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| #261061 - 05/31/13 07:57 PM  To cross a river ... |  
|   Crazy Canuck
 Carpal Tunnel
 
 Registered:  02/03/07
 Posts: 3266
 Loc:  Alberta, Canada
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I've been contemplating a scenario where I need to cross a slow-ish river (Class 1-2) with only the tools in my pocket and the clothes on my back. Probably a major glitch when hiking or canoeing solo. Estimate 100 yards of moving water as an average distance. And I'm a lousy, lousy swimmer.
 Techniques? Other considerations? What say you?
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| #261063 - 05/31/13 08:55 PM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   Carpal Tunnel
 
 Registered:  03/11/05
 Posts: 2574
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Survival and hiking books cover this extensively; tools, where to cross and even primitive boat building. Its good to know
 Teacher
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| #261064 - 05/31/13 08:57 PM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   Geezer in Chief
 Geezer
 
 Registered:  08/26/06
 Posts: 7705
 Loc:  southern Cal
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Didn't we have a thread similar to this a year or so ago?  Having fished the corpses of those who attempted to cross rivers of this nature and given your constraints, my comment would be - don't cross the river...... 
_________________________Geezer in Chief
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| #261068 - 05/31/13 09:25 PM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   day hiker
 Addict
 
 Registered:  02/15/07
 Posts: 590
 Loc:  ventura county, ca
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how to cross a mountain stream, the us army way:crossing a stream
_________________________“Everyone should have a horse.  It is a great way to store meat without refrigeration.  Just don’t ever get on one.”
 - ponder's dad
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| #261069 - 05/31/13 11:28 PM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   Crazy Canuck
 Carpal Tunnel
 
 Registered:  02/03/07
 Posts: 3266
 Loc:  Alberta, Canada
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Phew! It seems I have angered the gods.
 Thank you all for your concern. Let me assure you I have no suicidal tendencies. Couple that with a healthy respect for the power of moving water.
 
 We are not talking about a swift, deadly cold mountain stream here. I have canoed many happy miles on the river in question. I have a fair sense of its moods, its sweepers, where an eddy might form, and most importantly when to stay off (ice, breakup, flood stage). I have also floated several spring miles in a lifejacket just for fun. (Not related to canoeing, for the record.)
 
 Still, I duly ponder the (unlikely) scenario of needing to cross without my usual kit, especially considering that bridges on the upstream sections are an hour's drive apart.
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| #261072 - 06/01/13 04:24 AM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   Carpal Tunnel
 
   Registered:  05/05/07
 Posts: 3601
 Loc:  Ontario, Canada
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| #261073 - 06/01/13 04:25 AM  Re: To cross a river ...
[Re: dougwalkabout] |  
|   Old Hand
 
 Registered:  04/16/03
 Posts: 1076
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And I'm a lousy, lousy swimmer.I'll save you some time.  Become a better swimmer.  Then worry about what the Internet thinks about crossing rivers. |  
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