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Tortoise Reserve Work Party & Paddling Weekend
Every spring Dave Lee hosts a Work Weekend of volunteer labor at the
Tortoise Reserve on the banks of the South River NC, an opportunity to
sweat, be bitten by fire ants, and drink cheap beer. And paddle some
beautiful blackwater rivers in the Cape Fear basin.
I arrived at the gate to the Tortoise Reserve early Thursday afternoon.
The locked gate to the Tortoise Reserve. Next time I'll remember to
bring those bolt cutters Dave declared we would not need.
Just as I had decided to find a hardware store and buy a hacksaw Dave
arrived and we proceeded into the Reserve to disgorge tools, parts,
materials and assorted equipment. I had stuffed most of my home shop
into the van, to the point that lumber, ladders, and toolboxes occupied
the back, the floor and all areas but the driver's seat.
Having established my home away from home workshop beneath the pole barn
roof Dave and I set upon a few simple tasks; re-erecting the entrance
sign, which has been repeatedly stolen by frat boys due to its
alliterative allure and colloquial double meaning, built a couple of
sets of heavy duty sawhorses (I was pleased to see these in constant
demand as the work weekend progressed), replaced a tortoise pen gate and
installed a multi-can crusher (with unexpected results – the kids loved
crushing cans and would snatch empties before they even hit the ground,
which completely eliminated the largest aspect of policing the area).
Not only that but Dave was deviously delighted with the idea of drilling
a hole in the front crush plate so that half filled cans would forcibly
eject their contents onto the operator's chest, creating an impromptu
wet tee shirt contest.
Having successful accomplished those tasks we toured the Reserve,
creating a prioritized list of jobs-to-be-done and set about producing a
satisfactory quantity of empty beer cans for the kids to crush.
By Friday morning a contingent of free labor had arrived and the Reserve
resembled a bustling ant colony, although these worker ants all seemed
to be hammering or sawing with one hand and drinking cheap beer with the
other. Much was accomplished, especially in the realm of providing the
kids can crusher materials and a paddling trip was scoped out through
the old forest section of the Black River with the help of Ferguson's“Paddling Eastern North Carolina” guidebook.
Black River (Beattys Bridge Rd to Hunts Bluff Rd access)
12.9 Miles
OC2 – Mike Lowe/Roman _____, Alex Siess/Leo ____
OC1 – Mike McCrea
K1 – Dave Maneval
Setting shuttle the river at both ends appeared wide, flat and slow,
promising a long day of paddling. While it was a longish day with little
current the river changed character dramatically at the halfway point.
As the river began to narrow we came upon a couple in a tandem canoe
beached at the apex of a bifurcation. They had been to the left, and the
river petered out. They had been to the right, and the river grew too
shallow to paddle and diffused into many tiny channels too small to
permit passage of a boat. They had watched a party of paddlers in rec
kayaks go right and were waiting to see if they returned equally befuddled.
We pressed on to the right, following the current when discernable, and
soon came upon the rec kayakers, scattered throughout the swamp with
their boats wedged between cypress trees. Clueless, stuck and making no
discernable progress.
This area, known as the Three Sisters or the Narrows, contains the
oldest trees in North America, core sampled to 1700 years old, and some
may be as old as 2000 years. Surprisingly not as large as some along
Maryland or Delaware cypress swamp runs (the massive specimens along the
upper Pocomoke or James Branch come to mind) – these were the dwarfs and
disfigured trees that loggers left standing a hundred years ago.
We continued to pick our way through the bewilderingly thick swamp,
trying to follow the current while looking ahead for a clear path
(sometimes the meat of the current would head into an impenetrably dense
area of trees and it would be necessary to diverge from the flow and
pick a more open route off to one side, all the while keeping one eye on
the main flow in order to not lose it entirely during the detour into
the forest primeval).
Somewhere in the midst of this challenge Maneval disappeared, and given
his penchant for selecting the route less traveled the possibility of
again concluding a days paddle surrounded by the hubbub of Search & Rescue loomed large.
Just as the trickiest part of this swampage began to thin I heard the
unmistakable sound of a canoe flipping over, followed by laughter from
Alex and Leo. Interesting this, because I had been asked to create a
certificate commemorating Alex's unexpected swim on the South River
during last year's trip. Interesting because, in writing the inscription
for her certificate the phrase “capsized yet again” appeared.
Interesting because I had a feeling, I had faith; I just knew I could
count on Alex to fulfill that prophesy. Thanks Alex.
As the baffling swamp route began to become more obvious we were treated
to a visual oddity – a field of large cypress knees unlike any I've ever
seen before. While the cypress trees were thinly scattered the knees
were large and densely clustered in a bizarrely alien fairyland.
Just as suddenly as the river had petered out it reappeared, fifty feet
wide and flowing slowly. Taking a bankside shore break at the river's
reemergence Maneval soon reappeared as well. Finding that his road less
traveled meandered through the swamp to no end and no obvious outlet, he
had backtracked and followed what current there was to reemerge behind us.
Pondering Duckhead trivia we realized that new companions Leo & Roman
counted as Duckhead paddlers # 498 and 499. The milestone of Duckhead
paddler number 500 would occur on the next outing that included a new
paddling companion.
