Austin paddler Hansen slogs on during Day 2 of Great Alabama 650

Austin paddler Hansen slogs on during Day 2 of Great Alabama 650

West Hansen takes a breather after reaching Matagorda Cut while paddling up the Texas coast in this file photo taken on May 23, 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo

Rain is still falling in Alabama, where West Hansen is running side by side with another veteran solo paddler, Salli O’Donnell, in the Greater Alabama 650 paddling race.

The two are tied for second place in the long-distance race, which starts in northeastern Alabama and finishes at Fort Morgan in Mobile Bay.

At 9:30 p.m. Sunday, the two veteran paddlers – both leading their classes – had paddled 195 miles of the 650-mile race. After more than a day and a half of paddling nearly non-stop, both looked stiff and shaky getting out of their boats at an evening portage, par for the course in long-distance paddling events.

The route of what’s called The World’s Longest Annual Paddle Race follows the Coosa and Alabama rivers, passing Montgomery and Selma as it winds its way toward the Gulf of Mexico. Along the way, paddlers alternately encounter swift moving rivers, slack-water lakes and, at the end, a tidal delta.

Read more: Great Alabama 650 gets off to a soggy start

Hansen, 59, and O’Donnell, who finished first solo female and second overall in last year’s Great Alabama 650, are chasing a tandem team paddled by last year’s winners, Joe Mann and Paul Cox. They spent much of the day tied for third place, but tonight caught the second place boat, a tandem paddled by Bobby Johnson and Rod Price.

“We’re moving the pawns around in a long chess game,” support crew member Robert Youens said from the riverbank Sunday afternoon.

Unlike the Texas Water Safari, which Hansen has completed 21 times, this race is so long that racers must stop and sleep along the way. Hansen caught two hours of sleep Saturday night and will likely stop to sleep for a few hours again tonight.

O’Donnell has completed the race twice and is familiar with the course. It may be to Hansen’s advantage to stick with her, at least for now. “She knows the course and in some of these big lakes it just makes sense to run with someone who’s done it twice,” Youens said.

“I think it’s helping them keep the pace up and enjoy the race,” Youens said. “They’re extremely focused on working together to reel in the lead teams.”

Read more: When West Hansen needs a break from society, he goes with the flow

 Almost a third of the way through the Great Alabama 650

The leaders are about a third of the way through the race, which Mann and Cox won last year in just under six days.

The racers have been running ahead of pace so far, but more rain is expected tonight. “It’s going to get ugly,” Youens said.

Some of the portages that were designated drive-around portages have been switched to walking portages because roads are too muddy for vehicles to traverse. And an upcoming stretch of what would normally be whitewater is expected to be washed out because the river is flowing at more than 22,000 cubic feet per second, Youens said.

Hansen’s support crew meets him roughly every 20 to 30 miles. Today they spotted a snake at one of the portages; they’ve dealt with mud and slippery rocks, too. Their job, besides keeping him fed and hydrated, is to keep him as comfortable as possible. That means changing clothes, offering lubrication to ease chafing, and cheering him on.

“When we see him, we clean him up and lube him up,” Youens said.

Hansen’s paddling resume is extensive. He led an expedition down the entire Amazon River in 2012 and the entire Volga River two years later. He’s finished the Texas Water Safari, a 260-mile race from Spring Lake in San Marcos to the Texas coast, 21 times, and has wins at the Missouri River 340.

 

 

 

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Great Alabama 650 gets off to a soggy start

Great Alabama 650 gets off to a soggy start

alabama 650

Austin paddler West Hansen readies one of his boats before the start of the Great Alabama 650 paddling race. Robert Youens photo

Nine hours into a soggy race, Austin paddler West Hansen is leading the men’s division of the Great Alabama 650 paddling race.

The 650-mile race started in a downpour at Weiss Lake in northeastern Alabama, and Hansen and the other racers have paddled through a steady rain all day.

As Hansen approached a feeding zone at Mile 63.7 tonight, the rain had finally stopped, at least temporarily.

The overall race leaders – a tandem boat paddled by Joe Mann and Paul Cox, who won last year’s event – passed the checkpoint a little after 7 p.m. Hansen and another solo paddler, Salli O’Donnell, were about 5 miles back. The rest of the racers had spread out behind the three lead boats.

So far the teams have made one portage. Hansen stopped briefly to change into dry clothes and swap boats, a strategic move that will allow him to change up seating position.

Read more: With Arctic expedition postponed, West Hansen heads to Alabama for 650-mile paddling race

The area is under a flash flood morning. The river level has risen about 2.5 feet, according to Robert Youens, part of Hansen’s support crew, likely because of dam releases upstream. That’s giving the paddlers a boost – Hansen was maintaining a pace close to 7.9 mph.

alabama 650 start

The Great Alabama 650 paddling race started this morning in a driving rain. Photo by Robert Youens

He is expected to reach the first dam, where competitors are required to take a 45-minute layover break, before midnight tonight. Hansen will nap briefly in a support vehicle before returning to his boat.

