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An Ultralight River Rafting Adventure

My river rafting adventure was only lightweight
for the first thirty miles. This is because I didn't count the
weight of the bicycle until I was done riding it and had put
it on the raft. All I carried otherwise was a small backpack,
a hatchet, a saw, scraps of rope, food, water, a garbage bag
bivy sack, a hat, and odds and ends. Maybe fifteen pounds total.
It was to be a biking, hiking, and
river rafting adventure. It was late May, so I could stay warm
in my homemade bivy sack, without a sleeping bag. I might wear
my hat, and pile up some leaves to sleep on. If the mosquitoes
were bad, I would use my head net, which, I had learned, would
also trap warm air around my head, keeping me warmer. I had matches
and a lighter, in case I needed a fire in an emergency.
Thirty miles of pedaling had brought me
from my home in Traverse City, Michigan, down the back roads
to the Baxter Bridge, on the Manistee River. It was almost 10
a.m. I pushed the bicycle into the woods, and rolled it along,
lifting it over logs, until I was a mile upstream. Looking around
at the trees, I knew this was the place to start the river rafting
part of the trip.
Sometimes Adventure Involves A
Lot Of Work
The first tree was the biggest, and I almost
couldn't drag the ten-foot sections to the river after cutting
them. They were perfect, however. Dead, dry-rotted Poplar was
always good, because it was like Styrofoam inside. It cut easy,
and floated well. White Cedar was the best quality, but it was
more difficult to find, and to cut.
When I had hauled enough logs to the river,
I got into the water and pulled the first two pieces in after
me. I tied them together, then tied two long thin poles to them
perpendicularly near either end. The other logs were guided,
one by one, under these two rails, and tied in place. By early
afternoon I was finished. With the last piece of rope, I tied
the raft to shore. I found and cut a good rafting pole to guide
me. I was ready.
Tom Sawyer Day
My first river rafting adventure had involved
four of us. I advertised it to my friends as an adventure-disaster,
sure to get them wet and cold. Three took the bait. Apart from
snacks and water, we took only a hatchet, a small saw, and whatever
scraps of rope we could find. It all fit into a small backpack.
We parked near the river and hiked a trail upstream until we
were a few miles from the car. The plan was to build a raft,
using only dead trees and our scraps of rope. We would then get
on it and go rafting back to the car.
It was dubbed "Tom Sawyer Day,"
and became a much anticipated event among an ever-changing group
of participants. Since it was, in equal parts, fun and dangerous,
we didn't usually bring beer. Even sober, it was enough of a
challenge to keep a thousand-pound pile of logs, with four people
on it, from going where it wanted to go. Where it wanted to go
inevitably involved pain and cold water, but with each trip I
managed to learn a little. Sometimes we even stayed dry.
Sometimes Adventure Involves Math
The first trip, Roland and I were cutting
and hauling logs to the river, while Cathy and Leslie cooked
hotdogs over a fire. We began to do geometry on a piece of birch
bark, trying to figure out how many logs were needed, allowing
for the dishonesty of the women's stated weights.
"Cedar weighs 37 pounds per cubic
foot," I told Roland, "leaving a lifting capacity of
about 27 pounds, given that water is 64 pounds per cubic foot."
The girls were laughing at me. "The volume of a cylindrical
object is pi times the radius squared, times the length, right?"
Roland agreed. We counted out the logs and began to build the
raft. When finished, we had a floating pile of old rotten logs
and two frightened women.
Sometimes Adventure Involves Getting
Wet
Leslie and Cathy sat on a stump in the
middle of the raft. Roland and I stood with our poles, ready
to fend off the banks of the river and the overhanging trees.
We did this successfully for at least fifteen minutes. Then,
when a low, horizontal tree refused to move, Roland pushed us
all off in order to regain his balance. We quickly gave up trying
to find the bottom of the river, and swam after the raft. Sputtering
and cursing at Roland, the three of us climbed back on.
This first rafting trip was in late April,
when the water is still like ice. The sun warmed us, but our
feet were almost always in the water. It was bad enough that
the raft didn't float very high off the water, but then it began
to change shape before our eyes and under our feet. "It's
a square. No wait! It's a parallelogram. Now it's a square again."
The girls decided that there was too much geometry in river rafting,
so a few minutes later we let the raft drift close to the shore,
where they stepped off into the shallow water.
The water, however, wasn't as shallow as
we thought. Once they had reappeared and climbed up the sandy
bank of the river, we waved goodbye. The trail took them to and
from the river on their way to the car. The next time we saw
them, Leslie was hiking in her wet bra and panties. This part
of the adventure story was crucial to recruiting other young
males in the future. The trail went into the forest again, and
the girls didn't see us for thirty minutes.
Sometimes Adventure Involves Running
Actually they saw the raft first, floating
quietly down the river by itself. Soon they saw Roland and I,
running along the opposite side, trying to catch up. This was
because of a tree that stuck out from the bank, low to the water.
We were unable to avoid it, despite our excellent rafting skills,
and thought we could jump over it as the raft passed underneath.
It seemed like a reasonable plan at the time. It didn't seem
so reasonable when Roland was pushing my face into the sticks
in the tree while climbing over me to get to shore.
The raft went on, not noticing our absence.
We ran through swamp and woods, pretending this was part of the
plan when the girls saw us. The raft came near the riverbank
just as we caught up to it. We leapt for it, and we were back
in control. More or less.
"How do we get off?" Roland asked,
when we were near the car. We decided that we just had to get
close to shore and jump. Roland was still hanging from a tree
when I started up the big hill to the car. Tom Sawyer Days went
a little smoother after this first one.
Sometimes Adventure Involves Being
Pointed At
After pedaling thirty miles and hauling
logs for hours, I was tired, but satisfied. It was the best raft
yet, and I was soon rafting down the river, under Baxter Bridge,
and into the National Forest. I noticed immediately that these
rafts float better with only one person on them. There was just
one small group of houses to pass before a long uninhabited stretch.
My bicycle stood proudly in the center of the raft, tied in place,
with the backpack on the handlebars.
The first guy to see me yelled hello, and
pointed me out to his wife. The second didn't know what to say.
The Manistee is not a well-traveled river, especially not by
bicyclists. A few minutes later I was past the houses. Around
the next bend, a whitetail deer saw me and backed off through
the cattails. Probably went to tell his wife, I thought.
I floated for hours. Apparently my previous
river rafting experience was paying off, because I managed to
miss the trees, rocks, riverbanks, and to stay dry. I was even
able to sit down and soak up the sun for a minute or two at a
time. The latter was always interrupted, of course, by the necessity
to jump up and use the pole to avoid something.
Early in the evening, I stopped, disassembled
the raft, and began pushing my bicycle through the woods. A mile
later I found a trail, and got on the bike. A mile after that
I met two guys on a two-track, out four wheeling. The ice-cold
beer they gave me made them into instant friends, so I told them
that, no, I wasn't just out bicycling. I was river rafting. They
weren't sure they wanted a new friend, so I traveled on.
Eventually I decided to just keep going.
Sixty miles of bicycling, a couple miles hiking while pushing
the bike through the woods, three hours of log-hauling, and five
hours of rafting, all in one day, seemed like a worthy goal.
And the mosquitoes were worse than I had anticipated. Sometime
well after dark I pulled into the driveway and stumbled into
the house, my biking-hiking-river rafting adventure completed.
Related Page:
Michigan Backpacking
- Three Unknown Places
The Ultralight
Backpacking Site | An Ultralight River Rafting Adventure |