Thursday, June 26, 2008

Pictures from the Roadshow, pt 1

1. The trip begins with Nina, Meg, and Emily

2. Gas Station in Minnesota

3. Meg and Emily at the Canadian Superstore in Regina, Saskatchewan

4. Meg and Emily at the Canadian Superstore in Regina, Saskatchewan

5. Emily sleeps

6. Meg drives strong

7. Nina writes letters

8. Heading north on the Mackenzie Highway

9. Rainbow outside High Level, Alberta

10. Rainbow outside High Level, Alberta

11. Crossing into the Northwest Territories

12. Crossing into the Northwest Territories

13. Driving late

14. The Hay River

15. Falls on the Hay River

16. Stopped for a break between the Hay River and Fort Providence

17. Charging the sat. phone with the solar roll

18. The Mackenzie River ferry crossing

19. The Mackenzie River ferry crossing

20. Looking out toward Great Slave Lake

21. On the ferry

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Pictures from the Roadshow, pt 2


22. Driving north toward Yellowknife

23. Wood Bison


24. Visitors Center in Yellowknife

25. Beth arrives at the Yellowknife Airport

26. Beth arrives at the Yellowknife Airport

27. Our last meal at the Wildcat Cafe (oldest restaurant in Yellowknife)

28. Our last meal at the Wildcat Cafe

29. Repacking at our campsite outside yellowknife

30. Putting in our tie-in system

31. Tieing down the boats, one last time


32. Packing up our resupply at Ursus Air

33. Karen and our food will be flying in on the smaller plane

34. The Maul Lunar Rocket that will be bringing in our resupply

35. The hanger at Ursus Air

36. Working out logistics with Blair and Jay

37. Meg with her new Nikon D-80






38-43. Assorted pictures of us starting out at Rae on Marian Lake






Monday, June 23, 2008

June 22nd: Up the Emile

June 22nd, 2008; Day 15

Emile River, "Sand All Around Lake” (as known by the Dogrib Dene)
GPS Coordinates: 64 deg., 47 min. North; 115 deg., 27 min. West

Author: Emily


This morning I woke at 5:00 a.m. to a loud splashing sound right next to me. Our tents were pitched about 20 feet back from a sandy beach at a wider opening of the Emile River. I sat up abruptly in my sleeping bag, making enough noise to startle the large bull moose walking along the shore between our tents and the water. We stared at each other for a moment through the tent screen -- me in awe of the large mammal in such close proximity and the moose likely in awe of the strangers along his beach. He turned around and went in search of a less crowded place and I fell back asleep.

During the last week, this river has surprised each of us with its stunning rocky ridges and amazing wildlife sightings – an unexpected gift. Yesterday we watched a wolverine for a solid five minutes while he continuously galloped up the river bank and back down along the shore line as if searching for something he lost – way more involved in his own business than with his audience. The day before we paddled up to the beginning of a portage and found a snowfield where we had expected a spring creek. The snow had compacted into layers of ice flowing out between two cliff bands and gave the feel of a glacier – so much so that while sitting in our boats, where the blue ice met the water, a good five feet above our heads, it was easy to imagine ourselves in Greenland, rather than in the Boreal Forest of the Northwest Territories.

Our travel up the Emile has been slow, yet steady and deliberate. Progress up river is earned in traversing each portage three times with our heavy loads; it teaches a patience and satisfaction of truly being where you are, not looking too far ahead. Tomorrow we are planning to rest, stretch, eat more food from our packs, and prepare for the height of land portages which will transition us off the Emile and toward a new chapter in the trip. Not only will we be portaging into a new river system in which we will actually be traveling with the current, we also will be shifting out of the tree line and into the tundra for awhile. The familiarity of life out here as a small group makes it easy to forget that we are far enough north to emerge into tundra, yet the height of the sun in the sky each night and the chilling wind blowing across the lakes reminds us otherwise. We celebrated the summer solstice last night with twizzlers and multiple toasts to the Emile River, to portage trails through the Muskeg, and to wonderful wildlife. (Nina and I have checked 25 bird species off the list I picked up at the Visitor Center in Yellowknife.)

Our thoughts and best wishes go out to the six expeditions from Manito-wish starting out on trail in the past week. May your bellies be full, your laughter be strong, and your horizons be clear. We are thinking of you.

Monday, June 16, 2008

June 15th: My Summer Vacation

June 15th, 2008; Day 8

Basler Lake on the Emile River
GPS Coordinates: 63 deg. 50 min. north; 116 deg. 3 min. west

Author: Beth

Well, today was day eight of my summer vacation. Hard to believe that I took an exam just 10 days ago. I had no idea how fast I would feel the changes of being on trail. Just looking at my hands tells me that I am no longer sitting in the library and studying all day. They are brown from the sun and rapidly getting rough and calloused from hard use and long days in the wind and on the water. It has been a difficult week, no doubt; we are traveling up river, which means a lot of paddling against the current and portaging. And of course, this is northern Canada, where the wind is almost always blowing in your face. Our bodies often are sore and tired.

