Latest NEWS Tuesday, January 17, 2012An Odd Couple Travels 1,500 Arctic Miles
By TIM MUTRIE
Erik Boomer and Jon Turk hardly knew each other before they set out in kayaks and circumnavigated Canada’s Ellesmere Island in 104 days, becoming the first to do so. Read full article:
National Geographic has nominated Erik Boomer and me as one of ten “Adventurers of the Year 2012” for our Ellesmere circumnavigation. The final Grand Slam winner will be voted in as a “People’s Choice” award. So, please vote for us by going to this National Geographic link.
Moolynaut passed away in early Dec, 2011. For those of you who read, The Raven's Gift, she was the Koryak healer who helped me mend my pelvis. She was born during the reign of Czar Nicholas II, in a near Stone Age existence, and is probably one of the last of the aboriginal Siberian shamans. We all morn her passing, but it was inevitable, just as the sun rises and the seasons change. Along with our sadness it is important to keep the ancient wisdoms alive in this internet crazed, oil soaked world.
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In the Wake of the JomonIn the Wake of the Jomon Stone Age Mariners and a Voyage Across the Pacific
In 1999 and 2000, adventurer Jon Turk and partners sailed a small trimaran and paddled a sea kayak from Japan to Alaska. Paddler Magazine called this voyage: One of the 10 All-Time Greatest Sea Kayak Expeditions.
From Peter Stark: Author and Correspondent for OUTSIDE MAGAZINEJon Turk is one of today's boldest, most inquisitive, and most articulate adventurers. His journey by small boat across the North Pacific in the wake of ancient Jomon hunters will make you rethink how humans first populated the Americas and give an understanding of what compelled them - and him - to strike off on so audacious a quest. From Brian Fagan: Professor emeritus at UCSB, and author of numerous popular anthropology books:Bureaucrats, faithful companions, grizzlies, ice, and unforgiving northern seas: In the Wake of the Jomon has them all. Turk sailing and paddling trip from Japan to Alaska is a modern-day Kon-Tiki expedition that paints a fascinating portrait of life along Siberian shores. Anyone interested in prehistoric voyages should read this tale of extremely tough adventure in icy waters. ![]() First Paragraph My kayak slid gently off a wave and settled into an eerie calm, sheltered by mesmerizing gray-green walls of water. A part of me relaxed, even though I knew that this moment of peace was ephemeral. To windward, the next wave reared higher and steeper than its neighbors. The wave loomed, then overreached itself and hung above my head. An instant later, cascading droplets leaped over the precipice and exploded into a growing line of white. In The Wake of the Jomon is a tapestry of a grand adventure story and an anthropological quest into what makes us human. The Anthropology
The Adventure
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