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Boat Review: The Chinook TX by Seaward Kayaks

Photo Victoria Bowman
Boat Review: The Chinook TX by Seaward Kayaks

We didn’t know that our demo kayak would be sold out from under us while we were paddling it. We returned the Seaward Chinook five hours late from a multi-day trip in Clayoquot sound to learn that its frustrated buyer had long ago quit waiting for us to bring his boat back and had gone home.

Now, you can define kayak performance in various ways. for some, performance is being able to put a boat on an aggressive edge so it’ll spin on a jellyfish and feel as stable sliding sideways down a wave as it does on a trout pond. Others define high performance in arguably more practical terms. Like being able to throw the entire contents of a minivan into the hatches, plop first-timers in the cockpit and send them onto the ocean without a worry—or buy it off the rack and know that you’re sure to find it comfy and easy to paddle. That’s the Seaward Chinook TX: a beginner-friendly, outfitter-friendly, “ buy it on spec” friendly craft.

The Chinook started life as the now-discontinued tyee tX, a boat intended for outfitter fleets that turned out to be too tippy for beginners. The redesign emerged as the Chinook, a “stable, capable cruiser” with the exceptional primary stability that beginners and outfitters crave.

With the classic 17-foot by 24-inch dimensions of an all-purpose West Coast tourer, the Chinook stands apart for its depth and volume. The cockpit is roomy and the coaming and thigh braces are very high for big paddlers. The bottomless hatches turn this boat into any trip’s packhorse.

Seaward’s recyclable Zytx thermoformed ABs plastic makes for a hull that’s lightweight for its size and pleasing to the eye. Thermoform plastic is a soft material and we noticed some hull flex in the cockpit on the water, but with no noticeable effect on performance.

On-water performance is predictable and well-suited to the intended outfitter use. tracking is excellent. The Chinook takes effort to edge, let alone flip, when loaded. The rudder counteracts a slight tendency to weathercock in wind and adds manoeuvrability.

A lot of things conspired to make us late coming home from tofino, including bad weather, a sick paddler who needed to be towed, opposing tidal currents, and an ice cream break at the the country market with the goats on the roof in Coombs, British Columbia. The Chinook handled them all. Although we don’t recommend anyone buy a kayak while it’s still being paddled by someone else, we do recommend the Chinook for large beginner paddlers looking for comfort, rock-solid stability and expedition capacity in a thermoformed kayak.

Screen_Shot_2015-06-26_at_11.40.53_AM.pngWide bodied watercraft

The shallow-arch hull is deep and full for maximum carrying capacity and nearly flat-bottomed for rock solid initial stability.

A rudder in disguise

Seaward’s new and improved cockpit includes a height-adjustable seat, angle-adjustable rudder pedals and a rudder-deployment system that uses a slider, more like a skeg control than a rudder’s usual deck-top pull cord.

Foolproof hatches

Seaward excels at friendly features that seem so obvious you wonder why every manufacturer doesn’t copy them: like bow and stern directional arrows on the neoprene hatch covers.

Specs

  • Length: 17 ft (518 cm)
  • Width: 2 in (70 cm)
  • Depth: 1.5 in (37 cm)
  • Cockpit: 32.25 x 1.5 in (82 x 2 cm)
  • Total storage: 75 gal (285 L)
  • Weight: 5 lbs (25 kg)
  • Price: $2,500 CAD / $2,375 USD

Screen_Shot_2015-06-26_at_11.39.10_AM.pngThis article first appeared in the Fall 2009 issue of Adventure Kayak magazine. For more boat reviews, subscribe to Adventure Kayak’s print and digital editions here.

Composite Creations’ Tandem River Runner: Double Dog Review

Two people paddling a red canoe through whitewater.
Release the hounds. | Photo: Virginia Marshall

Composite Creations is a tenacious example of outdoor escapism fuelled by industrialism. The man behind the creations—which include specialized parts for Bombardier Learjet, Sikorsky and Airbus—is Andy Phillips. Phillips has worked his way through composite materials courses and dusty experiments in his dad’s garage to become a Canadian Aviation Maintenance Council and FAA-recognized composite technician. He has the friendly, unassuming air of a small town hardware store manager and the sandpaper-and-stain enthusiasm to match.

