After Over 2000 Miles, Record Attempt Ends Less than 150 Miles from Finish Line

NEW ORLEANS – Alpine Shop employee, Perry Whitaker, set out in early May as part of a four man team attempting to set a new World Record for Fastest Time to Row the Length of the Mississippi River by a Team. 16 days later and less than 150 miles from that record, the Mississippi Speed Record canoe swamped and sank due to a life-threatening mix of high winds, ocean-going vessels, barges and tugs all converging on the river at the same time.

Perry posted on Facebook, the morning after the canoe vanished into the waves: “Our canoe is at the bottom of the Mighty Mississippi. This adventure is done, after over 2,100 miles.”

A little later he added to that:

I’ve been on lots of crazy adventures, but this is the first time I’ve ever had more than just a few people cheering for me as I was adventuring.

For more than 2,000 miles over about two weeks, people have lined the River to encourage us. They’ve cheered, war-whooped, blew horns, shot fireworks, and rang cowbells.

Lots, and lots of cowbells…

There were crowds cheering as we paddled through cities, people waving from their back yards, groups partying at isolated boat ramps, and sometimes we had absolutely no idea where the cheering was coming from.

At a few very small, BEAUTIFUL towns along the River, it seemed that a majority of the residents were out there encouraging us.

Cheering for me??? I can’t wrap my brain around strangers cheering for me because I’m just a regular guy.

Unfortunately, with less than 150 miles to go, my River humbled us.

Heavy winds swamped our canoe in the middle of the night and we lost everything in a few short minutes.

I had a firm grip on the safety boat, and I struggled to hold on to the canoe as long as I could until the current took her down.

I’m pissed.

I’m sad.

I’m disappointed.

But mostly, I’m astounded that so many people took time out of their busy lives to encourage and support me in this little adventure, and I’m very, very appreciative of everyone.

Not just the crowds along the river, but also the couple dozen outstanding people who volunteered about three weeks of their time to try to make this whole thing a success.

This is not hyperbole, but I think more highly of people today than I did before this trip.

Perry Whitaker – May 21 on Facebook

After he took a few days to make his way back to work at Alpine Shop, here’s how Perry answered some of the most frequently asked questions about the trip:

Q. Why in the Hell did you do this?

“Because it’s there”. Someone once asked Mallory why he wanted to climb Everest and he said “Because it’s there”.  Paddling the whole Mississippi in less than 3 weeks isn’t nearly as daunting as climbing Everest. Mallory died on his third attempt at Everest, we just sunk our canoe and had to be rescued by our safety boat. 

I met Conrad Anker a few years ago, he’s the person who finally found Mallory’s body about 75 years after he died. I got to buy a few beers for the guys in the safety boats who rescued us, Mallory didn’t get that option.

I’ve given a lot of presentations about the history of the Mississippi River so I was excited when I got the opportunity to join this team on the record attempt. 

Q. Have you ever done anything like this before?

I’ve been on lots of adventures, but nothing like this. 

I went on a month-long solo bike trip through Central America, I walked across England along Hadrian’s Wall then biked across Ireland, and I’ve been on a lot of other long backpacking, biking, and paddling trips.

This was the first time I tried to break a Guinness Book of World Records time for something.

Q. What was your most memorable moment of this trip?

You mean other than the canoe sinking in a storm 137 miles from the finish? 

The first 2,160 miles of the trip were great, but the last few minutes kind of sucked. 

I really enjoyed all the wildlife. We heard a pack of wolves, saw a couple bears, some sandhill cranes, and we watched a huge fisher jumping out of a tree after something. I wish I had taken a bird identification book with me, even though I was too busy paddling to look up birds.

Q. What did you expect to be your biggest challenges of this trip and were you right? 

I think my expectations were pretty close to reality. There were two categories of challenges: those things we could control and those things we couldn’t. The things we could control included training and equipment, the things we couldn’t control included things like the weather, or a major barge traffic jam caused by a damaged bridge in Memphis, TN. I expected the physical challenge to be my biggest hurdle, so I trained pretty hard. I was also worried about how much this would cost. We expected it to cost between $20,000 and $30,000 dollars.

