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I have a few comments, and I offer them with the most humble of intentions. (some of this will echo Penns sentiments, some will offer my own ideas).
As Pennpaddler has said, the BW Jamboree and the Jimboree are completely different entities. They should be treated as such and planned separately. What the JIMboree group experienced on Cairn is completely different than what we experienced in and around Sucker Lake, and the two should not be merged or discussed in the same light. Those of you who want to meet in the middle of the Q, away from the crowds, off the beaten path, etc., have fun and enjoy, but let’s not make the next BWJ easier to get to because only a small percentage made it in this time. (This is Stumpy’s call in the end, I suppose, but I don’t think Stumpy will take it easy on any of us next time around.)
Let’s face it, bushwacking is hard work. It’s not just following an unmaintained portage trail, or cutting your own path through a few hundred yards of bush. It’s up and over ridges full of moss covered boulder gardens, it’s walking crotch deep through bogs and marshes hoping your next step hits semi-terra-firma so you don’t sink up to your armpits, it’s cursing at the bugs and the trees and the bushes that are pulling on your arms and hands and the canoe, and the guy in front that keeps going up hill when you want to go down. I think perhaps some of you underestimated what the bushwack would really be like.
We’ve done the Yum Yum and the JAP to Seagull portages, if only because people said they were horrible and we should avoid them. We enjoy the challenge. We started adding bushwacks into our trips a few years ago because we liked the physical and mental challenge and the reward of finding a lake that others have not seen (for a while at least) and cutting our own trail to it. If you want tough trails, there are many in the Q that will feed your hunger. If you want to go bushwacking, then go for it and stomp through, but be prepared to take it in return. I’m not trying to brag or gloat over those who attempted but did not make it to BWJ; I’m just trying to point out that there is no path, it is not a tough portage trail, it is not a walk in the park, it is bushwacking. Bushwacking takes every bit of physical and mental strength (mental – “don’t kill Mike for taking us over yet another ridge and across that boulder garden, he’s doing the best he can up front”) you can muster, which gets harder and harder by the hour. I will offer you this thought: Perhaps those of you that did actually meet on Cairn at the Jimboree, found it easier to call it short on your attempt to make it to the JAMboree because you met on Cairn. The dynamics of your parties, and your plans, were changed drastically once you met on Cairn.
Take our group for example. We weathered the wet and windy weather on Kawnipi just as you did on the other side of the ridges. Tuesday night was a downer. Keeping the fire going, trying to put on dry clothes and keep them dry, and trying to keep a smile on your face when all you want to do is curl up in a dry sleeping bag and call it quits until the ‘morrow is tiring. But we prevailed and woke up early to a bright sunny day that allowed us to dry our gear, dropping maybe 8 lbs a piece in water weight and put smiles on our faces. Then we shoved off and headed into the journey.
Perhaps, because many of you who had spent months talking about the trip in the virtual world actually met up in the real world before heading in, it was easier to subconsciously say, “well, this is just too tough, yesterday’s weather wore me out and we’ve already met most of the people we wanted to meet, so let’s just turn around and head back.” One of the primary objectives of the jamboree had been met, and so the rest of your objectives become less significant. You don’t even have to say it out loud. Body language and other signs will be visible by the others in your group; and if one person in the room yawns, everyone else feels the urge to yawn...
Some side information for Stumpy - It took us about 5-6 hours to get there from Kawnipi, with many breaks on the trail and lunch on one of the lakes on the way in. And it took us slightly longer to get out via Williams. We’ve been bushwacking before, and this was no picnic of a trip. But it was one hell of a bushwack. My kudos to Stumpy for picking a real winner.
To all who attempted the bushwack or was unable to make the BWJ fit your schedule this year, I hope you beat us to the next one.
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