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With the removal of the Hollister and Daniel Wright low-head dams in Lake County, boats were paddled without obstruction over the 18.5-mile course.
Bill McDermott of Libertyville, the event’s start line coordinator, said that means no required portages, which could pave the way for the race’s version of breaking the 4-minute mile barrier. “There is a two-hour threshold that’s never been crossed,” he said.
However, with lower water levels, it didn’t appear likely to happen, and officials were still compiling results late Sunday. River height at the Gurnee Gage was measured at just above three feet on Saturday night, and there was concern that the water around the former Ryerson dam was so shallow that an advisory was sent to anyone who might own craft with a fin or nonretractable rudder that they should portage or risk boat damage.
Among the first to cross the finish line was the kayak owned by Jim Pechous of Lombard, a member of the St. Charles Canoe Club. He clocked in at 2 hours and 42 minutes.
“I wish the water was a little bit higher,” he said, “but it wasn’t too low, where you were hitting stuff.”
But in general, the race is easier without the dams.
“There is an upside and a downside,” Pechous said. “The upside is you don’t have to portage around the dams. The downside is where the dams have been removed, the water is really shallow.”
The first paddlers left the starting gate near Oak Springs Road in Libertyville about 8 a.m. Shortly after 10:30 a.m., the first boats crossed the finish line at Dam No. 2 Woods in Mount Prospect.
Beside the removal of the dams, the big news was the introduction of a new trophy for women in the stand-up paddleboards category. McDermott said that prior to this year, it was only given to men, because not enough women had registered to create a trophy class. Not so this year; at least six women signed up.
“I think that’s awesome,” said Fiona Hope of Libertyville. “Girl power all the way.”