Jimmy Harvey drops off Arctic Cowboys’ Northwest Passage paddling expedition

Jimmy Harvey drops off Arctic Cowboys’ Northwest Passage paddling expedition

Arctic Cowboys Jimmy Harvey

Jimmy Harvey prepares to paddle on Lady Bird Lake during the 2021 freeze in Austin, Texas. He announced this week he is dropping from the Arctic Cowboys expedition through the Northwest Passage this summer. Pam LeBlanc photo

The lineup of an Austin-based team of paddlers who will attempt to kayak the entire Northwest Passage this summer has changed.

Jimmy Harvey announced this week that he is dropping off the Arctic Cowboys expedition. That leaves expedition leader West Hansen, who paddled the entire Amazon River in 2012 and the entire Volga River in 2014, and two others – longtime expedition partner Jeff Wueste and endurance paddler Rebekah Feaster, who signed on to the Arctic trip last month.

Hansen has said he plans to launch the 1,900-mile expedition in late July, and travel from Pond Inlet in the northeast part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago to Tuktoyaktuk in the southwest. Along the way, the team will likely face polar bears, orca, frigid water, and shifting ice.

Related: Arctic Cowboys add female paddler to Northwest Passage expedition

Hansen predicts that the trip will take about 60 days, finishing in late September. If the Arctic Cowboys make it, they will become the first to paddle through the entire passage in one continuous trip.

“Previous attempts to paddle or row the entire Northwest Passage from west to east were stopped by drift ice which blocked the Victoria Strait – a narrow and shallow island-clogged strait west of King William Island. These ice flows backed up north into Peel Sound and clogged the Bellot Strait, as well,” Hansen said.

Arctic Cowboys West Hansen

West Hansen, who paddled the entire Amazon River in 2012 and the Volga River two years later, paddles through Matagorda Bay in May 2020, while kayaking from South Padre Island to the Louisiana border. Pam LeBlanc photo

To avoid the same conditions, the Arctic Cowboys will start later in the season, giving that ice more time to break up, and monitor ice conditions and navigation options for those areas, Hansen said. They will travel east to west, through the more precarious areas first. That will leave the more open southerly portions of the Northwest Passage for the final leg, as winter closes the northern stretch behind them.

Harvey thinks expedition should start earlier to finish before cold sets in

But Harvey thinks the team should launch earlier, and travel the opposite direction, passing through areas where the ice breaks up early first, and reaching the colder, more frozen sections later.

“I think it’s a mistake,” Harvey said of Hansen’s proposed plan. “July and August are the two best summer months across the whole Northwest Passage.”

An expedition could conceivably make it through nearly the entire Northwest Passage, then get stopped a few hundred miles from the finish at Pond Inlet, he acknowledged.

“But with as warm as its been, it’s pretty certain it will be open this year,” Harvey says. “My theory is why wait until almost August to get on the water and miss the whole month of July? We could be finished by the end of August. September is when the weather starts getting bad – more cold fronts, and average temperatures drop.”

“(Hansen’s) worried about having a late (ice) breakup, but I’m worried about having an early winter,” Harvey said. “He could be 100 percent right and I could be 100 percent wrong or vice versa.”

Just in case Harvey changes his mind, Hansen is leaving the possibility open that he may rejoin the team at any time.

“We’ll miss Jimmy and understand his concerns about kayaking the Passage during the onset of winter weather,” Hansen said. “He’s been a strong team member with the right set of skills that would contribute to a successful expedition. There’s a slight chance he may change his mind, and if so, we’d welcome him back.”

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

Ceremony will honor Joan Khabele, who led effort to desegregate Barton Springs

Ceremony will honor Joan Khabele, who led effort to desegregate Barton Springs

Joan Khabele

Joan Khabele led a swim-in at Barton Springs in the summer of 1960. Photo courtesy Austin Parks Department

Before her high school senior picnic, the principal at Austin High School called Joan Means Khabele into the office to tell her the school’s eight black students wouldn’t be allowed to attend.

Zilker Park and Barton Springs Pool were segregated.

That spurred the young activist to take the plunge into the cool, chilly waters of Barton Springs Pool anyway, in an act of civil disobedience. That jump sparked a movement of swim-ins that took place throughout the summer of 1960.

Eventually, the city ordinance was changed. The pool officially integrated in 1962.

barton springs Joan Khabele

A ceremony to honor Joan Khabele, who led the effort to desegregate Barton Springs, is scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at the pool. Pam LeBlanc photo

City to honor Joan Khabele on Saturday

This Saturday, the city of Austin will honor Khabele, who died of leukemia in October, with a proclamation, speakers, and water blessing at the pool. The Moment of Silence & Splash is scheduled for 10 a.m. until noon.

A PBS documentary featuring Khabele talking about her swim will be screened at the pool. Community members are invited to share their personal experiences regarding race at Barton Springs at listening booths that will be set up on the grounds. The interviews will become part of an exhibit at the Beverly S. Sheffield Education Center.

Khabele attended Blackshear Elementary School and Kealing Junior High and was among the third group of students to integrate Austin High School in the late 1950s, according to an article by Michael Barnes in the Austin American Statesman. During her senior year of high school, she was a student activist. She attended the University of Chicago, joined the Peace Corps in Africa, and later earned a master’s degree in African studies and taught at universities in Zambia, Botswana, Lesotho, and Nigeria.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

Deep Eddy closes Sunday for two weeks of spring cleaning

Deep Eddy closes Sunday for two weeks of spring cleaning

deep eddy

Deep Eddy Pool will close Jan. 4 for repairs. Photo courtesy city of Austin

Heads up, swimmers.

Deep Eddy Pool, that chilly oasis where horses once dove off diving board and a man once ate bananas underwater, will close from April 10 until April 24 for annual spring cleaning.

The pool will reopen April 25 for normal hours.

In the meantime, check the city’s pools and splashpads website for information about the city’s other aquatic facilities.

Besides Barton Springs, at 2131 William Barton Drive in downtown Austin, my favorite alternative is Big Stacy Pool at 700 E. Live Oak Street. But hours are tricky at pools right now due to a shortage of lifeguards.

Related: Deep Eddy’s colorful past includes diving horses

Barton Springs is open from 5-8 a.m. daily for “swim at your own risk” sessions without lifeguards. The pool is closed the rest of the day Mondays and Wednesdays and is only open from 8-10 p.m. Thursdays.  Lifeguards are on duty from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

Related: Seven swimming holes and natural spots to splash into near Austin

Big Stacy is open for lap swimming from 6-9 a.m. weekdays. It’s closed for programming Monday through Thursday mornings from about 9 until noon, then opens for recreational swimming from noon until 8 p.m. weekdays and until 7 p.m. weekends.

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam