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worst portages, ever wet and wild wabakimi


Phil Cotton speaks with authority when he says, “the worst portage is not the longest one.” For the mastermind of the Wabakimi Project’s six years of documenting canoe routes in the wilderness of northwestern Ontario—and portaging 137,000 metres in the process—one carry stands out. In 2007, Cotton portaged from the Pikitigushi River to Cliff Lake, along Wabakimi’s eastern boundary, in a torrential downpour. “Te final portion of this portage is straight down,” says Cotton. “We had a torrent of water cascading over our feet while we picked our precarious footing.” Te team survived the billy goat path by floating the canoes down the trail, only to discover that the end of the portage “simply plunged into the water.”


Short Man Complex Participants in the 1967 Centennial Canoe Pageant from Rocky Mountain House to Montreal faced many challenges—not the least of which was the back-breaking toil of hauling 26-foot, 400-pound north canoes on the portages. Te biggest problem, remembers Norm Crerar, a long-time marathon racer whose Manitoba team won the Centennial race, was the fact that not all his teammates were the same height. “Tere was a four-mile portage from Cedar Lake to Lake Winnipegosis that was a killer,” says Crerar. “It was very hilly, and going downhill the guys in the front had all the weight and going uphill the guys in the middle could’ve done chin-ups from the thwarts.”


“What about the R.O.U.S.’s?


“Rodents of Unusual Size? I don’t believe they exist.” PHOTO: NORM CRERAR


a 5.10 Portage


Wally Schaber, the founder of Black Feather Wilderness Adventures and director of Ottawa’s Trailhead paddling shop had one of his most interesting portaging experiences with the late Bill Mason on a trip down the Northwest Territories’ Hood River in 1984. “Mason was writing Song of the Paddle and wanted lots of exciting stories and photos,” says Schaber. “He talked a few of us into running the rapids in the canyon below Wilberforce Falls. We portaged down a scree slope to the river; made it 100 yards down the canyon in the canoe…we swam the rest.” Both Schaber and Mason endured harrowing, rope-free climbs on sketchy cliffs—on opposite sides of the river—to exit the canyon. “I had no idea if he’d drowned,” says Schaber. “I was happy to get back into camp and be razzed by the crew, including Mason.”


mountain goat mackenzie


Northwest Company explorer Alexander Mackenzie became the first European to cross the North American continent in 1793 by surviving a back-breaking route across the Coast Mountains to British Columbia’s Pacific coast at Bella Coola. When his native guides warned of hostile tribes further south, Mackenzie elected for a more northerly route, in which he climbed a 6,000-foot mountain pass, skirted a series of peaks and a wild river valley, and eventually descended to Bella Coola. In his grossly understated journal, Mackenzie described his feeling of accomplishment at the end of the portage: “I could perceive the termination of the river and its discharge into a narrow arm of the sea.”


the Case of the stolen Canoe


Midway through the longest portage of his career—a 107- kilometre grunt across the parched foothills of Wyoming— the late long-distance paddler Verlen Kruger’s canoe was stolen from the side of the highway. Kruger, who was 60 at the time, was in the midst of his 45,000-kilometre Ultimate Canoe Challenge. A day later, Kruger and his occasional paddling partner and future wife spotted the stolen boat atop a pickup truck. A high-speed chase ensued for nearly 100 kilometres, in which Kruger dropped notes out the window asking for help, hoping that someone would notice the paper trail. Te strategy worked. Police eventually apprehended the thief, Kruger’s canoe was returned and he was promptly ushered back to where he left the portage.


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SUMMER/FALL 2010 SUMMER 2010


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