The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Man avoids traffic jams for 15 years by rowing to work

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IN a bid to avoid traffic jams, a librarian from Bladensbur­g, Maryland, has come up with a really unique way of commuting to work – he’s been rowing his way to work in downtown Washington for the past 15 years.

71-year-old Gabriel Horchler says he looks forward to rowing his 21-foot Vespoli fiberglass racing shell to work in the morning just as much as he did when he first started in the year 1997. He got the idea when he was stuck on his motorcycle in the middle of heavy traffic, and he turned his eyes to the Anacostia River that runs parallel to the freeway. That’s when it hit him – why not use the river instead?

So he did just that, and now, 15 years later, his routine is pretty much set in stone. The river doesn’t exactly flow right outside his home, so he has to first take a 15-minute bike ride to reach his rowing shell at the Bladensbur­g Waterfront Park.

He then rows about five miles downriver. In the last leg of the journey, he gets off the boat and onto another bike before arriving at the Library of Congress in Washington. The entire trip takes him 90 minutes from start to finish.

He takes the metro back home from work, and the next day, the routine is reversed – he takes the metro to work and rows back home. "I think a lot of people can’t quite comprehend it,” he told Whitney Pipkin of Bay Journal. “But this is the ideal arrangemen­t, because it’s such a straight shot. It’s perfect.” Horchler’s unique commute has plenty of perks – fresh air, exercise, and most importantl­y, the absence of other commuters.

“It’s wonderful. It’s almost sedative,” he said, speaking to The Washington Post. “You get into sort of a rhythm, and it’s very, very soothing. I’m not the victim of Metro breakdowns or traffic jams. I’m… I’m the master of the river.”

"There’s a section between New York Avenue and Benning Road where you go by the Aquatic Gardens on your left and the Arboretum on your right,” he added.

“You would not believe that you’re in D.C. You don’t see any buildings, you don’t hear anything. It’s really, really, exceptiona­lly rustic looking.”

“It’s easy to zone out, with the rhythmic moving of the oars and the tranquil surroundin­gs,” he said, in a short YouTube video that documents his commute.

“The river is full of contrasts. Even the name Anacostia evokes contradict­ory feelings. I associate the name with the mystery and the lure of the waterway.”

Naturally, years of rowing have made Horchler extremely fit for his age. Although he looks the part of a librarian – small build, grey hair, and wire-rimmed glasses – he’s actually quite something else under his shirt.

“The guy is ripped; he’s freaking ripped,” said James Foster, president of the Anacostia Watershed Society. “The guy makes Arnold Schwarzene­gger look wimpy.”

But Horchler is modest: “I don’t feel that I’m superior to these people in the traffic jam,” he said. “But I definitely appreciate the quiet and the water and the sounds of the oars in the water. It changes every day. You see a different wildlife. The quality of the water, sometimes it’s filthy, sometimes it’s amazingly clean. And then, with the seasons, the vegetation changes. It’s wonderful.”

Fifteen years of rowing has given Horchler plenty of time to become an expert of sorts on the local wildlife.

 ??  ?? Gabriel rowing to work.
Gabriel rowing to work.
 ??  ?? Avoid traffic.
Avoid traffic.
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