Paddling Past the Boiling Point
One of the most underrated superpowers in life and sport is knowing the difference between a reason and an excuse. Some sports practically hand out medals for inventive excuses (you know who you are), while endurance sports demand grit to a fault. “Tough it out” is the mantra, even when the smarter play might be a pivot or a pause.
Plan A was a long, easy Friday paddle. The idea: beat the
boats, dodge the smoke, and outmaneuver the storms. But Plan A got weather
slapped, so I pivoted. Enter a very hard ride. So hard, I doubled up for the
first time ever. Two hardcore efforts in one week. Victory? Yes. Part of the
plan? Not in any version of the alphabet soup.
Saturday was supposed to be the paddle reboot, and with only
56 days until the epic Red River Paddle Challenge I was motivated. I crushed a
heroic breakfast, packed fast, and got myself out the door at lightning speed.
For me. Ideal launch time? Early. Actual time? Less early. It was already 27°C
and climbing. I offhandedly asked Google, “What’s the humidity?” and she coolly
responded: “100% … good luck.” Not helpful, Google.
Legs? Toasty. But when I set up the board with all my gear,
I barely noticed. The heat had my full attention. A lone morning paddle
enthusiast was packing up. They’d started early, clearly in on the secret. As I
setup my NK Speed Coach, people asked how long I was going. “Six hours,” I
said. Some jaws dropped. Some eyes rolled. Others couldn’t even process the
idea. Paddling for six hours? In this heat? Respect, confusion, and admiration
swirled in the air like smoke.
After some more fiddling, I took a proper hose shower before
hitting the water. Wet, fed, and mildly cooked, I was ready to launch into this
sweaty saga. I felt a little tired, sure. But I figured I’d warm up into it.
Then came the back pain. A bit of soreness that had bugged
me overnight but didn’t set off any alarms. In hindsight, the week’s double
hard efforts were clearly the culprit. I hadn’t slept great, but well enough.
Still, I missed the connection between a sore back and paddling, which has
literally never happened before. It only clicked once I was on the water.
Ah, denial. Endurance athletes’ favorite warm up. I figured
I’d ease into it and the ache would fade, like most training twinges do.
I’ve done this drill hundreds of times. Paddling in serious
heat isn’t a matter of bravery. It’s about strategy. Adjust or perish (or at
least melt a little). My playbook always includes:
- Hide
from the sun: Hat, rash guard, full SPF armor.
- Slow
the heck down: I was moving so slowly, I nearly looped back to the start
out of sheer anti momentum.
- Stay
wet to stay cool: Jumped in every 30 minutes like it was a prescribed
medicine.
- Hydrate
like your life depends on it: Five liters on board and pre hydrated like I
was prepping for a desert ultramarathon.
But here’s the kicker… sometimes even all that isn’t enough.
When the humidity’s off the charts, evaporative cooling doesn’t happen. No
matter how wet, shady, or slow you go. And today? The wind had taken the day
off. Dead calm. No breeze. No relief.
The heat didn’t just cling. It smothered.
As the temperature cranks up, so does your body’s drama.
Once it starts auditioning for Pressure Cooker: The Musical, you’d better pay
attention. Because the signs of overheating? They’re spicier than a July soap
opera crossover episode.
What to do: Hit the shade, hose off, hydrate like you’re
prepping for a camel cosplay, and chill. If things keep sliding downhill, call
it. Get help. Don’t be the hero. Be the smart sweaty legend.
At some point, honestly, it’s all a sweaty blur. The slower
I paddled, the higher my heart rate climbed. My engine was revving with zero
throttle input. A rogue system alert. Then nausea knocked politely and asked to
come aboard. That was my cue.
So I downshifted. Hard. I sat back and embraced the full
Manitoba style paddle. Bayou tube float energy. Picture easy drifting,
questionable technique, and a vibe so mellow even the ducks looked concerned.
Realizing that pushing through would be less noble and more
self sabotage, I spun the board around and started the slow retreat. Five
minute siesta? Mandatory. Cool water dips every 30 minutes? Lifesaving and
spiritually cleansing.
The journey home wasn’t just physical. It was mental
endurance in molasses. Every stroke took willpower. Every breeze (okay,
imaginary breeze) was a blessing. I was halfway to baked before I even touched
dry land.
If heat was the teacher, today’s paddle was the masterclass.
Here’s what the bayou styled slog taught me, served with a side of sunscreen
and self reflection:
- Respect
the forecast. When Google says “100% humidity,” it’s not just being
dramatic. It’s sending out a weather themed warning.
- Gear
matters. Rash guard? Essential. Shade hat? Non negotiable. Pre launch hose
shower? Inspired. Next time, a beach umbrella and an industrial fan might
make an appearance.
- Slow
was smart. Speed became irrelevant. At one point, staying upright was the
only goal. I might as well have been a drifting buoy.
- Hydration
isn’t optional. Five liters and still feeling toasted. Pre hydration
helped, but next time I’m calling in electrolytes and maybe a sports
scientist.
- Listen
to your body. Sore back, heavy legs, heart rate rising without effort.
Those weren’t complaints. They were warning signs. I ignored them until
they couldn’t be ignored.
- Paddle
chill is a skill. When it all hits the fan, channel some Manitoba wisdom.
Sit down. Float slow. Don’t fight the melt. Sometimes, survival is the
smarter path than heroics.
Will I paddle in the extreme heat again? No doubt. But next
time, I might check that the sauna setting isn’t stuck on intense. This was one
for the memory bank and the humidity archive.
That’s me on my 7th long-ish paddle. Plans shifted, the heat
tested every move, and my body reminded me to listen closer. What started with
ambition turned into a lesson in slowing down, adapting, and finding strength
in the pause. Not the paddle I imagined, but maybe one I needed. And somewhere
between the haze and the hydration, watermelon proved—once again—that it’s not
a fruit, it’s a survival strategy.

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