My three trip mates and I also are adjusting to each other again. A lot has happened in all of our lives since our last trip together; we all feel older and, hopefully, we are a bit wiser. Besides that we are missing Karen - our fifth partner in crime - and it is not the same without her. While I have definitely had my moments of wondering what possessed me to leave the 95 degree weather in Columbus, Ohio for the wind, rain and bugs of the Northwest Territories, I have also had many reminders of what continues to draw me back up here. The other day we sat down to eat lunch by a rapid and watched a wolf catching fish from the other shore just by pulling it out of the fast moving water with its paws. The other night I woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of rain on my tent and when I stuck my head out to close the rain fly, I saw the brightest, most vibrant rainbow I have ever seen. This is, of course, only possible because we are far enough north that it is light all night long. Our campsite tonight is on a beautiful beach; we look out of our tents at a lake with tall, rocky shores and it looks even more beautiful and inviting after a day of pounding our bodies over nasty portages. Those same portages make my dinner taste better and my sleeping bag more comfortable than I ever imagined. Not such a bad deal, really.

We are all doing well and laughing a lot and, after careful observation, I believe I have identified the exact muscle in my butt that is most worked by carrying 90-pound packs uphill, putting my knowledge of anatomy to good use.

Also, we wanted to say Happy Father's Day to all our dads, who are so very far away. We toasted you tonight! We will continue up the Emile River for another week to 10 days. Look for another update next week.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

June 8th: Marian Lake, Northwest Territory

June 8th, 2008; Day 1

Marian Lake, Northwest Territory

Writer: Meg Casey

Exactly three years and ten days ago, I sat among the shrubs and spruce on the bank of Wollaston Lake, Saskatchewan. I was completely dumbfounded by the ice. Quiet ice. The kind of ice that doesn't creak, crack, groan or give any other indication of heating. Although the silence of that ice weighed so heavily in the air, my recollection is that it didn't come even remotely close to shadowing the raw will and desire my four trip mates and I brought to the Boreal Forest that summer. We were hungry for adventure and willing to take on the unknown. And how unknown it was. The following 95 days brimmed with experiences we never could have predicted.

Tonight I sit among the shrub and spruce once again. No ice just yet, but no doubt a great adventure is on the horizon. After a four-day drive to the end of the road at Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, we picked up Beth at the airport, ate our last supper at an historic mining restaurant, and spent a great morning with the pilots of Urus Aviation (our resupply outfitters). Finally we headed for the water. The native children of the small town, Rae, played with our gear and asked us a million questions like "Why is your jacket orange? Why are you camping? Do you like her?" We took photos, gave them all high-fives, and paddled away.

It was clear long before today that this is not merely a replication of our 2005 expedition. Our insatiable hunger for adventure seems to have taken on a new shape -- a personal and defined need to take this land with great intention and soak in the lessons of each challenge as they come. A favorite author of mine, Wendell Berry, described the combination of some of the feelings we are feeling today (excitement, curiosity and fear) as exploring.

We'd like to express our undying gratitude to our families for so, so much support in so many ways. We love you all so much. I'd also like to tell my grandpa that I saw the world through his eyes today, as it has always been his dream to get to Great Slave Lake. I love you and I wish you well.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Heading North

Emily and I are about to drive away from our amazing base camp here in Madison, the Stirr home, and head North. We can't say thank you enough times or in enough different ways to Rick and Gail for hosting us, feeding us and putting up with us taking over almost every single room of their house with expedition gear. We can't begin to imagine how much more difficult this process would have been without their support and care. Thanks so much Rick and Gail!

Our first stop is Boulder Junction where we will pick up Meg and our second canoe and say farewell to all the folks already up at Manito-wish. It's an exciting time at Manito-wish right now: summer camp is about to start and there not one or two but six expeditionary level trips headed out to the Brooks Range, the Pacific coast and Nunavut this summer, as well as numerous shorter trips. We wish all the best to everyone working at Manito-wish and taking part in summer camp, outpost and leadership programs!

Early tomorrow morning we will be starting the four day drive to Yellowknife. If all goes well we will be there to meet Beth at the Yellowknife airport on Saturday afternoon and put in at Rae sometime on Sunday. Rumor has it that it's a late spring up north so we're fully expecting Marian Lake, where the trip begins, to be frozen. (Fully expecting might be a bit of an exaggeration, but after our experience on Wollaston in 2005 let's just say it will be a pleasant surprise if we can push our boats off into open water.)

As we leave our computers behind we will be handing off all of the technical details involved in posting our updates to Rob Williams--good friend to four of the BPE, and fiance to the fifth (I'll let you guess which one). While we're on the expedition we plan to send updates back once a week, probably on Sundays so you should see them appear on the blog during the first couple days of each week. If you want to receive the updates directly by email you can let Rob know at rlwilliams12@gmail.com.

More to come soon from the roadshow and beyond...