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York River Canoe Trip

Photo: Kevin Callan
Egan Chute.

This article originally appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

The York River’s initial surveyors called it the great-grandchild of 
the mighty St. Lawrence. They may have gotten the lineage—or at least flow direction—wrong but the route comes complete with beautiful cascades that plunge over unique geological formations as it twists its way along a deep and forested valley. But what’s most special about the York is that no one knows about it. Spotting the re-introduced elk herd living in the area is more likely than seeing another paddler on the York.

A perfect two-day novice outing is between Egan Chutes Provincial Park and Conroy Marsh. Egan Chutes is
 11 kilometres east of Bancroft along Highway 28. The take-out is a public launch at the west end of Combermere on Highway 62. The first quarter of
 the route includes three major drops. Each have possible campsites but further downstream, between the Great Bend and King’s Marsh, are fantastic sand bars for campsites. Pack along a rock guide. Rockhounds consider this area to be the Mineral Capital of Canada. The three chutes abound in nepheline, sodalite, biotite, zircon, and blue corundum.

 

Need-to-know info:

 

Canoe Rental and Shuttle

Silgrey Resort, www.silgrey.ca

Canoe Rental

Trips and Trails Adventure Outfitting, www.tripsntrails.ca

Topographic Maps

31 F/4, 31 F/5

Route Information

A Paddler’s Guide to Ontario’s Lost Canoe Routes, by Kevin Callan.  

—Kevin Callan

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Early Summer 2009. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Butt End: Camping with a Canine

Canine Canoeist | Photo: Kevin Callan
Canine Canoeist | Photo: Kevin Callan

An hour after my canoeing companion of 12 years had been euthanized, I put my feelings about her life on paper. I wrote up a list of Bailey’s faults and strengths, her crazier character traits and the stunts she pulled during a life that included more than 600 nights out on canoe trips.

I posted my thoughts on my blog that evening and by the end of the next day I had received more than 500 emails of condolences from people who either knew of Bailey or were trippers who also rejoiced in canine company.

I wouldn’t have guessed that so many people knew my dog (or read my blog, for that matter) but I suppose it makes sense, since she has appeared in a dozen books and countless magazine articles.

More surprising was the number of people who wrote about willingly subjecting themselves to the maddening appeal of canoeing with a dog.

Bringing Bailey along on trips was a challenge. I carried her specially designed pack full of kibble and chew toys more then she. She was the first to have breakfast, lunch and dinner. Her sun umbrella strapped to the gunwale and foam cushion glued to the belly of the canoe made portaging difficult. She insisted the bug shelter be put up for her immediately once we reached camp. I lifted her in or out of the canoe at every single put-in and take-out.

Bailey was chased by skunks, porcupines, a lynx, raccoons, hawks, snakes, swarms of hornets, one nasty chipmunk, and a couple of black bears (some of which followed her right back toward me). She loved rolling in crap. When she was in the canoe she whined to be lifted out and once out she whined to be put in. Every time I hooked into a fish the ever-helpful dog would try to retrieve it for me.

Canine Canoeist | Photo: Kevin Callan
Canine Canoeist | Photo: Kevin Callan

So, why did I, and all those other dog owners, put up with dog paddling? It wasn’t just because by attracting all the bugs she made a good shoofly-pie, or that she could sense a thunderstorm better than any polyester-clad weatherman or that if it weren’t for her ability to sniff out a trail I’d still be on one particularly confusing portage on the Steel River.

I loved tripping with Bailey because she never once left my side. She was a constant companion, no questions asked. My daughter, Kyla, even nicknamed her my shadow. How I miss my shadow. I doubt that canoe tripping will ever be the same without her.

Rest in peace my dear friend.

KEVIN CALLAN won’t comment on rumours that Bailey was named for his favourite drink.

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Early Summer 2009. 

Gibson River Getaway

Photo: Hap Wilson
Muskoka, minus the movie stars.

This article originally appeared in Canoeroots and Family Camping magazine.

