September 11, 2007
I'm leaving Minneapolis early in the morning, and should be on the water by mid-afternoon on the 12th. Thanks for your support. I'll be in touch when I get back (in two weeks or so), with update, photos, stories, etc.
Cancer and the Environment: What You Need to Know and What You Can Do
National Foundation for Cancer Research: What causes cancer? Genes vs. Environment
Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute
The Collaborative on Health and the Environment
Strang Cancer Prevention Center
National Cancer Institute: Cancer Causes and Risk Factors
Cancer Research and Prevention Foundation
American Institute for Cancer Research
American Cancer Society: Cancer Prevention Studies
The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
The T.J. Martell Foundation: for leukemia, cancer and AIDS research
Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness
Contact:
Rich Pagen 3348 Lyndale Ave. S, #1 Minneapolis, MN 55408 USA 612-414-9233
October 10, 2007
I've received recommendations on some recent books that address the causes of cancer:
The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health by T. Colin Campbell, Thomas M. Campbell II, John Robbins, and Howard Lyman.
The Secret History of the War on Cancer by Devra Davis (FYI, Devra Davis is the Director of the Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh, the focus of this fundraising effort).
Avoiding Cancer One Day at a Time: Practical Advice for Preventing Cancer by Lynne Eldridge and David Borgeson.
Left in the Dust: How Race and Politics Created a Human and Environmental Tragedy in L.A. by Karen Piper.
Also, the Center for Environmental Oncology has redone their website, and it's now possible to donate online to them directly. Go to http://www.environmentaloncology.org/donate
November
15, 2007
Some news....
Jay Cooley, the husband of a friend, died this month after a three and a half month fight with stomach cancer. He was in his early 40's. He requested to have his ashes spread in the Gila Wilderness Area, one of his favorite places on the planet. Good thoughts and energy to all of his people, especially to his wife.
Finally, throughout this fundraiser I have heard many stories and received many letters. I want to leave you with a story sent to me by a friend several months ago. Fortunately, it has a happy ending. Hopefully, as we spend more time, energy and money on cancer prevention and treatment, there will be more and more happy endings.
Here's the letter I received:
September
24, 2007
At 10:30 AM yesterday, I paddled up to the landing on Poplar Lake, 12 days after leaving a very similar landing on Ojibway Lake far to the west. I had just traveled 82.7 miles, through 43 different lakes and rivers, and over 48 portages totaling 8.4 miles. I walked a few minutes up a winding road to a small parking area where my car sat waiting for me, about 150 road miles from the parking area at Ojibway Lake where I had left it almost two weeks ago. Some friends, colleagues, sponsors (please see the business sponsors at the bottom of this page, without whose support this trip would never have happened), and even people I've never met before contributed to moving the car to its new location while I was out paddling. I threw up my arms in excitement once I saw that it was there, its unlikely presence like magic to me, and a representation of the many ways that humans step up and unconditionally support one another.
The financial support that this
cause has received thus far (59%
of the way to the goal of raising $10,000
to research the causes of cancer) has been nothing short of inspiring. I
just made my own donation to the
Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute, as well as a donation to the
Friends of the
Boundary Waters for its efforts in keeping a wilderness so
spectacular in existence. Perhaps these wilderness areas will become
even more important in the years to come, serving as benchmarks to
understand the changes that we humans have made to the world we live in, and the effects
that these changes have upon us and our health.
I kept a daily journal on this trip and, for anyone who is interested, I
have posted photos,
journal
excerpts, a trip
route map, a list of
wildlife seen, the names of
the lakes
and
rivers traveled, as well as a
summary of weather
(which covered the spectrum by the way – sun, clouds, fog, rain, snow
flurries, wind and such stillness that one’s ears struggled to register
any sound whatsoever). Just click on the links under
Trip Details to the left.
Thanks to everyone for their support (financial, logistical, and moral)
- I also appreciated hearing other people’s cancer stories, as it has
reinforced in me how widespread the problem is, and therefore how
critical it is to address. This will be the last email I will send out
about this fundraiser, though the website will be kept up and running to
accept donations through December 8th, at which time the total funds
raised will be presented to
Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute.
Thanks again, and please forward this second (and
final) email along to anyone and everyone…..
rich pagen
January 10, 2008
According to the National Cancer Institute, approximately two-thirds of all cancers are caused by things in the environment or the world around us - yet relatively little research has been conducted on the relationship between the environment and cancer. During this fundraiser, $8,435 was contributed by 93 individuals, couples and families to help address this issue.
This Boundary Waters Cancer Canoe Trip fundraiser ended on January 8th, 2008. However, donations can be made directly to the Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute anytime. Click here to go to an article on this fundraiser which was published in the Spring 2008 issue of Conservation Minnesota magazine (page 34). Thank you.
Rich Pagen
"The casual relationship
between the environment and cancer has regrettably been on our minds as well
recently. While I am sure that an unintended result of your e-mail is that
you have more-than-likely been inundated with other stories, I would like to
share with you something that you rarely find on the internet, a happy story
about cancer and the environment!
