I have many hopes for the project, and they mostly stem from the origins of it.
For one, life is incredibly busy: all forms of communication must be satisfied; there are all sorts of media and other distractions. I hope for six days of quiet contemplation—six days to regroup, refocus, and really focus on the essentials. That’s really important to me with this project. It’s a little selfish, just get out there and enjoy some quiet, some physical work, and some peace.
I also want to draw attention to the historical sense of the Cane—that it was navigated very slowly. “Slow” is a very essential element of this project. That is an element that people continually try to dissuade me. “You could hide a little trolling motor on the back. Nobody would see it. It wouldn’t be noisy.” But the slow pace of the travel is an important thread that winds through this project.
Also, I see it as an artistic practice. I see the raft as the vehicle for the art. If you make art with welding or painting, then the torch and the brushes become the vehicles for the art. The outcome isn’t a visual piece of art—in the long run it’s what we call a happening or an event. I see myself out there on the river as a visual element. Every time I’m spotted, I think people will feel it’s kind of a romantic sight—this guy out there quietly and slowly poling his way down the river. It’s kind of like the gondolas of Italy or Huck Finn and Jim floating down the Mississippi.
Matt’s Pre-launch Fears
· Cold rain.
· It’s been instilled in me a fear that snakes may climb onto the raft.
· Alligators
· Headwinds the whole way
· Lightning
· The main fear is not accomplishing the project
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Why the Cane River is Essential Today
Today Natchitoches is one of the few towns intersected by a beautiful fingerlake like the Cane River. It's a tourist draw, it greatly increases the value of real estate on its banks, and it accommodates recreation like fishing and boating. There are boat parades on the Cane. It draws the essential tourists to Natchitoches which depends on that boost to its economy. The Cane is the center of most city activities—the City of Lights display, the concerts, and the Green Market (farmers market and arts & crafts fair).
The Cane River Lake dominates the ambiance of the city. It’s the city’s defining feature.
The Cane River Lake dominates the ambiance of the city. It’s the city’s defining feature.
Monday, January 28, 2008
The Origin of the Project
There is an initial spot that the idea was created. When I first moved here to Natchitoches I was reading River Horse: Across America by Boat by William Least Heat Moon. Moon traverses the United States, from the east coast to the west via the waterways. He wrote of the importance of these rivers and lakes to our country’s heritage. We originally traveled to a town by river. Now they are mostly covered up-we rarely see them except when we cross over them by bridge. While the people in the cities used to depend on the rivers, now we almost hide from them and the industries that have built up around them.
The book stirred my heart with appreciation and a sense of adventure.
As I crossed the Cane River going to and from work, I began to realize its importance, past and present, to this area. So I started thinking, "What if I found a way to experience it?"
It started gelling in my mind-maybe I could make a canoe or a pirogue. A pirogue (pronounced PEE-row) is a flat-bottomed canoe that was brought to this area by the French.
So I started talking to people about my ideas. I have a friend, Brad Ferguson, who had built a pirogue. He said it was very tippy and unstable. I wanted something that I could stay on and that would carry my gear adequately. So I decided I would build a raft.
The raft idea dated back to when I was a teenager in Houston. My friend Matt Reynolds and I were walking along a bayou and decided we would build a raft to float on the bayou. What a wonderful adventure! We never got around to that, so this project sort of satisfies that original idea.
The Cane River's Importance
Natchitoches was originally settled in 1714, and is arguably the oldest permanent settlement west of the Mississippi. It was at least the oldest settlement of the Louisiana Purchase.
The Cane River, as part of the Red River, flowed through Natchitoches and became the center of travel and commerce. If it hadn't been the offshoot of the Red River that came through this area, then there wouldn't have been this settlement.
There is a lot of history behind this river. There was a giant logjam, called the Great Raft. Once the Great Raft was cleared around 1830, the Red River found a shorter course to the gulf and abandoned the city. The Cane River began to dry up, the authorities built a dam on the south end to create this beautiful finger lake. As far as I can tell, they did this to maintain the aesthetics of the area.
That's how rivers were the essential element of the settling of a place. To settle in an area there had to be fresh water, and flowing fresh water was the most desirable.
The book stirred my heart with appreciation and a sense of adventure.
As I crossed the Cane River going to and from work, I began to realize its importance, past and present, to this area. So I started thinking, "What if I found a way to experience it?"
It started gelling in my mind-maybe I could make a canoe or a pirogue. A pirogue (pronounced PEE-row) is a flat-bottomed canoe that was brought to this area by the French.
So I started talking to people about my ideas. I have a friend, Brad Ferguson, who had built a pirogue. He said it was very tippy and unstable. I wanted something that I could stay on and that would carry my gear adequately. So I decided I would build a raft.
The raft idea dated back to when I was a teenager in Houston. My friend Matt Reynolds and I were walking along a bayou and decided we would build a raft to float on the bayou. What a wonderful adventure! We never got around to that, so this project sort of satisfies that original idea.
The Cane River's Importance
Natchitoches was originally settled in 1714, and is arguably the oldest permanent settlement west of the Mississippi. It was at least the oldest settlement of the Louisiana Purchase.
The Cane River, as part of the Red River, flowed through Natchitoches and became the center of travel and commerce. If it hadn't been the offshoot of the Red River that came through this area, then there wouldn't have been this settlement.
There is a lot of history behind this river. There was a giant logjam, called the Great Raft. Once the Great Raft was cleared around 1830, the Red River found a shorter course to the gulf and abandoned the city. The Cane River began to dry up, the authorities built a dam on the south end to create this beautiful finger lake. As far as I can tell, they did this to maintain the aesthetics of the area.
That's how rivers were the essential element of the settling of a place. To settle in an area there had to be fresh water, and flowing fresh water was the most desirable.
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Here is a map of the trip. Each color symbolizes the proposed length of each day of poling. I plan on traveling 6 miles a day at an average speed of .5 miles an hour. Since June, I have spent time on Oscar practising the art of poling, sweating and freezing. Propelling a raft with a pole is about the slowest means of transportation known to man (I hope someone will post a comment that will tell me otherwise. I imagine a piggy-back ride on a three-toed sloth might be a touch more sluggish for example).
The Cane River Lake is, well, a lake. It was dammed at both ends to fascilitate proper aesthitics for the lovely downtown Natchitoches. As such, there is no current. Almost all movement on this river-lake is up to me.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Just over two years ago, I was reading a book entitled RiverHorse by William Least Heat-Moon. While absorbing his experience crossing the U.S. by rivers, I began to notice the small river-lake that crosses through Natchitoches, Louisiana, the town we live in. It's called the Cane River Lake. Within this time of contemplation, I decided that I would experience our little, historical river-lake from the vantage point of the water.
I began to design a simple raft to propel me down the current-less Cane, and plan my trip with absolutely no prior experience in this area.
On February 4th, 2008, my raft Oscar Bitley (Choctaw for "in the cut-off cane") and I will start the 36 mile trip down the Cane River Lake. I expect it will take six days and five nights.
I began to design a simple raft to propel me down the current-less Cane, and plan my trip with absolutely no prior experience in this area.
On February 4th, 2008, my raft Oscar Bitley (Choctaw for "in the cut-off cane") and I will start the 36 mile trip down the Cane River Lake. I expect it will take six days and five nights.
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