10 BWJ Winter 2009 (Read 9302 times)
RedOwl
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 178
Location: slumbs of hopkins
Joined: Dec 17th, 2006
Re: BWJ Winter 2009
Reply #10 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 9:39pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
nice pic  Jimbo! Smiley

//Windsailor
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Magicpaddler
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 1321
Location: Chicago Burbs
Joined: Jan 7th, 2004
Re: BWJ Winter 2009
Reply #11 - Jan 10th, 2010 at 12:03am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Here is the picks that I have.  Same as the ones posted in  Woodland Caribou Park/WCPP-june28.… thread.
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
solotripper
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 8103
Location: clarkston MI
Joined: Mar 14th, 2005
Re: BWJ Winter 2009
Reply #12 - Jan 11th, 2010 at 6:38pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Now that's what I'm talking about Grin
Some great pics too my thinking. Puts me in a great frame of mind.

I see camp chairs were a stable of your trip?
See a couple different styles. Maybe a report on the pro's and con's of each style would be helpful in the Gear Forum?

I can tell the Lean 3 is a keeper. Hard to beat a dry-fly type rig with an even bigger eve and mesh bug screen Wink

I hope the details of your Ojibwa elder talk makes the forum? I wonder if that group ever posted a trip report of their adventure?

I got a big laugh out of the line's: "Hey, even WE don't do things the 'old way'.  I think somebody's gonna die!"

Reminds me of the time my friend and I hiked the coastal trail in Pukasaw National Park Ontario. It was the first year it opened. One wet rainy day we made camp and my friend who fancied himself a fire starter, struggled to make a decent campfire. He insisted on using too big of pieces of kindling and ended up with a smoky, smoldering fire. Hearing sounds of approaching hikers, we were surprised to see a Native trail crew heading toward us, carrying chainsaws and a ton of camping gear?

Seems they had come by boat and were headed for their homemade bush campsite, complete with SAUNA a few hundred yards down from our camp spot.

My friend has a very romanticized image of Native peoples. He "thinks" that they ALL are in touch with their wilderness heritage.

Seeing the Native crew, he hails them and asks the crew leader too show him the Ojibwa of starting fires?

The leader looked at him weird for a minute, puts his pack down and come up with a big can of BBQ type fire starter!
He squirts a generous amount on fire, it take hold and after the huge fireball tames down, the fire is burning good enough to add bigger logs.

The crew start laughing like crazy men and head off to their camp.
The rest of the night my friend just couldn't get over their lack of "primitive" skills Grin

From that moment on, whenever a my friend is asked to build a campfire, he always tells people he's going too do it the Ojibwa!
While the unknowing wait for some primitive fire skill, he produces a can of fuel, shouts OJIBWA, and pours in on Wink

I guess the old skills are valuable too know in an emergency, but convenience trumps even cultural heritage on occasion!
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Jimbo
Moderator
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 4597
Location: Florida
Joined: Oct 6th, 2002
Re: BWJ Winter 2009
Reply #13 - Jan 12th, 2010 at 5:52pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
solotripper wrote on Jan 11th, 2010 at 6:38pm:
I hope the details of your Ojibwa elder talk makes the forum? I wonder if that group ever posted a trip report of their adventure?

I got a big laugh out of the line's: "Hey, even WE don't do things the 'old way'.  I think somebody's gonna die!"



Neal,

Your wish is my command!  Here is the "missing last page" from my account of our WCP trip... the page Stu cut out:
**********************************************************

Approaching the completion of our paddling circuit the following morning on Leano Lake, I was glad to have notched the location of our access point in my GPS.  The small opening was nearly swallowed by the bush; we might have paddled right on by.  

Ben and I sat up front beside the outfitter’s driver, an elderly Chippewa, who would haul us and our belongings the two hours’ distance to Red Lake, where our vehicles waited.  The driver asked polite questions, listened to our tales, and seemed to size us up before sharing a tale of his own.  Solemnly, he told us of a group of twenty-one teenagers from an inner-city program out of Ottawa who, earlier in the week, he and tribe elders had been asked to “educate” before they entered Woodland Caribou Park.  None of these young visitors, including their instructor, had ever been in the wilderness, paddled a canoe, used a compass, started a fire, or set up a tent.  Our driver shook his head in serious doubt, indicating, “these people, they were determined to do things ‘the old way’… yikes, even we don’t do things the old way!”  He recounted how tribal leaders did what they could with the group in the short time allotted, even offering to serve as guides.   As the point of their trip was to “experience the wilderness”, they preferred to go it alone.  The teenagers would forego fishing poles in favor of using snares to supplement their food supply… even though they carried no sharp knives.  Neither would they carry maps, preferring the discovery method of learning and getting about the park.  Furthermore, the highlight of their three weeks would be to shoot rapids along the Bloodvein River in their Kevlar canoes.

Fresh off of our own challenges in the bush, Ben exclaimed, in incredulity, “Wow!  So what do you think is going to happen to them?”

The old Chippewa slowly turned his head to us.  His eyes creased into a smile as he chuckled, “That bunch?  Ha!  I don’t know!  I think maybe they’re going to die!”

Whatever your approach, there is plenty of Canoe Country magic and a unique, pristine beauty ready for your own discovery in Woodland Caribou Park.  It is, indeed, a path less travelled.  With that in mind, we strongly endorse the use of maps….

**********************************************************

And now you know the 'rest of the story'.

I also see how my memory fades with time.  The Objiwe was really a Chippewa.  There were only 21 teenagers and they came from Ottawa, not Toronto.

Hmmm... guess it pays to keep my trip journal in front of me when I write this stuff.

OF COURSE, I, for one, would NEVER be one to exaggerate about mission-critical stuff like fish size, length, etc....


Jimbo   Cool
  
Back to top
IP Logged
 
solotripper
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 8103
Location: clarkston MI
Joined: Mar 14th, 2005
Re: BWJ Winter 2009
Reply #14 - Jan 12th, 2010 at 11:46pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Thanks Jim Grin
I'd still love too read THEIR trip report?
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 

 
  « The Put-In ‹ Board  ^Top