GLSKA TRIP REPORTS - 2002
A selection of GLSKA Trip Reports from the 2002 paddling season
[Past Trip Reports from the Archives] [Current Trip Reports]
RENDEZVOUS 2002

Bill Lanning
A new venue, the highest number of registrants, a mini-Olympic paddling competition, a sumptuous potluck supper and live entertainment resulted in the best ever GLSKA annual Spring Rendezvous.
The new venue was the campsite situated on the point at the end of the Marina Road on Parry Island. Rented for the weekend from the Wausauksing First Nation, the site was large enough to hold the 75 paddlers and all their gear with adequate space left for a few more next year! A light continual breeze across the point, kept mosquitoes and other little pests to a minimum, as most of the participants arrived Friday night.
Saturday began with a threat of showers but as the last of the paddlers registered, the weekend became overcast but favourable. Morning sessions began as early as 6:15 with an early paddle and BYOBreaky, for those really early morning types. The morning seminars topics included first aid, risk management, boat repair and maintenance, kayak tripping, kayaking fitness and a general sharing session. On-water activities included instruction in paddling strokes, assisted rescues and a rolling demonstration.

A mid-day refueling break allowed all paddlers to prepare for the Qayaq Cup Challenge. Each paddler was assigned to a team and points were awarded based on first to fourth place finishes. Extra points were allotted for each team member if a team used its entire roster. A mysterious tiebreaker was held in a sealed envelope had that been required. Events included a long-distance race, a sprint, a towing race and a potentially embarrassing long and "shorts" of it scramble, just to mention a few. The competition made for memorable moments, a chance for all to meet and mingle with other club members (new and old), and to paddle with others of varied skill levels. In short it proved to be very popular afternoon, with lots of good fun.

The potluck supper has been a highlight of the Rendezvous for the past few years and this year was no exception; it featured everything from a fresh B.C. salmon, flown in specifically for the meal and cooked on cedar strips, to fresh baked pies, all cupped off by an assortment of "specialty" coffees. After the repast, the Qayaq Cup winning team was presented with their oversized gold metals (CDs painted gold and put on a lanyard). The stage was then taken over by Freshwater Trade and their songs about lumbering, people and the vast waterways of the Great Lakes basin. This Peterborough-based trio of folk singers entertained with traditional and tongue-in-cheek verse and delivered their message of concern over the health of the waterways for future generations. The evening ended with a campfire and, for those who were not too waterlogged, a late evening paddle.

Sunday allowed for those who had been eyeing items at the equipment swap trailer, to carry out their bartering. Those with more serious expenditures in mind could take up with Magnetic North or White Squall representatives.
Assorted paddle excursions of varying lengths and objectives were open to all for the remainder of the day. The last kayakers were off the water by early evening, just as a rain squall passed through, thus setting in motion the planning for next year's Spring Rendezvous.

Many thanks to Helene Gousseau, John Winter, Michael Daly, Sonja Weiss, Sandy Richardson, Jim Mark, and Bob Knapp for their presentations and assistance. If I have missed anyone (Im sure I have) ... Thank you! To Donna Griffin-Smith and Don Smith, thank you both for the work and imagination you put into Spring Rendezvous 2002. It was the best yet!
ROCKS AND PINES
GLSKAS MICHIPICOTEN ISLAND TRIP

Johanna Wandell
It isnt likely that youll find Pukaskwa pits on Michipicoten Island, nor will you see pictographs. It wasnt a place the Ojibwe frequented, not only because of its remoteness (the nearest point on the mainland is over 16 kilometres away) but because it was said to be the domain of Mishepeshu. According to the stories, those few Indians who made it there either perished crossing back or very soon after they had visited the island.
Europeans havent done much better. According to Chisholm and Gutsche (1999) and Littlejohn and Drew (1975), the Upper Canada, Superior and Quebec Mining Companies, Michipicoten Native Copper and Standard Oil all lost money trying to extract copper from Michipicoten Island from 1846 to the early 20th Century. The Chicago, a 3200-ton cargo ship, and the Strathmore, a 61-metre wooden steamer, met their ends at Michipicoten Island. While the Quebec Harbour fishing station had sustained a modest commercial fishery from 1839 onward, it collapsed during the 1950s when sea lampreys made the Michipicoten Island fishery too marginal to compete with larger operations. The light keeper of the Point Maurepas lighthouse disappeared on his way from the island to the mainland in 1918. His son took over, but lost all of his supplies and buildings to fire in the winter of 1928.
Not even bears bother with Michipicoten Island. While the place is crawling with beavers, fox and caribou (my evidence for this is little more than tracks, though), bears, moose and wolves are absent.
So, given all that, why did we want to go there? For me, it was the mystery of the place. The Indians said it was "a floating island, sometimes far off, sometimes near, according to the winds that push it and drive it in all directions" (Father Dablon, quoted in Littlejohn and Drew). Add to that Native legends which claimed that the island was made of heavy shining yellow sand, gleaming metals and beautiful stones but also the home of giants and gods. A place whose fogs were held to be poisonous vapours, the same fogs that I had seen roll over the island while sitting on a cobble beach in Lake Superior Provincial Park, had to be explored. Never mind that Alexander Henry reported that he "found nothing remarkable" there in 1869 and that Isaac Hope called it "an exceedingly dreary and desolate place" in 1872 (both cited in Littlejohn and Drew), all of this just made me want to see it myself that much more. So, this winter, Michipicoten Island was at the top of my "I want to go there" list.
A glance at some topographic maps shows that Michipicoten Island is uninhabited save a handful of summer cottages and that most of it is crown land (currently, it is classified as a non-operating provincial park). Given its location more than 15 kilometres of open water crossing to the nearest point of land on the already remote Pukaskwa shoreline I did not consider it the kind of trip that I could put together myself given my relative level of inexperience and lack of serious paddling skills. So Sam Wyss
listing of a trip to Michipicoten Island on the GLSKA trips site got me excited, and I e-mailed him and joined GLSKA. Then, on July 12, eight of us Sam, Peter, Jim, Frank, Bill, Lee, Melissa and I went to Michipicoten Island.Sam did all the work for this trip, and it was greatly appreciated. Arrangements had been made for a boat shuttle (Anderson Fisheries, out of Michipicoten Harbour) out to the Island and camping and dinner for the night before (at Naturally Superior Adventures in Michipicoten River). Hed even gone so far as to list the topographic maps required and arrange carpooling for those who wanted it. We met at NSAs Rock Island base on the evening of July 11, and took care of essentials like loading our boats into the shuttle boat, setting up our tents on their beach, drinking some beer and eating Sams rhubarb pie (which looked much more enticing than the bright blue jello dessert which came with the whitefish dinner that we enjoyed at NSAs lodge!).
We were scheduled to leave at 6 a.m. the next morning, which in Lake Superior East local time translates to about 6:45. For the bulk of that morning, we hung out in the L&S, a fishing vessel that spends a good chunk of its time during the summers shuttling kayakers and canoeists and doing coastguard duty. Well over four hours later, we pulled into Cozens Cove. We landed at a private dock, and were warmly welcomed by the couple who owns the dock. Unloading was a major undertaking the fully loaded kayaks were lifted out of the boat and lowered into the water, and from there lined to the dock. I heard a few gelcoat cracks there, and I still feel guilty that the guys had to lift my overstuffed yellow plastic boat. But we were really here now, on Michipicoten Island, and once we paddled out of Cozens Cove, we were out of sight of any signs of civilization.
We paddled for less than an hour in calm conditions before we reached the Point Maurepas lighthouse and stopped for lunch. Though there is an assortment of buildings, which are definitely habitable, the light is currently unmanned maybe a good thing considering the fate of the two lightkeepers Id read about.
All that wed heard and read indicated that there were few places to camp on the north side of Michipicoten Island and what there was is west of Bonner Head and marginal at that. Kurt Anderson the fisherman in Anderson fisheries had, however, told us that he thought Bonner Head Beach was large and suitable. It wasnt the only large and suitable cobble beach we passed, but we fought a 15-knot headwind all the way to this spot before setting up for the night. It was still early, so there was sitting and napping in the sun and consuming some of Peters beer before dinner.
We finished the evening off with a campfire and got to know each other a bit better. At one point, I decided to explore a game trail, but gave it up rather quickly. The botanist John Macoun, who travelled with Sir Sanford Fleming in 1872, found Michipicoten Island to be a treasure trove of rare plant species, but all I can tell you is that the brush is really dense, and that the game trails are only three feet high (the average height of a caribou?). Littlejohn and Drew maintain that Michipicoten is a natural wildlife sanctuary, bountiful in caribou, mink, marten, muskrat, silver fox, lynx and beaver. I saw some tracks, but what I can say for certain is that Michipicoten Island breeds wicked biting insects. I did see some beavers torpedoing through the water in the creek that ended on the beach, but that was the extent of my wildlife viewing during my time on the island.
Our first morning on Michipicoten Island, we got up early some of us not quite as early as others, but we were all on the water well before 8 a.m., leaving lots of time for exploring even if Sam did aim to circumnavigate half of the 24-kilometre long island that day. We stopped at the Quebec Rocks (yet another prime camping spot, nothing marginal about it), where the guys went on a 90-minute bushwhack to find the remains of the unlucky Quebec Mine. Shortly thereafter, we explored a very large sea cave, which apparently was used as a powder magazine for the mine at some point.
After the cave (which would have been another good place to camp, but its private property), we made our way around the west side of the island towards our nights destination, West Sand Bay. Everybody paddled at their own pace, which meant that I, the least experienced kayaker in this group, was far behind but Jim stayed with me and decided to use the tailwind to try umbrella sailing all the way to West Sand Bay. Ive since heard from David Whyte, who was on Michipicoten a week after we were there, that the cottagers in Quebec Harbour were still talking about the kayaker who used his umbrella as a sail.
West Sand Bay has a nice sandy beach, but Im not a big fan of sand for camping. I got over it, though, when I found a perfect piece of plywood for my kitchen farther down the beach, and Peter and I set up our stoves on. My pride in my kitchen was short-lived, however Lee showed up with a much bigger flat piece of debris for his kitchen. If I had been determined enough, Im sure that I could have found an even bigger hunk of debris here, since Superior has washed up all kinds of junk on these southwest-facing beaches.
Once again, we had a campfire on the beach (which was covered in fox tracks, Sam figured there was a den nearby), but turned in early because, above all, Michipicoten Island is a bug sanctuary (and since they dont have large mammals like moose and bear to feed on, we must have seemed like the tastiest game going). The bugs definitely hadnt got tired of the game by the next morning, either, making it that much more appealing for us to be packed and on the water before 8 a.m. again.
Just as we launched at West Sand Bay, Lees rudder cable snapped. This of course guaranteed that wed have following winds, which, though probably unpleasant for the now rudderless Lee, were prime conditions for Jims umbrella sailing endeavours. We stopped to explore Quebec Harbour, which contains a few private cottages, an old townsite ("No Trespassing" signs on that one) and the half-submerged wrecks of the Billy Blake and Captain Jim.

After Quebec Harbour, the winds really picked up, and Jim almost kept up with my (5.5-6 km/h) paddling pace with his umbrella. The rest of the group waited for us in a sheltered bay behind Four Mile Point, which is where the handle of Jims umbrella came off and he lost it, and he decided to don his wetsuit to go diving for it. Melissa, Lee and I paddled on ahead to East Sand Bay during this operation, and we all reconvened for lunch there. Jim and Lee then fixed the broken rudder cable using nothing more than a stick of gum and some cellotape (ok, a multitool and a rusty piece of wire), and we rode the ever-increasing rollers toward Point Maurepas and completed our circumnavigation of the island.
