Canoeists hitch a ride up river — on a train
Scenic railroad offers portage for Adirondack paddlers
![]() Mary Esch / AP Canoeists watch the Adirondack Scenic Railroad train as they paddle on Moose River outside Old Forge, N.Y. |
OLD FORGE, N.Y. - The soft plop and trickle of paddles breaking the cloud-reflecting surface of the Moose River was the only sound on a cool, still afternoon, until the wilderness peace was shattered by the shriek of a train whistle.
As the kayakers and canoeists paused to watch, the Adirondack Scenic Railroad train appeared from the forest and chugged along the river's edge, smoke trailing from the engine, passengers waving from an open boxcar.
In a couple of hours, the paddlers would emerge from a stretch of whitewater several miles downstream and carry their boats up a steep trail to wait on a wooden platform for the train to return and carry them back upriver.
"It's a beautiful trip," said Deborah Canapp of Fallston, Md., as she watched the passing scenery late last summer from the open door of a boxcar piled with canoes and kayaks. She and her husband, Stephen, were RV camping at nearby Eighth Lake in the western Adirondack Park. "We canoed down the northern section of the Moose yesterday."
The "River & Rail" float trip is one of several special packages offered on the Adirondack Scenic Railroad, a historic route that originally was built to carry Vanderbilts, Roosevelts, Whitneys and other well-to-do families to lavish Great Camps in the Adirondacks. The railroad, built in 1892, had been long abandoned when a group of rail enthusiasts revived a four-mile section for its centennial in 1992.
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The Adirondack Railway Preservation Society continues to lobby the state for funding to rehabilitate more sections of track so that the whole system will eventually be linked. "Our dreams seem to be coming true slowly but surely," Masters said.
However, some in the local tourism business are opposed to the track renovation, saying the cost of running a scenic railroad far exceeds the economic benefits, and that a snowmobile route along the rail corridor would generate more tourism.
The canoe train was the idea of Dan and Beth Tickner, who own Tickner's Canoe Rentals, located along the Moose River in Old Forge.
Tickner's Canoe Rentals has several other options for paddlers on the Moose as well. It will transport them north to Rondax for a six-hour, 12-mile paddle back to the store at Old Forge, on the North Branch of the Moose. Those who want to camp out can take a longer trip, spending the night at a primitive campsite along the river and returning on the train.
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