Catalina trip is matter of heart
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Rick Devereux
Rod La Shelle, 68, doesn’t describe himself as particularly athletic,
even though he will attempt to row from Catalina Island to his Balboa
Island home today.
He says he likes to golf but doesn’t consider himself very good at
it. He also likes to play racquetball with his friends and
occasionally goes quail hunting. He said he used to go running, but
fatigue forced him to stop that activity because he was born with an
aortic valve deficiency, the same condition that took the life of
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Bobby Darrin at the age of 37.
The aortic valve controls blood flow from the heart’s left
ventricle to the aorta and the rest of the body. It opens when the
ventricle contracts and closes when the ventricle relaxes. In La
Shelle and Darrin’s cases, the valve is smaller than normal, meaning
it has to work harder to push the required amount of blood to the
heart. The overworked valve becomes thicker and the heart can not
keep up with the work load and eventually fails.
“I should be dead,” La Shelle said. “I’m very blessed to be born
when I was born.”
La Shelle has always taken good care of his body by watching what
he eats and taking daily vitamins.
“He never touches butter,” his wife Caroline said. “And he takes
over 100 supplements a day, even though he’s not afraid of a Bombay
Gin martini or a good cigar.”
La Shelle first started rowing when a friend gave him an old boat
about five years ago. He began by rowing in Crystal Cove, then around
Balboa Island, and finally a 12-mile trip to Laguna Beach and back.
Last November he was hunting with friends and got into a friendly
discussion of whether La Shelle could row the 27 miles from Catalina
to his home.
He believed he could.
They didn’t think he could make it.
One reason for the doubt is La Shelle’s heart; not his desire, but
the actual organ. He had open heart surgery to repair the faulty
valve two years ago. La Shelle’s active lifestyle and diet helped
reduce the symptoms associated with aortic valve deficiency, but he
noticed he was getting more fatigued and sometimes had to stop
because of chest pains.
“I just figured I was getting older,” La Shelle said. “I went to a
cardiologist and he said that I could run until I feel pain, but that
I ran the risk of dying unexpectedly. That’s when I went to Dr.
[Douglas] Zusman.”
Dr. Zusman, a cardiovascular surgeon at Hoag Hospital, said La
Shelle had a perfectly healthy heart except for the aortic valve and
replaced it with a bovine pericardial valve in October of 2002.
“A normal heart should pump about 70 [cubic centimeters] of blood
a minute, but before the operation mine was pumping 30 cc’s,” La
Shelle said. “I felt like a brand new man after the surgery.”
La Shelle eased off his running regimen and increased his rowing
training. But problems persisted while rowing.
“I rowed down to Laguna and on the way back I noticed there was a
bee on me,” he said. “I swatted it away and then noticed that there
was a swarm of bees all around me. I put my towel in the water and
started hitting them. There must have been at least 100 bees dead on the bottom of the boat. But I didn’t get stung once. It was amazing.
I’m sure if they would have attacked me I would be dead right now.”
La Shelle, who will turn 69 Aug. 8, also has to deal with
blisters, exposure to the sun and stress to his back while rowing.
His journey today from Avalon to Balboa, which should last from 5
a.m. to around 1 p.m., will also have him crossing the paths of
tankers leaving San Pedro, yet more obstacles to overcome.
“On Sundays the traffic only goes south out of San Pedro,” he
said. “There is a three-mile [section] where the tankers will be.
Those things will throw a 12-foot wake, so I don’t want to be near
that. It’s up to me to anticipate if it’s safe for me to cross or not
because the tankers are so big they wouldn’t be able to stop or
maneuver out of the way. I don’t care if it does slow me down. I’m
not in any race.”
La Shelle will be trailed by a friend in a motor boat in case he
needs assistance. If he cannot complete the trek, La Shelle said he
would try gain next year at the same time because the best water
conditions occur around this time of year.
La Shelle, a former captain in the army, is trying to raise
awareness for the Freedom Alliance Scholarship Fund, which provides
educational scholarships to the children of military personnel who
have died in combat. For more information, call 800-329-5454.
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