Funny thing the winds were from the southwest, but once we rounded Maurepas and were on the northeast side of the island, we were nonetheless faced with a stiff headwind. Our original plan had been to return to the Bonner Head area, since that is the closest point to cross to the mainland, but we ended up stopping for a wind break on the first cobble beach past Maurepas, and Sam was prevailed upon to call it a day. I was happy with this decision, since the morning would bring our big open crossing to the mainland and I didnt want to wake up exhausted from fighting the wind the day before.
My GPS showed 21.8 kilometres to Ganley Harbour, our destination on the mainland. So, for a change, Sam changed the 8 a.m. start time to 6 a.m. (of course, I wondered if that meant wed be on the water by five, given the early rising nature of this group!). We were fortunate with ideal conditions flat, glassy water with no fog for the entire 3 hours and 45 minutes it took us to make the crossing, but to be on the safe side we were decked out in wetsuits. We stopped for a break 9 kilometres from Ganley Harbour, but overall I was pleased with my just slightly less than 7 km/h speed (since I am the slowest, my speed dictated the pace this time).
We paddled into Ganley Harbour, and then into False Ganley Harbour for breakfast (the guidebooks list False Ganley Harbour as a campsite but its nothing more than a narrow sand beach, and not a place Id seek out for an overnight. But then, these are the same books that say campsites are scarce on Michipicoten). I was struck by the beauty of the scenery the Island had remoteness and mystery going for it, but the mainland boasts towering cliffs, dazzling beaches and rocky outcrops. Looking back across the water, Michipicoten Island seemed very far away indeed, and when you compare the Islands scenery to the mainland, Hopes "desolate and dreary" description becomes understandable.
Over breakfast, Peter and Sam discussed further travel plans while I finished off the contents of Peters coffeepot. Peter, Jim and Melissa had travelled this coast before, and Peter has a good memory for nice sites. It was tentatively decided that we'd shoot for the mouth of the Pukaskwa River in Pukaskwa National Park a distance of a further 16 or so kilometres. From there, Cascade Falls would be within striking distance. Sam really wanted to make it to Cascade since that would complete his exploration of the coast from Silver Islet to Michipicoten Harbour. We had a lunch break at the Wheat Bin, an immense white sand beach, and made it to the Pukaskwa River by early afternoon.
The Pukaskwa River site is nothing less than gorgeous it sits in the middle of an immense playground of stuff to do. The bay and river mouth are configured in such a way that there is interesting surf no matter how calm the lake, and this made for fun swimming (Jim played in the surf in his kayak). Schist Falls, less than a kilometre upstream from our site, appears to be a popular destination that afternoon, a huge luxury cruise boat anchored off our site and dropped off several launches of tourists who engaged in mothership hiking. I checked the falls out after dinner and managed to find the trail, but resolved to return the next day for further exploration.
Peter and Sam left at 7 a.m. the next morning for a tough days paddle to Cascade Falls and back. Me, I got up at 7 a.m., but I did nothing more than read my book and drink several cups of coffee (not paddling meant I didnt have to limit my diuretic intake either). Frank and Lee (exhausted from a night of battling the local wildlife) slept in, Jim and Bill helped me take apart my stove to do some much-needed maintenance (I had to unclog the jet, and I cleaned the fuel line while I was at it). We all lounged around until noon and chatted with a pair of canoeists who stopped by.
