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Boundary Waters Quetico Forum Listening Point - General Discussion Phil "Uncle Phil" Cotton |
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05/07/2018 07:04AM
Very sad to lose someone like Uncle Phil. The project maps were just a hint of his knowledge of Wabakimi. Fourteen years of all his waking time obsessing over old canoe routes... amazing. And the effort to document all this for folks that will never have the pleasure to know him.
Thanks Phil for showing me a whole different way to appreciate canoe tripping and its history of backcountry travel.
Thanks Phil for showing me a whole different way to appreciate canoe tripping and its history of backcountry travel.
05/07/2018 07:22AM
oh my, I didn't know this and am so sorry to hear it. I had the pleasure of camping and paddling with Phil and calling him my friend. He was a great advocate for Wabakimi and will be missed.
We all have to believe in something. I believe I'll go paddle.
05/07/2018 07:30AM
Happy to say I knew Phil and he will be missed. I hope his ashes are spread across the land he loved.
Always liked meeting him at the various shows and seeing what new angle he had to twist my arm to join him in Wabikimi. I never was able to make it, but I will always think of him as the Face and Friend of Wabikimi.
Always liked meeting him at the various shows and seeing what new angle he had to twist my arm to join him in Wabikimi. I never was able to make it, but I will always think of him as the Face and Friend of Wabikimi.
"When a man is part of his canoe, he is part of all that canoes have ever known." Sigurd F. Olson WWJD
05/07/2018 10:27AM
I was able to join Phil for a couple of week-long trips in the Wabakimi Area in 2011. I became hooked on the Project trips, Phil's vast knowledge of the region, and the great bunch of folks involved in the trips, and have been back for a couple of weeks, most years.
Uncle Phil could be opinionated and a curmudgeon at times (we got a kick out of that). He was also generous, entirely dedicated to mapping and conservation of the canoe routes, and a virtual historical library of the Little North. In our hearts, he paddles there, yet.
Uncle Phil could be opinionated and a curmudgeon at times (we got a kick out of that). He was also generous, entirely dedicated to mapping and conservation of the canoe routes, and a virtual historical library of the Little North. In our hearts, he paddles there, yet.
05/07/2018 11:44AM
HighnDry: "I'll miss him! I just attended his Wabakimi talk at MWM expo. He's truly a legend and will be missed."
Me too. He had a really nasty cough at that time. Hard to believe it was just about 7 days before he died. So very very sad!
Wherever there is a channel for water, there is a road for the canoe. -Thoreau
05/08/2018 11:45AM
Our rhythms were never the same, ( me liking to get going in the AM, he a nite owl) but I enjoyed the eight trips I made with him.
( even though I always had to put up the tent and make his bed...!) ( we were always tentmates) You see , the tarp was what made camp and that was what he did first.
( even though I always had to put up the tent and make his bed...!) ( we were always tentmates) You see , the tarp was what made camp and that was what he did first.
05/09/2018 08:51AM
Since I heard the news, I have been thinking about Phil. His life was a testament to the impact one can make when you are true to a vision and a passion. He was laser-focused on Wabi, touched many lives, and opened up wilderness travel to many. Fly with the eagles, Phil!
05/09/2018 08:03PM
yellowcanoe: "Our rhythms were never the same, ( me liking to get going in the AM, he a nite owl) but I enjoyed the eight trips I made with him.
( even though I always had to put up the tent and make his bed...!) ( we were always tentmates) You see , the tarp was what made camp and that was what he did first."
Lucky duck - maybe a blessing your rhythms were off if you were tent mates - each could claim a portion of the day to themselves...
RIP Uncle Phil
Wherever there is a channel for water, there is a road for the canoe. -Thoreau
05/09/2018 08:36PM
I had a couple of email chats with Uncle Phil a few years ago, and sent him the scans of maps where I had penciled in portages on an obscure Wabikimi route I did years ago. He was definitely passionate about the area. I've gotta wonder if anyone can really ever fill his shoes in terms of documenting and maintaining canoe routes in the area.
“Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell.” -Edward Abbey
05/10/2018 08:53AM
I started tripping with Uncle Phil in 2007 and have been going back every year since. He was my tent mate, my paddling partner, and best of all my friend. He taught me a lot, enough that when he finally stopped tripping I became a trip leader.
He loved being out in the wilds with the guys and the gals with a pouch full of maps and an idea in his head. Often times he'd have Plan B, C, D, E and once up to Plan G already figured out by the end of breakfast if our original route seemed too much. He was always open to input though he could be stubborn too. At times we disagreed about routes that portages should take, but he was willing to see it out and was always glad if your bright idea worked.
He had definite, well-formed ideas about how camp should be set up, and meals prepared and canoes packed, but he'd been doing it for 50 years and up there in Wabakimi most of his ideas were good enough for me.
2019 will be the last years of organized Friends of Wabakimi reconnaissance trips. Future trips and information gathering will be initiated by people on their own Wabakimi area trips who will share any info they have with the Friends of Wabakimi.
Thanks to Phil I have many goods paddling friends scattered thoughout North America, and I will hopefully see many of them once again at his memorial gathering in Thunder Bay on July 7.
I will miss my paddling friend.
He loved being out in the wilds with the guys and the gals with a pouch full of maps and an idea in his head. Often times he'd have Plan B, C, D, E and once up to Plan G already figured out by the end of breakfast if our original route seemed too much. He was always open to input though he could be stubborn too. At times we disagreed about routes that portages should take, but he was willing to see it out and was always glad if your bright idea worked.
He had definite, well-formed ideas about how camp should be set up, and meals prepared and canoes packed, but he'd been doing it for 50 years and up there in Wabakimi most of his ideas were good enough for me.
2019 will be the last years of organized Friends of Wabakimi reconnaissance trips. Future trips and information gathering will be initiated by people on their own Wabakimi area trips who will share any info they have with the Friends of Wabakimi.
Thanks to Phil I have many goods paddling friends scattered thoughout North America, and I will hopefully see many of them once again at his memorial gathering in Thunder Bay on July 7.
I will miss my paddling friend.
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