Making resolutions to ring in the new year has been around for more than 4,000 years now. How did it get it’s start? According to 43things.com:
Revelry and resolutions have been essential to ringing in the New Year since 2000 B.C. when Babylonians held semi-annual festivals around the spring and autumn equinoxes. Back then, people marked the beginning of a New Year by paying off debts and returning borrowed goods. The practice carried over into Roman times with worshippers offering resolutions of good conduct to a double-faced deity named Janus, the god of beginnings and endings. When the Roman calendar was reformed, the first month of the year was renamed January in honor of Janus, establishing January 1 as the day of new beginnings.
One of my goals this year is to get you to do one of my resolutions with me. I’m not going to ask you to lose weight, stop smoking, drink less coffee or send me money. What I am going to ask you to do is this:
Take three people, who have never been, kayak fishing this year.
Seems simple enough right? Not only will it bring others into the sport but it will also allow you to share your passion of the outdoors in a new way with these folks.
Every time I take a new person out for that first paddle, they remark on the quiet, the peace and how close they feel to nature. Something about gliding across the top of the water where the sounds aren’t horns and radios but birds and fish calms the soul. Why would you not share that?
Take an afternoon or three and show someone why you love this sport. It will pay dividends down the road.
2 thoughts on “I Want You To Do This in 2014!”
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Oh yes! We plan on taking several "newbies" out on the yaks this year! Great challenge! Thanks!
For most, there is a fear of not being "in" a boat like a canoe or sit in kayak. here in Eastern NY and most of the non coastal waters a fishing kayak is unheard of. I am trying, but even my family hesitates to board one.