Between devising stronger floats for experimental aircraft and grinding fiberglass for custom hotrods, Phillips designs and builds canoes from the same advanced materials he uses for his aeronautical projects. His distinctive canoes—like the new Double Dog tandem—now make up 40 percent of Composite Creations’ business.

DOUBLE DOG SPECS
Price: $2,800 CDN
Material: Kevlar/Carbon/S-glass
Length: 12’6
Width: 28”
Depth: 15”
Weight: 54 lbs
Outfitting: Mike Yee saddles and straps
compositecreations.ca

“We’re the orange County Choppers of boat building,” he laughs.

Phillips’ first commercial foray into boat building was the Bull Dog in 2000. From its flat planing hull, double hard chines and integrated air tanks to its sharp, Lamborghini Countach lines and Kevlar/carbon/s-glass lay-up, the Bull Dog looked and felt more like an Italian sports car than a classic Canadian canoe. Named for the notoriously feisty canine, the twitchy Bull Dog was designed to be a playful wave hound (pun intended) that adept boaters could surf, flat spin and roll.

Phillips followed up with the Splash, a beginner-friendly, solo whitewater canoe designed and sized just for kids. The boat was a hit with adventurous youths happy to strike out on their own. But many kids (and parents), Phillips knew, were fearful of so much autonomy.

Enter the Double Dog. Phillips says he designed the tandem river runner short and responsive so an adult can paddle with a child and still overpower the boat when necessary: “Watching the kid/parent race at the Gull River, I saw parents physically struggling to maintain [control of] a longer boat.” The Double Dog, he continues, provides more maneuverability as well as comforting stability for newer paddlers.

Where the Splash offered independence, the Double Dog provides the reassurance of learning with “someone literally just over your shoulder.” Essentially a Bull Dog cut in half and stretched to fit two, the tandem Dog shares the abrupt angles, wide planing hull, super-duty composite shell and integrated air tanks of its pedigree.

We took the prototype Double Dog to a rocky, ledge-strewn rapid to test Phillips’ claims of durability (check) and suitability for two adult paddlers (check…sort of). Remember, the idea is for a parent and kid team; the boat performs best with a combined paddler weight of less than 300 pounds. Ideal in Class I-III rapids, where it is nimble enough to carve into micro eddies and catch smaller waves, the Double Dog feels similar to an Esquif Blast only faster.

The low gunwales dipped into the water during our test runs and the sharp bow pierced the waves, making for a very wet ride for the bow paddler. The stern paddler, meanwhile, stayed dry thanks to the central air tank that creates two entirely separate cockpits. Phillips says the tradeoff for a wetter ride is that the low gunwales let kids and those with shorter torsos reach the water.

The prototype is still a work in progress. For example, Phillips is working on water rails for the forward and aft air tanks to divert bow and stern wash out under the gunwales rather than into the paddlers’ laps. After several months of testing this summer he expects to finalize the mould and begin production.

With the Double Dog, Phillips has created a wholly distinctive canoe targeted to a unique—and, he believes, under serviced—market. Positive early experiences are vital to fostering a lifelong love of paddling, and the Double Dog allows kids to grow into whitewater even as they grow into their own boats.

This article originally appeared in Rapid‘s Fall 2009 issue. Subscribe to Paddling Magazine’s print and digital editions here, or browse the archives here.


Release the hounds. | Photo: Virginia Marshall

Betcha Didn’t Know About Loons

Photo: istockphoto.com/Stephen Muskie
Betcha Didn't Know About Loons

Unlike the hollow bones of most birds, much of a loon skeleton is solid. The added weight aids in diving but makes it difficult to get airborne. Loons must swim into the wind or run across the water to create enough lift for take-off.

The average airspeed velocity of a migrating loon is 120 kilometres per hour (much faster than an unladen swallow—African or European).

Loons can stay underwater for almost a minute and dive to depths of 80 metres.

Loons have four distinct calls: A laughing tremolo signals alarm or greeting; a haunting wail is used during night chorusing with a mate and social interactions. A one-note hoot aids in locating or checking on family members; and every male has a unique yodeling call that it uses to defend its territory. 

The loon has internal air sacs that help it float. When threatened, it can empty these sacs to sink its body like a submarine, leaving only the head visible as a periscope.

The loonie is rooted in classic Canadian scandal. In 1987, a voyageur canoe like that depicted on the old silver dollar was chosen to grace the new Canadian one-dollar coin. Somehow, the master dies were “lost” during transit from Ottawa to the Royal Canadian Mint in Winnipeg. To avoid possible counterfeiting, the familiar loon design was substituted at the last minute.

Although the loon’s maniacal laugh gave us the phrase “crazy as a loon,” the term “loony” has entirely separate origins. Since Roman times, a widely believed theory held that exposure to moonlight—especially that of a full moon—caused madness. Those unhinged by the moon’s influence were known as “lunatics” from luna, the Latin word for moon. Loony is simply a slang version. 

This article was originally published in the 2009 Summer/Fall issue of CanoerootsThis article first appeared in the Summer/Fall 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine.

 

Butt End: Losing my Shadow

Photo: Kevin Callan
Butt End: Losing my Shadow

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. 

A CONSTANT COMPANION

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.

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 on the loss of a pet was published in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine. For more great content, subscribe to Canoeroots’ print and digital editions here.

Betcha Didn’t Know About Inukshuk

Photo: iStockphoto.com/Shaun lowe
Betcha Didn't Know About Inukshuk
  • To pluralize the word inukshuk is a literary faux pas. Several of these stone figures are called inuksuit.
  • There are two forms of inuksuit. A figure with arms is called an inunnguaq and translates to “likeness of a person” in the Inuit language. A figure without arms is called an inukshuk, meaning “function of a person”.
  • An inunnguaq is pictured on the cover of Rush’s 1996 album Test for Echo. We’re not sure why.
  • Inuksuit are used across the Arctic from Alaska to Greenland for communication and navigation. In this featureless landscape, they are akin to tree blazes.
  • An inunnguaq’s arms may point in the direction of a navigable channel, a mountain pass or a migration route. An inukshuk can mark a food cache, a site with good fishing or a place where white children were bored.
  • Inuit tradition forbids the destruction of inuksuit in their homeland. This tradition does not hold true for the hundreds of imposters along the Trans-Canada Highway and wilderness park trails. Killarney Provincial Park issued a notice in 2007 urging visitors to “stop the invasion” of inuksuit.
  • In 1999, an inukshuk was chosen to grace the flag of Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut. The stone figure is also the 2010 Winter Olympics logo, in recognition of the inukshuk that watches over Vancouver’s English Bay.
  • The world’s largest inukshuk is located in Schomberg, ontario. Nicknamed Little Joe, it stands over 11 metres high and is formed of 11 granite slabs totalling 82,000 kilograms.
  • Inuksuit have come to symbolize cooperation and friendship. Each stone is chosen for how well it fits together with the other stones and the assembly is secured entirely through balance. 

This article on inukshuk was published in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine. For more great content, subscribe to Canoeroots’ print and digital editions here.

Skills: Get a Leg Up

Photo: Paul Villecourt/Helipress.com
Skills: Get a Leg Up

The thought of tossing a 16-foot canoe over your head and down onto the base of your neck can be intimidating—until you’ve been schooled in the finer technical points of the one-person canoe lift. As impressive as it looks, the weight of the canoe is easily managed by most canoeists. The secret is to position yourself properly, let your legs do the heavy lifting and be sure to keep good time when you rock and roll the canoe onto your shoulders. 

  • Find an area with no obstructions, stand at the centre of the canoe and grasp the closest gunwale with your hands about shoulder-width apart. 
  • Bend your knees and slide the canoe up your legs so it is resting on your thighs. 
  • Begin a gentle rocking motion to build momentum and establish your timing. When ready, use the leg closest to the bow to heave the canoe up so you can grab the far gunwale with your hand closest to the bow. You are now holding the canoe with your bow-side hand on the far gunwale and the stern-side hand on the near gunwale. The canoe’s weight is supported by your bow-side leg. 
  • Initiate another rocking motion using the strong muscles of your bow-side leg. Pick your moment and with a lift from your leg flip the canoe above your head so it follows an arc guided by your bow-side arm. 
  • Duck your head forward slightly as the gunwale and yoke finish the roll. Settle the yoke down on your shoulders. 
  • As you are swinging the canoe over your head you should be rotating your stance so you finish with your body facing the bow. 

With a quick hop to help lift the canoe off your head you can reverse these steps to unload the canoe. And though you will be tempted to let other paddlers continue in the belief that this is a strenuous manoeuvre, pass on the tip of using the bow-side leg to propel the canoe upward and you’ll find you soon have other people offering to share the portaging load.

Andrew Westwood is an open canoe instructor at the Madawaska Kanu Centre, a member of Team Esquif and the author of The Essential Guide to Canoeing, from which this article was excerpted. 

This article on canoe technique was published in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine. For more great content, subscribe to Canoeroots’ print and digital editions here.

Field Repair: Bring ’em Back Alive

Photo: Peter Mather
Field Repair: Bring 'em Back Alive

Nothing causes panic on a remote river trip like serious damage to your canoe. However, with a black bag of just five items and the skill of a drunken surgeon you can repair even large, gaping gashes in whitewater hulls.

Even though Royalex boats have a toughness approaching elephant hide, they can rip if a loaded or water-filled boat meets just the right knife-edged rock.

To patch a small tear you need heavy-duty duct tape, which means at least 13-mils-thick with a tensile strength of 45 pounds (look for Polyken by Covalence Adhesives). Normal duct tape is weak, barely adhesive and readily delaminates.

Clean the torn area inside the hull and flip the canoe over so you can slide your camp stove under the canoe below the tear. Apply the duct tape to the inside once the damaged area is clean, dry and very warm. Applying the tape to the outside of the hull or to the inside if the hull isn’t warm is just a waste of great tape.

If your ABS canoe wraps on a rock in fast current your hull will likely only become hideously creased, but it is possible that the hull will rip in an even more dramatic way.

WHAT YOU NEED IN YOUR TEAR KIT

Assuming you can drag the carcass off the rock, the repair requires a spool of 19-gauge stainless steel wire (from most hardware stores) and a four-inch nail. Kick out the hull to its normal shape the best you can. Heat the nail and melt holes on either side of the tear, then stitch the boat together with the wire. Cover the fine stitching with proper duct tape on the inside after first warming the hull. With this unbraided stainless wire you can fix any number of things: seats, broken hanger bolts, thwarts, paddle shafts. Don’t leave it at home.

For chemists, there is a way to actually plug the hole left by a tear or puncture. Black ABS plumbing pipe will initially dissolve in acetone before setting to become hardened plastic once again. Before the trip, reduce a section of pipe to shavings with a rasp and pack a small amount of acetone in a can or padded glass jar. If you need to plug a hole on the trip, mix acetone and ABS shavings until they reach the consistency of gravy. Fill deep gashes with a few consecutive layers, allowing the acetone to evaporate and the ABS to harden between coats.

This gunk is about the only material you can use on the outside of ABS boats. Make your job easier by first backing it up with a warm application of duct tape on the inside.

With this tear kit you can float your way out of situations that would otherwise end your trip. 

This article on backcountry canoe repair was published in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine. For more great content, subscribe to Canoeroots’ print and digital editions here.

Editorial: Rock of Ages

Photo: Jim Baird
Editorial: Rock of Ages

It would be incorrect to say, “I’d like to launch my canoe, but there are so many inukshuks lining the shore I fear for the safety of my shins.” As plausible as this sentence is, the correct plural of inukshuk is inuksuit.

Pluralizing inukshuk was once something you rarely had to do, but enough would-be adventurers now so enjoy piling rocks into human-like figures that the lonely inukshuk has become a plurality.

Killarney Provincial Park in ontario has reacted by declaring them granite non grata. The backlash really got going when an inukshuk was adopted by the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games. Anti-corporate wilderness travellers declared inuksuit to be unfashionable eyesores.

What’s the problem, you ask? The inuksuit were confusing hikers in Killarney, where trails are marked with stone cairns. other objections are ecological in nature (the rocks are habitat for critters that are entitled to a cold, wet place to live) and cultural (southern inuksuit represent a co-opting of Inuit culture).

To these I add the tragic tale of how they slowed my progress down Quebec’s Noire River.

