Washington, DC Jackson family trip update … by Will Richardson | Apr 26, 2005 | Whitewater | 0 comments April 26, 2005 We arrived in Bethesda, Maryland on a 90 degree sunny Wednesday afternoon. Bethesda is the first town upstream of the DC/Maryland line and right on the water. Go far enough upstream and the next town is Potomac, which holds Great Falls Park, Maryland as its prize possession. From 1984-1997 I chose Bethesda as my home. Most of the time I was in a neighborhood called Brookmont, because that neighborhood was the only one that was on the river side of the major road there, MacArthur Blvd. River front meant, pick up your kayak and walk down to the Feeder Canal, where a permanent slalom course is set, and go out the bottom of the feeder canal into the river and you hit Little Falls which ends at Chain Bridge in DC. Carry over 100 yards of trail, put-in on the Chesapeake/Ohio (C+O) Canal and paddle home, cool. Yes, DC is one of a kind for kayakers, which explains why there are so many there. I know lots of people in DC and also have lots of family here, mostly cousins, and an aunt and uncle. On this trip, I am teaching a WKF instructor clinic for Valley Mill, which is my favorite school in DC. I am also doing a demo and then one day of clinics that are open to the public. Tomorrow at the demo, we’ll be hucking ourselves off of the Valley Mill Boat Ramp into their own private pond. Nick plans on spending all day trying the double air screw. Dane is also committed to this feat. We just finished a great clinic with some terrific instructors. Koji, Jim and Monique (www.potomacpaddlers.com ), James (see really cool photos of Stephen Wright, those are his), Colin Kemp, Martin, Dane, Nick, and Emily were all taking the class and doing a terrific job. Today we had a guinea pig who had never been in a kayak. I got to demonstrate the you can roll in 15 minutes program (he did in 5 or 6), the EJ’s Strokes and Concepts program (very cool, he did great) and then hit the river and run Mather Gorge at 4 feet (big waves at Rocky and big eddylines at S-Turn). We all went to Potomac Pizza after class, which ended at 8pm and I got to know everybody better. Jim and Monique have two kids, ages 20 and 15. You would be impressed and never guess. They are both in great shape, paddle almost daily, and have great careers and will make terrific instructors. We talked about raising kids, etc. Fun stuff for a parent. Well, it is 11pm and Kristine is finishing her magazine, so I am out of here. EJ 🙂 Submit a Comment Cancel replyYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment * Name * Email * Website Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