
The Gordon Dalton Story: Maps, Memories, and the Currents that Shape Us
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From the rivers of Virginia to backcountry creeks across the country, Gordon Dalton’s life is defined by paddling, wilderness discovery, and thoughtful storytelling.
About Gordon DaltonGordon is a Virginia-based paddler whose passion for rivers began with a canoe in 1989 and his first kayak in 1992. Since then, he’s explored countless creeks across the Blue Ridge and American West, working as a video kayaker in the late 1990s on rivers like the New and Gauley. Along the way, he helped pioneer and document many of Virginia’s now-classic creek runs, blending adventure with preservation and education.
He’s the longtime organizer of the Goshen Pass downriver race on the Maury River—started in 2007 as a grassroots competition and grown into a beloved spring gathering, organized by Gordon and built on low-ego, shared paddling culture.
Gordon balances his passion for rivers with a day job as a speech therapist, which allows him summers exploring western snowmelt creeks. When he’s not paddling, he shares his discoveries through photography, guidebook contributions, and storytelling—always wrestling with what to share and what to leave undiscovered.
Check out Gordon's instagram: @gdaltonphoto
What You’ll Hear in This Episode- Gordon’s early inspirations—what made him fall in love with paddling.
- Behind the scenes of working as a video kayaker on iconic rivers.
- How he discovered and documented Virginia creeks and brought them into the paddling community.
- The origin story of Goshen Pass Race, its grassroots ethos, and why it endures as a place-based tradition.
- Gordon’s ongoing tension between documenting adventure and protecting wild runs from overexposure.
- Reflections on the importance of working together to protect access
Share the Story
If Gordon’s journey—rooted in exploration, self-discovery, and community building—resonated with you, please subscribe and leave a review wherever you listen. Help amplify a narrative of paddling stewardship, slow river exploration, and the richness of stories born from following waters.
Stay tuned for episode 4: more voices, more rivers, and more lessons from Following Waters!
Mentioned in this episode:
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