10 Lac la Croix (Read 14908 times)
pine_knot
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #10 - Jan 18th, 2011 at 7:48pm
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My son and I did Beaverhouse to Poohbah via Jean and returned the same way in late-June a couple years back.  Took 2.5 days to get there and 2.5 days to get back.  Could be done in 2 days each way with favorable or no wind. 

I could imagine the Maligne being very fast in May.  Even late June we had one very difficult swift where we almost didn;t make it upstream.  After 2 tries, qwe made it.  Our fallback was to float down to the LLC village and pay for a drive up to Beaverhouse. 

We also fought a westerly gale all the way across Quetico Lake and almost didn't make it through Beaverhouse back to the car.

Great memories though...and the 3 days of fishing on Poohbah were simply amazing...big fish all over.

Another option is get an RABC, BWCA and Quetico entry permits and paddle from EP14 or 16 to the LLC ranger station....I've toyed with this, but have yet to actually do it.
  
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nctry_Ben
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #11 - Jan 18th, 2011 at 7:51pm
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Old Salt wrote on Jan 18th, 2011 at 4:47pm:
To legally access PoohBah from anywhere in US, you must clear Canadian customs, and have a valid entry permit. If you use a tow from Crane Lake, they will stop at Sandpoint L (customs), and Native villiage (permit & fishing liscence).

To paddle up from Moose River bypasses both, and if caught, you could forfeit your whole outfit. I would not take that risk. It would cost a whole lot more than the tow.


At the time I suggested Moose River I didn't know about PoohBah... He originally asked about LLC.
And am I missing something? What happened to being able to buy fishing licenses and permits next door to customs on Sandpoint? Did that place close?
  
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Old Salt
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #12 - Jan 18th, 2011 at 9:09pm
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The RABC would take the place of a customs stop. My bad.
  
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wally
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #13 - Jan 19th, 2011 at 3:57am
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RABC is cake, and all of the Crane lake operators will also stop at Customs on Sandpoint for ya.  And Sandpoint customs is quick to boot.  Heck, most operators will even run you 1 bay N to Sandpoint lodge for liscenses and (me) Crownland permits as well.
  
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intrepid_camper
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #14 - Jan 19th, 2011 at 4:26am
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pine_knot wrote on Jan 18th, 2011 at 7:48pm:
Another option is get an RABC, BWCA and Quetico entry permits and paddle from EP14 or 16 to the LLC ranger station....I've toyed with this, but have yet to actually do it.

I have done this several times.  It works well but takes 2-3 days to paddle to the LLC Ranger Station from Crane Lake or the Echo Trail entries.
  
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bigpike
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #15 - Jan 20th, 2011 at 3:49am
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So it seems there are no easy ways into Pooh Bah, is there any other access options we have other than Crane Lake or Lac la Croix? We do have 10 days to paddle total. You guys have me a little spooked on the current flow of the Maligne. It certainly is an intriguing lake to get to.... Thank you guys again for the input, I appreciate it!!
  
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mastertangler
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #16 - Jan 20th, 2011 at 11:14am
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RE: current on the Maligne in spring

Didn't Stu (Boundary waters Journal (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)) stop trying to run his guide service up through the Maligne in spring because of heavy current.

It is probably 50/50. Somebody will know conditions. Then have a plan B if it seems a little dicey. Should be a fair amount of daylight that time of year if you want to put in big days to get there.

  
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solotripper
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #17 - Jan 20th, 2011 at 4:26pm
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bigpike wrote on Jan 20th, 2011 at 3:49am:
So it seems there are no easy ways into Pooh Bah, is there any other access options we have other than Crane Lake or Lac la Croix? We do have 10 days to paddle total. You guys have me a little spooked on the current flow of the Maligne. It certainly is an intriguing lake to get to.... Thank you guys again for the input, I appreciate it!!


