My daughter Christy on the Buffalo River in one of my Kayaks |
Two
good questions for master naturalist out there this week. How many species of cedar trees are
growing in the tri-state region of eastern Kansas, northern Arkansas and
southern Missouri? If that is too
easy, how about this multiple choice question… Of the hawks found in our area, which one is generally known
to nest earliest in the spring--- the Cooper’s hawk, the red-shouldered hawk,
the sharp-shinned hawk or the woodland gossett?
I
believe that a kayak is best considered a water-toy, as you might consider a
plastic air mattress found in swimming pools. My Uncle Norten, upon seeing one
years ago, commented that he would rather fish from an inner-tube in a farm
pond.
I
have often used one of the best kayaks you can buy. I own seven different kinds of fishing and hunting boats and
three kayaks. I have two
different-length kayaks made specifically for sportsmen, one twelve footer, and
one ten. I camouflaged them with
brown, black and green paint, and the ten-footer makes a heck of a good lay-out
boat for duck hunting.
I
don’t get out in that thing in the dead of winter and paddle it to a remote
spot where I wish to hunt ducks. I
put it in my 18-foot War-Eagle boat and take off across lakes or waters like
Stockton, Truman or Bull Shoals, to duck hunt out of it. In the big boat I carry my shells,
shotgun, camo-material, Labrador and decoys. The little kayak won’t hold half of that, but when I get
decoys set, and my Lab comfortably in place and hidden along the shore, I can
set the kayak out against a log or tree and cover it, set down flat in the
bottom of it and be fairly low and comfortable and hidden.
called a Lowe Paddle-Jon, made on the order of my grandfather’s wooden johnboats.
Remembering
back several decades, those wooden johnboats he made were better than anything
I have ever used on a stream because they floated high, they were quiet and
they were so stable you could walk along the top of the sideboards without
tipping them much at all. The
square-sterned canoes above 18-feet in length are fairly stable too. I have a 19-foot square-sterned Grumman
canoe and if you float rivers in it, you have to be a real greenhorn to tip
it.
If
you fill any of the river floating craft I use with water, they won’t
sink. Those aluminum canoes and
johnboats have Styrofoam floatation in the ends and under any enclosed seats.
Kayaks
won’t sink either. If they fill
with water, you just get wet, but you can still windmill them to the bank. I do not call it paddling… it is ‘windmilling’
using great long shafts with a blade on each end and I am sure you have seen
the way they are maneuvered.
That’s what
is so objectionable to me. The
young people who get them to fish from are windmillers. They cannot quietly and unobtrusively
go along any waterway because of that. And when I am floating along some small stream and a
caravan of them come by in red and yellow kayaks, I just paddle to the side and
let them pass until they can’t be heard and the river is peaceful again.
Christy on Pomm de Terre Lake |
She
stays in a small area along the bank and seems to enjoy fishing from it, but I instruct
her to not give her last name when she talks to someone out there, as it would
cast a shadow on the whole Dablemont clan if someone knew we have a kayaker amongst
us.
I
am progressive enough to use those kayaks of mine where they make sense, and
give me a good option, but I DO NOT use those windmill paddles and never
will. I have made myself a seat at
the back of mine and ballast in the bow, and I use my sassafras paddle to slip
along quietly in small waters. I can hunt squirrels, ducks, deer and turkey
from it, but only on little streams, never from a large one like the Niangua or
Gasconade or lower reaches of any main river. Why do I never fish from one? Because I have never seen the time that a kayak gives me a
better advantage as a fisherman.
I
didn’t buy my kayaks, I obtained them years ago by trading advertising in my
magazine, and made sure that they were the best available. But I must admit they are tremendously
expensive. Right now, all kayaks,
canoes and aluminum johnboats are expensive. But my river johnboat and square-sterned Grumman, when I
first began as an outdoor writer, were only a small percentage of the cost they
are today.
You
know what is a wise thing to do--- buy used boats. My Grumman canoe has been used hard and often, but still it
would last a new owner a lifetime. If you are looking for a kayak, get a used one, and camouflage it so you
don’t look like part of a carnival coming down the river. Keep the thing off of big waters,
because if you are in a lake, large boats are not going to slow down to a
no-wake situation just because of you and your kayak. They shouldn’t be
expected to. And always know that you are going to be observed wind-milling
that thing along by every living creature in your watery path when you are on a
river, way before you get there.
I
grew up slipping along the Big Piney in my dark gray or green wooden johnboat
trying to just blend in and be a part of the river. I have seen times when I would float past wood-ducks or deer
or mink that didn’t know I was there.
Many times, kingfishers would alight on the blind attached to the bow
when I was hunting. Rivermen
paddled a boat from one side, and could float for the whole day without taking
the blade from the water. You
don’t see that anymore, it has become the day of bright colors, banging
aluminum and windmill paddlers hurrying down the river as if they were fleeing
from something.
It
would be great if they could all have been taught how to do it right, and to
have reverence for that stream instead of seeing it as some sort of natural
waterslide where yelling and hollering is part of the ride, and banging paddles
are just made to make you go faster.
The
answers to the master naturalist questions… there are no cedars here; our red
cedars are actually junipers. Cedars are found in the Holy Land and countries nearby. The ‘woodland
gossett’? I just made that up. It
sounds good though.
Once
when I was just a kid, and took two ladies from Chicago on a float trip, I told
one that a goggle-eye she caught was a spotted river-flounder and she never
questioned it. Old Bill Stalder, down at the pool hall, put me up to that and
the front bench regulars really enjoyed it when I told them about it that
night. The earliest nesting hawk, generally speaking, is the red-shouldered
hawk.
No comments:
Post a Comment