Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska
Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska
Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska
Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska
Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska
Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska

Passage to Alaska: sea kayaking through the inside passage of BC and southeast Alaska

Regular price $14.95

Details

By: Lydon, Tim
ISBN: 0-88839-523-X
Binding: Trade Paper
Size: 8.5" X 5.5"
Pages: 336
Photos: 64
Illustrations: 15
Publication Date: 2003

Description

PR Highlights: Well told kayaking adventure tale
PHOTO Highlights: 16 Page Full Color Instert w/Inspiring Photography

Description: Adventures by sea kayak up the Pacific Northwest Coast to Alaska

A thrilling account of two friends kayaking 1,000 miles though the Inside Passage of BC and southeast Alaska. This is a story of exploration and adventure, with rough seas, calving glaciers, bear encounters and persistently bad weather. But equally enjoyable is the story of this dramatic and culturally rich region, which the author weaves fluidly throughout the book. With flowing prose and nontechnical language, the author provides a fundamental understanding of the area's rain forest, glaciers, wildlife and both past and present cultures. In addition to maps, instructive sidebars offer further information and tips about the many issues that arise while discovering the beauty and danger of this region. History buffs will like the many stories about the Pacific Northwest's early explorers; sea kayakers will benefit from the kayaking information; wilderness adventure buffs will be inspired by the exciting tale of paddling the Inside Passage. This book is sure to appeal to many and be enjoyed by all.

Author Biography

Tim Lydon has kayaked and worked as a ranger in the Inside Passage for ten years. His passion for the region's natural and human history is contagious and shines through his vivid descriptions of two months in a kayak cockpit.