The complete journal of Fox River Heritage Paddle 2010 with text and historically annotated maps is available for $12 (plus postage) at the History Museum at the Castle in downtown Appleton or by emailing sandhill7@gmail.com.
See photos from the journey
See photos from the journey
The Journey begins
I’ve been involved with a group that planned a series of paddle trips
covering most of the Fox, collectively called Fox River Heritage Paddle 2010.
After three of the 12 segments, I can tell you, it’s not the Fox River we’re
used to up in the Fox Cities.
Segment 1: Portage to
CTH O – April 24, 2010
For the first leg of our journey,
we are to depart from Portage, the connecting point – almost – for the Fox and
Wisconsin rivers. Forty-seven paddlers turn out to journey the 10.7 miles to
the landing at Marquette County Highway O.
Writer David Horst on the first segment of Fox River Heritage Paddle 2011. Photo by Mark Hoffman. |
Traveling from
Hortonville, rain pelts the windshield of my truck. I’m convinced the forecast
for storms and lightening will prove correct and I’m driving an hour and a half
for nothing.
But the rains stop in advance of the launch and we see no more than an
intermittent drizzle.
The paddlers – couples and older guys and strapping youngsters – unload
canoes of Fiberglas and aluminum, plastic kayaks, skin kayaks, wooden kayaks
and a stand-up “Yak.” They fill the 16-seat voyageur canoe that leads us
throughout these 120 miles of rediscovery.
Up here (up river, though geographically to the
south) the Fox River is not all industry and houses that make the Fox Cities
tax assessors so happy. In this section, the Fox is a country stream, lined
with farm fields and fishing shacks and rarely running more than a couple of
feet deep. Crane music accompanies us much of the way.
Some among us appoint themselves to trash
detail, relieving the river of various bottles and buckets, a duck decoy and a
television set, which a kayaker with a flair for the ridiculous bungies to the
front of his boat.
At Governor’s Bend Park we face the entirety of
the Fox River’s rapids – a little chute that wouldn’t warrant a rating but
delivers a little rush of fun. While the lower Fox drops nearly the height of
Niagara Falls from Lake Winnebago to Green Bay, its whitewater was harnessed by
a system of locks and dams more than a century ago.
We pass under the County O bridge and beach on the muddy bank. From there
we get our first presentation on the history that flows with the river – a
reading of pioneering environmentalist John Muir’s boyhood remembrances at John
Muir Park.
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