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Mon, Nov 23 2009 

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Colton Witte (front) and Sean Bloomfield paddled the Minnesota River under the Highway 99 bridge in St. Peter Saturdaymorning. The Chaska teenagers are following the same path Eric Sevareid and Walter Port took to Hudson Bay in 1930.
Pat Christman


Track canoeists on their trip

Minnesota River's heavy flow makes it tough

By Shane Frederick
Free Press Staff Writer

While Bloomfield and Witte are taking the same route as Sevareid and Port took nearly 80 years ago, they’re not neces­sarily doing it 1930s style.

With their canoe and gear back in St. Peter, the pair used some time off the water on Friday to go to River Hill Mall in Mankato to get some supplies they were miss­ing, including cell-phone chargers and warmer clothes.

They also have a global positioning system beacon that can let family and friends track them on a Web site and, if necessary, call for help.

“It will be more similar (to Sevareid’s trip) north of Winnipeg,” Bloomfield said.

Like Sevareid and Port, who were 17 and 19, respec­tively, on their excursion, Bloomfield and Witte are taking their trip post-gradu­ation. They finished their classes at Chaska High School after the third quar­ter in order to get an earlier start.

Bloomfield, who plans to attend Minnesota State University in the fall, said they hope to reach Hudson Bay in early July.

Despite the trip to the mall and a little assistance from Dan Witte — who calls himself the kids’ “road­ie” — they’re not skipping over any parts of the route.

They returned to St. Peter and, with Colton Witte feel­ing better, put their 18

1 ⁄ 2- foot Bell canoe back in the Minnesota Saturday morn­ing with hopes of reaching the north end of Mankato by the end of the day.

The friends are experi­enced paddlers. They have been regulars in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness with their families for about eight years. Last summer, they said, the two did a 12- day Voyageurs trip together, canoeing 400 miles along the U.S.-Canada border from Lake of the Woods to Lake Superior.

This trip, though, is five times longer and includes this stretch of the Minnesota River that only allows them to go about 2 mph.

They can’t wait until they get to the border when the water will start working with them.

“ You just gotta look down as opposed to the shore,” Bloomfield said. “Otherwise you get a little demoral­ized.”



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