On day two we began noticing somewhat organized piles of rubble peeking out from rocky points. My trip mate—let’s call him Destructor—decided they had no place on the river and vowed to eradicate them.

The inuksuit ballooned in number as we paddled and Destructor began criss-crossing the river on an increasing frequency. our pace slowed as he tried to squeeze blood from stones.

As Destructor showed, the real menace is that inuksuit might divide the paddling community into two groups: one that likes to create while they recreate and another that won’t abide signs of a human presence near portage landings. But recent events show paddlers can’t afford to be fragment- ed like feuding religious sects.

To see why, consider John and Jim Baird. John Baird is Canada’s minister responsible for transportation. He’s the man who has dismantled the Navigable Waters Protection Act (NWPA), a 126-year-old law that protected both waterways and each Canadian’s right to paddle them. It was a law that said rivers were important for six generations of Canadians, and now it doesn’t.

Last summer Jim Baird and his brother Ted paddled the Kuujjua River on Victoria Island in Canada’s high Arctic. There they saw real inuksuit and stone cairns, some 300 years old, that had been built not because of an excess of ego or spare time, but because they served important functions in a severe land.

At Minto Inlet they stopped at a squat, man-sized cairn that housed a message from a party that had passed that way 157 years ago while searching for the Franklin Expedition.

The Bairds left the cairn standing of course. Victoria Island isn’t the sort of place that tolerates those who act rashly on the land or dismiss the past.

The law John Baird knocked down was only 31 years younger than that stone cairn. By pointing to a temporary downturn in the business cycle as the reason the NWPA had to go, Baird demonstrated all the wisdom of a pile of rocks, but none of the steadiness.

Until the NWPA is reinstated, inuksuit may be the only things standing guard over the places we paddle. Perhaps we should embrace them as our own, and consider them new recruits in an army of resistance gathering where they are most needed. 

This article on inuksuit was published in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.This article first appeared in the Early Summer 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine. For more great content, subscribe to Canoeroots’ print and digital editions here.

Making Contact

Photo: Ron Hollingworth
Making Contact

One of the great joys of working at The Canadian Canoe Museum is opening the mystery packages that float in over the transom every so often. The most recent of these was a large padded envelope from St. Albert, Alberta, which contained a story that was as thought-provoking as it was sad.

Inside was a matted sepia photograph showing a crew of healthy young men from the Grand Trunk Boating Club in Montreal paddling a 30-foot war canoe called the Minne-wa-wa. It was dated July 2, 1892. There is a mix of characters in the boat— smiling lads in dark singlets showing off their muscles, a couple of aboriginal guys, probably from the Mohawk territory of kahnawake, and even a few older chaps in ties and dress shirts with the sleeves rolled up for regatta action against rival clubs on the mighty St. Lawrence River. There are club caps and fedoras. It’s a crew looking proud and happy after a big win.

The story took a turn when I opened a booklet that came with the photo. What looked like a prize ribbon fell out onto my desk. It said “Minne-wa-wa War Canoe,” but instead of being brightly coloured the rosette on the ribbon was black. And in the program the truth was told.

The crew had paddled from their home boathouse near what is now the base of Montreal’s Champlain Bridge to a regatta downriver at Isle Sainte-Hélène. They triumphed in the race, but on the way home they capsized and six of the crew of 17 drowned. The caption indicated that the photo had been taken about an hour before the accident.

That got me thinking about memory and what we as canoeists choose to remember and share with each other. Who knows what kind of footwear these paddlers had on, or how well suited their clothing was to swimming, or if they could swim at all? And they were certainly not wearing floatation devices (which, of course, was the order of the day for canoeists right up to the late 1960s).

So there was the Minne-wa-wa upset with multiple loss of life in 1892 in Montreal. But, with no apparent appreciation of this unnecessary loss of life, the same thing happened again in 1926 on Balsam Lake in Ontario—war canoe upset, multiple deaths. People then wondered how such a terrible thing could have happened. And then more or less the same thing happened in 1978, when four big canoes upset on Lake Temiskaming resulting in the deaths of 12 boys and a master on a high school canoe trip. 

It’s never been so easy for far-flung but like-minded canoephiles to communicate

True, the Temiskaming kids were wearing lifejackets and most succumbed to cold instead of drowning, but at the time people wrung their hands and asked, “How could this have happened?” As though it had never happened before.