While Peter and Sam saw Cascade Falls and discovered a motherlode of vision pits, the rest of us followed our various leisure-day pursuits: Melissa went for an exploratory paddle, Bill decided to go fishing, and the rest of us departed for the trail at Schist Falls. We made it to the very end, above the next set of falls beyond Schist Falls. Back at the base of the falls, Jim donned his diving mask to look at the pools from below while Lee and I worked our way up the canyon using a combination of swimming, scrambling and a log thrown across a rapid. Thomas Anderson described the falls in 1849, noting "the most beautiful spoon shaped basin to the falls, which come tumbling down a tremendous chasm in the rocks. It hastens down with the wildest speed conceivable, as if to escape the over hanging precipice on either side immense rocks have fallen into it from the height, against which, in its furious progress to the placid basin below, it dashes head-long throwing its spray all around and creating rainbows innumerable" (quoted in Littlejohn and Drew). What he said. Sitting on a huge boulder in the midst of rushing whitewater at what I figure is the point on Superior furthest removed from any roads was as good as it can get, I thought.
But then it got better. Melissa told me that the next cove to the north (Imogene Cove) was beautiful, and let me borrow her map (my topos didnt go this far), and Lee and I went for a very leisurely exploratory paddle during which we saw Sam and Peter return from Cascade Falls. We turned back just short of Point la Canadienne, and got back to the site to the smell of brownies in Melissas Outback Oven! Just as good, Bill had caught an enormous lake trout, and was frying up fish to share! I dug through my food bags and came up with a red cabbage to turn into a salad, and appetizers (smoked oysters on crackers) magically appeared, and we enjoyed a fantastic dinner and campfire.
Despite bearanoia, I slept well which was good, since we were back to Sams usual "I thought wed leave by 8 oclock." Sam, Bill, Melissa and Lee had further wildlife visits which I slept through (to his great disappointment, Jim did as well he had worked out the rules for a game of porcuquidditch, an elaborate wilderness activity which involves 30 second periods during which opposing teams try to herd porcupines to the other teams tents).
After the Pukaskwa River, we headed east toward our takeout point at Anderson Fisheries. We once again stopped for a break at False Ganley Harbour, and Sam decided that wed make Floating Heart Bay our next home (giving us a moderate 28-kilometre day). Once we got to Floating Heart, however, the canoeists who had stopped by our Pukaskwa River site were already there but Sam had spotted a nice spot for his tent in the shade on the opposite end of the (large) beach from them, so we stayed despite moderate feelings of guilt at horning in on another partys site.

We hit hot weather that afternoon the sun was relentless. Sam disappeared into his tent for a long nap, Jim and Melissa embarked on an exploration of another creek. (Jim would like it known that he cliff-dived and butt-dammed a stream, though not in the buff in deference to the other member in his party.) While Lee demonstrated his proficiency at the roll, I cleaned out my kayak in the water, and then borrowed his paddle float to see if I could self-rescue in deep water (proud to report that I can). After that, I decided to clean out my dry-bags while I was at it, and then hung out in the best kitchen yet: a rock table, two log benches, a log to hang the bucket for water filtering. Up until this point in the trip, Sam had always had the best kitchen, but the rest of us are no dummies: we finally learned, and started scouting for good locations early as well.
The winds kicked up overnight and the other parties on the beach (we had been joined by a couple of guys in kayaks later that evening) decided not to travel in the morning. We did (at, yes indeed, 8 a.m.), and even though it was high-output paddling, I had a great time working my way through the bigger water (and felt very secure since two of the guys paddled with me and I knew that even if I did go over, there were competent rescuers around). However, it wasnt the speediest way to travel, and by 10:57 we had covered only 8 km and decided to take a long break at The Flats, a gorgeous site that resembles paradise even if it is full of sand that got into my freshly cleaned out boat.
By 1:00, the winds had died down enough that we decided to press on past Point Isacor, a stretch notorious for reflection waves and its lack of suitable landing spots. It had become hot and my 6.5-7 km/h paddling pace was slower than the rest of the groups, but I made up some time by cutting across all the bays while the rest of them explored the shoreline. The last five kilometres were tough going I was hot and tired and I enviously looked over at Jim sailing with his umbrella beside me (of course, I would have been way too chicken to try and sail myself even if I did have an umbrella). Jims comment as I was making notes in my journal that night: "You may note that I successfully sailed the last five kilometres and I successfully negotiated the harbour including the rapids at the mouth, and I didnt lose the umbrella either."