Clean water, dark night skies, swimming under a 15-metre waterfall, ancient pine forests (we won’t mention rattlesnakes yet),
 the quiet Gibson River has it all. Muskoka might be known as a cottager’s playground of million-dollar summer homes, but the Gibson stubbornly and successfully retains a wilderness charm. The Gibson River corridor is partially protected for its rich Atlantic Coastal Plain flora, gneissic bedrock outcrops, superb vistas and yes, the threatened (but not threatening) Eastern Massasauga rattlesnake. The 45-kilometre Gibson river route is a novice mix of small river, creek and lake canoeing with a few short portages around shallow rapids and plenty of great campsites.

To put in, take Highway 169 north as far as Torrance. Drive eight kilometres south on Southwood Road to Nine-Mile
 Lake Marina (705-762-5303). Follow the Gibson through the southwestern outlet of Nine-Mile Lake and continue to Woodland and Brothersons lakes, then through ponds and stretches of river to Gibson Lake and Go Home Lake. Take out is generally the Go Home Lake Marina (on Go Home Lake Road, west off of Highway 69, 705-375-2211). You’ll need to do a one-hour vehicle shuttle and might be able to arrange it with either marina if you call ahead.

 

Need-to-know info:

 

Canoe Rental

Muskoka Paddle Shack (705) 687-9415

Algonquin Outfitters (705) 645-9262

Muskoka Outfitters (705) 646 0492

Topographic Maps

31 D/13

Route Information

Canoeing, Kayaking and Hiking Wild Muskoka, by Hap Wilson. 

—Hap Wilson

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Early Summer 2009. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Tumblehome: Alone Across the Atlantic

Courtesy of James Raffan
Pride of Peterborough

Sooner or later, everybody who owns a canoe scans the boat in the rosy light of evening and wonders what adventures it has been on and what future odysseys are in store. A trip upstream to the source of the local river? A trip across the country? In a nation of rivers like Canada, it’s easy to think that with the right boat, the proper gear, enough food and dollop of daring and ingenuity, epic journeys are possible for any- one willing to take a risk.

And then there’s John Smith of Peterborough.

It was the spring of 1934. Smith, 34, had spent the previous five years being a whaler and merchant mariner. But he had returned home to realize a dream that had been brewing in his fertile mind since his early adult years working for the Peterborough Canoe Company. The dream was simple. He would paddle a 16-foot cedar-canvas canoe, called “Pride of Peterborough,” from Peterborough, Ontario, to Peterborough, England—solo across the Atlantic.

Really. He would load the boat with 500 pounds of fresh water and hard tack, sew a canvas cover to keep waves at bay. All in, he would leave the George Street wharf on the Otonabee River in June and, in two to three months, would be relaying personal greetings to family and friends in Ireland. Then onward across the Irish Sea to Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, on the River Nene.

And that’s exactly what he set out to do. The reporter who broke the story in the Peterborough Examiner was initially skeptical. But Smith’s shy demeanour and earnest determination convinced him otherwise. “Yes sir, Smith is serious,” he wrote. “For the past eight months… he has been analyzing carefully the various problems involved. And right now he is busy seeking a canoe of the proper type and arranging for the food rations and equipment he will carry with him.”

Smith… well… didn’t make it. He’s buried in an unmarked grave near Stephenville, Newfoundland. He made his way safely to the tip of the Gaspé Peninsula and, from there, struck out into the open waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence to make the 435-kilometre crossing to Newfoundland.

His journal, which turned up as beach flotsam in a waterproofed tin can, detailed that partway over he stopped aboard a freighter whose captain gave him a hot meal, a mariner’s rubber safety suit and a map and sent him on his way again. Somewhere between there and Newfoundland, Smith came a cropper.

His body washed up in one place, his surf-bashed canoe in another, the tin can containing his journal in another; all pieces of Smith’s impossible dream.

It was on those beaches that Smith’s story would have faded into obscurity had it not been for two Peterborough artists who have kept the tale alive.

