Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 1 (Read 4775 times)
Pirogue
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Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 1
Apr 26th, 2005 at 10:17pm
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A few weeks back, the Tampa Tribune ran an article about the Alafia River State Park. In it, the author, Frank Sargent mentioned an easy launch for the South prong of the Alafia River. Being that I enjoy exploring new areas I went out to check it out.

I arrived on a Sunday and paddled up stream into the marsh. It was a beautiful paddle and I looked forward to one day continuing my journey downstream. This I planned to do in a couple of weeks.

Saturday, Feb 7, 2004. My paddling partner Kevin and I launch at 12 noon in my home built 15-½ foot canoe. The current is moving fairly swift, the sun was bright and we were protected from the breeze by the trees.

Within 200 yards, we run into our first obstacle. A cabbage palm that had fallen and crossed the river. Fortunately, there was just enough water to float us over it. After that we arrived at our first portage. Little did we know that this would be a sign of things to come on the rest of our trip?

The portage was about 4 rods. A rod is defined as the approximate length of a canoe used by the Voyageurs of past (16 1/2ft). We carried the canoe thru some muddy ground then thru a little poison ivy filled island. After looking around for a bit, we continued downstream.

Within the next hour, we had 5 more portages. All from 1 rod to approximately 30 rods. These portages were required due to the fallen oak and cabbage palms. The river would meander, and at the bends, we were sure to find a tangled mess of tree trunks, branches, and other vegetation. This paddle was to be more difficult than we had expected.

Our plan was to leave Kevin’s truck at the Alderman’s Ford canoe launch in order to ferry us back down to my truck located at the Thatcher Rd put in. Being the parks closed at 6 pm we had 6 hours for our journey. Or so we thought.

Back on the river, we would run into the same scenario over again. The few straight runs were uneventful and nice. The bends in the river would almost always be clogged with trees. I had started keeping a log of or portages on a little waterproof notepad. But after a while, the novelty wore off and we were concerned about what was ahead.

Now a couple of hours into the trip, I am silently getting concerned. I find I am constantly looking at my watch. We have no clue as to how far we have traveled, do not have any landmarks, and have not passed the one landmark we have identified (Lithia-Pinecrest road). We still paddle downstream, but the trip is becoming more difficult, and it is getting later.

The river is opening a bit, and we are starting to get into some pastureland. Across the river in front is a fence and cable. Illegal yes, but it still exists. We back up, turn on the speed and are able to paddle right over the obstruction. Now we have a curve ball thrown at us. How many more will there be and will we be able to get past them. We are committed to continuing downstream. Ahead is another fence. This time, we have to portage around on dry land.

As a lot of people know, this can be controversial. The law says the “People” own all land up to the mean high water mark as determined by the Army Corps of Engineers. Ranchers typically have a differing point of view. It is not a conversation I care to have with a ranch hand in the middle of no where, so we carry the canoe around and paddle away as quick as possible.

Aside from the fences, this part of our trip is relatively clean. We are still paddling thru the pastureland and even pass under a small concrete bridge. Just past the bridge, on the left we see a tent and some balloons. It looks like some one is throwing a birthday party. I am feeling a little bit nervous and all eyes are on us while we pass. One gentleman yells out “Are you guys paddling back upstream?” I holler “No sir”. He turns to a friend and says something. I am wondering, was that a loaded question? Did he know we were on dry land, or does he know were will have trouble ahead?

  
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Pirogue
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Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 2
Reply #1 - Apr 26th, 2005 at 10:18pm
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It is now well after 4pm and Kevin and I are very worried about our progress or lack of. We pull over and I call (on my cell) to the Ranger at Alafia. I explain our situation and we expect to be off the river by about 6:30pm (boy were we wrong). The Ranger gets me in touch with the Alderman’s Ford Ranger, and our vehicle situation is solved. The next call is to our wives to let them know we are running “a tad” bit late.

Back downstream.

Ahead we can hear traffic on Litha-Pinecrest. But the sun is getting low and it is getting cooler. Kevin is wearing shorts, Teva sandals, and a t-shirt. I am in a t-shirt, jeans, and my neoprene wading booties. We are both wet from the various portages. Finally, at 6pm we are at Lithia-Pinecrest. Alderman’s Ford is only a mile north of us. We are almost done (again, or so we thought).

The sun is now below the trees, and it is getting downright cold. The portages are getting tougher and we are getting tired. There are trees across the river and we devise a new plan. We get the canoe parallel to the tree, get out and sit on the trunk, spin the canoe perpendicular, drag it over and get back in. This was repeated more times than I can remember, and it got more difficult every time.

