The River Reclaimed My Soul
The province is ablaze, and smoke is sashaying through the city like it owns the place, canceling picnics, outdoor runs, and pretty much anyone’s will to explore our Provincial Parks. It’s only early July, but summer’s already serving a symphony of thunderclaps and wildfire plumes with a splash of eye-watering apathy. The air quality alerts ping more reliably than my calendar notifications and are now just… Tuesday.
One hulking log drifted past my SUP mere inches away, like
Poseidon himself sending a passive-aggressive reminder: “Nice board. Shame if
something happened to it.” Mental note: avoid that spot unless I’m ready to add
river jousting to my training regimen.
The wind ramped up and the waves got feisty. For over three hours, I wrestled gusts and rode rollers while sticking to my fueling schedule like a caffeinated GPS. By the final turn, déjà vu kicked in. I was 12 minutes behind last weeks pace and knew I wouldn’t make up time on the descent. My blistered hands protested every stroke, and the calm sections I cruised on the way up turned into a full-on battle royale heading back to the MPA dock.
My first close encounter was an ambush in a wind-whipped
corridor where my speed had downgraded to a crawl. Thanks to the roaring gusts,
I didn’t hear it until it was practically breathing down my neck. That yellow
beast had been sashaying up and down the river all day like it was rehearsing for
a waterborne tango. They waved with the carefree grace of backup dancers while
I twirled behind them, bubbling like a cork in fizzy soda, blissfully unaware
that their high-speed choreography was turning the river into a demolition
derby.
Then came the moment. Commitment kicked in. I snapped into
Big Wave Mode: feet firm, stance wide, adrenaline surging. The first wave
rolled beneath me, and I wobbled, yelling, “You got this!” The second wave hit harder,
and I screamed, “Paddle, dammit!” The third spun my board 45 degrees, but I
clung on like a caffeinated spider monkey. Surrender? Not on today’s program.
Here’s the thing: you never really believe you’re going to
lose until you do. I went down headfirst, paddle flailing, knowing I’d given it
100%, and still went swimming. “If you’re not falling, are you even trying?”
As I approached the BDI, four river taxis entered stage left
in quick succession, each packed with passengers, motoring through the chop.
Their wakes collided at wild angles, creating a choppy rhythm that felt more
mosh pit than Swan Lake. But I saw my moment, a chance to dance through the
chaos, weaving my paddleboard through the waves like a soloist in a stormy
ballet.
I nailed the first four moves with finesse. My paddle sliced
through the water like a ballerina’s pointed toe. Then, of course, the yellow
pontoon boat crashed the party. No rhythm, no grace, just raw speed and a wake
that hit me like a rogue tap dancer. The blender chop morphed into a full-on
washing machine, and just like that, the tango was over. I was breakdancing
against my will.
The wind gusted at 40 km/h, and the rolling waves turned my
paddleboard into an uncooperative dance partner. I fought to stay upright. I
screamed. I braced. I swam. And yes, I had an audience, because every great
performance needs spectators. Too bad mine involved flailing limbs and a
not-so-graceful attempt to climb back on stage.
Four hours in, I felt good. Not hungry, not thirsty, not
sore (that was scheduled for later). But fatigue was creeping in, especially
with the steady stream of motorboats. Still, I pushed on to the final stretch,
where waves bounce off one bank and roll impressively against the current. I
knew what was coming, I’d surfed this section before. Heading upriver, I was
riding the crest of each wave, vibing with the curling waters and gusting
winds. Pure magic.
Heading downriver, though? A different story. I was
laser-focused on not burying the nose and really wished I’d installed a wave
guard. But I hadn’t, so every so often I’d end up with a dugout full of water, which
is basically like trying to paddle an anchor.
And then (you knew this was coming), that stupid yellow
pontoon boat returned. It whipped up the waves, wind and current like a blender,
but this time the waves were four feet high. That’s my story and I’m sticking
to it. I was determined to ride it out, but rhythm was nowhere to be found. I
braced, paddled, yelled, screamed, slammed the paddle, braced again, paddled
more, screamed louder, and finally, my legs gave out.
Total failure. I couldn’t stay up. Spread eagle, I
surrendered to the inevitable and let the river reclaim my soul.
A marathon canoe I’d passed earlier going upriver had
apparently witnessed the whole drama. As they paddled by, they asked, “Are you
all right?” I yelled back, “If you’re not falling, are you even trying?” They
laughed and agreed.
And that, right there, was the win.



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