Boundary Waters Trip Reports, Blog, BWCA, BWCAW, Quetico Park

BWCA Entry Point, Route, and Trip Report Blog

June 01 2025

Entry Point 30 - Lake One

Lake One entry point allows overnight paddle only. This entry point is supported by Kawishiwi Ranger Station near the city of Ely, MN. The distance from ranger station to entry point is 21 miles. Access is a canoe landing at Lake One.

Number of Permits per Day: 13
Elevation: 1230 feet
Latitude: 47.9391
Longitude: -91.4792
My son Remy and I, and my friend Keith and his son Charlie put our canoes into Lake one at 9:30 Monday morning after dropping off a car at the Snowbank Lake landing. Lake One can be tricky to navigate. On our way to Lake Two we turned East too early and ended up paddling about a mile out of our way into a dead-end bay before we realized our mistake. We blamed the fact that Lake One was split between Fisher Maps #10 and #4 for our error. If the entire lake had been visible at once on a single map, we would not have made the wrong turn. Once we got back on course we portaged the 30 rods into a pond and then portaged the 40 rods into Lake Two. The weather was nice, and there was a bit of a tail wind out of the West. We stopped for lunch on the shore of Lake Two. After lunch we canoed through the North end of Lake Three and into Lake Four. We stopped for the night at a campsite on the West shore of Lake Four, just North of the channel heading toward Hudson Lake. We had to battle swarms of mosquitoes as we set up the tents. We then had a nice refreshing swim. Because we had brought steaks along for the first night, we didn't go fishing.

On Tuesday morning we had a bacon and eggs breakfast then packed up camp and headed out in our canoes. As we canoed past our campsite, we realized that Remy & I had left our hammocks pitched between trees. We landed again and quickly packed them up. Once again we had beautiful weather. We paddled East and completed 3 short portages before entering Hudson Lake. The 105 rod portage into Lake Insula was exhausting! Lake Insula is a large gorgeous lake broken up by multiple islands and penninsulas. We had lunch at a campsite on a large island just East of Hudson Lake. It felt like we had a tail wind as we were heading East, and then as we turned North it seemed like the wind shifted and was at our backs once again. We navigated Lake Insula flawlessly and camped for the night on the island just West of Williamson Island. After setting up the tents and a refreshing swim, Remy & I got back into the canoe and tried to catch some fish. We had no luck! At 9PM that night, just as we were going to bed, a thunderstorm rolled through. That night I was awakened several times by the loud croaking of bullfrogs from the shallows around our island. What noisy neighbors!

By Wednesday morning the weather had cleared, but the wind was now coming from the Northwest, pretty much in our faces. We paddled to the North end of Lake Insula and tackled the largest portage of our trip. The 180 rod walk to Kiana Lake actually seemed easier than the 105 rod carry into Lake Insula. We headed onward into Thomas Lake where we really started feeling the headwind. We finally made it to the campsite just Northeast of the portage into Thomas Pond in time for lunch. After lunch we proceeded across Thomas Pond and into Thomas Creek after hiking across the famous Kekekabic Trail. We managed to easily run the rapids in Thomas Creek and avoid the 2 short portages. We camped for the night on Hatchet Lake at the northern campsite. It was cool and windy, so we didn't swim. There was lots of threatening weather going by to the North of us, but we stayed dry. After supper we canoed back to Thomas Creek to fish and look for moose. No luck on either count, but we did see a beaver swimmming.

The weather was nice again Thursday morning, but the wind was out of the West which was the direction we were heading. We portaged into Ima Lake and canoed across it. Before portaging into Jordan Lake, we watched a bald eagle sitting in a tree get harrassed repeatedly by a seagull. The narrow channel leading into Jordan Lake is quite beautiful. It is narrow like a river with big rock outcroppings. We paddled across Jordan, Cattyman, Adventure, and Jitterbug Lakes. We found the Eastern campsite on Ahsub Lake taken, so we camped at the Western campsite which had a great place for swimming in front of it. There was a very brave loon in front of the campsite who didn't seem to mind if we got close to it. We tried our luck at fishing, but only caught 1 smallmouth which was too small to eat. Between 5:00 and 7:30 that evening we saw a number of canoes heading across Ahsub Lake from Disappointment Lake to Jitterbug Lake. We weren't sure where they were planning to camp, but it was getting late.

On Friday we awoke again to good weather. We paddled the length of Disappointment Lake and portaged into to Parent Lake and then on to Snowbank Lake. It was July 4th, and as we entered Snowbank Lake the sounfd of firecrackers reminded us we weren't in the wilderness anaymore. After a brief splash war on our way across Snowbank, we made it to the landing and our car was still there. What a great trip!

