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Business of the Year

Photo: Kaydi Pyette
Photo: Kaydi Pyette

 

Nunavut Tourism has awarded Black Feather Nunavut Tourism Business of the Year 2013 award. The award recognizes outstanding service, industry leadership, and partnership with local communities in Nunavut.

“I am thrilled and honoured to receive this acknowledgement,” says Wendy Grater, guide, director and owner of Black Feather. “We have really enjoyed working with Northern communities, and introducing our guests to the wonders of Nunavut and the Arctic.”

Black Feather has recently partnered with Polar Sea Adventures, becoming Canada’s largest Arctic adventure travel company. Five new expedition packages are being planned in Nunavut for the spring and summer of 2014, including a ski tour through frozen fjords, hiking through Sirmilik National Park and sea kayaking along the ice floe edge off the north coast of Baffin Island.

Black Feather has also received accolades from a number of tourism destination regions, and has also earned nominations as Tourism Operator of the year in the North West Territories.

“It is a real testament to our amazing guiding team,” adds Grater. “They bring a wealth of knowledge and experience, and ensure everyone gets the most from every Northern adventure”

For more information about Black Feather, visit www.blackfeather.com.

 

Trips: Weekend Escapes

Photo: Courtesy Northern Forest Canoe Trail
Trips: Weekend Escapes

From mountainous, forest lakes to meandering, pastoral rivers to the friendly, historic villages that dot these landscapes—the Northern Forest Canoe Trail has it all.

Since its inception in 2000, it has remained the longest inland water trail in North America, linking the waterways of New York, Vermont, Quebec, New Hampshire and Maine, inviting paddlers from all walks of life.

“A 67-year-old retired truck driver paddled the entire trail last summer, a family from Northern Vermont is paddling the trail in sections and many people use it for day trips to week-long excursions, or for angling and birding,” says Kate Williams, the trail’s Executive Director. Williams, who has paddled a large portion of the water trail’s 1,190-kilometre length—much of it with her two young kids, shares her favourite weekend excursions.

Long Lake to Axton Landing • New York

Panoramic vistas of faraway summits and a stunning picnic lunch view of 80-foot Racket Falls highlight the wildest section of canoe trail in New York. “This route provides a nice combination of lake and river paddling,” says Williams. Plenty of campsites and lean-tos are available. Bring your rod to enjoy excellent bass, pike and walleye fishing.

Northeast Kingdom • Vermont

“For families with diverse interests, the Northeast Kingdom paddle and pedal itinerary is ideal,” says Williams. Spend a full day meandering through a bucolic landscape on the Clide River and canoe through a rare wetland complex. The following day, head to the village of East Burke to mountain bike or hike part of the 110-mile trail complex at Kingdom Trails—recently voted North America’s best trail network by BIKE magazine readers.

Lake Memphremagog • Quebec/Vermont

Finger-shaped Lake Memphremagog extends 43 kilometres along the Quebec/Vermont border. Nestled among steep mountains, Williams says the glacial lake offers “excellent birding opportunities in the South Bay

Wildlife Management Area.” Local lore has it that the deep lake also harbours a 30-foot sea serpent named Memphre. Over 200 alleged sightings exist, dating from the 1800s to most recently in 2003.

Connecticut River • Vermont/New Hampshire

Enjoy a leisure float down the agricultural valley of the Connecticut River—the longest in New England. “It’s definitely one of my favourites,” says Williams. “It’s a big, wide river with no portaging, excellent camping and a rich history.” Paddle under an antique railroad trestle, watch for osprey and eagles and swim at one of the many sand beaches from Bloomfield to Groveton.

Flagstaff Lake • Maine

“Flagstaff Lake provides a neat blend of recreation and history,” says Williams. Villages that were submersed by the Long Falls Dam in 1949 have been mapped out by the Northern Forest Canoe Trail. “With our GPS coordinates or brochure,” she adds, “you can paddle over and know the exact location of the old school house and many farms.” Overnight options range from huts to luxurious bed and breakfasts. 

Learn more about the Northern Forest Canoe Trail here: http://www.northernforestcanoetrail.org

 This article first appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping, Summer/Fall 2010 issue.  For more expert tips, download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Daily Photo: OC Drop

Photo: Pascal Girard
OC drop

 

Pascal Girard submitted this shot, taken on The Malbaie River, to Rapid’s Daily Photo.

Want to see your photo here? Send your whitewater images to [email protected]

 

Daily Photo: Surf Sesh

Photo: Flickr user s.schmitz
kayak surfing

This photo was taken by Flickr user s.schmitz and lisenced through Creative Commons. Want to see your photo here? Send your whitewater shots to [email protected].

