Canoe Focus Summer 2017 | Page 46

46 I use paddling as a way to watch wildlife, a way to get fit, a way to get out of the rat race and into the wilderness, because to me it is just the passport to a whole other world. The DW is a very achievable goal even to someone who has never paddled before and it’s growing year by year. It has a little bit of everything, you get tears, sweat, blood, frustration; the feeling that you just cannot carry on and finish, and then absolute elation when you cross the line. It’s one of the greatest endurance events in the world and it’s right here in tame old England. Let’s go right back to the beginning, how did you first ever get into paddling? Some of my biggest and most treasured expeditions have been in a kayak - making the first descent of white water rivers in the Himalayas, and being able to You have 24 hours to go on an ultimate paddling adventure, where would you go? I would go back to Bhutan, I was lucky enough to be on the first ever descent of this ridiculously stunning white water river. It was challenging and exciting, and staggeringly beautiful. We were paddling into gorges with precipitous rock faces on either side knowing we were the first people ever to go there. I will always treasure that and would go back in a heartbeat. You’ve mentioned a few of your most treasured expeditions, is there anywhere on your paddling bucket list you haven’t visited yet? There really is! After doing the DW with Helen we got talking and started thinking about other paddling races we could do. There’s the Dusi in South Africa that we would love to do, but because it’s got quite a lot of white water in a tippy boat we would need to do a lot of training, but it’s definitely on our wish list. The Yukon 1000 is the biggie, that’s the monster race and we would love to go and do that too. >> I have photos of me aged six canoeing for the first time but I didn’t really get into it until I was about 11 or 12-years-old in the Scouts. I started paddling to get my Duke of Edinburgh Award so I did all of my first expeditions in a kayak. Through scouting I acquired all the skills you need to do a reasonable white water expedition, and still use all of those skills - even now! do big crossings and circumnavigations in a sea kayak. It’s something I hope to be doing until I’m in my 90’s. Your most recent paddling challenge was the Devizes to Westminster race, which you took on with your wife Helen to raise money for charity, how would you describe that experience? 47