A distant memory of a memorable trip

by ECpizza
Trip Report

Entry Date: July 20, 1987
Entry Point: Moose River (south)
Number of Days: 6
Group Size: 7

Trip Introduction:
This is the last "memory" I think I will post. I hope to have a "recent" trip to report on real soon.

Report


The year was 1987. I was 18, and this was my third trip into the BWCA. I can't remember the exact dates or lakes. As you will see however, it was easy for me to get close and reconstruct from my fragmented memories such details. But then what happened is more important than what lake we were on and when. So, while the story is true, some of the exact details may be just a bit off. Just think of it as a campfire story, and forgive the missing details.

Our group of canoeists were going out of a camp on Vermilion. Our group had canoed together before. We were a teenage church group. We set out with our pastor acting as guide. He once was a "real" guide. Everyone had multiple BWCA trips together, and we had some great stories, but this was the trip that was an adventure for all of us. 

Previously, we had all done Lake One to Alice and out Moose. So, while I cannot recall yet where we put in, I do remember it was supposed to be a river. It wasn't long before we found ourselves tugging our canoes through the mud. I remember leeches. I remember a long portage with TWO canoe rests along the trail. And I remember our campsite, but not what lake it was on. It was so bad that more than once we thought we missed a portage... But we didn't.

Our campsite was open enough for all the tents to group together and some open space. With backs to the lake, the bear pole was on the left back corner of camp. As we were cooking dinner, we heard a lot of shouting and banging of pots at the neighboring campsite. Didn't think much of it until about a half hour later, Yogi decided to visit our camp.

After a brief introduction, Yogi scampered back towards the other campsite. We decided to get our dishes done and get our pack hung. In the process of hanging the pack, we could hear from the banging pots, Yogi was visiting our neighbors again, and a short while after that, banging pots even further down the lake. On into the night until either everyone decided Yogi wasn't getting their food, or until Yogi gave up, we followed his progress from site to site waiting for our turn. At some point I remember we decided to not scare him away his next visit unless he was going to get the pack. We all watched out from our tents as Yogi did a dance under our food pack. Eventually Yogi left us, and we all drifted to sleep.

Day 2. I remember nothing of day 2 until we came to a campsite. I remember it being sunny as we pulled into a campsite perfect for our group. It was large, and it was on a bluff. I remember being excited about all the blueberries just outside camp. (The prior year i picked enough blue berries for Pastor J to make 2 [t w o] blueberry pies.) as we pulled our gear from the canoes and began to make camp, someone commented on the trash in the fire pit. I even remember it was the foil and food remains of hobo dinners on top. And then...

"Ouch!" *slap*

A deer fly bit me. 

Bzzzzzz

"Ouch!" *slap*

Another!

And then they descended. A hoard of houseflies! Not deer flies, not horse flies, not bitty black flies, nor mosquitos. Just ordinary flies. But Lord! There were so many, and _biting_. Not something I even knew they did.

As this plague of flies descended upon us, we quickly grabbed our gear, threw it into the boats and left that site as fast as we could. One member of the crew I only remember one thing of her. I remember as we paddled furiously across the lake, she sat duffer and spent the entire trip across swatting at flies that had hitched a ride.

Just as well because our new site was great. Well, we thought it was at the time... 

We set up camp and got all settled when Auggie comes running from the latrine, pants unzipped and held up by one hand as Auggie runs awkwardly (but surprisingly fast) into the campsite. The word "bear!" Coming from his mouth in a hoarse and desperate gasp.

We did not see nor hear BooBoo other than the one time. There being no bear pole here, we did an extra good job hanging the pack, and retired as the rain set in. A restful night it was not to be.

To this day I am a tent fanatic. All because of this very night, this very rain. While I do not remember the lake or the exact date, I remember all too clearly the river of ice cold rainwater running through my tent all night long. I remember my old cotton sleeping bag being soaking wet. I remember not sleeping much that night.

I still blame the tent. To this day I will not sleep in a Eureka A frame tent. I am certain it was not operator error. Now somehow, at some time, I have become a 'responsible adult'. I have stood by and watched as dozens of teenagers ignored my tent setup instructions, Ignored the minor issues I might point out, and ultimately spent a night of misery as the rain soaked their tent. But hey. When I was a teenager, we were different. *ahem*

The next day, we were headed for our layover camp. We had a site facing north. Tents on the east side. Firepit on a nice open boulder. I was exhausted. I went to my tent and went to sleep.

Now J was a musician and a chef as well as pastor and guide. While I slept in my tent, dinner was consumed. A fire lit, and J made up some gingerbread, and while it baked, J played his guitar and the group sang campfire songs.

We were a close knit group. We had a reunion recently, and it made me see that we were so close, yet all so different. But I digress...

We were a close knit group. While the others had devoured dinner forgetting about me, when they realized that they all felt guilty. When the gingerbread was done, they cut out the first piece for me.  They put it on a plate and set it in my tent so it would be the first thing I would see when I awoke.