I dont know about the rest of them, but I was wiped when I got to the site at the mouth of the Dog/University River and then I partook in happy hour. For the rest of the evening, I was capable of little more than staring out at Superior like it was tv. I didnt feel the need to explore, either, since over happy hour wed decided on a plan that would allow us to spend our last night here as well, leaving a full day to explore the river and Dennison Falls.
Let it be noted that, for the first time on one of his trips, Sam Wyss had a day where nobody, not even Sam himself, paddled a single stroke. All eight of us trooped into the bush at 9:30 the next morning to find the trail to Denison Falls. We stopped for a group shot at the sign declaring the river to be the "Dog River since 1763" (maps sometimes show it as the University River, but youll have to ask Jim to get the full story here). The trail looked like it would be the toughest portage in the history of portaging, including a rope hanging over a small cliff which was designed to lower canoes. I had no canoe on my head, and I found this place challenging.
Tough, but oh so worth it! We got there, and I thought at first that it was raining because the spray from the falls was so big. After a few minutes of mute staring at the 40-metre waterfalls, we decided to scramble to the top (there is an easy scrambling route on river left along the falls). Every view was more impressive than the last. The place was doubly special since the ruggedness of the trail precluded the mothership type hikers we had encountered at Schist Falls this one involved getting sweaty, bug-bitten and scratched.
We had lunch high up on the rocks at the top of the falls. Sams comment here perfectly summed up Denison Falls: "Niagara is boring." After lunch, our group split up all but three of us returned to the site. We made our way up a side stream and were rewarded with many small cascades along the way, and Jim even stopped and had a shower in one of them. We followed this up with a swim in a standing wave farther downstream on the Dog River. Fun! We worked our way into the top part of the rapid, then let go of whatever rock we were clinging to, and the swift carried us a good 30 metres downstream. My comment after the first time was simply "again" and I took the ride no less than six times.
Meanwhile, back at the site, Bill was fishing and he caught some northern pike for our dinner. Several of us threw together our supplies, and we ended up with appetizers of mackerel on crackers, a main course of fried fish, rice, cabbage salad and bacon, and dessert consisting of hot chocolate with brandy. Our last nights dinner was miles better than the fish dinner we had the first night at NSA, even if Sam neglected to bring a pie this time.
The weather forecast for the next morning did not sound promising 25-knot side winds were called for, and we had over 20 kilometres to paddle. We decided to leave at 7 a.m. and take breaks as we needed them, but it turned out to be a perfect paddling day with virtually no waves. We stopped for a at a little jewel of a beach at Minnekona Point. We then made a run for the last point or rather, Lee and Sam raced for the last point, with Sam edging Lee out narrowly. (Jims comment: "old age and treachery beat out youth and strength.") I once again brought up the rear with Jim keeping me company (we managed to figure out what cross-track error meant on my GPS along the way) and by noon we hit the beach at the Andersons and our adventure was officially over.
The Superior shore from Point la Canadienne to Michipicoten Harbour is eye candy. The travellers of the 18th and 19th Centuries were apparently not enamoured of it, complaining that it was nothing more than "rocks and pines, rocks and pines!" and "terrible because of a chain of rocks and mountains" (Littlejohn and Drew). Rocks and pines and shining sand beaches and inviting cobble beaches and gravel bars and points and islands and bays and cliffs and waterfalls thats why I was here. While the explorers considered the shore to be the most desolate on the lake, I found the stretch from Pukaskwa River to Perkwakia Point to be one of the most special places Ive been to yet. But then, Superior is special.

References:
Chisholm, Barbara and Andrea Gutsche. Superior: Under the Shadow
of the Gods. Toronto: Lynx Images, 1999.
Littlejohn, Bruce and Wayland Drew. Superior: The Haunted Shore. Toronto:
Gage, 1975.