 

Crazy Whale Encounter

In this amazing footage from the Discovery network show, North America, two sea kayakers in Alaska are nearly mistaken for a delicious krill dinner by a pod of feeding humpback whales.

Learn more about humpback whales and their feeding habits at the NOAA’s National Marine Mammal Laboratory website.

 

Ikkatsu Project Returns from Alaska

Photo: Ikkatsu Project
Ikkatsu Project Returns from Alaska

Washington paddlers Steve Weileman and Ken Campbell started the Ikkatsu Project in January 2012 with the simple idea of taking a sea kayak trip along the roadless coast of the Olympic Peninsula, looking for debris from the tsunami that struck Japan in March 2011.

Months later, the film Weileman and Campbell shot on the trip almost as an afterthought, blossomed into a full-fledged, award-winning documentary (watch the full film below). Moreover, the pair began working with scientists to research marine debris in general, conducting beach surveys that could be used to coordinate future clean-up efforts. As Cambell explains, “The project progressed from being a one-time vacation idea to a full-time vocation.”

In 2013, the Ikkatsu team began working with Oikonos, a non-profit that researches plastic ingestion by sea birds. They also started doing presentations in schools to help students understand the connections between ocean currents, marine debris and the environment. In July, Weileman and Campbell headed to Alaska to conduct surveys on the remote beaches of Cook Inlet in south-central Alaska. Once again, the pair filmed their journey and are currently putting the finishing touches on a new documentary, slated for release in spring 2014, called Ikkatsu: The Secrets of Augustine.

According to Cambell, the volcanic island of Augustine has never been visited by modern day paddlers. But even on these remote beaches, marine debris was everywhere. “It’s a sobering thought, that every piece of plastic that has ever been made is still in existence,” says Cambell. “It’s even more sobering to see so much of it in such a wild and primal place.”

 

 

Kayaking the Great Bear

Photo: Paul Manning-Hunter
Kayaking the Great Bear

For his very first sea kayaking trip, Paul Manning-Hunter wanted more than just a personal adventure. He wanted his trip to mattter. Nine days after entering British Columbia’s sprawling Great Bear Rainforest, he returned with the makings of a film that shared his concern and wonder for this threatened wilderness.

 

My kayak was full of water. We were over a mile from shore when I made this unsettling observation. Already overloaded with two hundred pounds of food, gear and camera equipment, I hadn’t noticed my shrinking freeboard until now. Through my dry suit, I felt something float into my thigh. With the waves continuously crashing over my deck, I called to Spencer and Daniel to raft up next to me. Pumping furiously, we bailed the frigid North Pacific only slightly faster than it poured in.

Reaching one of Douglas Channel’s scarce beaches, I carefully pulled my boat up on the slippery rocks to drain the flooded front hatch and cockpit, noticing the foam bulkhead between the two was not properly sealed. Still, I was thankful the worst was over. Then the bag containing our satellite phone and tide charts washed out, full of seawater.

With our primary means of communication destroyed (we carried an emergency transmitter for back-up) and our charts ruined, we had a difficult decision to make: return to the small Haisla community of Kitamaat Village where we had begun our trip just hours before, or continue as planned eight days into the remote coastal wilderness of the Great Bear Rainforest….

 

 

Check out the Summer/Fall 2013 edition of Adventure Kayak to continue reading their inspiring story. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here for free.

 

GreatBearSpread.jpg

Click HERE to watch the film, Kayaking the Great Bear: A Search for Wilderness

Daily Photo: She’s a Butte-y

Daily Photo: She's a Butte-y

Adventure Kayak reader Kay shared this image of man’s best friend enjoying a paddle on Butte Lake in Lassen National Park, California. Stay tuned for more doggone great Daily Photos.
 

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

Daily Photo: Three’s a Crowd

Photo: Rick Boisdeau
Daily Photo: Three's a Crowd

Adventure Kayak reader Rick Boisdeau snapped this shot while enjoying a paddle in Marina Del Rey, California, with pups Lincoln and Logan. Stay tuned for more doggone great Daily Photos.
 

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.

 

 

Daily Photo: Pampered Pooch

Photo: Claire Zimmerman
Daily Photo: Pampered Pooch

Adventure Kayak reader Claire Zimmerman sent us this pet portrait from a recent kayaking adventure with her hound. Stay tuned for mor in our series of doggone great Daily Photos.
 

Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo.