BWCA Emily Ford deserves a lot of applause Boundary Waters Listening Point - General Discussion
Chat Rooms (0 Chatting)  |  Search  |   Login/Join
* BWCA is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
Boundary Waters Quetico Forum
   Listening Point - General Discussion
      Emily Ford deserves a lot of applause     
 Forum Sponsor

Author

Text

 
      Print Top Bottom Previous Next
03/11/2022 12:11PM  
By John Myers
March 10, 2022 12:08 PM
SHARE
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
EMAIL
GRAND MARAIS — Emily Ford ended her roughly 200-mile ski-snowshoe-hiking trek across the top of Minnesota a day early and with a last-minute diversion due to open water on the Pigeon River.

Ford pulled off her route and opted to hitch a ride with Diggins, her sled dog, into Grand Marais, officially ending her 28-day trek that started on Crane Lake on Feb. 11.

Ford had skied out of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, heading east toward Lake Superior, and had planned to ski along the Pigeon River and into Grand Portage on Saturday. But she left the trail at South Fowl Lake on the border because the Pigeon River was already flowing fast.

"This was a fantastic trip. I did what I set out to do: traverse the Boundary Waters by ski and paw. I am so incredibly proud of myself and Diggins!" Ford posted on Instagram on Thursday. "We saw one of the most spectacular places in one of the most spectacular seasons. No. We lived in it!... I will forever say that I am not here to conquer the wilderness, just to experience it."

Ford and Diggins weathered nights at nearly 40 below zero and days on end of trudging through snow that was 2 feet deep. Ford, of Duluth, also encountered boot-sucking slush on the surface of some frozen lakes, along with some open rivers, and even fell in at one point.

While the original plan was for Ford to skijor behind Diggins, the dog was having a hard time breaking trail in the deep snow. So Ford fashioned a different system where she was the lead breaking trail with Diggins in the middle and the sled behind the dog.

Along the 30-day trip she was resupplied twice and spent one night at the log home of Ashley Bredemus on the Seagull River. Ford mostly stuck to her planned route that traced the Ontario-Minnesota border across canoe country. But she did deviate at one point along a snowmobile trail just off the Gunflint Trail.

Grand Rapids native quit her job in Florida and moved to the edge of the BWCAW, where she writes "The Cabin Season" blog.
February 04, 2021 06:43 PM
Where Ford has been within range of cellphone service, she’s been reporting on Instagram that breaking trail through deep snow on the frozen lakes has been extremely difficult and that she cherished the few places where tracks from dog sleds or snowmobiles had packed down her route.

Emily Ford met a trout fisherman earlier this week while trekking across a frozen lake on the Ontario-Minnesota border. The angler gave her a lake trout, which she strapped to her sled and later cleaned and cooked for dinner.Contributed / Emily Ford
“I met a fisherman yesterday. He gave me a lake trout for dinner! It was a delight to ski with a trout in tow. I've never gutted or cooked fish before, but I think I got it alright! I fried it up in ample amounts of lard,” Ford posted on Instagram on Tuesday.

“My mind is slowly preparing itself for re-entering the fast paced normal. … I spend from 8 a.m. 'til 6 p.m. in the sun, moving my body and hanging out with another animal that helps me produce happiness. My worries are pretty simple: eat and drink enough (do the same for Diggins), ski, sk, ski, ski, ski, ski, portage three times, set up the tent correctly and don't fall through the ice,” she added. “But trust me, I'm ready to be home. In a dry bed. In a house with running water. And with daily clean undies (might be the best part).”

Ford, 29, who last year became only the second person to hike all of Wisconsin's Ice Age Trail in winter, said she wanted a more remote trip this year and dedicated her journey to protecting the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and encouraging more people of color to experience the wilderness first-hand.

“This place is so amazing, I feel that I can scarcely capture it in photos or videos. I hope you get to experience the BWCA in the winter sometime in your life. It feels vast and small all at once. Sometimes the wind is there to beat you up all day and other times it's just there to dance on your neck. The sun plays hide and seek behind the trees as it races across the winter sky. There is so much here, and there is nothing,” Ford posted.

Since her Ice Age Trail trip, Ford has become a celebrity of sorts after widespread media and social media coverage of her expedition. She's been invited to speak at outdoor events, and went to Canada for the Banff International Film Festival, which featured a short documentary film about her hike. (The same filmmaker was expected to document part of Ford's ski trip, too.) There have been magazine stories and television interviews and Ford now has more than 17,000 followers as "Emily on Trail" on Instagram.

 
missmolly
distinguished member(7653)distinguished memberdistinguished memberdistinguished memberdistinguished memberpower member
  
03/11/2022 04:34PM  
Thanks, Mr. Tree. What a woman!
 
03/11/2022 06:47PM  
Definitely very cool!
 
beanpole
member (48)member
  
03/12/2022 09:14PM  
So cool. I followed closely when she was hiking the ice age trail. I'll have to check out her posts on this trek.
 
03/19/2022 09:22PM  
beanpole: "So cool. I followed closely when she was hiking the ice age trail. I'll have to check out her posts on this trek."


Just this evening we saw "Breaking Trail", a 30-minute video documenting the Ice Age Trail effort by Emily Ford and Diggins. The film is part of the 2021/22 World Tour Films from the Banff Film Festival. Check it out if the Tour comes to a location near you.

TZ
 
03/23/2022 08:57AM  
Ashley Bredemus is a friend of mine and a business owner up here, runs a camp that her grandfather started on lake Saganaga - Birchwood. The second sentence below, about florida and the blog, is referring to Ashley, not Emily. Read more about her! The Cabin Season




Along the 30-day trip she was resupplied twice and spent one night at the log home of Ashley Bredemus on the Seagull River. Ford mostly stuck to her planned route that traced the Ontario-Minnesota border across canoe country. But she did deviate at one point along a snowmobile trail just off the Gunflint Trail.

Grand Rapids native quit her job in Florida and moved to the edge of the BWCAW, where she writes "The Cabin Season" blog.
February 04, 2021 06:43 PM
 
      Print Top Bottom Previous Next
Listening Point - General Discussion Sponsor:
True North Map Company