Day 3
We have to paddle 26 miles today, so we are up at
5:00am and on the water by 6:15am. It is
raining lightly, but the air temperature is a nice 70 degrees—not too hot, not
too cold. We paddle the next six hours
in the rain with only two short breaks.
We are soaked and as soon as we stop, we instantly get chilled. Paddling keeps us warm. Visibility is terrible, maybe 2 miles. At least the wind is not too strong and it’s
at our backs.
By noon, we’ve covered the 26 miles and reached
Highland. The landing at Highland is
under construction. There is a big pile
of dirt, an old boarded up building and a small, flat patch of scrubby grass
that is now under an inch of water. No
one is looking forward to camping here.
The building has a porch, so we climb up and Dave and I change into dry
clothes and rain gear. Russ and
Jean-Claude elect to stay in their wet clothes.
I am badly chilled and the dry clothes are a welcome relief.
We walk about a half-mile up the hill to the local gas
station/Dunkin Donuts/Subway and spend the next few hours eating, and staying
dry. At around 3:30pm, we wander out to
find the rain has all but stopped. We
take a quick walk on the Walkway Over the Hudson, then hike back down to the
kayaks. We are well rested and it takes
us no time at all to make the decision to push on. Jean-Claude has a friend who offered to let
us camp on his lawn and his house is only another 9 miles downriver. Dave and I change back into our wet clothes
and we shove off.
View of the Mid-Hudson Bridge from the Walkway Over the Hudson |
The next 9 miles is an easy paddle at a very relaxed
pace. By waiting out the afternoon,
we’ve caught the second southerly current for the day. Unfortunately, there is no place to take out
when we arrive. We unload all of our
gear onto land and carry it, piece by piece to the backyard that will be our
camp tonight. After some negotiating, we
get permission from the marina down the street to put our kayaks up on their
docks. As an added bonus, we get to use their showers! (Our only one this whole
trip). It is 9pm by the time we settle
into our tents and we are exhausted from paddling over 35 miles in one day.
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