All of which reminds me how important it is that people of like minds and common interests communicate, so that the stories—of triumph and of tragedy—can be passed on. Although the Grand Trunk Boating Club is no more, at least four of the original nine clubs that in 1900 formed The Canadian Canoe Assocation—and many more like them—are there for people to join. 

Recreational paddlers have provinvial organizations and national groups like Paddle Canada devoted to connecting padllers with other and with the stories of the sport. There are films, television networks and magazines like this one that connect people as well.

And, of course, in today’s electronic universe there are growing and sprawling virtual aggregations of paddlers. They travel the waterways of the web, such as the bulletin board at canoecountry.com or the Wilderness Canoe Association’s lively Canadian Canoe Routes forum, twittering with late-night chatter about everything from bollards to books, safety tips to winter trips and recipes to races. Never before has it been so easy for far-flung but like-minded canoephiles to cimmunicate with one another, and that represents a true strength and great opportunity for a different sport such as our own. 

And, when all else fails, there is mail—the venerable Canadian Postal Storage System— where a well-placed package from one paddler to another can pass on an instructive tale or two. Thank you Ron Hollingworth, of St. Albert, Alberta, for taking the time to write. 

This article on connecting paddlers was published in the Spring 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.

This article first appeared in the Spring 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine.

 

Editorial: Life After Death

Photo: Conor Mihell
Editorial: Life After Death

In this issue’s Tumblehome column, our resident sage James Raffan enthuses that the active chatter on Internet forums allows far-flung canoeists to connect with each other.

Of course, they don’t always agree. Last fall the Canadian Canoe Routes forum debated the removal of the bronze cross on Algonquin Park’s Petawawa River that commemorated Blair Fraser’s 1968 drowning.

The anonymous vandal apparently thought he was defending wilderness by taking a hack saw to a three-foot cross in a park that is 78 per cent tree farm.

True, not everyone who has slept in a tent needs to be immortalized in the wilderness after death, but Blair Fraser wasn’t just any paddler.

Fraser, Eric Morse, Sigurd Olson and a half-dozen others made up the latter-day Voyageurs, a group of prominent Canadians and Americans who, in the 1950s and ‘60s, retraced the fur trade routes of the real voyageurs.

This would be commonplace now, which is just the point. Back then it was a new idea to embark on gruelling wilderness canoe trips for recreation. They became media darlings. The Toronto Star even chartered a plane to intercept them on the Churchill River.

“The media’s interest could scarcely have been greater had the Archbishop of Canterbury been discovered making a northern canoe trip with the Pope,” remarked Morse in Freshwater Saga.

Though the Voyageurs were just out for a good time, the timing was such that they spearheaded a growing appreciation for the cultural history of a nation that had, at its core, a landscape explored, settled and still best-travelled by canoe.

Without the kick start Fraser’s Voyageurs gave to conservation, paddlers would have had a harder time convincing the rest of the country that wild waters are central to our history, our future, and worth preserving. This fight continues. The cross in the photo above isn’t Fraser’s cross, it’s for a paddler who drowned on Lake Superior’s White River. But it might soon also be commemorating the waterfall just downstream. It is the second of three hydro sites proposed for the White, the first site was finished last fall.

Fraser’s continuing relevance can also be read into Amy Stuart’s report on what Canada’s high urbanization and immigration rates mean for canoeing. Fewer and fewer Canadians are growing up with a family tradition of canoeing. Will canoeing be marginalized by changing demographics?

If the answer is no, it’s because of something Fraser identified 40 years ago. In The Search for Identity (a book of political history, not new-age introspection) he wrote of the Canada he knew. “This land is still empty. …its portages still well marked, its lakes and streams still clean. Most Canadians have never seen this wilderness and never will. It is too far away. But it is typical of something that is within the easy reach of every Canadian, urban or rustic—an empty area of forest or plain in which a man can still en- joy the illusion of solitude. This is the quality that makes Canada unique and gives root to Canadian patriotism.”

An idea—and a paddler—worth remembering. 

This editorial article was published in the Spring 2009 issue of Canoeroots magazine.

This article first appeared in the Spring 2009 issue of Canoeroots Magazine.