After seven years, three surgeries, 18 months of physical therapy, more than $56,000 in charitable donations and 1,000 miles of rigorous paddleboarding, Michael Curtis is about to complete the most ambitious journey of his self-described “adventurous life.”
Curtis, a Washougal resident, is finishing his journey to traverse the entire length of the Columbia River on a stand-up paddleboard to raise money for Northwest Battle Buddies (NWBB), a Battle Ground nonprofit dedicated to gifting professionally trained service dogs to military veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
“It’s definitely been a rollercoaster,” Curtis said. “Every (leg of the journey has) presented different challenges. But it’s also been very physically and mentally rewarding. It allows me to pull away from the daily grind for a week or so and reset and re-calibrate.”
On Aug. 10, Curtis set out on his fifth and final 150-mile leg (from Black Sand Beach, about 3 miles south of the United States-Canada border, to Grand Coulee Dam in central Washington) of his expedition, which he’s named Stand-up Paddleboard for Northwest Battle Buddies (SUP4NWBB). He completed the final stretch one week later, on Saturday, Aug. 17.
A celebration event was held for Curtis the following day, on Sunday, Aug. 18, at Chinook Landing Marine Park in Fairview, Oregon.