10 Latest late-in-year trip? (Read 4569 times)
solotripper
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 8107
Location: clarkston MI
Joined: Mar 14th, 2005
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #10 - Oct 25th, 2016 at 9:54pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Quote:
I did so by using the same tactics I use to find alleged portages.  From The Pines I took a compass heading that would put me a short but significant distance south of the river mouth.  Even though I couldn't see a darned thing, sooner or later I would HAVE to hit that eastern shore... as long as I kept my heading.  By purposely targeting a point distinctly south of the river I would KNOW when I finally hit that shoreline that the ONLY way to head was north.  There would be no guesswork involved.


It's called Shooting Off and is described in detail in Be and Expert with Map&Compass where I picked the idea up. I thought GPS could get a signal despite foul weather as long as you were in the open?
Oh well, a good old map/compass and that technique is always your Ace in the Hole.


(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)

(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
DentonDoc
Moderator
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 3468
Location: Central Texas
Joined: Dec 27th, 2003
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #11 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 5:13am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Jimbo wrote on Oct 25th, 2016 at 9:18pm:
Hmmm... I covered the exact same stretch of water across Pickerel twice during that trip in late September a few weeks back. 

On a clear & sunny Thursday afternoon I paddled the entire stretch (@13 miles) from Dawson campground to my camp (a couple miles southwest of Lookout Island).  I only lost my signal for about 45 seconds, tops, in three hours of paddling.

Eight days later on what started as a fairly foggy morning it quickly became REAL foggy.  I traveled virtually the same stretch of water as before.  The GPS worked fine for the first 10 minutes... right until I got completely immersed in the soup.  The signal died and never did return. 

Based on this, I'd say you have a defective unit.  Anytime I've had unobstructed sky overhead, my GPS has always accurately placed me on the map.  Weather has seemingly no impact on my unit (which I'd venture to say is older and less capable than the one you have).  It has only failed to provide a signal when I was under relatively thick foliage or in narrow valleys or slot canyons where there is limited sky overhead.

Sounds like you might have a screw wire loose.

dd
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
BillConner
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 665
Location: Thousand Islands
Joined: Apr 12th, 2010
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #12 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 10:15am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
kypaddler wrote on Oct 25th, 2016 at 1:59pm:
BillConner wrote on Oct 25th, 2016 at 12:01pm:
I love October trips and my latest exited in Halloween. CCO said we were their last group for the year.


Yo Bill C.,

You can't do that man. (Leave with no details.)

Halloween? That's late. How soon did the ice follow? Where'd you go? What was the weather like? Fish any? Go swimming? See any polar bears? Mermaids in parkas? More wildlife than usual? (I have this theory, probably an ignorant one, that as the last paddlers stroke their way out, all the animals come out of hiding, shake their heads at the messy campsites and celebrate having gotten rid of us again). See anybody else? etc. etc. etc.

- kypaddler


It was really my son's trip. He went up on his own around 10th of October, after his hs graduation and eagle board of review. 6 years or so ago. Went in Moose and went east to Ogish. I joined him for last three nights, stayed on Moose. He and I only ever saw thin ice at landings. Last day hard blowing snow as we paddled.

I agree the wildlife does come out as visitors wane. I've only seen Moose in October.
  
Back to top
IP Logged
 
kypaddler
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 308
Location: Kentucky
Joined: Oct 6th, 2007
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #13 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 1:09pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Canoeing with your son in the blowing snow?

Didn't Mr. Olson write a short story about that? "The Feel of Spring," if I remember correctly. His son was home on furlough during the war. They were fishing and kept dashing to the shore to build fires to warm up.

Come to think of it, they came out on Moose Lake as well.

Interesting.

C'mon folks, keep these memories coming. They're lessening the torture of being chained to my desk 950 miles to the south here.

-- kypaddler
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Marten
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 546
Location: IL
Joined: Feb 7th, 2010
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #14 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 1:54pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
We used to do a first week of Oct. Trip every year. BWCA and Quetico and then WCPP. We were going late to avoid the bugs and people. Then it dawned on me that those are not things to worry about in WCPP. We still kept doing them using a Coleman lantern for preparing breakfast and supper. The lantern was also used to bring someone back from the first stages hypothermia when it had rained so many days that a fire was hardly an option. At the end of a Leano to Mexican Hat loop where it started with 45 degrees and mist and ended with 37 degrees and heavy wind driven rain in the warmest part of the day I had an epiphany. Sitting 200 miles to the south was my log cabin with a woodstove and a roof. That is where I started spending early Oct. !!

