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Paddle your way through it
with head, heart and sinew.
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Paddle Your Own Canoe from Baden-Powell, Rovering
to Success, 1930
One of B-P's more popular books was Rovering
to Success, published in the 1920's. Subtitled "A Guide for
Young Manhood," it was addressed to older Scouts in the
"Rover Branch" of Scouting. In his preface, B-P outlined the
book and, as he said, "what is meant by success."
HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH RICH OR
POOR
A canoe trip is lake a voyage of life.
An old 'un ought to hand on piloting hints.
The only true Success is Happiness.
Two steps to Happiness are: Taking life as a game and giving out Love.
Happiness is not mere pleasure not the outcome of wealth.
It is the result of active work rather than passive enjoyment of
pleasure.
Your success depends on your own individual effort in the voyage of
life,
And the avoidance of certain dangerous Rocks.
Self-education, in continuation of what you have learned at school, is
necessary.
Go forward with confidence.
Paddle your own canoe!
While much of what B-P has written
is set in the context of earlier days (his "Rocks" are Horses,
Wine, Women, Cuckoos and Humbugs, and Irreligion), much of what he says
has direct value to youth today. Really, the book is written much in the
manner of fatherly advice. One could do worse than to listen carefully to
one man's thoughtful insight into success.
The Voyage of Life
I was once caught in a gale when
paddling in a birch-bank canoe across a lake in Upper Canada. It was a
pretty exciting experience while it lasted, but well worth while.
We had voyaged along rivers and
streams, sometimes in the smooth, sometimes through the rapids, but
always amid the ever-changing glories of forest scenery.
It was a new experience to come
out of our stream on to the wider expanse of the lake and, after
starting out in sunshine, to find ourselves presently under a darkening
sky involved in a rising gale and a choppy sea.
The frail little canoe, which
before we had merely looked upon as a vehicle for carrying us along the
river, was now our one hope of life. If she shipped a sea, or if she
touched a snag (and there were plenty of them about) we were done for.
Our paddle, instead of being
looked on as a mere propeller, became our one means for dodging the
attacks of waves and of keeping us going. All depended on the handling
of that one implement.
"In a four hour run across an
open bay you will encounter over a thousand waves, no two of which are
alike, and any one of which can fill you up only too easily, if it is
not correctly met," writes Stewart E. White, in that delightful
book of his, The Forest; and he proceeds to tell you exactly how you
deal with them.
"With the sea over one bow
you must paddle on the leeward side. When the canoe mounts a wave you
must allow the crest to throw the bow off a trifle, but the moment you
start down the other slope you must twist your paddle sharply to
regain the direction of your course.
"The careening tendency of
this twist you must counteract by a corresponding twist of your body
in the other direction. Then the hollow will allow you two or three
strokes wherewith to assure a little progress. The double twist at the
very crest of the wave must be very delicately performed or you will
ship water the whole length of your craft
"With the sea abeam you
must paddle straight ahead. The adjustment is to be accomplished
entirely by the poise of the body. You must prevent the capsize of
your canoe when clinging to the angle of a wave by leaning to one
side.
" The crucial moment, of
course, is that during which the peak of the wave slips under you. In
case of a breaking comber thrust the flap of your paddle deep in the
water to prevent an upset, and lean well to leeward thus presenting
the side and half the bottom of the canoe to the shock of water.
" Your recovery must be
instant, however. If you lean a second too long, over you go."
Jumpy work!
The author goes on to tell
successively, in similar detail, how to deal with a sea coming dead ahead,
from a quarter or from dead astern.
In every case all depends on your
concentrated attention, pluck and activity. The slightest slackness and
down you go. But the contest has its compensation.
"Probably nothing can more
effectively wake you up to the last fibre of your physical,
intellectual and nervous being. You are filled with an exhilaration
every muscle, strung tight, answers immediately and accurately to the
slightest hint. You quiver all over with restrained energy. Your mind
thrusts behind you the problem of the last wave as soon as solved, and
leaps with insistent eagerness to the next. It is a species of
intoxication. You personify each wave; you grapple with it as with a
personal adversary; you exult as, beaten and broken, it hisses away to
leeward. "Go it, you son of a gun," you shout. "Ah you
would, would you ?—think you can, do you ?" And in the roar and
the rush of wind and water you crouch like a boxer on the defence,
parrying the blows but ready at the slightest opening to gain a stroke
or two of the paddle. You are too busily engaged in slaughtering waves
to consider your rate of progress. The fact that slowly you are
pulling up on your objective point does not occur to you until you are
within a few hundred yards of it. Then don't relax your efforts; the
waves to be encountered in the last hundred yards are exactly as
dangerous as those you dodge four miles from shore."
Yes—and it is just the same with
a busy life.
The whole thing—the early voyage
through the easy-running stream, and then coming out on to the broad
lake, the arising of difficulties, the succession of waves and rocks
only avoided by careful piloting, the triumph of overcoming the dangers,
the successful sliding into a sheltered landing-place, the happy
camp-fire and the sleep of tired men at night—is just what a man goes
through in life; but too often he gets swamped among the difficulties or
temptations on the rough waters, mainly because he has not been warned
what to expect and how to deal with them.
From Sir Robert Baden-Powell,
Rovering to Success, London, 1930, pp. 11-13.
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