A week into his 60-day trek down the Mississippi River, Bert Chamberlain was exhausted.
The 64-year-old Moorhead man set out in early July for the solo journey, captaining a 15-foot sailboat, the Box Turtle, that he built himself. Although he'd never made a trip like this one, Chamberlain had spent his life chasing adventure. He'd climbed Devil's Tower, Mount Fuji, Grand Teton and Mount St. Helens. He'd gotten a black belt and a scuba license. He'd completed four marathons.
This trip was different, though. For starters, there was the ever-moving, unpredictable river to contend with. Chamberlain's first days on the water were spent charging batteries for the boat's too-small motor and using a canoe paddle to maneuver — the result of wind on the bow that made it tough to move.
"It was just really exhausting," Chamberlain said. "It pretty much would've ended the trip."
But with a little good luck and help from his son, Chamberlain was able to make a pit stop in Hastings to rest for a few days and in Red Wing to pick up a new motor.
In Hastings, two men — including a retired barge welder — suggested that Chamberlain alter his route: instead of following the Mississippi to New Orleans, take the safer Ohio and Tennessee rivers to Alabama's Mobile Bay.
Chamberlain decided to give it a shot. And from that moment, the trip changed.
"What I thought would be an isolated, I'm-going-by-myself trip ended up being, really, a partnership with the community of the river people," he said.