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From: Dave Kruger <dkruger_at_pacifier.com>
subject: [Paddlewise] The Pig in Winter
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2000 00:41:18 -0800
We forced ourselves into turbo-cleaning the house Saturday morning -- long
overdue.  Guests coming Monday mandated an end to our slovenly ways.  Two hours
of high-energy dusting, mopping, and wiping later, we were packing for an
overnight yak trip, our first  together since the summer of '99.

Four hours later with only one false start, and we were launching from the
ramp, eying the clear sky and a substantial tailwind, unanticipated in the
confined waters of the Clatskanie "River," hardly more than a wide ditch. 
Can't imagine it over the banks, but in '97 it roared and floated away the
inventory of the stud mill nearby.  Eight-foot number ones became the most
common marine hazard in the ditch for weeks afterward.  

A trio of goose hunters and the largest Chessy retriever we had ever seen slid
back to the dock, one bird aboard but a dozen dekes lost to freighter wakes --
an excuse for their return the next day.

With the tailwind pushing, we were soon on the main stem Columbia, an apple and
a candy bar for fuel, feeling the soreness from turbo-cleaning and grinning at
our good fortune.  Sun in February?  This is Oregon!!??

The big tide made for a direct route to North Dead Wild Pig Island and our fave
campsite on the Columbia:  a scatter of poles and blue tarp over rustic tables
and a plushly-padded bench, relics of the '97 floods.  NDWP got its name from
the failed scheme of a pioneer Tillamook-area vintner who figured folks would
flock to luaus featuring roast feral pig, fattened on island vegetation and
slow nutrias.  He planted half a dozen porkers on the island to the south of
NDWP, and walked, expecting to reap a "harvest" in two years.  The pigs raised
hell with the underbrush and made new pathways all over the island, but died
off on their own, some say helped along by locals scandalized by the pig-dump. 
Hence, we attached "Dead Wild Pig Island" to it, to confuse the unwary about
where we camp.

Freighter wakes wash over the downstream end of the island, making for
sometimes-interesting launches and landings.  A friend ignored our warning one
time and swamped his vintage Folbot as we doubled over in mirth.  Today,
though, we are alone.  An hour after landing, the tent is up, gear sorted, and
firewood gathered for the barbecue.  Lots of "downed" wood around, a casualty
of heavy erosion of a grove of cottonwoods and alders -- erosion which will
soon take the campsite away.

Articulating spud-boiling and coal-building, we appetize with hot tomato soup
and the Ritz experience.  Broiled steaks complement Guinness, corn and the
spuds, as we huddle around the fire, avoiding the breeze.  When dinner is gone,
a **huge** moon rises over the island to the her-luk of geese flying by, eying
our beach but too spooked by the hunting season to share.

By eight we are enfleeced and in bags, listening to the throb of freighters
slide by.  We thrash about in the night, trying to share a double bag and
fleece liners, abandoned after too-many bladder-break forays, as the sun rises
to a well-frozen Pig.  

Aaaaack!  This is cold!  Dave does the duty and nails the first of three
Thermoses of coffee while Becky cracks twigs for a reeallly necessary warming
fire, gloves all around and fleeced to the nines.  Leftover potatoes and vegies
topped with cheese and more coffee at the fire help us warm.  Dave crunches
across the frozen beach to greet one of the goose hunters and his friendly
Chessy, returning to retrieve his lost dekes.  A cup of coffee draws out a
dozen war stories.  I trade the legend of the pigs.  He likes the story.

A long walk to the upper end of the Island shows massive erosion there, also,
with some 150 feet of bank gone over the last three years.  The Corps of
Engineers has a new benchmark in the middle of the island, fore-runner of more
dredge spoils, we suspect.  Should we move it three feet and throw them off? 
No, too much work.

The sun warms and distills moisture off the tent, and Dave sheds to shorts and
a T-shirt.  An hour of packing later, and more freighter wakes, we launch for
the return, helped back up the Clatskanie River by a hotly rising tide.  Seals
spy-hop, gulls squawk, geese her-luk, raptors swoop silently, and the
cormorants on their way to lunch say nothing.  We paddle and snack, paddle and
snack.  The soreness from cleaning is replaced with a pleasant muscle-buzz from
paddling.

The Pig was kind, though cool.  Long live the Pig.

-- 
Dave Kruger
Astoria, OR

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From: Bob Volin <bobvolin_at_bestweb.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] The Pig in Winter
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2000 10:51:39 -0500
Ahhh, Dave -- to write with clarity and love of life!  I felt I was there.
Thanks.



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