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Man's 2,000 km paddleboard journey highlights benefits of 'blue space'

Man's 2,000 km paddleboard journey highlights benefits of 'blue space'

Yahoo02-07-2025
Back in 2023, Dan Rubinstein was on the last leg of a 2,000-kilometre paddleboard journey that took him along the waterways from Ottawa to New York City and back again.
Since trading his paddleboard for a keyboard, Rubinstein has written a book titled Waterborne.
SEE ALSO:
Rubinstein says the two-month journey changed him after seeing the impacts of 'blue space' and aquatic environments on physical, mental, and ecological health. He also notes that the water acts as a conduit for connection between people and sparks a sense of community.
"I like to say that the book is rooted in the journey. So you know, it's a 2,000-kilometre paddle, but it's not a macho, kind of man-conquering-nature kind of thing. It's really about the people I meet and the communities I pass through," Rubinstein said in an interview with The Weather Network. "All of our communities are where they are because of water."
In a time when humanity seems so polarized and divided, places like 'blue space' offer opportunities for anyone and everyone to connect.
Check out the video above for the full interview.
Copyedited by Anika Beaudry, a digital journalist at The Weather Network.
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But, with the acquisition of the site, the property has been renamed Aah Mahwi Nibi (Crying Water) as a tribute to the China. China Cove shoreline. (Esme Batten/Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC)/Submitted to The Weather Network) "An elder, Miptoon, who sits on our Ontario regional advisory board, came to the property with us last year and heard the stories of the water crying out to him," said Batten. "He asked us if we would call it Crying Water to kind of honour the history of that area." The newly protected habitats will safeguard drinking water and air quality, and provide sanctuary for species like eastern Massasauga (threatened), Hill's thistle (threatened), and midland painted turtle (special concern). While the site supports 44 different species of orchids, so far more than six have been discovered on Crying Water, Batten noted. It also has other wildlife, including black bears and foxes. Painted turtle. 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Man's 2,000 km paddleboard journey highlights benefits of 'blue space'
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(Cameron Curran/Submitted and supplied by Nature Conservancy of Canada) "We're really just kind of learning a little bit more about what this property protects. That's kind of going to be what we're focusing on over the next few years in terms of developing a management plan for the property, and understanding what rare species and habitats are there [and] what things might threaten them, so that we can ensure that we can protect them into the future," said Batten. Batten noted that the Bruce Peninsula houses one of the oldest, living forests in North America, and one of the "most unchanged forests in the world." "That's the small eastern white cedar that clings along the 400-million-year-old face of the Niagara Escarpment. Some of them have been aged [more than] 1,300 years old. There's such a high diversity of species and habitats here, and even habitats that can't be found in many other places in the world," said Batten. China Cove. 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