[Paddlewise] Aldrich Point. Woody Island. Connections to the Past

From: Dave Kruger <kdruger_at_pacifier.com>
Date: Sun, 24 Feb 2008 19:27:08 -0800
Pink.  Fiberglass.  Insulation.  What's this stuff doing inside the cockpit 
of my main machine kayak?  Oh, yeah, that big storm back in December with 
all the high winds.  Must have released a bunch through the access panel to 
the attic, above the boat.  Vacuum.  Vacuum.  Gotta be clean for the first 
paddle in ... ahhhh ... five months??!!  Ooof.  Those boats I saw yesterday 
on the float when I returned Surf Scoter to her trailer got me thinking 
about paddling.  So, today I went.  Aldrich Point, my fave launch spot 
hereabouts.  Entry to the islands, to the main channel of the Columbia, 
twenty miles from the mouth.

Stretch, reach, hump that boat over to the water.  What's this funny bump 
under the neoprene?  Must be too much pizza and beer.  Oh, well, it all 
floats, no?  A little breeze down the river as I slide the drytop on.  At 
least that still fits.  Slick, slick, slide, slide into the water.  Move 
those muscles.  Shit, this feels good!  More fun than riding the random 
orbital sander express, or hooting along the epoxy wagon.  Boat building is 
fun, sometimes mental work, but paddling is holistic food, for the mind, 
the body, the senses and the fingers.

Across the channel to Tronsen, around its top, stroking down with the tail 
of the ebb, chasing scaups off the water, eyeballing herons on stumps. 
Nobody but me.  All the duck hunters are gone, and it is freaking, 
stuff-busting, beautiful out here!  Clear, open water, easy paddling, a few 
mild eddies to bridge, coasting along and checking out the inbound 
freighter and downbound tug, nattering at each other, "port to port, cap!" 
as they pass head to head, the odd small open skiff skittering like a water 
bug along the Washington shore, making that gnat noise.

I slide ashore on Woody, my summer beach for noshing and sunning.  In 
winter, it is a view spot for the other side, a mile distant, across calm, 
almost glassy water, windshields winking in the sun as fishers hunt 
ironheads over there.  It is all in alders and second growth, concealing a 
hundred years of history, canneries gone, fish wheels disappeared, an 
entire small village bulldozed and burnt to make way for a log dump.  One 
red-roofed set of old buildings a mile or two downstream still shines in 
the sun, where Chinese filleters, Slav gill netters, and Scandinavian 
oarsmen worked salmon runs in the early part of the twentieth century, a 
hit or miss way of life, with mortality an everyday reality.

On my side, horses hauled seine nets onto the sands, so burly armed guys 
could toss big hogs (chinook salmon) into hoppers for the same canneries.

This stuff is all gone, gone, gone, replaced by chi-chi float houses, 
decked out in fresh siding and blue-fluided Marine Sanitation Devices ... 
heaven forfend any human poop add to the huge volumes of otter, fish, 
nutria, and duck poop already here.  A long-sunk ferry which used to ply 
the route from Astoria to Washington is under me as I glide by the float 
houses, each permitted and now a high value item for yuppies and the odd 
crawdad gatherer.

The twigs quiver in the tide, and part when I move through them, geese 
scattering before me, swans and scaups and mallards making quiet noises in 
the distance, a panoply of satisfying, healing sounds.  Better than any 
therapy at the hands of man.

Kids toss rocks at pilings, squirting back and forth on their bikes along 
the dike on my return, to a deserted ramp, empty parking lot, bare beach, 
all slightly dented and scratched by the day's visitors, one intermittent 
mole route at tide's edge.  Hope that guy can swim in there -- here comes 
the water!

I'm done here, put back together, quieter, calmer, ready for rest.

-- 
Dave Kruger
Astoria, OR
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Received on Tue Feb 26 2008 - 09:23:20 PST

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