Q. Twenty to thirty thousand dollars?

We had a huge support crew. There were three safety boats and two RVs following us down the river. The primary costs were fuel for those vehicles and food for about 25 volunteers for about 3 weeks. There was also the price of gear. The canoe was about $3500, modifications to the canoe was another grand, paddles were about $300 each. There were a million other things we needed and they all added up.

Q. Tell me about your training for this.

For the past several years, I’ve kayak over two thousand miles per year, so I already had a good start on my training. 

In addition to that, I started training on a rowing machine about a year and a half ago. Distance paddling in a canoe or kayak is more about the core than the arms so the rowing machine has been great. I should have worked on my shoulders more, but I did okay. My training was slowed down by the pandemic because I couldn’t go to the gym. 

I think I did pretty well, physically. I felt strong throughout the trip, and I think I could have paddled at that pace for a couple more weeks. 

Q. What was the weather like?

It was below freezing for the first few nights, then it got up to the mid-80’s toward the finish. The weather was surprisingly good until the wind on the last two days. 

Q. I assume this got rather monotonous at times, what kept you going?

I didn’t think it was monotonous, I enjoyed the heck out of it.

When we were forced off the river, I wasn’t joking when I asked if someone could loan me a boat to finish the trip or maybe even paddle about a thousand miles upstream back to St Louis.

Q. As you were on the river, your attempt was covered by a few newspapers and TV stations, while thousands of people were following the progress on Facebook. Were you expecting that? 

Absolutely not. I’ve been on a lot of adventures but I’ve never had thousands of people cheering me on. It was awkward. 

How are the big rivers different from the smaller Ozark streams?

A lot of the upper Mississippi seemed just like paddling on the Current River or upper Meramac. We just saw a lot more eagles and beavers on the upper Mississippi. 

Big rivers like the Mississippi and Missouri are safer than smaller streams in a lot of ways, but more dangerous in others. Paddling on a big river is usually like paddling on a lake, but we don’t worry about barge traffic on our local lakes. Once you understand the concepts of river navigation, it’s pretty easy.  

If you want to paddle on the Mississippi or Missouri, go with someone who knows what they’re doing for the first couple times. It’s simple after someone walks you through it, but it’s difficult and dangerous to try to figure out on your own.

How can people learn more about paddling on the big rivers?

The Mississippi River Water Trail Association is an organization that can really help. Big Muddy Adventures takes people out on the Mississippi all the time, and the Alpine Shop occasionally does too. You can also talk to people who’ve done the MR340, they love to talk about it.

What questions have you been asked the most about this trip?

Getting through the locks, does my butt hurt from sitting in a canoe for 2 ½ weeks, and will I do it again.

What are the answers to those questions?

Locking through was great. There are 27 locks on the Mississippi, and the US Army Corp of Engineers went above and beyond to help us get through them quickly, and some barges even let us lock through ahead of them. That was amazingly cool of them. We only had to wait a couple times. If you haven’t locked through before, do it because it’s very educational.

Yes, my butt was numb.  My hands and feet hurt and were swollen, but people don’t ask about my hands and feet, they just want to know about my butt.  

I’ve had a couple weeks to recover and I’m almost back to normal now. 

You didn’t say if you’d do it again?

I think it’s impossible to do something like this and not think of ways to be faster, more efficient, and safer. I think I could probably knock a couple days off the world record time. I already have the right boat, I just need to find the right people. If I can find the right people, I’ll try it again.

Do you have any other big adventures planned?

The MR340 is coming in a few weeks and I plan to race in that again this year. I’m also thinking about walking the Trail of Tears this winter. 

Any final thoughts or words of wisdom?

I’ve been reading a lot about Teddy Roosevelt recently, and I think more people should read his “Man in the Arena” speech.

Alpine Shop Wins Three 2021 A-List Awards

St. Louis Magazine announced their A-List Readers’ Choice Awards on Monday, June 14 and for the second time in three years, St. Louis-based Alpine Shop has taken home three awards.

Alpine Shop won awards for Best Outdoor Outfitters, Best Sporting Goods, and Best Activewear, beating out brands like REI, Bass Pro Shops, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Lululemon and Big River Running.

This is the third consecutive year that Alpine Shop has won Best Outdoor Outfitters, and the second consecutive year for Best Sporting Goods. It’s also the second time in three years that the store won Best Activewear.

Alpine Shop Employee Attempting World Record Paddle

UPDATE: Alpine Shop’s own Perry Whitaker – part of a four-man team known as “Mississippi Speed Record” – will be paddling through St. Louis today on day 10 of their attempt at the World Record for Fastest Time to Row the Length of the Mississippi River by a Team. (By Guinness’ guidelines, this can be undertaken in a scull, rowboat, kayak or canoe.)

The old World Record of 18 days, four hours and 51 minutes was set back in 2003. However, a new tentative record of 17 days and 20 hours was set just four days ago by another team.

Now, Mississippi Speed Record has that new time in sight. As of 10 am on Friday, May 14, they had reduced a deficit of more than four hours down to just 36 minutes off the pace as they head into Alton and then into downtown St. Louis later today.

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ORIGINAL STORY:

Of all the personalities and characters that you may have come across at an Alpine Shop location over the past decade, none are probably so well known as Perry Whitaker. A consummate adventurer and ambassador, Whitaker has dedicated himself to getting people outdoors – especially if it involves his beloved rivers.

An experienced kayaker and canoeist, Whitaker is a 12-time finisher of the Missouri River 340 Race and has been Alpine Shop’s lead paddle instructor for almost a decade, leading everything from small basic classes to multi-day paddles on the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers around his hometown St. Louis. In 2019, he was even named one of the area’s Best Outdoor Guides/Instructors by the readers of Terrain Magazine.

Now, after months of training, he’s begun “an adventure like no other” – an attempt at the World Record for Fastest Time to Row the Length of the Mississippi River by a Team. (By Guinness’ guidelines, this can be undertaken in a scull, rowboat, kayak or canoe.) Whitaker, part of a four-man team comprised of paddling experts from across the U.S., will be attempting to break the World Record of 18 days, four hours and 51 minutes set back in 2003. The team, known as Mississippi Speed Record, has a live feed of the attempt that is allowing people from across the world to keep track of the attempt.

The second-longest river in the U.S. and the fourth longest in the world, the Mississippi River is between 2,300 and 2,350 miles (at best estimate). In order to break the record, Whitaker’s team will need to tackle nearly 140 miles each day on the river. Leaving Lake Itasca in Northern Minnesota on Tuesday, May 4, they expect to take about four days to reach the Twin Cities, six days from Minneapolis/St. Paul to St. Louis, and another seven from his hometown of St. Louis to the Gulf of Mexico south of New Orleans.

According to the Mississippi Speed Record site:

Since 2003 there have been at least three unsuccessful attempts to break the record. A team of four consisting of Tim Muhich, Colin Bright, Clint Adams and Boot Baweja made and attempt in 2014, and in 2017 they made another attempt with Dale Waldo replacing Boot Baweja. Kevin Eckelkamp (nephew of Steve Eckelkamp), Nate Lastinger and KJ Millhone made an unsuccessful attempt in 2018(9).

In 2020, Scott Miller along with KJ Millhone, Casey Millhone, and Oliver Simes put together a team to break the record. Because of the Covid pandemic and numerous stay at home orders, this attempt was scraped and Scott Miller put together the current team trying to break the record in 2021.