Singer and songwriter Glen Caradus premiered a splendid new ballad about John Smith at a concert at The Canadian Canoe Museum earlier this year. When asked, he allowed that he was inspired to write the song by an art installation created by Mount Pleasant, Ontario, artist JoEllen Brydon.

In the early 1990s, Brydon was pulling up flooring in her 19th-century farmhouse and came upon old newspapers that included a June, 1934 edition of the Peterborough Examiner. So captivated was she by Smith’s story that she created a whole art installation around the tale—18 paintings installed on a wall behind a 1930s-style diner counter where visitors can sit on padded chrome stools and read reprints of the Smith story as it appeared back in the day. This work is now in the Museum of Civilization in Ottawa.

Not only do we need John Smiths for inspiration, we also need artists like Caradus and Brydon to keep their stories alive. The stories they tell remind us that epic journeys of discovery, whatever the vehicle, whatever the goal, begin far closer to home than most of us ever imagine.

All it takes is a dream.

James Raffan is the executive director of the Canadian Canoe Museum.

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Summer/Fall 2009.

 

Rapid Media at Canoecopia

Ever wondered what Canoecopia in Madison, Wisconsin is all about? Here is Rapid Media’s take on it with interviews of Darren Bush, Jon Turk and other paddlers who make the journey each year.

Tumblehome: Godfather of Canoeing

Courtesy of James Raffan
Heritage canoe

Okay, it’s not War and Peace, or even an early edition of How to Shit in the Woods, but it’s noteworthy when a little-known volume called The Rob Roy on the Baltic by John MacGregor, first published in 1866, is being re-published in 2009.

MacGregor revolutionized waterborne travel in Europe by turning around to face forward in what was essentially a rowing scull. Instead of rowing with oars he opted to alternate dips with a double-bladed paddle. His dream was to tour the Baltic and also paddle through Europe passing out religious tracts (but that’s another story) on water- ways possibly too small for a conventional rowboat. About the decision to “canoe” in- stead of row across Europe, he wrote:

“It was clear no rowboat would serve on a voyage of this sort, for in the wildest parts of the best rivers the channel is too narrow for oars, or, if wide enough, it is often too shallow; and the tortuous passages…that constantly occur on a river winding among hills, make those very parts where the scenery is wildest and best to be quite unapproachable in such a boat, for it would be swamped by the sharp waves, or upset over the sunk- en rocks, which cannot be seen by a steersman [facing the stern].”

MacGregor named his 15-foot decked canoe for his famous ancestor Rob Roy and when he returned from his odyssey in 1865 he wrote the best-selling A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe. In it, he celebrated paddling just for the sake of paddling, which was then a novel idea. Building on the book’s success, he founded the Royal Canoe Club and the idea crossed the Atlantic.

And so began the sport of recreational canoeing, say some. Recreational canoeing in Canada inspired by a Brit? Maybe, in part. For more on the story we need to look into an exhibit at The Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterbrough, Ontario.

Its name is Harmony and it’s a lightweight decked canoe very similar to MacGregor’s. One might assume Harmony is derivative of Rob Roy, after all, the two were built only 10 kilometres from each other. But that gets turned upside down by research which suggests that Harmony was built before John MacGregor cooked up his design and paddled off to become famous.

In piecing the story together it seems that Dr. George Mellis Douglas purchased Harmony when passing through London and had the craft shipped home for his son Campbell. According to Douglas, writing in Forest and Stream in 1886:

“This canoe was built [before] Mr. MacGregor brought canoeing into notice by the publication of his well known cruise in the Rob Roy… On the eve of my departure for India in 1865, I had her sent out to Quebec… Last year I remembered my old canoe and had her sent to me at Lakefield, where she was renovated and again put in com- mission this spring. The Harmony is a paddling canoe, pur et simple [sic].” In the fullness of time, the son Campbell had a son—another George Mellis Douglas—who was one of the first Barren Land explorers to extensively photograph the Northwest Territories in the early 20th century. He lived out his days paddling Harmony, much in the spirit of MacGregor, on Lake Katchewanooka, not far from Harmony’s current home in the museum.