Back to the Tortoise Reserve, feeling a bit guilty about having
absconded with some of the hardest working and most skilled serfs for
the better part of the day, we accomplished a few more tasks and
gathered together for the dedication of the Barbara Bonner Turtle
Conservation & Education Center. Leslie and Dave spoke in memory of
Barbara, and Dave got something in his eye and was hard pressed to continue.
Back to work - ain't the beer cold - and as darkness fell we retired to
the library to conclude the bidding on the silent auction, in the end
raising over $800 for the Asian Turtle Consortium (that darned Arthur
outbid me for the Tortoise Reserve work weekend hard hat). Another peek
at the Ferguson Guide and we had a run selected for the morrow.
Sunday
Black River (NC 41 to Wildcat Rd)
6 Miles
OC1 – Mike McCrea
K1 – Dave Maneval
Having decided on an early morning run on another section of the Black,
the plan was for Maneval and I to kick Mike Lowe when we awoke to
ascertain if he was sufficiently sober to join us. We took “Go away you
bastards” as a no.
This section of the Black would be a fine choice for a short novice run,
with naught to impede our progress but a single limbo log, and we were
back at the Tortoise Reserve by mid-morning to cross our remaining tasks
off the list and admire the quantity and quality of work others had
accomplished.
Amy had scrubbed, swept and scoured many of the outbuildings, including
the main cabin and bunkhouse. Charlotte and Arthur had bow sawed their
way through immense quantities of fallen tree branches. Leo had hauled
and stacked cords of firewood. Mike had tackled several painting and
trim jobs on the library walls. A contingent of volunteer laborers had
constructed a new tortoise pen (without Dave's help this became the
first level and symmetrical structure at the Reserve). Leslie and Alex
had established new plantings in many of the inside and outside pens.
And more, much more. One of the joys of the Tortoise Reserve Work
Weekends, besides good company and bad beer, is the startling
realization come Sunday afternoon of exactly how much has been completed.
Over the course of the weekend Maneval and I managed to accomplish the
following:
Install door trim in the tortoise greenhouse, clean & install plastic on
greenhouse ceiling, reattach the insulation, re-install a damaged
shelving unit, secure the removable boardwalk planks, re-erect a toppled
headstone in graveyard and straighten some other leaning stones, install
a dryer vent, rout & install signs on bunkhouse, repair a lock set on
tool shed, (not to mention drink large quantities of beer, which may be
why I can't remember our other tasks, and why many of those above were
completed by Maneval while I supervised and drank his beer before it got
warm).
Sunday
South River (at Tortoise Reserve frontage)
0.3 Miles
OC2 – Mike McCrea/Dave Lee, Alex Seiss/Leo ____/Biscuit Lee
As the various volunteers eased their aching bodies in their vehicles
and departed Alex managed to convince Dave to partake in a short
paddling trip, making him my 500th paddling companion since I started
keeping track in 1997. This for me was truly one of the highlights of
the weekend, not only hitting to 500 mark, but to have Dave Lee as
number five hundred. Hard to believe that I've known Dave since 1971,
have traveled and worked with him throughout the mid-Atlantic and desert
southwest, and had yet to wet a boat with him. When the Christmas awards
ceremony rolls around there is sure to be a special prize for number 500.
Not only has Dave been enshrined as the 500th Duckhead paddler, but he
will likely remain forever at the bottom of the Duckhead mileage list,
since the heavily strainered nature of the South River prevented us from
paddling more than a few hundred yards. With a scant 0.3 total miles
Dave has replaced C. Serp's 0.8 miles, which had occupied last place in
the mileage count since November of '97.
Having reached this milestone it seems like an opportune time to look at
the Duckhead statistics – 373 adult paddlers, 101 kids, 27 dogs and 201
Duckhead paddling trips since 1997.
Whadda ya know, we reached another milestone at the Tortoise Reserve
work weekend; the early morning float down the Black with Maneval was
the 200th Duckhead paddling trip. Serendipity, if I had known in advance
and had my pick of companions for the 200th trip it would have been
Maneval. Mark that one down as another award.
And, unbeknownst to us, we passed another Duckhead milestone on last
months Trap Pond strainer-fest, our 100th Duckhead paddling kid. Another
award in waiting.
Packing tools and gear I racked one less boat than I came down with. Ed
Evangelidi's old Shenandoah having been nicely rebuilt - thanks
especially to Topher for the gunwales and deck plates, Maneval for the
seats and to various donors for other parts and pieces – I was able to
leave a loaner canoe at the Tortoise Reserve, along with some spare
paddles and PFDs. And I have a second Shenandoah waiting in the wings to
rebuilt as soon as I find another set of gunwales, so eventually the
Tortoise Reserve will have a fleet of loaner canoes and gear available.
Next work weekend at the Tortoise Reserve I'll need to build a canoe
rack for growing loaner boat fleet. Build a lumber rack in the pole
barn. Build a couple more sets of sawhorses and a 4' x 8' tabletop for
the sawhorses. OK Dave, you can start making my work list for next
spring now.
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