In short: Not every stretch of river opens up wide and easy. This one is the opposite. A narrow blackwater run choked with downed trees and tight turns, where every bend has you making a choice. Slip through the gap, go over the log, or get out and drag around. This is what it takes to work a canoe down a river that has not been cleared, and how to make the safe call every time.
When the river narrows down and the trees start crossing it, the paddling changes. You quit thinking about miles and you start thinking about the next obstacle. Every downed tree is its own little problem. Sometimes there is a clean gap you can line up and slip through. Sometimes a log is sitting low enough you can ease over it. And sometimes there is no way through, and the only right answer is to get out and drag the canoe around.
The one thing you never do is charge a tree blind with the current pushing you into it. A downed tree in moving water is what they call a strainer. The water goes through the branches, but a boat or a body can get pinned against it and held. That is why you slow down, look it over, and decide before you commit. There is no prize for speed out here.
A twisty river makes you work. You come around a bend and you cannot see what is on the far side until you are half into it, so you keep your speed down and you look ahead. Set your angle early, ride the inside of the turn where the current runs slower, and be ready to back-paddle the second a log shows up waiting on you. Patience is the whole trick. The river will let you through if you take it one turn at a time.
Every one of those choices is a small one, but they add up to whether you get down the river clean or end up swimming. A loaded canoe does not stop on a dime. Give yourself room, keep your eyes up, and make the call while you still have the room to make it.
By the time you clear a stretch like this you have earned every foot of it. But that is the good kind of tired. A cleared, easy river is fine, but there is something about working a boat down a narrow, blocked run that makes you a better paddler. You learn to read water, you learn when to muscle it and when to walk it, and you learn that the smart move and the safe move are almost always the same move. Slow is smooth, and smooth gets you home.
Reading strainers, picking a line through tight turns, and knowing when to portage instead of push. It is all in the River Master guide.
Read the River Master guideYou slow down and read it before you commit. Sometimes there is a gap to slip through, sometimes you go over a low log, and sometimes the only safe move is to get out and drag around. Never charge a strainer with the current behind you.
A downed tree in moving water is a strainer. Water flows through the branches but a boat or a body can get pinned against it and held under. That is why you never run one blind and take them one at a time.
Keep your speed down and look ahead through the turn before you enter it. Set your angle early, use the inside of the bend where the current is slower, and be ready to back-paddle if a log is waiting on the far side.
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