“We’re actually ahead of our schedule by an hour,” Youens said. “One, they’re paddling fast, and two, they have really nice water.”

Hansen was relaxed and prepared leading up to the race, managing to sneak in an afternoon nap yesterday. The race began at 10 a.m. today.

The race finishes at Fort Morgan, west of Orange Beach at the Gulf of Mexico. Last year’s winners finished the race in just under six days.

Hansen paddled the entire Amazon River in 2012 and the entire Volga River in Russia two years la

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Stop by Chaco bus for custom sandals – or free refurbs

Stop by Chaco bus for custom sandals – or free refurbs

Chaco bus

The Chaco Roving Repairs bus is parked on South Congress Avenue. Pam LeBlanc photo

Sewing machines were whirring and scissors snipping when I stepped into the Chaco Roving Repairs bus in downtown Austin on Thursday.

The vintage bus, where you can get your old Chaco sandals refurbished for free or buy a new pair of custom Chaco sandals, is parked in front of the Church on South Congress, 1511 S. Congress Ave., until Sept. 26.

If your old Chacos need some loving, you should stop by. Hours are noon to 6 p.m. daily, except Wednesday, when the bus moves to Speedway Plaza at the University of Texas. Longhorns can drop by from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. that day.

The bus itself has more than 170,000 miles on it, but not all of that comes from the Chaco Fit for Adventure Tour. Chaco bought the bus, which delivered kids to schools in the 1990s, and equipped it with everything needed to assemble and repair sandals. It’s been on the road since June, with stops in Denver and Nashville to serve sandal afficionados.

Zane Yelzick Chaco

Zane Yelzick fashions straps for a new pair of sandals. Pam LeBlanc photo

full service chacos

No shoes needed to get your new Chacos. Pam LeBlanc photo

A new custom pair of Chacos

Zane Yanzick, part of the Chaco field crew, whipped up a custom pair for me in about 20 minutes. The timing couldn’t be better. I’m heading out next week for a 15-day rafting trip on the Grand Canyon with some friends who finally pulled a permit after a 25-year wait.

I also watched Yanzick refurb a well-worn pair that was getting some new straps. (Sadly, the pair had no-longer-available special edition Smokey Bear straps, which made my heart beat harder.)

“A whole sandbar came out of that one,” Yanzick said as he dumped out a few spoonfuls of grit. He’s also dealt with customers who needed replacement straps on sandals chewed by dogs and others who just wanted new colors on their feet.

pam new chaco sandals

I’m taking my new custom Chaco sandals on a 15-day rafting trip through the Grand Canyon. Pam LeBlanc photo

My custom pair features black straps with the word Chaco embroidered in rainbow colors. Customers get to pick separate webbing for the main straps, heel straps and side straps, plus a buckle in their choice of colors.

A new custom pair costs $100. The factory is back-logged right now, so this is a great deal. Basic repairs, including new straps or minor sole fixes, are free on existing shoes.

For information or to book an appointment, go here.

 

 

 

 

 

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Grab a cold one at pop-up beer garden on the Butler Trail

Grab a cold one at pop-up beer garden on the Butler Trail

sonya jevette at pop up beer garden Live music and beer will be available at the pop-up beer garden. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation[/caption]

Most folks head to the Butler Trail on Lady Bird Lake to work up a sweat, but on Oct. 9 and 10 they can grab a cold one at a pop-up beer garden, too.

The temporary beer garden at Sand Beach Park will be open from noon to 7 p.m. both days. The event coincides with the second weekend of ACL Fest at nearby Zilker Park.

Tickets are $50 for adults and $10 for children. Inside the garden, at 111 Sandra Muraida Way near the Open Room Austin picnic table, attendees can enjoy live music, food, and local beer.

Read more: Head to San Antonio for cultural arts exhibits this fall

Texas Beer Co., Fairweather Cider, Truly Hard Seltzer and Miller Lite will provide drinks. Non-alcoholic tea, sparkling water, and still water will also be available, courtesy of Weird Beverages.

Tje Austin and Zach Morgan, Sonya Jevette, Monk’s Jazz, Mariachi Relampago and others will perform.

Everyone who enters the garden must complete a health screening questionnaire within 72 hours prior to the event. Masks must be worn, except when eating or drinking. Tables will be placed 6 feet apart, with no more than 10 guests per table.

Proceeds will benefit The Trail Foundation, a non-profit organization that works to protect, enhance and connect the 10-mile Ann and Roy Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail at Lady Bird Lake.

For tickets, go here. 

 

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Paddler West Hansen set to start Great Alabama 650

Paddler West Hansen set to start Great Alabama 650

West Hansen paddles the Texas coast in 2020

West Hansen paddles up the Texas coast in late spring 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo

When Austin paddler West Hansen scrapped plans to kayak the Northwest Passage this summer, he subbed in another daunting adventure – a paddle race that winds 650 miles through Alabama.