Gift Ideas for Mom

We know. You meant to grab a gift weeks ago for Mom. But if you’re still on the fence as to what to buy, the friendly outfitters from Alpine Shop and The Pathfinder have some fantastic ideas for you!

Smartwool Merino Wool Tank Top
Smartwool Merino Wool Sport 150 Tank Top $45
On Cloud Running Shoes
Patagonia Tech Skort $75
Patagonia Tech Skort $75
Birketnstock sandals
Birkentstock Gizeh Sandals $99.95
Red sun dress with pink and orange flowers
Patagonia Amber Dawn Dress $59.95
The North Face Motion Pull-On Short
goodr Circle G Sunglasses $25
Yeti Slim Can Colster $25
C.C. Panama Hat $22
Brümate hopsulator Trio

Alpine Shop Supports Give STL Day- May 6, 2021

Over the past decade, Alpine Shop has raised over $100,000 for local area organizations thanks to the generosity of our loyal customers and the help of many of our vendors. Even throughout 2020, without the benefit of being able to hold our usual fundraisers, we continued to do our best with our annual One Warm Coat Drive, where we collected more than 900 coats, and our support of the Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital Foundation’s Glennon Card this past October. But, as we’re all aware, 2020 was a very different type of year, and 2021 hasn’t been much better for us to jump start our fundraising.

Today, May 6, is Give STL Day, 24-hours of giving to organizations that do so much for the St. Louis region. Many of the organizations listed on the GiveSTLday.org website have deals in place to match the dollars raised during this day.

If you’re interested in supporting some of the wonderful organizations that we work with throughout the year, below you’ll find a list, along with links to either the Give STL Day donation links or their specific websites:

Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital Foundation

Gateway Disabled Ski Program

Gateway Off-Road Cyclists

Great Rivers Greenway

Missouri River Relief

Missouri Stream Team (supported by Patagonia Action Works)

Missouri Whitewater Association

One Warm Coat

Open Space Council

Ozark Trail Association

Sierra Club

Saint Louis BicycleWorks

Stray Rescue of Saint Louis

Team River Runner – St. Louis

Trailnet

Wildlife Rescue Center

World Bird Sanctuary

Earth Day/Earth Lifetime: How Our Brands Are Making an Impact

At Alpine Shop, we actively engage in and support efforts to preserve and improve the environment on a daily basis. Many – if not most – of the brands we partner with have that same belief and are consistently making an impact each and every day. So, during this Earth Day Week, here are a few examples of how some of our vendors are leading these efforts.

Keep Nature Wild

For every product sold, Keep Nature Wild picks up one pound of trash.

Hydro Flask

Parks for All Program: Created to benefit public green spaces and promote happier, healthier lives outdoors for all. To date , more than 122 nonprofits have been supported and over $1.9 million donated

#RefillForGood campaign to encourage use of reusable

Hydro Flask Wide Mouth Flex Lid – 20 Oz Acai At

Cotopaxi

  • Climate Neutral Certified (100% carbon neutral)
  • B Corp Certified
  • Del Dia Collection products are made from 100% repurposed fabrics

Buzzee

  • Reusable food wraps to eliminate the use of single-use plastics
  • 100% compostable after life-cycle (200 uses)
  • Hand Made

Klean Kanteen

  • Stainless steel straws and bottles reduce the use of single-use plastics
  • 100% of company’s headquarters’ electricity powered by solar
  • Donates 1% of gross sales through One Percent for the Planet

Patagonia

  • Regenerative Organic Certified
  • Since 1985, Patagonia has pledged 1% of its sales to the preservation and restoration of the natural environment
  • Products like Responsibli-Tees (see below) made from 50% cotton scraps and 50% post-consumer recycled plastics
  • Worn Wear program to extend the life of apparel and reduce number of products going to landfills
Patagonia Boardshort Label Pocket Responsibili-Tee

Stasher

  • 1% of Sales each year give to non-profits working to protect our planet
  • Save What Matters campaign to educate consumers and reduce single-use plastics
Stasher Sandwich Bag

It’s No Joke! Alpine Shop Purchased 43 Years Ago on April 1, 1978

Every year around April Fools’ Day, we like to relate the story of how the modern Alpine Shop came to exist. It’s not really a funny joke, it’s just that it actually happened on April 1. Here’s the story of the Mapmaker, the Vintner and the Fugitive:

One of the original signs from Mooers Alpine, Alpine Shop’s predecessor.