A more informal look at the trip, including more pictures, can be found at Johannas web-site: http://johanna.wandel.ca/michipicoten/tripreport.htm .
FRANKLIN ISLAND
PADDLING SEASON "WARM-UP" WEEKEND
Sarka Lhotak
Eager to get on Georgian Bay with my new kayak, I signed-up on this Victoria Day Weekend trip organized by Wolfgang Kuschke. As the date was approaching, however, I followed the weather forecast with concern. The maximum temperatures were not to exceed 4º C that weekend. "Wolfgang, are we going? I think it is crazy." Wolfgang had his doubts too but soon was back on the phone: "Guess what, everybody wants to go, so its on." At this point I could not chicken out.
Wolfgang and John Cross went on Friday to set-up a camp on Franklin Island and were to meet the rest of us, Christine Hutchison, Mark and me, on Saturday morning in Snug Harbour. I arrived early to a deserted and cold harbour. Looking across the grey water, my feet and hands freezing, I had no desire to get into the kayak. But soon others arrived and Wolfgang and Johns kayaks brightened-up the bleak landscape. I cheered up somewhat and soon the kayaks were loaded and we were off.
Approaching the island, from a distance, I could see a bright orange tent pitched on a rock. "I guess it must have been somebody elses," I thought as we ignored the tent and kept paddling along the shore looking for Wolfgang and Johns spot. They could not find it! It turned out it was that orange tent after all!

After setting-up the camp we went for a short paddle around the Henrietta point. The waves were close to 1 metre and confused around the shoals. At one point I found myself on top of a wave looking down at an exposed rock and wondering what will happen when my kayak crashes down onto it. Given the temperature of the water (and air) was only 4º C, it was not a time to play in the waves. We turned around and headed back into the sheltered waters towards our campsite on the east shore of the island.
At night the temperature dropped below zero and we woke up to a calm, grey and cold day. Our kayaks were covered with a layer of frost and ice. However, with a warm breakfast in our stomachs we felt good and decided to circumnavigate the island. Out on the west side we got some small waves and wind that posed no problem to paddling, however, it was cold! Some of us were eager to get out of the boats before we could reach a sheltered spot. The lunch was therefore the coldest and for me the only miserable time of the trip. I put on all the spare clothes I had, so from this point on I would have had no dry clothes in a case of immersion. As one member of our party was pushing me off the shore so I did not get my feet wet, I noticed he was shaking badly with cold. I was concerned about that but as we got back into our paddling rhythm, everybody warmed up and felt much better.
Back at the campsite we had a good dinner and a nice campfire. On Monday morning we paddled back to Snug Harbour in snow flurries joking about our new season warm-up trip. As Wolfgang put it, he did not take off his tuque for 72 hours, sleeping, cooking, eating and paddling in it! I felt happy that I made it in good spirits and that I was well prepared and equipped to handle the cold. This was the closest I ever got to winter camping. I was surprised how many kayakers were out there in this weather. We saw at least 10 other people!
Thank you, Wolfgang, for a memorable trip!

FRANKLIN ISLAND
INSTRUCTIONAL WEEKEND
Johanna Wandel
Ive never been one to read the instructions usually, I need to screw up before Ill look for the back of the package to try and figure out what I was supposed to do in the first place. My approach to kayaking has been similar: when I first started I took some lessons to learn things as basic as which side of the paddle is up and how to get into the boat. I did some workshops on bracing, but little stuck with me given that Id never been on water which would require skills like this.
Since then, Id applied my usual approach: keep doing it, and eventually you get better. By and large, this approach works. However, there are those situations that you dont routinely do which you might end up in nevertheless. You know, those situations that we dont always like to think about sudden storms when were out on the water. Capsize. Rescue. Last spring, when I finally bought my own boat, I faced reality and acknowledged that practising wet exits three or four years ago and some fuzzy theory on braces in the back of my head werent good enough. Right around this time I joined GLSKA and signed up for Sams Lake Superior trip. Sam encouraged me to participate in Ron Coulsons Instructional Weekend on Franklin Island in June, and Im very glad I took the advice.
Our goals for the weekend were to learn/refresh the main types of braces and practice them. Furthermore, we were to spend some time on assisted and self-rescues a good thing, too, since diligent bracing practice can easily lead to a need for rescues! Since the weekend was held early in the year (in time to use these skills on the seasons longer trips), Ron encouraged all to come equipped with wet or dry suits. The Franklin Island venue (Henrietta Point) was ideal since it afforded both exposed and sheltered waters to practise in.

We were eleven that weekend, of various skill levels there were those who had done extended solo trips and those who had never been on a backcountry kayak trip, and the rest of us who fit somewhere in between. On Saturday morning, we all got into our boats and paddled out, and Ron demonstrated an assisted rescue. We were then encouraged to buddy up and practise both being rescuer and rescued, and Im proud to report that we all took the plunge and were all competent enough to assist our partners back into our boats. Ron then discussed situations which could require self-rescue, and Sam demonstrated a paddle-float rescue. After that, we discussed various means of contact towing and practised this (I was a little chilly at this point, so welcomed the effort required to tow Ron a few hundred metres). Finally, Ron gave us all a refresher on low, high and sculling braces, and we practised those some of us so eagerly that we got to use our newly-refreshed rescue skills!
If there is anything I would have changed about the weekend, its the weather. No, not the rain I was fine with the rain but the winds. When we did most or our rescue practice, the water was perfectly flat. However, we are most likely to need these skills in rough water, and it would have been good to spend some time doing just that once we were comfortable on flat water.
Of course, the weekend wasnt just formal instruction. We had a lot of fun, too Friday night was very rainy (so rainy that it kept our numbers lower than Ron had anticipated, since some cancelled on account of the poor weather forecast). However, we had an informal tarp-rigging workshop that afternoon, and had plenty of dry area to cook and get to know one another. If anything, being at close quarters under a few tarps likely made us get to know one another better than if wed been scattered all over the large site, and Nancys tin of cookies didnt hurt either.
On Saturday, after rescue, towing and bracing practice (not to mention lunch), Ron offered to lead a paddle to the Snake Islands. We were lucky with a sunny afternoon and not much wind, and Ron spent time with those of us who were less experienced and helped us with some of our strokes. Later the same day we found that the tarps had become unnecessary and we took some of them down and had a cosy campfire. On Sunday, Ron offered to lead a trip out to Red Rock lighthouse, but since the winds had really picked up this was accepted only by the more experienced and hardier members of our party (I was not among these.) while the rest of us either sat around and drank coffee (me!) or made our various ways back to Snug Harbour.
Ron is one of those exceptional teachers who leaves you feeling more confident in your own skills while also inspiring you to want to become a better paddler. I came away from the weekend wanting to spend more time in my boat not just paddling to get from point A to point B, but practising some of the skills. Later this summer, I did just that when I spent some time on an afternoon during Sams Superior trip making sure I remembered how to do a paddle-float rescue, and I catch myself mentally and physically reviewing the braces from time to time. I still have a lot to learn, but fortunately, Ron has said hed like to hold the weekend again next year!
The summer is winding down now, and looking back I can say that Im lucky that I didnt need to use any of the skills we practised that weekend for real. However, I can also say that I never once needed my PFD, and I wouldnt consider kayaking without it so I wonder why it took me so long to recognize that I needed to have current rescue skills? The awareness that I knew what to do in the event of a capsize sure made paddling all sorts of water more enjoyable particularly so since I was almost always paddling with other people who had attended the same weekend and thus would be confident in rescuing me!
Thanks, Ron, for a fantastic weekend I refreshed some skills, learned others, met some good people and had a lot of fun. Sign me up for next year!
Pictures from the weekend can be found at Johanna Wandels web-site.
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