The water can be low on substantial portions of the Namekagon River in northwest Wisconsin this time of year, but there's usually a section or two that can still be floated easily during the cool autumn season.
You won't be motivated to take a swim along the way, as many paddlers do during the summer, but there's still something special about floating this river in the crisp fall air, when a paddler most likely has the stream all to himself.
It's been years — in the late '80s, before I hit my teens — when the Namekagon made its first impression on me during a summer family trip. Lucky for me, this family trip has been repeated almost annually with parents, siblings and cousins.
One year we encountered some nasty August weather. My family started on a cool summer day with blue skies and clouds. But several miles into the trip, the skies gave way to heavy, cold rain. It started pounding just as we pulled up for a picnic at the Earl Park landing near Trego, Wis. My father, sister and cousin, in the canoe ahead of us, ditched their boat on the landing and darted for shelter in the smelly cinder block restrooms a couple hundred yards away.
But as my canoe, with my mom, my brother and me, pulled up to the landing, the rain turned torrential. So we simply flipped our boat and waited underneath. Luckily, our boat was carrying the cooler and the main dish for the whole family's planned picnic: fried chicken.
My brother and I dug in, eating under the comfort of our green, plastic rental canoe.
"We were sitting in a rainstorm, and you guys wanted hot sauce," my mom recalled recently. "I couldn't believe it."
Pack wisely