In 1973, Bob Mooers–a local St. Louis climber, Army Map Service employee, and author of “Finding Your Way in the Outdoors” (still available used on-line)–convinced Chouinard Equipment, a growing climbing brand at the time, to open him as a dealer. So, Mooers started a climbing shop – in a small room upstairs from the home wine-making shop he was moonlighting on the side from his Army Map Service work. It took just one month for climbing to outsell wine-making, which ended up being abandoned when Mooers moved the climbing shop to a new, larger space.

Five years later, “Mooers Alpine” was thriving, but Mooers was looking to sell and move to the Northwest.

Russell “Holly”, and Lisa Hollenbeck, co-owners of Alpine Shop, on a recent trip out West.

Enter Russell “Holly” Hollenbeck to the picture. A 45-year-old customer of Mooers’ originally from the Northwest, Hollenbeck had come to St. Louis to work in the city’s banking and finance industry. However, a change in leadership at the company he worked for had soured him on the field, and he had taken to considering himself a “fugitive” from corporate life. While skiing at Snowbird in Utah during the winter of 1977, Hollenbeck broached the subject of purchasing Mooers Alpine with his family. On April 1, 1978, “Mooers Alpine” became “Alpine Shop” with Hollenbeck as the new owner.

43 years later, climbing is still at our core, but over the years we have added gear, clothing, events and clinics for almost every type of outdoor enthusiast, from backpackers, hikers, campers, paddlers, and cyclists, to snowboarders and skiers, at four locations in Missouri and Kansas.

Alpine Shop Kirkwood’s collection of historic climbing gear, cleared from big walls in Yosemite National Park by friend-of-the-Shop Rich Copeland. Copeland died in a fall in Yosemite in 2014 and the outpouring of tributes was truly amazing.

Those 43 years have been good to us and to our vendors, as well. Recently, at the 2019 Grassroots Outdoor Alliance summer meetings, Alpine Shop was named National Retailer of the Year, an honor we are truly humbled by and continue to strive to earn in the eyes of our customers.

Our first supplier, Chouinard Equipment, ended up morphing into Great Pacific Iron Works, which went on to become Black Diamond and Patagonia. They remain our largest and one of our most admired vendor partners.

After 49 years in the business, it is Alpine Shop’s Vision to see Generations Transformed by Discovery Outdoors.

7th Annual Egg Hunt Challenge

Are you one of those people who still enjoy participating in Egg Hunts around the Easter holiday? Or do you like to test your “detective” skills and solve some riddles? How about trying your hand at both?!?!

Alpine Shop invites you to participate in our Seventh Annual Egg Hunt Challenge on-line at www.alpineshop.com! Yes, you’re still looking for eggs – in this case one very lovely golden egg worth $200 in an Alpine Shop gift card – but your hunt involves solving riddles related to five different products on our website. Find the products and find your next clue! Solve all five clues and you’ll be entered into the drawing to win the $200 gift card.

We’ll randomly draw a winner from the names of everyone who finds the golden egg between now and Monday, April 5. Get hunting!

Oh! And everyone who participates get a mystery coupon code, too! So… to recap: Solve the clues. Find the product on alpineshop.com. Get entered to win. Shop with a coupon code. Good? Alright here we go…

Here’s your first clue:

So what do you think this could be? The only hint you’ll get from us is that it’s at alpineshop.com!

