have patience;
read what follows, and then perhaps you will change
your mind -- as many have done before YOU.
10. Canoe Handling.
Capabilities.
Before telling you what a canoe now
is and how to use one, if you do not already know,
perhaps it will be as well to interest you, if
possible, by stating a few facts as to what the canoe
can give you, what she is capable of, and what she has
done. A little information as to what canoeing is may
induce you to read still further and learn what the
canoe is. The time-honored usage in referring to boats
as feminine you see is followed here.
The canoe is not a fickle, but a very shy and
modest little puss, and she must be long and
faithfully wooed -- gently withal -- before she is
won. Once conquered she is docility itself, and
obedient. A more faithful traveling companion you
cannot find. She will show you the choicest bits of
nature, un-got-at-able except with her aid. She will
shelter you miles from civilization, will carry you
and your luxuries and necessities by day down rivers,
across lakes, along the sounds and bays of the coast
and will ask very little in return -- a coat of
varnish twice a year, a few brass screws now and then,
a little care of her and nothing more.
A comfortable seat is provided for you with a back
to it and facing the way you are going. You are tired
paddling; a favorable breeze springs up, the sail is
set and you are moving four, five, yes seven miles an
hour without doing more than keeping a lookout ahead
and around, and resting one hand on the tiller.
Canoes have been used for exploration and the
gathering of facts. An author has cruised from
Labrador to Cape Breton, the entire length of the Gulf
of St. Lawrence Coast, and noted the life and manners
of a strange people -- the French Canadians -- in many
a nook and corner. He has shared the knowledge with us
all in numerous illustrated magazine articles.
MacGregor's cruises on the Rhine, Jordan and Baltic
Sea have been published. Bishop has written a book
about his 2500-mile cruise from Quebec to Florida and
the Gulf. Dr. Neidé's cruise down the Ohio and
Mississippi rivers has also appeared in print. These
are charming books, all of them. Several of the
leading magazines have contained articles on canoeing
-- The Century, Harper's, Outing and others. Forest
and Stream for five years has had articles and news in
its canoe department every week.
Perhaps you are a married man. You would like to go
canoeing, but -- Well! take her with you, and them
too, if you like. This has often been done. There is
plenty of room for two if you manage well -- and don't
"fall out." Live in a large city, do you? Have no
vacation to speak of! Plenty of water about you, but
"no time." Do you know that you can alone lift the
canoe from the boathouse into the water, get in just
as you are in your "shore clothes," have an hour's
paddle and return home to dine of a summer's
afternoon, a better man for the open air exercise?
Too old? Indeed ! Gray hair, you say; or did you
mention baldness?
12. Canoe Handling. The
Scope of Canoeing.
You will find companions grayer and
more bald than you are in almost every canoe club. At
the yearly meets of the American Canoe Association,
when every member who can takes a two weeks' vacation
in which to meet "the boys," if you attend one, you
will see the lion -- a graybeard of sixty -- lying
down beside the lamb still at school, when night comes
and all seek the rest and retirement that pure air and
a tent shelter grant. Ministers, doctors, professors,
lawyers, artists, statesmen, editors, merchants,
clerks, manufacturers and men of leisure -- all are of
us and with us. Will you join the clan? Age, means,
occupation nor sex can stand in your way if you once
taste the delights afforded by a canoe. This is all
true. If you do not believe it and are not interested,
do not read another word, as you will find it grows
dryer as you go on. If you have been touched, the
dryness may prove like that of champagne.
There are canoes -- and canoes. If you have
not seen a modern civilized canoe, the word probably
brings to mind pictures you have seen of the Indian in
the birch, the Esquimau in his kayak, or perchance the
cannibals in "Robinson Crusoe" paddling canoes which
are but hollowed-out logs having the ends sharpened.
The craft this book is to treat of is none of these,
but it is derived directly from them and has all their
good qualities and many more of its own. Our canoe is
neither bark, skins nor a log, but a canoe -- having
decided limitations, especially in the matter of size
and great possibilities.
Canoeing does not mean only cruising, as some
writers would have us believe. Perhaps too much
emphasis has been given to cruising to the detriment
of canoeing generally. If you get a canoe, use it for
whatever your time and inclination dictate hunting,
fishing, exercise, sailing, racing, drifting, short
trips, long cruises, exploration, as the means of
enjoying a (male or female) friend's exclusive
society, to recreation of tired faculties -- in short,
do as you like with it, even to varnishing, rigging,
"monkeying" and polishing. Though you never go afloat,
you will derive pleasure and benefit from the
canoeing, and can slap your chest and sing, "I am a
canoeist, I."
© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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