It’s dark now. There is no light, and our obstructions seem to be coming at us with more frequency. There is no conversation. The only words are “right, left, or straight” from Kevin. We are dead serious. It is cold, we are wet, and for all intents and purpose, can be considered “lost”. We are not lost in the fact we do not know where to go. We are lost because we have no clue as to how far we are from the take out, and really have no clue as to when we will get there.

Shivering, we pick our way downstream. We can’t really paddle. The current is the only propulsion. Every few minutes, the canoe hits an obstruction under the water. Cabbage palms appear out of the water with little or no warning. Trees obstruct the water, only to be spotted just seconds before impact. Things we think are obstructions are only shadows. Our fingers and biceps are cramping up from the cold. My toes are cold and sore in my water filled boots. Constantly, our eyes are scanning the woods for lights, our ears listening for traffic on CR 39. Nothing. Where is the moon? It’s full, but what time will it rise? We are in a bad situation.

Blocking our path is another tree. Kevin and I get out and straddle the log. Our legs are dangling in the water. The water’s warm, the water feels good. Scary, the water is probably 60 degrees and it feels warmer than the surrounding air. I pull out my cell and call my wife to update her on our progress. She says, “I was trying to call you, are you guys alright?” I tell her we are fine, and I left my cell off in case we need it for an emergency. I will call her at the take out. It is now 8pm. We are located right under the tall footbridge that is located in Alderman’s Ford Park. We get back in the canoe and push off.

There is a star to our west. It is standing alone in the sky and I am using this as my guide. As long as it is in front of us, we are gaining ground to the west. To the side or behind, I know we are just moving downstream. This tracking/ navigation is going on silently in my mind. We are moving, and I am just watching “my star”.

By now, I am really ready for this to end. I tell Kevin, “If we see the boardwalk, we will pull over, and we can walk out. I will get the canoe in the morning”. No, we just keep on. We take a quick inventory. I have some cheese sticks, beef jerky, and two bottles of water. I think Kevin has water and some jerky. We have no matches. So even if we decide or find we have to tough it out overnight, we have no way of making a fire. But we keep floating and bumping with the current.

Now Kevin hears cars in front of us. Big trucks, Harleys, some sirens are heard. We have some hope that the end of our trip is near. Kevin says, “Crap, now they are behind us”. The traffic is to our backs. Damn, the river made a u turn. This happens a couple times. It is like just being out of reach of something you really want. But we don’t say much and just keep pressing forward.
  
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Pirogue
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Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 3
Reply #2 - Apr 26th, 2005 at 10:20pm
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The moon is up a bit and is giving an eerie glow over the treetops. First we think it is fog moving in. It was very surreal. But the traffic is getting louder. And around the bend, we see headlights fly by about 20 feet in the air. Funny, you couldn’t even see the bridge. I mutter “Oh man”. I was never so happy to see a car in my life. Now, instinctively, we are paddling faster. Our goal is in reach. We just hope we don’t pass the canoe launch, and ahead on the left, we see it.

9 PM.

Kevin and I are at the launch. He brings his truck down and has the heater running. I call my wife and tell her we are safe and to let Kevin’s wife know. My wife wants to know what happened. But, I can’t talk. The shivering now sets in. We are literally shaking violently from the cold. There is no way we are going to load up the canoe tonight. So I decide to leave it and pick it up in the morning.

The ten-mile drive to that hot shower felt like an eternity.

Reflections:

I am the first person to preach personal responsibility, and with this fiasco, I have one person to blame. Myself.

Kevin did an outstanding job watching out for obstructions. And he has the scars to prove it.

I know hypothermia was setting in. They say one of the first symptoms is flawed decision making. We experienced this.

The teamwork we were displaying earlier had left. We would pull up to a fallen tree, and we wouldn’t know what to do. I would paddle one direction, Kevin would say “what are you doing”? I would answer, “What do you want me to do”? Indecision, it hit us hard. I think we started getting short with each other.

What went wrong? First, I didn’t research this river. I had no clue to the challenge or true length of the paddle. After speaking with the Ranger, I found it was considered a nine-hour paddle in good conditions, and they haven’t really opened it for use or had a chance to clear it out. So, even the 6 hours I gave us wasn’t sufficient for the run.

Second, clothing. We all knew a front was coming thru. Yet, I (we) did not have the correct clothing for the conditions. I put on my PVC rain jacket, but it didn’t have any effect on the wet blue jeans I was wearing.