So, you’re looking for a product on www.alpineshop.com that matches the description of the clue. You’ll know you’ve found it when you arrive on a product page and see, below the main product photo – instead of an alternate-color image – a clue, like in the photo below:

See that first alternate color image that looks like the first clue… that’s what you’re searching for, right there!

Solve all five clues and you’re in the running for that $200 gift card to Alpine Shop!

Ready to begin the challenge? It starts right here.

Shopping Safe

From the moment we reopened our stores earlier this year, Alpine Shop and The Pathfinder have been concerned with only one thing: making sure you are safe when you shop with us.

To that end, we have continually offered as many options as possible for you to safely get what you need from our stores – including curbside pick-up, buy online, pick-up in store, 24-hour online shopping at www.alpineshop.com and enhanced sanitization and disinfection protocols at all of our locations.

Stores open at this time:

All Alpine Shop locations are open, although many have shorter operating hours than you might have been used to in the past. Please visit our locations page to verify hours before heading out to see us.

Health and Safety Policies:

The health of our staff and our loyal customers is always our biggest concern. Over the spring and summer months, our management team developed specific sanitization protocols that are now in effect at all stores.

Each location is deep-cleaned every morning before we open, and staff rotate different cleaning procedures throughout the day.

Dressing Rooms:

Dressing rooms are available as needed, but are only accessible with the help of an outfitter. After each use, our staff will disinfect and sanitize the dressing room before allowing anyone else to enter.

Masks:

In accordance with CDC guidelines and with local city mandates, outfitters are required to wear masks at all times when inside our stores.

Customers are also required to wear masks in all stores, as well.

If, for some reason, you are unable to wear a mask, we will still do everything we can to make sure you can get the assistance you need. Before entering the store, please call and ask a manager for assistance. We will be happy to help.

Number of people allowed in our stores:

All locations are operating at far below the max occupancy levels mandated by local government authorities. In fact, all stores are operating at fewer than 15% of max capacity throughout the holidays, with staff on hand monitoring total number of customers inside the store.

Returns:

We are currently allowing and accepting returns inside our stores according to our normal return guidelines.

Curbside Pick-Up/Buy On-line, Pick Up in Store:

Curbside Pick-Up as well as Buy On-Line, Pick-Up in Store are both available at all Alpine Shop and Pathfinder locations. However, there are some limitations. All on-line purchases are handled from our Kirkwood location and may take extended time to reach another store.

If you would like to use curbside pick-up, we would encourage you to please call your preferred store and tell the outfitter you would like to arrange for Curbside Pick-up. They will take your order over the phone and make sure we have everything ready for you to pick-up at your convenience.

Give Back on Giving Tuesday

Over the past decade, Alpine Shop has raised over $100,000 for local area organizations thanks to the generosity of our loyal customers and the help of many of our vendors. Even through 2020, without the benefit of being able to hold our usual fundraisers, we’ve continued to do our best with our annual One Warm Coat Drive, where we collected more than 900 coats, and our support of the Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital Foundation’s Glennon Card this past October.

But, as we’re all aware, 2020 has been a very different type of year. And a very difficult year for many non-profits in our communities.

This Giving Tuesday, we ask for you to consider supporting some of the organizations we have worked with over the past decade.

There are a number of options to consider, including our partnership with Patagonia Action Works, which is Patagonia’s effort to connect committed individuals to organizations working on environmental issues in the same community.

If you’re interested in supporting some of the other wonderful organizations that we work with throughout the year, below you’ll find a list, along with links to their websites.

Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital Foundation

Disabled Athelete Sports Association (DASA)

Gateway Disabled Ski Program

Gateway Off-Road Cyclists

Great Rivers Greenway

Missouri River Relief

Missouri Stream Team (supported by Patagonia Action Works)

Missouri Whitewater Association

One Warm Coat

Open Space Council

Ozark Trail Association

Sierra Club

Saint Louis BicycleWorks

Stray Rescue of Saint Louis

Team River Runner – St. Louis

Trailnet

Wildlife Rescue Center

World Bird Sanctuary