Saturday, July 26, 2008

My Best Brigade Shot - Ready, Switch !


Like everyone involved with the David Thompson Brigade, I am struggling to decide what is my single best photo. At this point, this blurred-in-camera shot of the Canadian Voyageur crew doing a switch is my favourite. For me, this captures the essence of the experience - a blur of people working together in complete synchronization. Often it wasn't obvious who was doing the work. Often you only saw it briefly while you were focused on something else. Often it seemed like others were able to effortlessly do something you could not.

In the beginning it was frustrating to see a crew like the Voyageurs slip past at what seemed an impossible rate while we struggled to make our boat respond to clumsy efforts. The first revelation was a clean switch which in time became simple even in high winds, big waves and rapids. One day on the Rainy River we snuck up on the Canadian Voyageurs and beat them to shore at a crew change - it wasn't really a race, but to everyone on the crew it was a small victory which we will probably remember (and boasted of) for a long time.

Friday, July 25, 2008

BlackBerry top wireless device

Research in Motion was the top-selling wireless handset maker in the U.S. in July, marking the third consecutive month the company has held the position, according to Avian Securities' monthly U.S. wireless handset survey. The BlackBerry Curve was the best-selling device. LG ranked second in the survey . . . The study is based on a survey of service representatives at retail stores of the four major wireless operators--AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Surfing the Dog

We had a good day on the Dog River on July 10th. This is just a quick low-resolution edit.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Grand portage

The Brigade drove across the border into Minnesota on Friday with canoes in tow for a visit to the Grand Portage National Monument. This is the location of an important fur trade era fort of the Northwest Company. David Thompson arrived upon the same stone beach where we launched our canoes. We toasted him with milk, something he didn't have in his years in the north.
Thursday morning we spent two hours surfing a series of waves along the Kamanistiqua River. The Kam drops an impressive two hundred feet at Kakabeka Falls. We avoided the scary rapids and enjoyed the day in a modest narrow.
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Monday, July 07, 2008

Quetico

July 4th
We have spent three days traveling through Quetico Provincial Park. The first camp was on Tanner Lake (the picture of the canoes), the second was on Sturgeon and tonight we are on an island East of Emerald Island on Pickerel Lake.

We were on the water again this morning at 6:30, paddling the narrow, twisting river from Sturgeon to Twin Lakes. We interrupted three moose having their morning meal as we approached the first portage. After carrying several canoes and our gear across the 800 meters we were all getting tired. The second portage, Pine, was about 500 meters, and left everyone tired and hungry. After a long lunch we paddled for an hour into Pickerel Lake and found a nice campsite on an island.

Ellie, on the right in the third picture, is one of the captains of the Shawnigan crew. She has paddled with us for this section while John is away for a few days.
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Sunday, June 22, 2008

History Lessons

Today was our day off in Kenora Ontario. Local artist Don McMaster helped with our portage and crew change yesterday and today he gave a private talk about his paintings of David Thompson's travels which are on display at the Kenora Museum. Daryl, Sharon and Bill are at the left of the photo as he describes a monument built for the international boundary survey in this area.



John Latham has joined the crew and had his first short paddle late on Saturday afternoon, but tomorrow will be his first full day in the boat as we head out into the 14,000 islands of Lake of the Woods for an over-night camp. Getting off track is easily done, so the Brigade will likely travel slose together and follow the boat that knows the region. John seems to have enjoyed the museum visit and is here speaking with the artist. The next photo shows Laverne Thompson (a seventh generation decendant of David Thompson) next to a painting depicting the wedding of Charlotte Small and David Thompson. Charlotte paddled tens of thousands of kilometers with David, covering more than twice the distance of the famed Americans Lewis and Clark.

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

Shopping

A daily part of this trip is shopping. We buy chocolate bars, bananas, apples and bagles just about every day. Even when we are being fed by communities on a regular basis, ten people consume a lot. And some times the most efficient place to pack is in the middle of a supermarket parking lot - like this one in Kenora. While Richard, Daryl, Bill and I shop, the rest of the crew is on a wilderness overnight paddle.
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

The Local Guide

Second from the right is Keith Reid who we met in Pinawa (which means calm water in Cree). He has paddled, rowed and sailed the Winnipeg River for thirty years and we were lucky to have him join our crew for the day. We paddled up the swifts, rapids and calmer waters for 41 kilometers to the tiny village of Point Du Bois. Keith saved the entire Brigade from a long portage by guiding us right to the base of a spillway at the Slave Falls Dam.
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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Off to Pinawa

The community of Lac du Bonnet gave us a pancake breakfast send off this morning. Here are the Paddle Canada 1 and 2 crews just heading out to the next community of Pinawa.
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Monday, June 16, 2008

Charge the beach

Yesterday we did an arrival ceremony at the Lac du Bonnet public beach. We begin with the nine canoes performing a figure eight maneuver. Turning the boats and zipping past the canoe which has just crossed in front while not making it look like chaos requires lots of communication and planning. After two circuits, we lined up and then one canoe fires a shotgun blank, a responding gun is shot from shore, we shout three cheers and then we race the boats to the shore and then break hard at the last instant before actually touching the shore. Today was our day off and everyone enjoyed the time to do some laundry, rest and enjoy this small town - we especially enjoyed the restaurants.
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