Posts Tagged ‘Gunflint Trail’
Saturday, March 20th, 2010
submitted by: Bob Evans
Edwina and I just returned from Canoecopia. I presented a short program on our three-year project to compile a complete and accurate record of all known pictograph sites in Canoe Country. As we were driving home from Madison, we talked about how we meet the nicest people in canoes! While that is not exactly literally what I mean, since we were not in a canoe in Madison, we do mean that canoeing and related activities have introduced us to a group of really great people.
A number of years ago we flew into Atikokan on a float plane and were met by our friends from Canoe Canada Outfitters. They shuttled us to our hotel room. It was July 1. We had planned to spend the rest of the day in Atikokan walking around, visiting, shopping and generally enjoying the small town canoeing atmosphere. We did not know that July 1 is Canadian Independence Day and businesses would be closed. We enjoyed being around the town anyway and have gone back a number of times since. The next day, the folks from Canoe Canada dropped us off at the French Lake entry and we began our trip back to Prairie Portage. We looked for the remains of old log cabins, steam boat relics on beaches, and visited the Dore Lake pictograph site. Nearby was the sunken steam boat in shallow water. But the best part of the trip happened in Sturgeon Narrows. (more…)
Tags: Atikokan, Beaverhouse Lake, Boundary Waters, Cache Bay, Canoe Canada Outfitters, canoe country, Canoecopia, Chatterton Falls, Dore Lake, French Lake, Grand Marais, Granite Lake, Gunflint Trail, Jon Nelson, Kawnipi Lake, Keewatin Lake, Lake Agnes, Lakota, Northwoods Pictographs, Ojibwa, Ojibway, Ojibwe, Ottertrack Lake, pictographs, Prairie Portage, Quetico, Seagull Lake Outfitters, Sturgeon Narrows, Sunday Lake, Superior National Forrest, Tuscarora Outfitters, Voyager Outfitters, Williams and Hall Outfitters
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Monday, February 23rd, 2009
submitted by: Bob Evans
Our Northwoods Pictograph project is based on our commitment to revisit every pictograph site seen in the past and visit those we have not yet seen. On our first trip in 2007, we visited 13 sites through 4 entry points in Quetico and two entry points in the Boundary Waters. This trip consisted of four individual trips of one or more nights and two day trips of a few hours each. In this report on the first part of the trip, I will cover the day trip to the Sea Gull Lake pictograph site (in the BWCA) and the overnight trip to the Cache Bay site across the Canadian borderOrder Cache Bay and Seagull Lake Bulletins.
Northwoods Pictograph bulletins used on this trip: Saganaga Lake, Cache Bay and Seagull Lake (one bulletin covering two sites). Order Bulletin here .
Fisher Map used on this trip: F 19
McKenzie Map used on this trip: Map 6
I also provide some information for future paddlers or those interested in simple trips, pictures of the Cache Bay Ranger Station, a video clip of the Quetico sea plane resupplying the Cache Bay Ranger station, and the account of a completely unexpected and exciting encounter with a group of paddlers who reported a new petroglyph site. (more…)
Tags: american indian pictograph, Atikokan, Boundary Waters, BWCA, Cache Bay, Cache Lake, canoe, canoes, Fisher map, float plane, Grand Marais, Gunflint Trail, Horseshoe Island, indian pictograph, indian symbol, Janice Matichuk, Jon Nelson, Kawa Bay, Kawnipi Lake, Lindsay Lake, McKenzie Bay, McKenzie Lake, McKenzie Map, native american pictograph, Ontariok, Palisades, petroglyph, pictograph, pictograph site, Quetico Provincial Park, Ranger Station, Saganaga Lake, Sea Gull Lake, sea plane, solar panels, Trails End Cafe, Voyageur North Outfitter, Way of the Wilderness
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Tuesday, December 9th, 2008
submitted by: Bob Evans
For interested folks who have never made a wilderness canoe trip, the planning and preparation is intimidating. It would be nice if you had a very experienced friend who would let you go on a trip with him or her. It would also be nice if they took you by the hand and led you through all the preparations. Most of us do not have such a friend.
But all of us have access to an outfitter. Experienced outfitters are available at every area around canoe country where you might want to enter.
Outfitters are expert at handling all the details of securing permits to enter the wilderness. They will advise you on any documents needed to cross international boundaries if that is a part of your plan. They have excellent equipment for rent that is exactly the equipment you need for this type of outdoor adventure. If you have some of your equipment, they can fill out your gear to what is needed. They can pack an entire kitchen and food store for you, usually based on menus you select. They have a variety of canoes for rent along with paddles and life jackets. And they can provide the canoe, equipment, and food preparation training for you if you are a beginner, or an outdoors person who just needs to make the transition into canoeing. Before you leave on your trip they will provide you with good maps and lots of detailed information on your traveling route. (more…)
Tags: Atikokan, canoe outfitter, canoe rental, Crane Lake, Duluth, Ely, Grand Marais, Gunflint Trail, outfitter, rent canoe, rental equipment, wilderness canoe trip, youth group canoe trips
Posted in For Future Paddlers | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
submitted by: Bob Evans
Our first trip of 2008 took us to a total of 14 pictograph sites around the periphery of Quetico and in the Boundary Waters. To complete our series of Northwoods Pictograph Bulletins, we committed to revisiting every site we have visited in the past to check the accuracy of our photographs and records, and to visit the few remaining sites we had not yet visited. (more…)
Tags: Argo Lake, Atikokan, Atikokan Hotel, Beaverhouse Lake, Cache Bay, Cirrus Lake, Crane Lake, Crooked Lake, Darkwater Lake, Darky Lake, Ely, French Lake, Grand Marais Minnesota, Gunflint Trail, McAlpine Lake, North Hegman Lake, Ontario, pictograph, Quetico Lake, Sea Gull Lake, Sue Falls
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