Third, basic survival equipment. We had no flashlight, matches, first aid, etc. At one point Kevin was impaled by a very thorny bush. One thorn, about 1 inch long was broken in off in his fore arm. Luckily the pocketknife I carry has a small scissor on it and I used it as tweezers.

Forth, no float plan. My wife knew where we were going, but she didn’t know WHERE we were going. If that makes any sense. Please make sure your spouse, significant other or who ever know exactly where you are and what time you expect to get out.

Had a Ranger or someone else seen our trucks at 8:30pm, I fully expected a call be made to the Sheriff. I cannot count the number of times I looked to the sky expecting to see a helicopter. If that happened, it would just be another case of an idiot causing resources to be mobilized when the situation could have been avoided by the simple application of common sense.

Honestly, I am mad at myself and frankly I am embarrassed. I know better, but I didn’t think it thru.

We did this, so now, you don’t have to.
  
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Re: Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 3
Reply #3 - Apr 27th, 2005 at 6:35am
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<big snip> We did this, so now, you don’t have to.

We started a similar paddle once and experienced a similar result. We took someone's word for it w/o researching or preparing. It seemed simple enough at the time. After much unexpected hardship, indecision and a few choice words, we finally arrived at the takeout (thankful we didn't miss it) well past dark - freezing our butts off as well.

After car heaters (and defrosters), the shuttle (there were three canoes) and the ride back, we got together at someone's house. After apologies and tipping a few, there were no hard feelings - just laughter at our own stupidity as well as our bad/good luck = lessons learned.

Thank you for the reminder sir. It's always preferable to learn from the mistakes of others. Especially when those mistakes serve as reminders of important lessons we hold so dear long after having forgotten why they became important in the first place. I now remember WHY all those scratches got there...

90% of the "character" earned by the bottom of my canoe came from the last quarter of that single day. I remember the day but had forgotten the 'why' until a few hours after reading this thread. Much appreciated!
  
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Yellowbird
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Re: Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 1
Reply #4 - Apr 30th, 2005 at 8:55pm
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Interesting story Pirogue.  Are you and your paddling partner still paddling partners?  That type of adversity can be tough on a friendship.  By the sound of it, the author of the said article never paddled the section you took.

-YB
  
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Pirogue
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Re: Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 1
Reply #5 - May 1st, 2005 at 6:58pm
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Yellow Bird.

We do still paddle together. As a matter of fact, he and I are going to BWCA May 13th on the Mudro Lake loop for 7days.

"Whatever doesn't kill you, makes you stronger"
  
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WW
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Re: Alafia River, Florida September 2004 Part 1
Reply #6 - May 13th, 2005 at 3:46am
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8) Good story, had a similar one that happened to me a couple weeks ago. Some friends came in from all over for a few days paddling here on the Current and Jack's Fork in MO. Wanted to paddle the upper Jack's Fork as it had been a few years because the water has to be just right. I ALWAYS do the shuttling, 'cause I'm the "Local." This time, for a change of pace, I stayed at the put-in with the boats and let someone else do the driving. We had discussed a few options, but decided on a 10-11 mile paddle since with the long shuttle, we wouldn't put in until about 1:00 pm. It was a typical Spring day in MO, sunshine, rain, then sunshine, rain, then a little hail thrown in for variety. Lots of bluffs, several ospreys, plenty of fun class I and II runs, but when we arrived at Rhymers access I was ready to get into some dry clothing and rest my sore muscles. My friend looked at me and said "This isn't where I left the truck, it's a few miles further." Shocked So we dug in and paddled hard. About 6:00 pm the friend whose truck awaited us decided he'd paddle that skinny kayak of his on ahead. An hour later, the remaining three of us start talking about options. Two of us had emergency "Space" blankets, we had a little food and water, and I had a couple of candles. No sleeping gear or tents or tarps, but we all had dry clothes to change into. And there was plenty of driftwood to make a roaring fire. I still thought we MAY make it before dark, but we made the decision to stop before it got too dark to get ready for the night. Paddling after dark is not a very good option on Ozark streams, too many sweepers and strainers, especially this time of the year. About the time the sun hit the horizon we rounded a bend and there was our friend, ready to help load the boats; it was 7:40 pm. His GPS showed our total paddling to be a bit over 19 miles ???. I used to ALWAYS carry a tarp with me. I will resume this practice. I used to always carry extra food, I didn't this time. And from now on, I think I'll continue to do the shuttling to prevent any future misunderstandings like we had. And one thing I've also noticed when I read paddling stories about other states; I'm certainly glad we don't have to negotiate fences in our streams here in MO! Good story, Pirogue.  8) WW
  
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