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Just got back from my 2nd trip into WCPP, this time entering from the western side at Crystal Lake. Overall an excellent trip with many memorable highlights!
Trip dates: July 31-Aug10
Participants: myself, my usual paddle partner Tim, Kingfisher. Kingfisher was in a solo canoe and Tim and I drove a tandem.
Route: Wallace, Siderock, Crystal, Broken Arrow, Haggart, Bulging, Donald, Hammerhead, Rostoul, Gammon, Royd, Donald, Carroll, Haggart River, Broken Arrow, Crystal, Siderock, Wallace.
Tim and I took a daytrip down to Hansen from Rostoul on one layover day and just puttered around Carroll Lake on the other.
Kingfisher ranged a little more widely on his layover days, heading thru Hansen, Cyclops, Haven, Gulch, Jigsaw, Wrist, Hansen, and back to Rostoul on one daytrip and on the other layover day on Carroll Lake he headed upriver most of the way to Terry Lake before turning back.
Fire Ban Level: None. Fireban put in place about 10 days before the trip, then lifted a couple days before our trip despite an uncontrolled wildfire in the park and no appreciable rainfall (at least none that I saw as I monitored the weather prior to the trip). I was pleased to see the fireban lifted but definitely surprised under the conditions.
Water levels: Low and dropping quickly. This turned out to be a challenge on the return trip between Crystal and Siderock.
Bugs: A few deerflies tormented Tim and Kingfisher but seemed relatively uninterested in me for some reason. Mosquitoes popped out at dusk and ranged from a minor annoyance to quite thick depending on the campsite. Almost no canoe flies!
Campsites: Very primitive, as expected, but clean. As we saw only two other canoe parties the entire time in the park, we could afford to be picky about where we camped.
Wildlife: Bear cubs, Moose, Beaver, Otters, Bald Eagles, Turkey Vultures, Loons, Owls, and various other critters.
Other cool stuff: Pictographs (2 sets on Hansen Lake), spectacular display of Northern Lights, a personal visit to Kingfisher by Claire via helicopter, canoeing thru a thick haze of smoke from the wildfire just to the northwest of us.
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