This Saturday, Hansen will line up at Weiss Lake in northeastern Alabama for the start of the Great Alabama 650. If all goes well, he’ll chug down the length of the Coosa and Alabama rivers before reaching historic Fort Morgan west of Gulf Shores less than six days later.

Read more: What’s it like to chase a team of paddlers up the Texas coast?

Hansen has finished the Texas Water Safari, a 260-mile race from Spring Lake in San Marcos to the Texas coast, 21 times. He has also paddled the entire length of the Amazon River and all the Volga River in Russia. He didn’t want to sit around this summer.

“I inadvertently found myself with a lot of time off and no goal,” he says of postponing his Arctic expedition due to the ongoing pandemic. “I really needed some reason to go exercise and do something interesting and exciting.”

West Hansen

West Hansen paddles off the Texas coast in 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo

He’ll switch between three different boats as he makes his way down the course – a C1 canoe with a rudder, and two different sea kayaks. He’ll face everything from Class 2 and Class 3 rapids – and one Class 4 rapid, organizers say – to long slow stretches through a tidal delta.

“I’m not sure I’ve ever been ready for a race, and I really wish I had trained more, but those things aren’t out of the ordinary,” Hansen says. Preparations included a lot of time to rig boats and work out problems loading the course onto a GPS unit.

‘The race will give you nothing’

What sets this race apart, says race director Greg Wingo, is the racing mindset needed to cover such a long distance nearly non-stop. The event, in its third year, is billed as the world’s longest annual paddle race.

“This race is less about the type of vessel you use or way the water flows or doesn’t flow, and more about your will to truly paddle day after day after day, because the race will give you nothing. It will give you no flow, no perfect weather conditions, and even good weather is still Alabama hot and humid,” Wingo says. “The only thing that gets you to the finish is the will to keep going when nothing else is going right.”

Paddlers pay $500 for the privilege of entering, and the winner in each of three categories will win $2,000. The field is capped at 20 competitors. This year’s race initially sold out, but some of those who entered have since dropped out. Thirteen boats are expected to line up for Saturday’s 10 a.m. start.

West Hansen

West Hansen raises an eyebrow during his 2020 paddling trip from the tip of Texas to the Louisiana border. Pam LeBlanc photo

The West Hansen forecast

Wingo says he is keeping an eye on Tropical Storm Nicholas, which is predicted to inundate parts of East Texas and Louisiana. He doesn’t expect any delays – just some steady rain for the first four days of the race. That might benefit the racers, cooling off typically hot and muggy temperatures and providing a boost in flow rates on the water.

“I’m feeling way better with it being overcast and cooler,” says Robert Youens, part of Hansen’s four-person support crew, which also includes Hansen’s wife Lizet Alaniz and sister Barbara Hansen Edington, and veteran paddle racer Max Dugas. “West ain’t a spring chicken and the heat hits us more as we get older. If it’s overcast and cooler, I think he’s going to rock.”

Youens, who is coordinating logistics for Hansen’s team, says proper sleep management will be critical.

Unlike the 260-mile Texas Water Safari, paddlers will have to stop and sleep periodically during this race. Youens says Hansen will nap in one of his team support vehicles along the way.

“The thing I believe that’s going to be different in this race is taking care of yourself. Three days of fungus between your toes you can handle, but six days – that’s an issue,” Youens said. “That’s why he’ll strip his clothes and clean up at the dam portages.”

West Hansen at the Texas Water Safari in 2020

West Hansen, front, racing the 2021 Texas Water Safari. Pam LeBlanc photo

Paddlers are only required to carry their boats over two of the race’s many portages. Racers will load their boats onto vehicles and drive around the others, some of which stretch for several miles.

Three Water Safaris in one for West Hansen

Wingo put it in terms some Texas paddlers can understand.

“It would be like if you put three Water Safaris back-to-back, but you made it all flatwater except for 80 miles of bay water, about 100 miles of delta tidal water and a stretch that’s 7 miles long where there is some whitewater,” he said.

Last year’s top finishers, a tandem team comprised of Joe Mann and Paul Cox, finished in five days, 23 hours and change. (That number does not include more than 4 hours of mandatory down time at portages, so the total time on course is closer to six days and three hours.)

Wingo wouldn’t predict who will win this year’s race, but Hansen is likely in the mix, along with Salli O’Donnell, who finished second in last year’s race.

“West is an accomplished paddler and I think it is to his benefit that he’s done difficult things before,” Wingo says.

Track West Hansen’s race

Fans can track the paddlers live at https://www.alabamascenicrivertrail.com/calendar/great-alabama-650/. I’ll be posting occasional updates too.

“If you have any sort of interest in the way in which people will destroy themselves physically or mentally for a goal that is quite possibly not achievable, you should follow this race,” Wingo said.

 

 

About Pam

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