You never mentioned how many are in your crew? Having more than one vehicle would expand your options.
I mentioned going in thru Beaverhouse/West bay/Badwater/Bentpine Creek/Lower Sturgeon. Traveling solo, with 2x on portages, I made it from Beaverhouse to Lower Sturgeon in one day, stating at 7 am to about 5 pm. Even if you stopped 3/4 of the way, your looking at no more than a day and a half tops.
If you had a vehicle stored a LLC, you could arrange for a pick-up at Bell Island. From Lower Sturgeon, a day should put you on Poohbah. A day from Poohbah to Bell Island or less.
No easy way there other than fly-in.
I'd rather paddle small lakes/short portages, than fight a heavy current going up the Maligne. Going from Badwater to Jean and then down is dicey when the wind is out of the E/NE, which is the usual spring pattern.

You can run the North shoreline of Beaverhouse even in windy conditions. Once on Quetico lk, you take the short sand drag over on the peninsula separating the lake from W. Bay and your at the Badwater portage. Long but mostly flat and not a bad as it's been made out to be.
I've done it solo 2x, took about 1 1/2 hr double portaging. A few mud holes and the ever present ominous spirits Shocked, but not a big deal, just keep you head down and give no mind to the the feeling you being watched Huh
Nice campsites on the Lower Sturgeon and good fishing.
Depending on your level of paddling skill, fighting up the Maligne in normal spring conditions can be nerve racking. Putting rusty paddling skills together with treacherous water is a recipe for bad things to happen. Taking a longer but easier Northern route gives you a chance to get you Mojo working and if you do take a spill, you in far more forgiving water Wink
  
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bigpike
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #18 - Jan 20th, 2011 at 9:12pm
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solotripper wrote on Jan 20th, 2011 at 4:26pm:
bigpike wrote on Jan 20th, 2011 at 3:49am:
So it seems there are no easy ways into Pooh Bah, is there any other access options we have other than Crane Lake or Lac la Croix? We do have 10 days to paddle total. You guys have me a little spooked on the current flow of the Maligne. It certainly is an intriguing lake to get to.... Thank you guys again for the input, I appreciate it!!


You never mentioned how many are in your crew? Having more than one vehicle would expand your options.
I mentioned going in thru Beaverhouse/West bay/Badwater/Bentpine Creek/Lower Sturgeon. Traveling solo, with 2x on portages, I made it from Beaverhouse to Lower Sturgeon in one day, stating at 7 am to about 5 pm. Even if you stopped 3/4 of the way, your looking at no more than a day and a half tops.
If you had a vehicle stored a LLC, you could arrange for a pick-up at Bell Island. From Lower Sturgeon, a day should put you on Poohbah. A day from Poohbah to Bell Island or less.
No easy way there other than fly-in.
I'd rather paddle small lakes/short portages, than fight a heavy current going up the Maligne. Going from Badwater to Jean and then down is dicey when the wind is out of the E/NE, which is the usual spring pattern.

You can run the North shoreline of Beaverhouse even in windy conditions. Once on Quetico lk, you take the short sand drag over on the peninsula separating the lake from W. Bay and your at the Badwater portage. Long but mostly flat and not a bad as it's been made out to be.
I've done it solo 2x, took about 1 1/2 hr double portaging. A few mud holes and the ever present ominous spirits Shocked, but not a big deal, just keep you head down and give no mind to the the feeling you being watched Huh
Nice campsites on the Lower Sturgeon and good fishing.
Depending on your level of paddling skill, fighting up the Maligne in normal spring conditions can be nerve racking. Putting rusty paddling skills together with treacherous water is a recipe for bad things to happen. Taking a longer but easier Northern route gives you a chance to get you Mojo working and if you do take a spill, you in far more forgiving water Wink


Thank you Mr Tripper, I like your idea the best, I do have an outfitter friend who could pick us up / drop us off at the put in and we would get to see a whole nother sectcion of Quetico we have never seen, it is just me and 1 other going.
  
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Old Salt
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Re: Lac la Croix
Reply #19 - Jan 20th, 2011 at 11:09pm
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I think Poohbah is on the Native's fly-in list. That's the easiest, quickest way in or out.
  
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