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Kayak program has disabled vets moving again

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Lexington’s Ben Brown, a 27-year-old disabled Navy veteran, came to Knight’s bridge early Wednesday evening to take a biweekly kayaking journey with other veterans on Elkhorn Creek.

But he didn’t know the new black kayak waiting for him on the creek bank was a gift from Jackson Kayaks and Canoe Kentucky.

When Nathan Depenbrock of Canoe Kentucky told him, Brown smiled, saying, “Awesome.”

Just being able to kayak is an incredible pleasure, says Brown, who was injured in a 2002 motorcycle accident in Naples, Italy, and is paralyzed from the waist down.

On a trip for coffee, Brown’s motorcycle hit “an unsecured manhole cover and ran into a wall and went over the wall,” he says. “I broke my lower three lumbar (vertebrae).”

Wednesday’s two-hour kayaking trip was part of Team River Runner Lexington.

“It’s a program we do with the Lexington VA,” Depenbrock says. “We use kayaking as a form of rehab for soldiers affected by war.

“The national program focuses on vets returning from Afghanistan and Iraq, but we are open to any veterans. We consistently get over 10 vets a week and 10 to 20 volunteers.”

Linda Tribble, compliance officer at VA in Lexington, says Ben “is a great guy. You just love him the minute you meet him.

“He has said when he’s in a wheelchair, he’s looking up at people all the time. But when he’s in a boat he’s eye level with you and on the same playing field.

“The freedom kayaking gives him is phenomenal. He’s out with everybody else as an able-bodied paddler.”

Team River Runner was founded in 2004 by Washington, D.C., area kayakers who worked with veterans at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

“It has spread across the country with different chapters, and it started out with one guy and a vision,” Brown says. “Joe Mornini went down to Walter Reed and took injured veterans out of hospital beds and put them in kayaks in (swimming) pools for rehabilitation.”

Brown said he met Mornini at a VA sponsored summer sports clinic in San Diego last year.

“That was the first time (since his accident) I ever participated in an organized disabled sports event,” he says. “There were so many opportunities in recreation – sailing, surfing, kayaking, track and field.

“It’s awesome. There are really no barriers. You just have to figure out how to do it. Kayaking is cool for me because I’m moving in the water. Instead of being a spectator, now I’m a participant. I never thought I’d be a kayaker.”

Brown’s wife, Tiffany, was going with him on Wednesday’s trip on the Elkhorn in Franklin County.

“This has been great for Ben to get out and be active,” Tiffany says. “Before his accident, he was really active and liked doing things outdoors.

“After his accident, he felt he was limited with what he could do and he felt he spent a lot of time sitting on the sidelines. This gives him the ability to get involved and be in action.”

Ben Brown, a Scott County High School graduate, just received his bachelor’s in communications and leadership development from the University of Kentucky.

He says he would like to get into “public relations or government relations” work.

Many of the Team River Runner Lexington volunteers are members of the Bluegrass Wildwater Association of Lexington. Each veteran who goes out in a kayak has at least one volunteer teammate.

“We really couldn’t be doing this without them,” Tribble says. “They’ve donated money, time and taken it on as their cause.”

In winter, the local Team River Runner veterans practice their kayak rolling skills at The Pavilion indoor pool in Georgetown, Depenbrock says.

“The pool director said she had a friend whose dad is a Vietnam veteran and is in a model airplane club in Carrollton, and the club decided to donate money to pay for the pool sessions,” Depenbrock says. “That was really neat.”

Depenbrock says it’s a wonderful program.

“For me personally, the best part is the feeling that you’re giving back to someone who has given so much in the first place,” Depenbrock says.

“These veterans I work with, I absolutely think of them as heroes. They’re good people, they’re genuine. The reward they give me through a smile and appreciation is one million times worth me doing the program.”

This summer, the veterans also will kayak on the Kentucky River at Clay’s Ferry, Boonesboro, High Bridge and Frankfort; and again on Elkhorn Creek in Franklin County occasionally, depending on the water level, Depenbrock says.

Other Team River chapters are in Augusta, Ga.; San Antonio; Tampa Bay; St. Louis; Seattle; Richmond, Va.; Washington, D.C.; and San Diego, Loma Linda and Palo Alto, all in California.

 




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   Next 10 Comments of 11 Total Comments
11.
    Posted by daniel2497451 July 10, 2009
No rubber bumpers here...I have taken part in so-called risky behaviours all of my life...but I believe in knowing one's limitations and staying within them. I believe that one needs a whole body in good condition to kayak safely...and even then there are risks. I have come close to buying it a couple of times doing this sport. I am not a killjoy, but I do not believe in putting people out there in sports where they could get killed or hurt either.

