Posts

The Accident – Part 3 of 3

As I lined our canoe up to shoot the rapids roaring just ahead of us, Kerry Sipe and I both had a moment of clarity.

He saw a light on the right bank of the Neuse River and said to me, “Let’s call it a night.”

And I said, “OK.”

I paddled to the right bank and we made our way up through a thicket toward the light, in a mobile home park next to the river.  We knocked on the door of the first home we came to.  The door open, and closed, just like that.

We went to the next mobile home, and knocked again.  An older black woman answered the door and let us in.  With her were a young woman and a teenage boy.  Bless that woman for taking a chance on two, wet, somewhat shaken white men in need of help.

The woman put a blanket around Kerry and set him down in front of a heater.  She said she didn’t have a phone but we were only two miles or so from my house. Warmed up some, I took off walking.

As I headed up a dirt road toward U.S. 64 a car coming toward me slowed, and then stopped beside me.  The driver rolled down the window and asked, “Were you in an accident at the dam?”

Dam?  There’s a dam on the Neuse?  That was news to me.

Click on the arrow and you’ll hear what we heard that night but you won’t see what we saw. We were upstream; it was dark.  We had no idea we were approaching a drop from a 16-foot high dam into what might have been the end of our lives.
Sounds like rapids to me.  

“Get in,” the driver said to me, “your wife’s looking for you.”

Linda Sipe, about 1972

I got in but I knew Donna wasn’t looking for me.  She was looking after our three small boys.   Kerry had just gotten married.  Had to be his wife.

The man who picked me up drove me to U.S. 64 and then across the Neuse River bridge to a store on the other side of the river.  Kerry’s bride, Linda, was waiting there with her mother.  It was dark, Kerry and I were hours overdue, and she feared the worst. When she saw me get out of the car, wet and alone, and she cried out. For a few seconds, Linda Sipe thought she was a widow.

Postscript

Like me, Kerry was a newspaperman-for-life.  He took a job in Virginia and he and I hadn’t talked in decades, I guess, until we exchanged emails a few days ago. He had heard about my story blog and commented on one of the stories.  I emailed him and told him I planned to write about our adventure on the Neuse.

Kerry wrote,  “…she [Linda] tells me she and her mother were pretty sure she was a young widow when we hadn’t shown up so long after dark.  She would have missed the next 45 years of wedded bliss.”

I did not get back in a canoe or kayak until this year, when I kayaked about 225 miles down the Neuse River from Raleigh to Oriental, on the North Carolina coast.

But that night didn’t keep Kerry off the water.

“I just gave away the 17-foot Mohawk Kevlar canoe that I paddled on whitewater rivers all across the South,” he wrote.  “We live on a lake, but flatwater just isn’t the same and I decided I used up all my luck on moving water.”

Coming Monday: “A Warm Memory”

 

The Accident – Part 2 of 3

Finally, I was out of the river and safe.  But I was so cold.  I was shaking all over.  I didn’t know much about hypothermia but I knew enough to know I was a candidate.

I took off my cowboy boots, poured out the water, and put them back on.  I used the lead line on the bow of our canoe to pull it to the bank.  And then I tried to figure out what to do next, quickly.

I didn’t know where my boating partner, Kerry Sipe, was or if he was alive.  When I yelled for him he didn’t answer.  After our canoe overturned in the Neuse River on a beautiful, cold, December night he had been carried downstream by the current.

I didn’t know where I was, either.

img_2471
On the day we turned over the river was higher — and faster.

But I knew I couldn’t be too far from the U.S. 64 Bridge over the Neuse, where we had originally planned to end our trip.

I considered hiking through the woods, staying as close as I could to the river so I wouldn’t get lost.  But I decided the canoe would be the quickest way to find Kerry.  Or, if I couldn’t find him, to go for help.  Either way, I had to get going, I had to get out of there. I had to get warm.

I dumped the water out of the canoe and got back in.  I didn’t have a paddle. I had let go of my paddle when the canoe overturned so I paddled with my hands, maneuvering the canoe into the middle of the river, into the current.

I don’t know how far I floated down the Neuse, quite a ways, around several bends, before I heard him: Kerry Sipe was singing.

He was sitting at the edge of what looked like a small island, maybe it was just a clump of trees, in the middle of the river.   He still had the life jacket he had risked his life to save and, oh, so much better, he had his paddle.

Kerry had been in the water a lot longer than I had and he was not well. He handed the paddle to me, got in the canoe, and we lit out for the bridge at U.S. 64, for home, as fast as we could go.

And then we heard them — rapids, big ones!  I didn’t even know the Neuse had rapids.  They couldn’t be that big, not like the rapids Kerry and I had run on the Chattooga River down in South Carolina.  But they were loud.  And getting louder.

Maybe I had hypothermia, maybe we both did. Hypothermia distorts your hearing, maybe that was the problem.  Kerry and I had paddled a river with real rapids so we decided to go for it, to take a chance.

Continued tomorrow.