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Kawishiwi Triangle
My First Solo was the Kawishiwi Triangle in the late summer of 2003.
Starting out I got a permit from Farm Lake as the permits from Lake One were taken for the day. I departed from Kawishiwi Lodge, cut through the channel, past the Lake One Put In, and quickly made it to the Confusion Lake portage. I got lost on Confusion. I found the portages to the Kawishiwi River and paddled to an Isle Camp Site. I made camp early and did a lot of reflecting. It took a lot of soul searching for me to make the decision to do a Solo. My dog, Oliver was along, yet in my mind still a Solo.
As the water lapped on the rocks of my island camp, I did a lot of reflecting. I did a lot of thinking of my father that had passed two years earlier. For a moment I thought I felt his presence as some of us like to imagine after we lose some-one. I made it a point to talk with my dad and say all the things I wish I had said, or could say about life, how things were going, and so on.
Later on in the day I noticed Oliver left my side, had stopped his usual roaming about the camp and slightly beyond. He had decided it prudent to take refuge behind my gear pack. I heard an eagle and looked up. He was perched high on a pine across the river looking down on us. Hence; an understanding of why Oliver was in hiding came to me.
It was fair weather the next day as I paddled down to Little Gabbro, passed through the rocky channel, and set up camp and set up camp at the first site on Big Gabbro. It was there that I began to feel the reality of being alone in the woods and the solitude began to have its way with my soul. I realized the danger of myself making a possible mistake or a mishap and not making it back. A new sense or maybe older primitive sense of thinking came of duty to task of solo in the wilderness.
The moon was full that night and our only companion. She was beautiful, full of mystery, glowing, and slow dancing across the heavens. The clouds moved in and she hid, and reappeared again and again without warning until she was gone. The air chilled and I slept.
I imagined a bear in camp that night close to my tent, sniffing. Imagined or real, I'll never know.
The morning brought wind and more clouds. It was a day to appreciate nothing and all. It was day to be still, a day to fish from shore and catch nothing mattering none. Day four came with good weather as I made way through the next leg of the triangle. Remembrance of how hard it was for me to quit smoking a few years back as I spied a cigarette butt while portaging and looking down for sure footing. I took a picture of my dog in my canoe after he had jumped into my canoe as had become routine for him after I had finished the loading. It remains to this day one of my favorite pictures of Oliver in the canoe on the portage shore of Rice Lake.
A year or so latter DB borrowed that picture for the POD on April Fool’s day. At my first attendance of Copia I noticed a computer mouse pad for sale that had a picture of that exact spot, less my canoe and Oliver. I whispered "Rice Lake". The man selling the mouse pads said "Yes". I then learned then his name was Nibbi Mocks, Translation, Water Snake, if my recollection is correct. I believe Nibi is now retired from his day job and has became a proffesional photographer of the North Woods.
As we made it through Rice, Clear, etc, back into the river I made some of the portages pulling the canoe through rushing water instead of on packing carrying and packing the canoe and packs. Latter it began to rain and then pour. My dog and I were drenched, cold and hungry. It was time to make camp. Every site we found was taken as the day went from early afternoon to late.
I made a decision. I made camp high up on a hill on a slope as it was what it was. Far back enough to be hid from the river yet I could still see it myself. I felt it a necessity with the time of day, and the need to get warm, dry, fed and ready for the coming nightfall. It continued to rain into the night.
Braking camp in the morning the skies were clear. I caught a Northern while trolling, first fish of the trip. I didn't get lost on Confusion on the way back to Lake One. Arriving back at Kawishiwi Lodge I felt a new sense of accomplishment, humbleness and appreciation for the company of good people. I bunked again at the lodge as I had the night before the put in.
Morning came, time to go home. As always, it was heart wrenching to leave. Passing through Ely, Tower, etc... until next year.. I knew then, God willing, I'd Solo again.
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