A few years later I must have weakened and consented to another fall trip to WCPP. Irvine was still a bushwhack lake and I had found a nice spot with a southern exposure during a July trip. The group was flying in so we could be well supplied with the extra gear needed late in the season. At our planning meeting I laid out the exact sizes we needed in our tarps and the quanity. We again started the trip with decent 45 degree temps but slowly things kept going downhill. The southern exposure should have saved us but the wind all week came from that direction and kept getting colder and wetter. Tarps kept being added until we added the last one and were huddled in our make shift wall tent. We had two coleman lanterns and plenty of fuel so things were cozy. After the last wall was added to our shelter some finally realized why I had been so specific about tarp number and sizes at the pre-trip meeting.

The last full day one of the fishermen was out in the windy, wet and 40 degree weather. We would keep peeking out a tent flap to check on him as he was in a very small kayak. Then the report came that he was not out there. I packed a sleeping bag and had the others prepare hot water for our hopeful rerturn. I was relieved when I came around a bend and saw his kayak pulled up on shore. I called his name and faster than an echo he called back. When he found he could not get the little kayak back to camp he had retreated to the trees to await his rescue. The real kicker was a few years later when one of our trip mates and this man's wife ended up sharing a bus seat on a shuttle to Ohare Airport. Our daring kayaker let be known later that what happens in WCPP stays in WCPP. As for me, that cabin woodsdtove is working just fine.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
kypaddler
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 308
Location: Kentucky
Joined: Oct 6th, 2007
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #15 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 2:51pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
So Marten,

Did he catch any fish? Did anybody?

(Hardy souls, ye are.)

-- kypaddler
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Marten
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 546
Location: IL
Joined: Feb 7th, 2010
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #16 - Oct 26th, 2016 at 8:24pm
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
When they could get out they caught some fish. I remember conditions were the biggest factor. Kayak man had a honey hole for big pike but the wind kept him out of that portion of the lake most of the week. He was rigged for big fish and knew that he had to be properly positioned to fight a 40 inch northern in a tiny kayak. For what it worth evenings around a campfire can be filled with stories concerning that man.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Solus
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 967
Location: Northern Minnesota
Joined: Oct 6th, 2006
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #17 - Oct 27th, 2016 at 1:26am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
In the late 80's I took two friends in off the Gunflint for three nights early in November. On the third night temperature dropped well below zero. There was open water on the lake we were camped on but both exit options were frozen tight. We ended up portaging  (my fine 85# plus canoe) five miles to the Gunflint and then walking another couple of miles back to the car. A mile of  bush whacking led to an old cart way that led to the road.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
kypaddler
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 308
Location: Kentucky
Joined: Oct 6th, 2007
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #18 - Oct 27th, 2016 at 2:06am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
Solus wrote on Oct 27th, 2016 at 1:26am:
In the late 80's I took two friends in off the Gunflint for three nights early in November. On the third night temperature dropped well below zero. There was open water on the lake we were camped on but both exit options were frozen tight.


So it went from no ice to impassable in one night? Wow.

- kypaddler
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Westwood
Inukshuk
Offline



Posts: 669
Location: Was Minnesota Now Iowa
Joined: Mar 4th, 2005
Re: Latest late-in-year trip?
Reply #19 - Oct 27th, 2016 at 3:37am
Quote Quote Print Post Print Post  
My wife and I went on a three day trip, October 14, 15 and 16, 2005 into Beaverhouse Lake.  We were the only car in the BH parking lot.  We had to paddle to the ranger station to register and then camped on one of the islands north of the ranger station.  We did not encounter any really bad weather, but did have some strong winds.  We caught a few bass which made two evening meals.  We caught 4 other fish, namely, 18 inch northern, 32 inch, 11.7 pound trout, 27 inch, 6.7 pound trout and a 40 inch, 17.8 pound northern.  I lost one or two other fish.  The lake is very quite in mid October as most birds have left and mating season is over.  The cooler weather makes every thing slower.  But the biggest problem is how short the days are.  Plus, the season on trout ends in September.  I would like to try another October trip because the big northerns are suppose to bite in the fall.  My wife, however, would not accompany me.  Campfires in fall, however, are wonderful.  I think fishing in a future trip could be better because in 2005 I was still working on our fishing techniques.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 

 
  « The Put-In ‹ Board  ^Top