I never saw it. Well, I saw the plate, but that was secondary.

What my eyes beheld when I awoke was not the sight of fresh gingerbread. No.  The sight that greeted me upon returning from the land of Morpheus were the teeth, tongue, and claws of a bear.  In my tent. A BEAR in MY TENT! 

While I know what woke me were the panicked screams of my friends when they saw the bear. I do not remember anything else of that night after the teeth tongue and claw. I don't remember the bear leaving, don't remember my reaction. Nothing.

We moved on the next day. My survival led us to call this bear Ben. As in Gentle Ben. Having Ben visit our camp again (Gentle or not) was not a restful thought. So we moved on a bit.

  I would like to interject that I did not see another bear in the wild for 25 years after this. And that bear was in New Mexico. 

I remember a site on a big lake, but not how big. I remember the site faced the north and I think our portage for the next morning was to the east, and I know we were close to the portage. I remember that night hearing thunder but having no rain, I decided to sneak out of my tent and look things over.  There was J sitting under the tarp watching the storms. Looking north and seeing the most violent storm, and we were right on the edge, and for a long time didn't get a drop of rain. 

My mother is one who always rushed everyone to the basement for every storm. My storm memories up to that point were in the basement listening to storm updates on WCCO AM. Listening to static from the lightning is more accurate. Well, mom was smart and we were safe. So this was my first experience watching a storm.

We rode out the storm under that tarp when it finally hit us. We had some wind we had a downpour and it was over. We went to bed.

We awoke to a beautiful sunny morning. We hit the lake and were quickly to our first portage where we discovered just how close the storm had come. There were 3 downed trees across the portage.  We must have just lucked out and been in a sweet spot to avoid the worst of the storm. After struggling to pass our canoes over each downed tree, we finally completed the portage. 

We came across another group, and they shared the news that a camper (or campers) on a neighboring lake were killed by a lightning strike the night before. I clearly remember them telling us the zipper was fused shut by the lightning. Suddenly the struggle over the portage didn't seem like such a big deal anymore.

The one lake I remember without question was the last on our trip. Nina-Moose lake. I believe it was the first site off to the left entering from the Nina-Moose River. It was a beautiful site. It had a nice easy landing with a shelf of rock to put our canoes on and quite a long gentle slope.

When we woke the next morning, our canoes were gone. All of them. We spotted a canoe drifting in the lake. In the middle of the lake. Pastor J grabbed a life jacket (it had doubled as someone's pillow I think) and a paddle we had used as a pole for our tarp, and swam out to retrieve the canoe.  We took that canoe and were able to locate and retrieve all our boats and we were short only one paddle. It seems that we were a little quicker than the rainwater that had doused the area in the past week. It had baffled us how our canoes got in the water until we realized the long landing we put our canoes on was significantly shorter. The water had risen a few inches overnight. 

Back in our normal routine, Pastor J continued his tradition. He worked like a dog all week paddling and portaging. On the last day he sat duffer, he only portaged his guitar. He would sit there in the middle of the canoe playing his guitar and singing. I remember clearly "Fire and Rain" to the point that when I listen to JT sing it I still hear pastor J instead. Rocky Raccoon is another that sticks in my mind. It was a period of pure joy. PJ was in heaven playing and singing, relaxing and gliding through some of the most beautiful scenery on Earth. The rest of us grouped together, paddling easy, making jokes and reliving the past week in between songs.

The camp told us about storms that hit the cities, but we were not prepared for the sight that greeted us upon our return home. Freeways were closed, and it seemed that every way we knew to get home was blocked by flooding or downed trees. The area we lived in was all but cut off from the rest of the world. Remember, 1987, cell phones were not an option to have someone guide us through.  We eventually made it home and swapped stories of our storm outside for their stories of the storm of the century at home as the flood slowly receded over the following weeks.

As often happens with even the best of friends in high school, we all drifted apart. College, work, marriage, kids... Life. 

It was a couple years ago that Pastor J passed on. It brought many of us back together again. It was bizarre how different each of us had become, and yet we still had that bond of love and trust we shared 25 years earlier. I am so grateful for all he shared with me. Every time I venture into the wilderness, it is Pastor J who is on my mind. Whenever I touch a guitar, it is his playing that enters my mind before touching a single string. When I cook outdoors, it is his memory I am trying to impress. (Consequently, when you camp with me you eat well!)

The BWCA is a magical place. One may not remember every little detail of every trip, but the bonds that are forged there last forever. Even in my own family it is the love of wilderness trips that binds some of us together. I am so grateful for what Pastor J shared with me. I have guided so many others in the BW trying to pay it forward. The problem is, I keep getting so much more from the experience that I fear I will never be even. I just feel more in his debt.

 


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