![]() |
|
![]() |
| A Daughter's Story of Her Father's Journey |
|
Born in Oklahoma in 1916, 10-year old Melvin sees a photograph of a cabin deep in the Alaska wilderness in his fourth-grade geography book. He dreams of living in the "north country" and, nearly fifty years later, builds a 47-foot boat in his backyard and cruises it from Arkansas to Alaska. Melvin has never been south of the United States border, has never even been on a boat in the open ocean, and has certainly never navigated a homemade boat for thousands of miles in the Caribbean and Pacific Oceans. "Learn by doing," he says. |
![]() ![]()
Left: Melvin on
the bow of the Red Dog along
Right: Melvin
at home on Pennock Island |
![]() ![]()
Building
|
Although the launching had not been
announced, a crowd of approximately 65 persons gathered at the landing.
The crowd cheered when the boat hit the water and men rushed to help
with the ropes. ---Southwest Times Record, Fort Smith, Arkansas, September 28, 1971.
|
Melvin
Owens’ lifelong dream of living in Alaska begins to materialize in
1968 when, to the astonishment of neighbors and friends, he
single-handedly constructs the 47-foot Red Dog in his Arkansas
backyard. After launching the boat on the Arkansas River in 1971,
he cruises the Arkansas and Mississippi Rivers
to the Gulf of Mexico.
A true story of courage and endurance, South to Alaska chronicles Melvin's dangerous 10,000-mile journey through a watery world he knows little about, to get to a world he cannot forget. |
| Building the Red Dog, Hartford, Arkansas, 1968. |
![]() |
![]() |
from Pennock Island, 1993. |
|
|
by Nancy Owens Barnes New Leaf Books, 2007
―
|
|
© Copyright 2007
Nancy Owens Barnes ::: I am grateful to my brother Jerry and my late brother Donald for permission and use of a number of their photographs in this website. ::: |