Lucy's Revenge is a project in memory of Lucy Plunkett to raise funds for Alzheimer's research and support services while showcasing Mississippi's waterways. All donations go directly to the Mississippi Chapter of the Alzheimer's Association.

Announcements

The Longest Day is June 20! We'll be putting in 50 miles in one day on the Pearl River.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Mississippi Paddler to Hit Century Mark on Big Black River to End First Month of Paddling for Alzheimer’s Awareness

Flora, MS. Saturday July 31, 2010—Mississippi paddler Keith Plunkett will mark 100 miles of paddling for the month of July Sunday afternoon after paddling 30 miles from Highway 16 to Highway 49 on the Big Black River. Plunkett is expected to arrive at the Highway 49 Bridge sometime late Sunday afternoon. The Yazoo County native and Flora resident announced in April the schedule for a year of paddling Mississippi’s waterways. The effort started on July 10 on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and will take Plunkett on a journey across 5 regions of the state ending in June of 2011. During the trips Plunkett is interviewing Alzheimer’s patients and caregivers in each region, and will highlight ongoing efforts by the Alzheimer’s Association and medical professionals to defeat the disease.  Video and photos of the trips are posted online at http://www.lucysrevenge.com/.

Plunkett has been speaking with groups across the state to raise awareness, and to sign up corporate sponsors for the journey. He has set a goal of 600 miles, or roughly 120 miles per region, and hopes to entice a few others to join him on some of the excursions. Anyone interested can follow his travels on his Facebook page through a real-time GPS mapping service provided by the newest sponsor, I-Tech of Madison. 

“I think it’s a significant symbol to hit the hundred-mile mark in the place that my Mamaw always called home,” said Plunkett of the river that marks the Yazoo and Madison County border. “

Plunkett’s grandmother was Lucy Plunkett. The matriarch of the Plunkett family reared six children, and oversaw the upbringing of 9 grandchildren. She was a housewife and an active member of the rural community of Little Yazoo in Yazoo County.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Trip Log: July 21, 2010--Pearl River, Ratliff Ferry to Highway 43--Some Things Just Happen (Video Included)

Sometimes things just happen, and you CAN explain why: it’s because they’re intended to. Agnostics and atheists try their best to explain away these circumstances. But, they can’t. Those of us with Faith know when divine intervention happens. Those without faith simply aren’t prepared to recognize divine circumstances, or they are too married to their perception of life as primordial suffering and explain it away as chance. But, life sure is good here on the other side. Over here, every happening offers an opportunity for a response that puts all of us in line with God’s intention. When these marvelous interventions are life affirming, all feels right with the world.

Such was the case for me on Wednesday, July 21.

Sharon and I decided last Tuesday we were going to find a body of water somewhere for a mid-week paddle. We weren’t sure exactly where. We have been discussing a mid-week paddle for a while in order to take advantage of the long summer days. So, despite the unknowns, we loaded the kayaks Wednesday morning. This was the first time we loaded the boats on a whim without specific plans. Sharon took off to her office, and I mine.

At lunch she ran into a paddling friend of ours who, when seeing the boats on top of the vehicle, said, “Oh, you and Keith must be going to meet Scot at Ratliff Ferry this afternoon.”

My wife’s response was simple enough, “Who?”

You see until Wednesday afternoon, we had never heard of, yet alone spoken with, Scot Thigpen. But because of divine providence, within two hours he, Sharon and I, along with six of Scot’s paddling partners, lovingly referred to by Scot as the “River Rats,” were on our way for a sunset cruise on the Pearl River. Had the circumstances stopped there it would have been fortuitous enough, but there was more for me to learn.

It turns out that Scot wrote a book called Chasing Solomon. It is a book about his faith, a book inspired by his grandmother’s exemplary life which steered him towards a path of redemption when he began re-examining his life in his late 30’s.

Any of that sound familiar? If you’ve read any of this website before now it should.

Scot joked that he and I may have been separated at birth. His story and my story very closely parallel. Our grandmother’s examples helped shape both of our lives in such a way that led to new perspectives for us. We both love the water and believe the outdoors is a gift from God. And, we both have been led by faith to rediscover the importance of the legacy we are called to carry forward.

Our group of paddlers launched from Ratliff Ferry and paddled the eight miles to Highway 43 on the north end of the Ross Barnett Reservoir. It was a beautiful trip. We saw alligators, plenty of birds, flowering lilies, and a sunset that only the pictures can hope to represent. We talked about our love of paddling, how the paddling bug bit each of us, and we traded adventure stories and paddling techniques. But, eight miles and three hours aren’t nearly enough time to catch up with someone you were destined to meet, let alone separated from at birth. So, we still have some catching up to do.

You can check out Scot’s passion at the Chasing Solomon website


Thursday, July 22, 2010

Trip Log: July 9-11, 2010--Kickoff Weekend, Old Fort Bayou and Davis Bayou, Ocean Springs

BY: B. Keith Plunkett--Lucy's Revenge

As coastal areas go, Mississippi’s coast is still a little known gem. Some see it as a diamond in the rough with opportunity for improved infrastructure for economic development. Others see an already polished jewel with environmental resources, recreational opportunities, and a rugged beauty and serenity. Much sound opinion believes man-made infrastructure is needed for the Mississippi coasts future economic development. For some of the business-first-and-last believers, the conviction overrides most every other concern.

Let me state clearly that I save my hugs for friends and family, not trees. I love the simple joys of nature, but I’m no Unabomber or neo-luddite. The point I attempt to make is that the only infrastructure needed to attract visitors to the Mississippi coast is already in place. In fact, it’s been in place for millions of years, and we should never lose sight of that.

When I decided to spend the next year of my life paddling some of the thousands of miles of Mississippi’s waterways, it was only natural for my mind to think of the Mississippi Gulf Coast. After all, there is plenty of water there. It may come as a surprise to people from outside our state that there is more to Mississippi’s coast than sandy white beaches and monstrous casinos. The diverse ecosystem of the barrier islands, back bays, rivers and marshes support an incredible array of wildlife and touring opportunity. For paddlers this is a seemingly endless menu.

In many ways, Mississippi’s gulf coast is a microcosm of the same opposing forces and troubling conundrums that exist for beautiful coastal areas everywhere. Due to the beauty of the environment, people want to be there. Good, right? But, more people lead to the need for additional man-made infrastructure that pressures, and sometimes destroys, the very reason for the initial attraction.

In the end, a fully understood compromise of these two opposing forces is as impossible to reach as the eternal dispute between night and day. But, everyone knows that both the sun and moon are required to make the tides move, and the world go round. There is a happy medium. As author and artist Alexandra Penney says, “The ultimate test of a relationship is to disagree but hold hands.”


Old Fort Bayou Blueway

Without attracting people to appreciate such beauty, conservation efforts are seriously diminished. So, it becomes necessary for environmentalists to look at ways to recruit visitors to aid in preservation efforts. Old Fort Bayou in Ocean Springs, Mississippi is just such an example. There, the Land Trust for the Mississippi Coastal Plain (LTMCP) has created the Old Fort Bayou Blueway. This trail for paddlers is a way to give conservation minded people a water level view of how conservation can integrate with outdoor recreation. LTMCP is working on this concept in other areas of coastal Mississippi, and I’ll highlight those efforts in the future.

Recently, thirty paddlers joined me on Old Fort Bayou. I happily led this excursion of first time paddlers and long time paddlers alike; from young to old. We witnessed the benefit of this beautiful resource from a personal and social perspective from our boats. The benefit of the personal experience came from the exercise, physically and mentally. Nothing pushes someone’s body to the limit quite like July heat in Mississippi. But at the end, the look of exhaustion on my fellow paddler’s faces was tempered by the great sense of accomplishment.

We all paddled to bring awareness to, and raise money for, Alzheimer’s research and support services. Many of the first-timers smiled at the idea of having completed the 10-mile trek, but to raise money and awareness for a good reason was cause for a smile on every face.

Our journey began at eight-o’clock on Saturday morning, July 10. We launched our boats heading east from mile marker number one. By mile marker two, the nervousness of some of our first time paddlers gave way to one of excitement as we spotted a pod of dolphins heading in the opposite direction towards the Bay of Biloxi. By miles four and five, the expressions were more along the lines of, “What have I gotten myself into?”

There were beautiful examples of coastal marsh flowers with butterflies all over them around markers seven and eight. At this point, the look of dread on some faces began to turn to one of determination. Upon crossing under the Interstate Ten Bridge, I settled into a turn in the bayou and one by one as tired boaters passed I informed them that our destination was right around the next bend. The reaction ranged from big smiles and sighs of relief to celebratory squeals and backslapping “attaboys”.

Paddlers landed boats and prepared to enjoy lunch. The adventure stories ensued, and all the range of emotions were in full display. It was obvious that my friends were hot, tired and hungry. But what was also obvious is that they had been nourished on the water in ways that only nature and its challenges provide.


Davis Bayou

Nothing tests new paddlers quite like open water. On day two of Lucy’s Revenge Kickoff Weekend, ten paddlers took on that challenge. This time, with the exception of me, my wife and youngest son, EVERY paddler was a newbie. Davis Bayou is protected from the Mississippi Sound by a single marsh to the south. But, choppy waters and surf from the west can cause some issues. Some of our boats didn’t quite have the length needed to deal with this very easily. But once across the bayou to the marsh a half-mile away, it became much easier for the paddlers with shorter boats to handle.

In no time at all the gulf breeze and the loosening of muscles had us all relaxed enough to carry on easy conversations. This was billed as a “fun paddle.” It could have just as easily been called the laid back paddle.

We traveled east alongside the grassy marsh until the bayou began closing in to a width of about a quarter mile before we crossed back to the north shore. Here, an uninhabited point loaded with ancient windswept live oaks, and endlessly circling gulls lulled me into forgetting how close civilization really is. Homes are a mere two-tenths of mile to the west. But, without being in view, it may as well be hundreds of miles. Paddling along the north shore, and further to the east the bayou narrows to fifty feet across. Here homes of all shapes and sizes show the challenge of coastal living. Decades of construction and destruction resulted in homes from different eras and styles standing in close proximity, from geo-domes to Spanish style haciendas to beach cottages.

We turned back and paddled the north shore to the mouth of the waterway entering Gulf Islands National Seashore. This is where we spotted the only dolphin pod for the day, but the second of the weekend. I allowed the paddlers to cross to East Beach and continue ahead, while I shot a short video. This trip was one that invited introspection and caused me to think this would be the best time to offer a recap of the weekend’s events.

After shooting a short video, I paddled hard and rode the wakes of a few fishing vessels to catch up with the other paddlers just before landing. We had put in another eight miles toward the cause.

Unlike the Old Fort Bayou trip this one offered the other side of the paddler’s coin: peace and tranquility. Such is paddling, and it sure as heck beats lying on the couch watching television.


Until next time…………………………..

Friday, July 16, 2010

Alzheimer’s Paddler To Be on Wolf River For 45-Mile Trek July 16-18

Flora, MS. July 16, 2010—Keith Plunkett, Mississippi paddler and organizer of Lucy’s Revenge, will be paddling his longest trek yet on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Plunkett, along with his wife Sharon, will launch south of the Wolf River Game Management Area outside of Poplarville today. The 45-mile trip will end at W. Wittman Road in Pass Christian just a mile upstream from St. Louis Bay on Sunday afternoon taking the kayaking couple through 4 coastal counties.

The effort will continue on Mississippi Gulf Coast Regions throughout July and August, before moving to the Eastern Region of the state in September.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

SUN HERALD REPORTING: BP HAS STOPPED OIL FLOWING INTO GULF

NEW ORLEANS -- BP says oil has stopped leaking into the Gulf for the first time since April.

BP has been slowly dialing down the flow as part of a test on a new cap. Engineers are now monitoring the pressure to see if the busted well holds.

Sun Herald

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

UMC to lead $26M Alzheimer's study

The University of Mississippi Medical Center is poised to become a world leader in Alzheimer's research.
UMC and four collaborating academic centers have received $26 million from the National Institutes of Health to conduct a study to determine risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and related forms of cognitive decline.

UMC will take the lead role in the study.

Also, UMC announced today the creation of a research center that will go along with the study.

"This puts the University of Mississippi Medical Center as one of the world leaders to deal with Alzheimer disease, dementia and memory loss," said Dr. James Keeton, UMC’s Dean of the School of Medicine.

The study will build on data collected from 16,000 individuals over 20 years to determine risk factors from heart disease and stroke.

Some things are already in place, but overall Alzheimer study is expected to kickoff May 2011.

Mostly private funds will be used to operate the new research center. A $9 million fund-raising campaign will go toward the effort.

Clarion Ledger

ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION LAUNCHES TRIALMATCH. A FIRST-OF-ITS-KIND CLINICAL TRIAL MATCHING SERVICE IN ALZHEIMER’S

Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatchTM Connects People with Alzheimer’s with Potentially Life-Altering Clinical Studies

July 12, 2010, Ridgeland, MS – The Alzheimer’s Association announced today the launch of Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatchTM, a confidential and free tool that provides comprehensive clinical trial information and an individualized trial matching service for people with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.

The Internet (www.alz.org/TrialMatch) and phone-based (800-272-3900) service debuted during the Alzheimer’s Association’s 2010 International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease (ICAD) in Honolulu, HI.

As many as 5.3 million Americans are living with the disease, and every 70 seconds someone in America develops Alzheimer’s disease, according to the Alzheimer’s Association’s 2010 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures.

“Alzheimer’s disease is reaching epidemic proportions with devastating impact on families, and the potential to wreck Medicare, Medicaid and the health care system,” said William Thies, PhD, chief medical and scientific officer at the Alzheimer’s Association. “The immediate need for advances in diagnosis, treatment and prevention has led to an unprecedented need for clinical study participants. This, combined with challenges specific to recruitment and retention of participants with Alzheimer’s, has created a particularly difficult situation for the field. That’s why the Alzheimer’s Association has launched Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch.”

Recruiting and retaining participants for clinical studies is one of the greatest obstacles to developing the next generation of Alzheimer’s treatments, according to the National Institute on Aging.

“We’re looking to physicians to play a leadership role in referring their patients to clinical trials in Alzheimer’s and dementia,” said Marilyn Albert, PhD, professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins and director of the Division of Cognitive Neuroscience. “As healthcare professionals, there is more we can do to help our patients post-diagnosis. By referring our current patients to trials, we offer access to potential cutting-edge treatments while unlocking the door to potentially more widely available treatments for people with Alzheimer’s in the future.”

No treatments are available to slow or stop the brain cell deterioration that occurs with Alzheimer’s. However, more than 100 clinical studies in Alzheimer’s and dementia are currently taking place and dozens more experimental compounds are moving from the laboratory to clinical testing.

“Families affected by Alzheimer’s need better diagnostic and treatment options now, and the lack of participants in clinical studies is a significant public health issue,” Dr. Thies said. “Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch is a powerful and user-friendly tool for people with Alzheimer’s, their healthcare professionals, caregivers, and healthy volunteers to learn about and take part in cutting-edge research going on right now. By volunteering for clinical studies, people with Alzheimer’s and their caregivers can play a more active role in their own treatment while also contributing to scientific discovery and benefiting future generations. It is public service in the best possible sense.”

Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch is a “dementia friendlier” service than others in this space, with Web and phone support, specially trained staff, and tools developed with input from people with Alzheimer’s.

The strength of this Web- and national 800 line-based service is that Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch contains a comprehensive, constantly updated database of institutional review board-approved Alzheimer’s, mild cognitive impairment and other dementia trials taking place across the U.S. Specialists at the Alzheimer’s Association’s national Contact Center – available 24-hours a day – assist in the process of matching individuals to clinical trials for which they are eligible based on study inclusion/exclusion criteria, diagnosis, treatment history and location. The technology and platform for Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch is provided by EmergingMed.

Alzheimer’s Association Contact Center specialists will not recommend any particular clinical trial but will describe all studies for which the person is eligible. They will answer questions about the trial process and connect individuals with trial sites based on their unique profile. Patients and caregivers will be encouraged to share their trial matches with their healthcare professionals to help decide whether a clinical trial is appropriate.

Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch can be accessed at www.alz.org/TrialMatch or by calling toll-free, (800) 272-3900.

The Alzheimer's Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer care, support and research, with a vision of a world without Alzheimer’s. The mission is to eliminate Alzheimer's disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health. For more information, visit www.alz.org.

It's just now becomes "official," but she's been UNofficially working for several months

Patty Dunn has been recognized for her role as the new executive director of Alzheimer's Mississippi. But despite what the news blurb would lead you to believe, she's been on the job for a while now. Patty, along with development director Ian Macdonald, has played a key role in helping us get Lucy's Revenge off the ground. Congratulations on being recognized, Patty . . . even if it is a little late.

Resident tapped to lead Alzheimer's group

Brandon resident Patty Dunn is the new executive director of Alzheimer's Mississippi.

Dunn officially took the post as the chapter opened its new Ridgeland office.

Patty has served as the chapter's state operations director for the past five years. She earned a bachelor's in accounting from Texas Christian University and a master's in business administration from Millsaps College.

Rankin County Ledger

Monday, July 12, 2010

Thanks to everyone for making Kickoff Weekend a huge success!

Lucy's Revenge Kickoff Weekend was July 10-11, and was a huge success. Fifty people were on hand for the Launch on Old Fort Bayou. Thirty Paddlers took on 10 miles Saturday to help bring attention to Alzheimer's Disease and to raise money for research and support services. Another 10 paddled 8 miles on Davis Bayou on Sunday.