Was there a relationship between George Mellis Douglas, the elder, and John MacGregor? Did MacGregor model his boat after Harmony? Is Harmony the canoe that started it all? Questions. Lots of questions. A Thousand Miles in the Rob Roy Canoe (readable at www.ibiblio.org) or Rob Roy on the Baltic (re-released by Dixon-Price) are excellent places to start looking for answers

This article appeared in Canoeroots & Family Camping, Late Summer 2011.

 

Daily Photo: Going In

Photo: Tony Marsh
about to swim

“Hope you like this photo, it’s of my unplanned boat exit, on River Rothay, Lake District, UK.”— Paul Binks

This photo was taken by Tony Marsh. Want to see your photo here? Send to [email protected] with subject line Daily Photo

 

Tahquamenon River Trip

Photo: Aaron Peterson
By Aaron Peterson

This two-day itinerary is courtesy of the Tahquamenon Scenic Heritage Route. 

A Liquid Landscape: Paddling the Tahquamenon Country of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula from Aaron Peterson Photography on Vimeo.

 

Day 1: Paddle the Tahquamenon River

Launch at dawn: Begin a six-mile, three-hour float at the M-123 bridge over the Tahqaumenon River just north of Newberry. Get an early start for the best chance at seeing wildlife like deer, otters and even elusive moose. Follow a gentle current as the river zigs and zags, taking you through deep forests, open meadows and quiet backwaters. End your trip at McPhee’s Landing. Hungry? Travel about 25 miles north of the logging museum to the Upper Tahquamenon Falls in the Paradise for lunch at the Tahquamenon Falls Brewery and Pub. After lunch, spend the afternoon hiking the trails of the Tahquamenon Falls State Park. 

Day 2: Savor the Silence of the Pretty Lakes Quiet Area

Rise and shine: Pack your picnic and travel about an hour northwest from Newberry via M-123, County Road 407 and County Road 416. Arrive ar Oretty Lake. Paddle, portage, fish and swim in near silens for a few hours or an entire day. Explore more: Countinue north on County Road 407 and take in the sunset over Lake Superior at Muskallonge State Park. 

Get more information about this route at: www.explorem123.com/recreation/paddling/

Daily Photo: A Mean Time in Greenwich

Photo: Susan Engelman
Daily Photo: A Mean Time in Greenwich

Rhode Island Canoe/Kayak Association paddler and Adventure Kayak reader Susan Engleman says this February day in Greenwich Cove, Warwick, RI, was “gorgeous—temps in the 30s, but with the bright sun shining, it felt warm and just so invigorating to be on the water.” Engleman and her paddling partner Earl MacRae had to break through the ice to get to open water. “That just made it more fun!” she says.

 

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

 

 

Bay of Fundy Kayak Trip

Photo: Matt Boulton
Hopewell Rocks.

This kayak trip destination is excerpted from “The East Coast’s Best 5 Places to Paddle” in Adventure Kayak magazine. 

The Bay of Fundy

The Bay of Fundy is well known for having the most extreme tides in the world. With 
a maximum tidal range of 16 meters (53 feet) and current speeds of 30 knots, we were both impressed and somewhat nervous. For over a decade paddlers have been exploring many of the unique tidal features that form in the various river mouths. The most famous of these are the Reversing Falls located just minutes from downtown Saint John, New Brunswick, arguably one of the most dramatic bodies of tidal water in the world. We based a large part of our itinerary around these rapids and the Shubenacadie tidal bore to the north. The Reversing Falls threatened to spoil a few pairs of fresh undies, while the Shubenacadie proved to have some of the best longboat surfing we have ever found.

OUTFITTING: Committed 2 the Core, www.committed2thecore.com

 

This article originally appeared in Adventure Kayak, Early Summer 2009. Download our free iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch App or Android App or read it here.

Photo courtesy Flickr user mafue, licensed Creative Commons