
Donald Starkell was in a hospital
bed learning to grip the shaft of
a paddle with what was left of his
fingers in 1992 when he realized
he had found what he was looking
for within the sport of paddling.
It wasn’t buried treasure, though
you might think that as Starkell has
propelled himself a total distance
equivalent to twice around the world
in a canoe or kayak during over half a
century as a paddler. He had his life
threatened in the Amazon, lost the
tops of his fingers and some toes in
the Arctic and wrote two books on
his journeys. What he discovered
was something buried within himself.
“My Arctic trip, that was the first
time in my life I had found out what I
was seeking. What I was seeking was
what is your maximum,” Starkell, who
paddled the 3,200-mile Northwest
Passage from Churchill to
Tuktoyaktuk in 1992, said as
the subject of a CKY-TV
Manitoba Moment. He
came within 36 miles
of completing the trip
before ice and freezing
temperatures stopped him
cold and he was rescued
by an aircraft. “Well, that
was my maximum.”
Born in Winnipeg on December 7,
1932, Starkell began paddling out of
necessity and grew to love it for the
freedom. A flood in Winnipeg in
1948 put him in his North Kildonan
foster family’s canoe to get supplies.
Two years later at age 17, he was
named the Most Outstanding Novice
at Kildonan Canoe Club in 1950.
Now 73 years of age and still paddling
daily when the Red River isn’t frozen,
he still has the trophy and counts
it among his prized possessions.
Though Starkell went on to win
numerous provincial and national
competitions in addition to a number
of successful long-distance paddling
and cycling trips, he will always be
best known for two epic journeys
that resulted in his writing two books.
The first was “Paddle to the Amazon”
which described his 12,181 mile,
23-month journey from a Red River
bank near Winnipeg’s Bronx Park to
Belem, Brazil, which became a Guinness
World Record in 1986 as the longest
canoe trip. The second “Paddle
to the Arctic” detailed his 1992 foray
“across the roof of the world” through
the historic Northwest Passage
when he nearly froze to death in his
kayak. It was the longest self-propelled
kayak trip in Canadian Arctic history.
A father of three including daughter
Sherri and sons Dana and Jeff,
Starkell shared some of his paddling
adventures with his sons. Dana and
Jeff accompanied their father on the
Amazon trip in 1980-82 with Dana
completing the journey. In 1973, the
three climbed Banff’s Mount Rundle,
a 9,000-foot summit reached when
the boys were just 12 and 11 years old.
Starkell was awarded the Gold Medal
for Outstanding Achievement by the
City of Winnipeg and the Order of
Sport Excellence by the Province of
Manitoba in 1982, followed by the Order
of the Buffalo Hunt by the Province
of Manitoba in 1983. He counts
his children as his greatest success but
his Arctic trip ranks highly. Though
he was just short of completing the
journey in distance, it was an unmitigated
success physically and spiritually
for the man wielding the paddle.
“When I did the Arctic trip, I gave
absolutely everything I had and
that was success,” Starkell said.
Starkell, along with his adventuresome
spirit and tireless determination,
is a unique and proud addition to the
Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame.
b. December 7th, 1932