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The Water Issue: Restoration Dreams Without a Paddle (Cont.) IT'S A WARM NOVEMBER AFTERNOON when David, Saranne, Steve, and I first step through the saw-grass curtain. We pull off the Tamiami Trail about an hour west of Miami. It's a desolate spot, the kind of place where dead bodies are tossed. Not a very auspicious launching point for our 50-plus-mile voyage. It's hard to imagine that the boats are going to float, much less squeeze through this brush, since the combination of no rain and impeded flow means there's only a few inches of water. The
No, thanks. This time I'll take my chances in the tall grass. "I give the order to proceed," I announce, and David laughs. Saranne and Steve look puzzled, so I have to explain that Hugh Willoughby, a gentleman explorer who crossed the Everglades with a local moonshiner and avian-plume poacher named Ed Brewer in 1897, started his own
I'm thinking about this as I stand in my canoe. I've never poled one before, and the 12-foot PVC pipes we're using are not ideal. A pole should be light and svelte; mine feels like some plumber forgot to flush it out. I find myself glancing resentfully at Steve, who pushes his streamlined Kevlar canoe along with ease. He notices me struggling. "You gotta go with the flow here," he cautions. "Don't fight it. Less is more. That's what works in the Everglades." I consider whacking Steve over the head, but we'd be screwed without him. Instead, I jam my pole down hard and cause my body to fly backward, exiting the canoe. As the boat shoots forward, I take the Nestea plunge, and then my pole whacks me. Less is more, except when it comes to good footing. Floating on my back, I am surrounded by the softest scene, the softest light, the softest water I've ever encountered. Imagine what it was like in the womb, coddled by all that nurturing amniotic fluid. Well, I don't have to. I'm in that pH-neutral oasis, feeling fine. I'm able to pause just long enougha few seconds, on account of my fear of alligatorsto soak it all in. Sunlight swarms through and over the pale-green saw grass, plays along the surface, dives down to the dark, mucky bottom, and spreads back up to engulf our little group. It's as if we're in some century-old sepia-tone photo. We only go about two miles our first day, but already we've left CERP and all its confusion behind. As the sun sets, Saranne, David, and I stop in a patch of shorter grass, lashing our canoes together and laying plywood boards over them. This platform will be our bedroom, kitchen, and bathroom for the next eight days. As Saranne and I heat up dinner, Steve pulls out his sleeping bag, sets up a cushion in the stern of his canoe, and goes into a kind of twilight trance state, looking out over the "pond" we're floating on. David, on the other hand, has put on a white two-piece hazmat-type bodysuit and is rigging an oversize mosquito net over the platform to protect the sanctity of our blood. As it turns out, the mosquitoes aren't bad at all. The river flows imperceptibly, and the water's clearer than Paul Newman's eyes. I want to drink it unfiltered, and almost do, but I'm leery of giardia and dysentery. I drift off to sleep thinking of something else Willoughby said, and feel a little envious. "The popular impression has always been that the Everglades is a huge swamp, full of malaria and disease germs," he wrote. "I had no hesitation in drinking [the water] whenever the canoe stopped, taking two or three glasses at a time...It agreed with Brewer and myself perfectly; we did not know a sick hour."
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