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Three solo paddlers from New England—Wayne from New Hampshire, Mary from Vermont, and Phyllis from Greenville by way of Massachusetts—came together as one, for one of the best River Reader trips in a long time.
The mid-February day turned sunny and blue as we crossed the river and took, in a change of last-minute heart, the long way to Sandy Island by way of Cowhouse Creek and the rice canals. No wind tickled the rice, and the river was as calm as the river can be. Two red cardinals provided something of a color spark for a day otherwise birdless. In White Creek we rode the last of the incoming tide, chatting idly in the way of fellow kayakers about our various lives, then turned into Vaux Creek for gorgeous swimming sunlight. On the island, on our hike, Mary found a buck’s antlers (four points!), and the longleaf pinecones were closed up in anticipation of the week's coming rain. We found two small yellow pitcher plants fresh and green among the winter's decay, and we heard pigs squealing and grunting at the edge of the rice fields when we got back to the dock. Then a big black pig swimming--fast as hell!--across the creek! We fought a little headwind on the way back, but we dug in and kept quiet in our thoughts until we reached the blue heron rookery. We noticed that the birds had returned and were building their nests--twigs in their beaks--and then an osprey cut across the sky to remind us that the river is never truly birdless.
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AuthorHastings Hensel Archives
March 2026
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