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I took a group of six really good dudes in their 60’s—down here for a reunion weekend from all over the country (Boston, Detroit, Philly, Raleigh, and Chicago)—out to Sandy Island this Saturday morning. I liked these guys—they were active, interested, interesting, convivial, kind, successful, easy-going. It’s hard to find that group dynamic with a half-dozen men anywhere in our country, at any age, and I knew it would be a good trip from the get-go.
One in their reunion had to cancel at the last minute, so we had an extra kayak. The problem was, right when we shoved off into the river, I noticed there wasn’t the extra kayak to be found. I counted in my head, then recounted. I was, by God, missing a kayak. My newest one, too! Had someone stolen it while I went to park? No, I reasoned, the tide must have come in under the dock and lifted it from the grass and taken it out to the river like a ghost boat. I found it, thank God, tethered to the other side of the public dock by a Good Samaritan, and I figured it was karma for helping another guy with his runaway boat a few weeks ago. But I decided to tow the empty boat behind me the whole way on the lollipop route, since we were already out on the river, and I didn't want to leave it alone at the landing. Thus, I towed a ghost today. With a strong incoming tide behind us, we sped upriver and saw the first snake of the season, a brown water snake coiled in my secret but surefire spot. The great blue herons posed regally in their high nests above blooming lilies as the day warmed into true heat. On the island, not much moved in the stillness, and my old landmark for the pitcher plants—what I called the “keyhole stump”—had fallen. But we hiked up the sand rim and beheld the Carolina bay from above, then made our way back to the kayaks to finish another great trip on a great day with great people.
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AuthorHastings Hensel Archives
May 2026
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