That´s why you should start somewhere else in the first place:
The Northeast Passage.
Here, in nautical dog miles, it´s possible to connect New Hampshire with itself via the Connecticut River. It requires flatbottom watercraft canine ballast, an unintentional near drowning that your dog will interpret as a new game of super-fetch, and the finer points of dogpaddling your way to the nearest sandbar without spilling your beer.
What's the first rule in canoeing with your dog?
NEVER canoe with your dog.
If you're determined to scuttle that advice, I can only offer you the following guide and my deepest sympathies at the outset. Do pick a stretch of the New Hampshire/Vermont fluvial border that offers an historic, built-in fond recollection, like the Windsor-Cornish Covered Bridge. You'll need this watermark to neutralize the horror years hence, when you tell your grandchildren of your perilous river expedition with Tippy.
Ready?
NEVER take a canoe trip with a dog named "Tippy." No sense in flying in the face of prophecy.
There´s a reason that a dog, when riding in an automobile, sticks his head out the window. This goes double when applied to travel over water in a canoe, as his head, body, legs and tail are all now sticking out a big window. It´s a sensory overload, and your dog needs boundaries, especially when he´s being moved artificially on fluid space.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe on a "windy" day in New Hampshire. The resulting fourteen consecutive revolutions you´ll perform without advancing one ripple on your journey will create a new game of splash & fetch that you´ll be hard-pressed to recreate in your backyard pool.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe from the leeward side. In fact, never put your dog in a canoe from the windward side. I´d suggest tethering him to the bathtub for short periods prior to your trip. This will acclimatize him for the approaching granddaddy of all head-out-the-window rides.
When you arrive and are about to put-in, avoid letting him board anywhere near the stern (more on this later). Remember, the stern is the back of the canoe. It will be the end facing forward for most of your trip downriver (See: New Hampshire, Windy Day).
NEVER put your dog in a canoe before you get in. If you´re dumb enough to do this, (and we all know you are because you´re out there canoeing in a Yankee typhoon) don´t compound the error by entering with one foot on the bank and one foot in the canoe.
This will result in the inevitable "Wishbone Dunk & Groin Pull," and will forever adversely affect your ability to squat.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe, and then paddle without squatting. Yes, you may assume a semblance of sitting, but don´t put your full weight on the seat. You must maintain a constant scrunch, leaning forward enough to balance on the balls of your feet, ready to pounce.
Dogs don´t know how to trim ship.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe and pounce.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe with anything that doesn´t float. This includes any valued personal items heavier than air.
NEVER put your dog in a canoe without sitting him in the bow. Remember, the bow is the front of the canoe. It will be the end facing backward for most of your trip upriver. There are two reasons for putting your dog in front:
1. Dogs, unlike humans, are equally content and adept at seeing either where they´ve been or where they´re going.
2. If you put him in the stern with you, the combined ballast of idiot canoe pilot, clawing dog and cooler of beer, will lift the bow into an angle that will aggravate your groin pull, dunk & send all your floatable provisions into Vermont, and prompt any onshore onlookers to wonder why a vertical canoe is going past them the wrong way under the world's longest two-span covered wooden bridge.
In New Hampshire, it's the only time you'll get there from here.
Syndicated humor columnist B. Elwin Sherman is trying to stay dry somewhere in the North Country. You may reach him via his website at: elwinshumor.com. Copyright 2008 B. Elwin Sherman. All rights reserved. Used here with permission.


