Paddler Profile- June 2004
by Jeff Lancaster
John Dowd is the founding editor of Sea Kayaker magazine,
author of Sea Kayaking: A Manual for Long Distance Touring and a
major advocate of kayaking education and safety.
John
Dowd is a likable Kiwi with true Bohemian sensibilities and a passion
for adventure. He wrote one of sea kayakings classic books,
Sea Kayaking: A Manual for Long-Distance Touring (Grey-stone Books).
Now in its fifth edition, it was the first book to give the name
sea kayaking to what had been known variously as blue-water
paddling, sea canoeing and open-water canoeing.
Dowd left his native New Zealand in 1967 to embark on a 15-year
voyage around the world, kayaking and climbing the far-flung corners
of the globe. He paid his way by working as a commercial diver,
an Outward Bound instructor, a freelance writer and a photographer.
In 1976, during his travels through South America, he met and later
married Beatrice, a Canadian who was also a traveler. Bea shared
Johns passion for paddling, and in 1977, they paddled from
Venezuela to Florida. They eventually settled in the mountains above
Vancouver, B.C., and in 1980, founded the first specialty sea-kayaking
store there. In 1981, Dowds magnum opus Sea Kayaking was published
and introduced enthusiasts to seamanship, navigation, reading the
weather and the sea, and low-impact environmental paddling.
In 1984, John became the founding editor of Sea Kayaker, the first
publication dedicated to the sport. Dowds vision for the magazine
was to provide a forum for serious input from knowledgeable
paddlers and to serve as a vehicle for the defense of the freedoms
and responsibilities of sea kayaking. He stayed at Sea Kayakers
editorial helm for five years, moved to Vancouver and, together
with Bea as managing editor, they produced the first 21 issues.
In 1989, the Dowds stepped down from their roles with Sea Kayaker,
packed up their young family and headed back to the Canadian woods.
John, Bea, their daughter, Olympia, and son, Dylan, lived in a log
cabin. Dowd wrote a series of childrens books, served as a
trustee on the board of the National Outdoor Leadership School,
and temporarily chained his nomadic existence to a fence post in
rural Canada. Says John of those days, We had no electricity,
we home-schooled our kids and lived an alternative lifestyle on
the edge of the city. But the nomadic impulse would not be
put to rest. In the words of Dorothy Parker, They sicken of
the calm, who know the storm. When Olympia, then 14, was invited
to join the Moscow City Ballet as a principal dancer, the Dowds
sold everything they owned and headed to Russia, where they lived
for a year.
It was an amazing opportunity for Olympia, Dowd said.
It was an amazing experience for the whole family.
Olympia wrote a book about her experiences in Russia called A Young
Dancers Apprenticeship (Raincoast Books). The family later
lived in Italy and Spain before returning to Canada, where John
and Bea now make their home. |