The story begins in Ollantaytambo Peru just a few months ago. After a week
in the Galapagos (a trip I would take again in a heartbeat) and half a week
in Peru , Heidi and I found ourselves in the middle of the Sacred Valley in a
town not far from Cusco readying ourselves for a short train ride to the
foot of Machu Picchu . As luck would have it, Heidi got the worst case of
Montezuma’s revenge (wrong Spanish speaking country I know) and could barely
make it on the train to Aquas Calientes, let alone up the mountain to the
hidden city. She probably lost 15 lbs in 36 hours but, God love her, she
eventually made it up to Machu Picchu a day thereafter. We chalked that
two-day-bug up to “bad guinea pig” and made our way back to the United
States after an otherwise wonderful trip.
Upon our return to the US, a gaunt (but otherwise healthy) Heidi was leaning
up against the bathroom sink and noticed a lump in her right arm. Her
brothers, who are both orthopedic surgeons, happened to be coming through
town over the next week, and both got a look at her arm and encouraged us to
go see a specialist sooner rather than later. Both of us wondered in the
back of our minds (and jokingly aloud sometimes) if she had picked up a rare
bug known only to the Galapagos Islands or the cloud forest of Machu Picchu
. As we sit here today, it appears as if quite the opposite is the case. Not
only did our trip to Ecuador and Peru not MAKE Heidi sick, but indeed seemed
to REVEAL an illness, which if otherwise had gone undetected, might have in
all likelihood resulted in an amputation. You see, the lump in her arm
turned out to be a rare type of soft tissue cancer called a sarcoma. Since
our trip in June, Heidi has now had her right biceps muscle removed and
begins radiation treatments at the end of the week. The lump was aggressive
and of a high grade, but was less than 3cm (catching anything before it gets
to be 5cm is considered early). The margins around the cancer looked
completely clear and since it seemed to be fully encapsulated within the
muscle (which has now been completely removed) it also appears as if no
chemotherapy is necessary! At this moment, Heidi could not be doing any
better! She looks like a million bucks and to see her wearing long sleeves,
you’d never know that anything ever happened. The surgeon, being quite
cognizant of Heidi’s profession, did a wonderful job keeping all nerves
intact and Heidi is now back at work full time with full sensation, dexterity
and motor coordination in her drafting arm. While statistics say that you
can’t indicate that you are cancer-free until five years after initial
treatment and she still has 5-6 weeks of radiation treatments ahead of her
(no more harmful or bothersome than a tanning bed from what we understand),
her story so far seems unbelievable.
There have been good days and bad days over the past two months but prayers
being said now are prayers of thanks rather than prayers of hope. We are now
want to say that Heidi “had” cancer rather than “has” cancer but are careful
with our words knowing that almost everyone has been touched by this
anomalous disease. Throughout the process one can’t help but Google-this and
Google-that but as seems to be the case in our bubble-less information age
where the world is literally at our finger tips, one never finds good
stories about cancer on the internet. My goal is to change that."
- Chris

September 3, 2007
In mid-September of this year, I will be heading out on a solo canoe trip across one of the widest sections of the 1.1-million-acre Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in northern Minnesota. I’ve wanted to do a one-way trip, crossing the Boundary Waters, for a long time. However, based on the way that this past year has played out, I’ve decided to make the trip about more than a celebration of wild places and intact ecosystems.
As some of
you may know, the calendar in Microsoft Outlook sends reminders when an
event on the calendar is
approaching. A week ago, it sent me a reminder that said, “Due in 13
hours, Visit Ben”. I am just finishing a research cruise in the
Gulf of Maine and, when I put the note in the calendar some time ago, I had
thought that this would be a good time to swing over to upstate New York to
visit Ben Tassinari, a friend who had been struggling with stomach cancer
for 10 months or so. But instead, in late April, Ben passed away at
the age of 30, and I found myself at his funeral. The word never made
it to my calendar in Microsoft Outlook.
After Ben’s
funeral, I stayed with my brother, sister-in-law and two-year-old niece
(Matt, Katie and Cassidy) in Rye, NY before flying home to Minneapolis.
Two weeks later, Cassidy was diagnosed with leukemia; she began what will be
an over-two-year-long chemotherapy treatment,
nearly died from an intestinal infection, and is now (four months later and
as I write this) in remission and making her way downstairs after a nap,
excited for more rounds of hide n’ seek. I am sitting on the couch
waiting for her.
I don’t live in a bubble – I know that these stories are not unique to me, and that they are happening all the time, to all sorts of people (including most of you). I also know that they are occurring more and more frequently. It is because of this that I am using this canoe trip as means to raise awareness and money to help address the CAUSES of cancer. According to the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, most cases of cancer are linked to environmental causes and, in principle, can therefore be prevented. Research on improving cancer treatment is essential; however, the amount of time and money spent on addressing environmental causes and prevention currently pales in comparison. This needs to change.
The distance across the section of the Boundary Waters that I hope to cross is approximately 85 miles; the route includes 44 lakes, 2 rivers and 55 portages; and the entire trip will take just under two weeks to complete (weather and logistics may affect the actual distance traveled). When I complete the trip in late September, I will donate a dollar for every mile traveled to the Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, which promotes research on the environmental causes of cancer and educates the public about environmental risk factors. If you are interested in sponsoring me and supporting this cause, click HERE or on the "FIRST GIVING Sponsor Me!" badge located above. Also, please keep visiting:
for updates
on fundraising progress, new links to organizations
involved in cancer research and treatment, as well as photos, stories, and
details about the canoe trip itself.
Thanks for taking the time to read. And please forward this to anyone and
everyone who you think might be interested in following along or
participating in the fundraising effort.
thanks,
rich pagen
Canoe Trip Details:
