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Wednesday, August 10th, 2005. Willie Stewart.

Mutilated Coast Guardsman pays the ultimate price at his battle station on the USS Menges (DE-320) in the Mediterranean by Arthur Greene.jpgBethesda.- Willie Stewart, a Maryland man of 43 years, spent the last 25 years in anger over losing his left arm is set to embark on a white-water kayaking adventure with a special prosthetic arm.
Stewart, 43, lost his arm up to the bicep in a roofing accident at Washington’s Watergate Hotel when he was 18, leading to years of depression and anger.
His life changed since a special kayaking arm was designed and built by orthotics and prosthetics clinical manager Michael Davidson at Loma Linda University Medical Center in California.
On Wednesday, Stewart will embark on his next pursuit: a 20-day kayaking trip through the Grand Canyon on the Colorado River after training with his new arm. Willie will battle the rapids and live out a dream.
Obviously, it’s needed to do things like steer and propel and make the kayak go, but it’s real critical should he flip over, upside-down. He needs two arms to be able to get back upright so he doesn’t drown, Davidson said.
Last month, Stewart showed a group of veterans and kayakers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington how the kayaking arm works. The next day, he was out on the Potomac River showing off his skills with Team River Runner, a local kayaking group that includes war veterans, amputees and world champion kayakers.
Bill Johnston, a veteran of the Vietnam War, got involved with Team River Runner as soon as he arrived at Walter Reed in June. Johnston, a double-leg amputee, says kayaking is good for balance, and the “skills are transferable” to other activities, such as horseback riding and basketball.
He is impressed with Stewart’s Grand Canyon trip and says the kayaking arm has inspired other upper-extremity amputees at Walter Reed to get involved with the sport.
Stewart knows he’s taking on a daunting challenge: The Colorado River can reach a staggering volume of 9,000 to 17,000 cubic feet per second. One cubic foot of water weighs nearly 63 pounds and contains almost eight gallons.
But he remains optimistic.

Posted on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 at 12:57AM by Registered Commenter[Ignacio Wenley Palacios] in | CommentsPost a Comment

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