450 Miles By Canoe
Popular Mechanics|April 2018

THE HUDSON RIVER IS A LOVELY PLACE FOR A BOAT RIDE. BUT THE TRAFFIC NEAR THE BRIDGE CAN BE A NIGHTMARE.

James Lynch
450 Miles By Canoe

THE WATER ROILED, the texture of mashed potatoes, hostile, unconquerable, bucking my seventeen-foot canoe and shooting up frequent, unpredictable spires of water where crisscrossing waves converged. A few weeks’ worth of sweat lived in the threadbare Hawaiian shirt that hung from my shoulders, and my palms ached red and raw. Thousands of people cross the Tap- pan Zee Bridge, twenty-five miles up the Hudson River from New York City, every day. But most of them use the road deck, not the actual river, 138 feet below. I was learning why. The fact that the hull of my polyethylene canoe had gone soft two days before, making it bend and warp in even the tiniest waves, didn’t make me feel any better.

Rather than coming from the Catskills or a pleasant New Jersey county, my friend and I were in the midst of a nineteen-day, 450-mile trip from Buffalo to New York via the Erie Canal and the lower half of the Hudson. And whether you travel on I-87 or on the Hudson, you have to deal with the Tappan Zee. 

This story is from the April 2018 edition of Popular Mechanics.

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This story is from the April 2018 edition of Popular Mechanics.

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