Special thanks to Camellia Home Health and Hospice for being a Gold Level Sponsor, and to the Land Trust for the Mississippi Coastal Plain for their conservation work and providing such an excellent resource for paddlers on Old Fort Bayou. Also, a big thank you to Gulf Hills Resort and Hotel for providing such incredible hospitality, and The Shed BBQ Joint for helping us end the paddle with some excellent grub. Finally, thanks go to South Coast Paddling Company. Melissa Johnson was available to take my call anytime over the weekend, and Paul Nettles did an excellent job giving our first time paddlers a quick lesson and shuttled us anywhere we needed to be.

Only one yakker flipped their boat (my nephew, who was likely clowning around and did it on purpose). We saw dolphin on both days, and found there is much to explore on the coast, and much fun can be had despite the oil spill. We didn't see a drop of oil!

To my friends at the Alzheimer's Association, thank you for the support, we're off to an excellent start! Next up: 35 miles on the Wolf River July 16-18. Details will be available soon.

Miles traveled this weekend: 18
Miles traveled in July: 18
Miles Traveled this Region: 18
Total Miles Traveled: 18

Monday, July 5, 2010

A Little "Refocusing" Before I Get Started

In her book Rowing To Latitude, Jill Fredston wrote of her adventures rowing in some of the most beautiful, challenging and isolated places in the world. She writes that she has received comments from well-wishers about how nice it must be to get out away from it all so she could "think". Fredston's reply? A shrug.


People who don't put themselves in the position to experience it simply can't understand. Going "off-grid" is not about thinking about anything in particular. It's about responding. Responding to weather, to conditions, and yes, even thoughts. But, those thoughts about the office and whether you left the iron on disappear quickly. What is left is a life minus the baggage, minus the background noise. You're left with what matters.


It mattered little to me late Sunday afternoon whether I had returned all phone calls at the office Friday. I had made a snap decision to leave Cypress Creek Campgrounds and return to the waters of Black Creek, and my worries were a little more pressing. Forty Five minutes of paddling and the trees were beginning to shade out the afternoon sun. My wife was behind me in a kayak, and between us were my two sons in a canoe. We were all loaded with gear for the weekend that had to be unloaded and assembled. I couldn't find a sandbar to make camp, and I was thinking, "STUPID! You had a bird in the hand and you were looking for the one in the bush."

It was the uncertainty that had to be dealt with that mattered most at that moment. Little lessons are everywhere when you are forced by necessity to learn them. We found a beautiful and secluded sandbar just in time to make camp. Just as the uncertainty was immediate, so was the joy of having come through it in time to set up camp before dark. Nothing can be more scary or more rewarding than immediate feedback from a decision. You can't put it off, and you can't pretend it's not there.


Earlier in the day it mattered not one bit that my boss may have come into the office over the weekend and saw that I had left a huge mess behind my desk while working on case files. As I, my wife and my two sons explored a shaded and quiet creek that fed into Black Creek, and I watched the wonder on my boys faces from their canoe I was thinking, "nothing else matters." Later, as I watched them laughing and joking with one another while splashing from a rope swing I was thinking, "my family is a gift from God."

Whatever mental filing or head-work needed to organize a persons hustle and bustle life, it has been my experience that out on the water is not the place to do it. I simply can't. There's too much else to think about. Being on the water strips things down to the bare, meaningful essentials. There is plenty of time for thought, plenty of time for discussion, plenty of time for prayer and meditation. But, no time for false worries, or self imposed problems. It's time for refocusing away from such things.

I begin a journey on July 10, 2010. It is a journey that I believe was God-given. It was inspired by one of the most influential people in my life. It is to honor her memory, her Faith, and her example. The idea came to me while on the water, while nature had me, and was refocusing me.

A years worth of paddling as many Mississippi waterways as I can get my boat in will take a toll on the false worries and the self imposed problems. Even though I hope my family will be there as often as possible, it will no doubt lead to tensions with them, too. But, I know it is the right thing to do.

"I press on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of me" —Philippians 3:12

It was only fitting that I use the Independence Day Weekend to get my head right before starting the Alzheimer's project this week. With the press releases, the interviews, the marketing to sponsors, and the organizing, I needed to remember why I was doing it and what this is all about. Where exactly this will take me I don't know. But, I know where it's headed, and I know why.