Neal Moore is descending New York State's Mohawk River by canoe, approaching the end of a journey that began 22 months and more than 11,200 km ago. His paddle has plied 21 bodies of water so far on his way across the continent. Downstream always means easier paddling, yet dangers abound-wedge up against a log or rock, and the current will flip him and sink his earthly goods. All those upstream slogs were worse, of course. His eyes would scan the river for the calm seams of flat water, the points of land that subdued the stream and made the way less difficult. Lest he surrender hard-earned progress, he would dig and dig long past the burning of his shoulders in mid-morning and on into the long and stifling-or freezing and windblown-afternoon.
"Twenty-two rivers, 22 states, 22 months of journeying" has been his declared objective. "Stringing together rivers" and the people along them to see what still connects us as Americans in divided times.
At evening, sunset often beams upon a chosen spit of sand-the river showing him where to camp. He likes islands for their safety from animals but also from people. An hour before nightfall he unloads his gear, pitches his tent, fixes some supper, maybe cracks a beer. And then he dines in perfect solitude seated upon an overturned plastic bucket, watching the timeless mystery of day becoming night. Music of coyotes, crickets, frogs. The silent coming of fireflies from out across the water, piling into the willows above his head. He turns in early, marvelling at the strength in his 49-year-old limbs, which increases by the day. He'll will himself awake one hour before dawn, and in concert with the first hopeful rays of morning he will push off into the stream, leaving nothing behind but the notch in the coarse sand where his canoe has passed the sacred night.
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