I think that all kayaking paraplegics should be drug tested...

10.
    Posted by aja_deacon July 10, 2009
Jeeze, Daniel. Your house must be full of rubber bumpers on all the edges of anything so people don't get hurt. What a killjoy.

9.
    Posted by daniel2497451 July 10, 2009
"Ben is well outfitted in his boat...".


Hmmm.

How does one "outfit" a paraplegic into a kayak. In my kayak, I have the hip pads and knee braces fitting snugly so that I can hip-snap to roll and control the horizontal plan of the boat, which includes keeping the upstream edge out of the water.

It was my understanding that Ben was paralyzed from the waist down. This does not compute. What happens when he flips over in shallow water, where he can't just pull the skirt and let gravity assist in dropping out? I know, I know, that is what the buddy is for, but what happens if the buddy flips too? Who is gong to help him then? He will need his legs to get out of the boat in shallow water where he is being drug over rocks and any "outfitting" in there that is holding him in, could be deadly. The legal liabilities that the "buddies" and anyone who is assisting them doing this are astronomical.

I have seen a student of mine nearly drown with her head and upper body completely out of the water holding on to the front of my boat, after flipping over and freaking out. As the old saying goes, you can drown on a tablespoon of water. It is not a pretty sight.

Hey, I am all for disabled people "living life" rather than "sitting it out" (really, "sitting" it out? Jeeze!), shucks they took an expedition of handicapped folks to the top of Mt. Everest...and these were the same folks who came back and got all of the best parking spots at Walmart ;-)! I am certainly not trying to pee on anyone's parade here. But there are a lot of activities that do not require full immersion, upside down in moving water while your head is getting pounded on the rocks when you screw up.

You can play all kinds of sports that are adapted, like basketball, baseball, etc., but kayaking just seems like a poor choice. Why not bullfighting or motorcycle racing? My hips and legs are essential in a kayak, and the last thing I would want to do is get in one as a paraplegic.

Like my grandson says when we get in a tight spot during an outdoor activity, "Grandaddy, I don't think that this is such a good idea!" Out of the mouths of babes...

8.
    Posted by Kayaker July 9, 2009
The Department of Veterans Affairs has a long history of developing adaptive equipment for disabled veterans to participate in many sports. In fact, most commercially available adaptive equipment in the country was first developed by the VA. That being said, Ben is well outfitted in his boat and has the necessary control to perform the necessary skills for safe paddling. The National Team River Runner has also taken a leading role in outfitting disabled veterans in their kayaks.

7.
    Posted by nautilusfish July 9, 2009
Great job Canoe Ky and to all the voluteers. I will have to check into this program and see if I have any kataking skills to volunteer. This is a worthy program. Good job.

Thank you Ben for your service.

6.
    Posted by aja_deacon July 9, 2009
I applaud Ben and other vets for living life rather than sitting it out because of an acquired disability. I also applaud Canoe KY for providing the opportunity for vets to continue experiencing freedom. As far as this being dangerous, "Live free or die, for death is not the worst of evils." Not being able to participate in this program due to disability would be the true evil and injustice. Go Ben!

5.
    Posted by Need4speed July 9, 2009
I wonder what's in it for Ed?

4.
    Posted by daniel2497451 July 9, 2009
I have kayaked for the better part of 15 years, and instructed kayaking for many of those. In my opinion, kayaking is not "an organized disabled sports event".

Contrary to popular belief by non-participants, kayaking is a whole body sport which requires the legs to be just as active and the arms when controlling a boat. The boat MUST fit the hips, knees and feet snugly in order to control it. The boat must be controlled when going through even moderate cross-currents of eddy lines or it will catch and edge and flip. Rolling a kayak absolutely requires lower body control...it isn't easy to learn for those without functional disabilities.

While I applaud Canoe Kentucky's entrepreneurial spirit, this sounds like a good way to get people hurt. And now I am hearing that there are 10 chapters of Team River all over the US? This defies logic to me...

3.
    Posted by JW82 July 9, 2009
I have visited Canoe KY a few times now and LOVE IT! Canoing is probably one of the best and most relaxing activity I've done. My husband and I go with a group of friends and have a blast. I would recommend it to anyone. They people are awesome as well.
I didn't know about the program until this article but I think it's great. Keep it up!

2.
    Posted by duh. July 9, 2009
This really is a great program.

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