Williams woman discusses her book on paddling the Mississippi

A north-central Iowa woman is sharing the tales of her 13-year adventure of paddling a canoe the entire length of the Mississippi River. (contact information included)

Anne Sherve-Ose, from the Hamilton County town of Williams, is the author of “Mississippi Misadventures,” about a long and involved trip which started innocently enough.

“Some college friends and I decided to paddle canoes from Itasca in northern Minnesota to the Twin Cities,” Sherve-Ose says. “When we got to the Twin Cities, we decided to just keep on going. We just kind of segmented our way down the whole length.”

Each year, they’d meet and paddle from the point where their journey ended the previous year. It took 13 segments over 13 years to complete the route. Sherve-Ose says the book covers a range of subjects, like history, geology, and river navigation. She notes it’s not chronological.

“It doesn’t say we had tuna sandwiches for lunch and mac-and-cheese for supper,” she says. “It’s organized more on topics such as the storms that we endured or scary things that happened or animals and other wildlife that we experienced.” As for wildlife, the group saw plenty of deer, bald eagles, heron, fish, beavers and ducks, but one thing they were looking forward to was seeing an alligator.

“We were disappointed in that until the very last week of the trip when were having a picnic lunch by the side of the river,” Sherve-Ose says. “One of my friends said, ‘That looks like an alligator,’ and it was an alligator, in fact, there were four of them right by where we were eating and where we had just been swimming.”

For information about buying her book, contact her at: anneso2423@yahoo.com.

 

About Dave Vickers

Dave has been News Director since 1983 and has been Station General Manager since 1999. Dave has also served on the Board of Directors of the Iowa Broadcast News Association and the Iowa Broadcast Association and has served on the Iowa Freedom of Information Council.
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