I encountered one on my ride this AM. It’s been really warm here lately, but it was stalled out in the middle of the trail.
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Solitudinally challenged
Just returned from a 3 day 'slack bastards' paddle of the Gippsland Lakes (Victoria, Australia)
Slack bastards because we rented a holiday cottage this time and used the car to lug the inflatables to different launching spots. No big distances covered nor was it adequate compensation for losing a 6 week Vancouver Island kayak / road trip to C19 this time last year but it was certainly brilliant to be back out on the water again.
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Base training.
Does anyone know what these supersized painted turtles are called? Their shells are the size of dinner plates, but they have small heads with red/green stripes on the sizes.
Painted turtles can get huge. Like 12" in diameter. Most areas in the US also have red-eared sliders due to the pet trade. And river cooters (eastern version is Pseudemys concinna concinna) are wide ranging with many sub-species that also can get pretty big. In all these turtles, the shell can flatten and get smoother with age.
That photo looks a bit like a softshell turtle, except for the head. There are two in Minnesota. The smooth and the spiny.
Last edited by j44ke; 05-17-2021 at 10:19 AM.
Jorn's correct that's a soft shell Turtle. I've seen them even bigger when I was growing up. Of course I was smaller so they seemed huge. Mostly see them in rivers and streams, can't recall ever seeing one in a pond. That's some Gorgeous Water you floating on, where is that?
Frank Beshears
The gentlest thing in the world
overcomes the hardest thing in the world.
Looks like a great match for the softshell to me. I hadn't noticed them before, but we saw a whole bunch this trip.
Some of it is the lower Namekagon and some is the upper St. Croix, both in northwestern Wisconsin. It's an overlooked place to paddle. We only saw a few other people on the water, and almost all of it is away from roads, houses, and noise. It's pretty secluded.
Interestingly, where we were is upstream a ways from where the DNR says softshell turtles are common. The Namekagon is a bit unique in that it's a stronghold for sturgeon.
Celebrating Taco Tuesday.
When earlier this week Maureen Dowd wrote a column titled Apocalypse Right Now, the headline was a good intro to the column's first line that gave it all away: "Holy smokes."
For those of us anywhere near the jet stream or The Heat Dome, or both, the prospect that this summer marks the beginning of the end of the world (as we know it, or for humanity) is starting to seem quite real. The sky is yellow, the sun is orange, and no Dyson air purifier is going to fix it. My world, and much of North America, is on fire.
This week the Forest Service did the responsible thing and cancelled my Boundary Waters permit for next week because I might get burned alive out there; this is a non-paddling report, but it's also a pro-paddling report.
What's it going to take to secure the natural world for the human future? Are we headed for the end of casual flights, private cars, or the normalization of vegetarian entrees?
I want to live in and hand down a world that does not extinguish the best we have, especially the outdoors. I can't imagine a greater issue of intergenerational justice than this: we must not destroy the earth for the future.
Last edited by caleb; 07-29-2021 at 09:54 PM.
There's something about silent motion that appeals to me. Canoes/kayaks are perfect examples. It's why I built this little cedar sled.
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Build thread is here https://www.velocipedesalon.com/foru...ighlight=canoe
Rick
If the process is more important than the result, you play. If the result is more important than the process, you work.
Nice little paddling trip on the Hudson River with my wife.
Put in...Hudson, NY.
August 11, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
August 11, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
http://www.hudsonathenslighthouse.org
August 11, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
August 11, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
The fishing shacks...
August 11, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
https://www.hudsonriverwise.org/log/...shing-shanties
SPP
Pike machine...
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
The naked interior...
Last edited by guido; 11-17-2021 at 09:06 PM.
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
Almost ready to fish. Perhaps it should be put in fishing...
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
Wow. I don’t even know what most of that stuff is. Motor and seat - recognize those things. I guess that won’t go on the roof of the Prius any longer.
I sometimes used to fish in stocking waders and Converse All-Star high tops. But I was 16 and operating on a lawn mowing income. 16 year old me would have died and gone to heaven with a boat like that for bass fishing.
I found my old fly rods and boxes of moth eaten flies the last trip into the city. I’ll have to bring it all up here and spend the winter getting ready for spring. See if I still remember how to do it.
Nothing that complex. It has a casting bar that lets one get have something to hold on to or lean against while standing to cast/fish (extra comfort when fishing in cold water...). Behind and under the seat are tackle boxes. And all the way back is a battery for the motor.
It all pops off and stores easily in the Prius.
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
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