Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Listening Point - General Discussion :: Remembering how you got started in the wilderness
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missmolly |
HoJaf: "I grew up in a suburban area. Fortunately, since it was in my city's most remote area, fields and woods were right outside my door. My father got me the bike (similar to this ) I currently ride when I was 12 years old, and I began to travel more and further on it, eventually making it to adjacent towns a few times in my adolescent years, where I fell in love with the seeds. I persuaded my father to leave me on Cottonwood Gulch for 21 days when I was 15 years old. Actually, it was a wonderful experience. I was taken on top-notch backpacking and hiking paths and engaged with nature and science firsthand. I was also involved in culture and the arts. " You are my doppelganger! I was also raised in the suburbs, which I sought to escape. I bought my bike when I was 14, riding to Canada twice, and I still ride that bike at 66. I convinced my father to leave me on an island in northwestern Ontario when I was 15. Instead of attending my high school graduation, I hiked the Appalachian Trail. Weird, huh? |
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YetiJedi |
With that in mind, how did you get started with wilderness adventures? Old photos and stories are greatly appreciated! For my part, my parents started taking me camping when I was little. We regularly did father/son campouts, family outings, and I was a boy scout - my dad was my scoutmaster. My dad and I recently completed an 11-day 50-mile loop into Lizz/Swamp, my two oldest daughters just spent last week with me on the Kawishiwi Triangle, and my four youngest daughters spent a week with me on Wood Lake in July. I'm nearing 50 and my Dad is in his early 70's. Here are a few pics of how we got started! That's me in the mid 70's building a campfire: That's me helping my Dad get dinner ready: Here's my dad teaching me and my brother about swamping a canoe: And here's a picture with my two oldest daughters who are now off to college: |
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Jackfish |
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dogwoodgirl |
Gunwhale: "Holy Cow, Dogwoodgirl, that needs a larger audience. Thanks Gunwhale! Any leads on publishers would be awesome...poetry is hard to get into print. |
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Freeleo1 |
I camped a lot with my son and husband in the boy scouts because there weren't a lot of parents that wanted to camp and they needed a minimum number of adults to go. I guess girl scouts camp more now, but it didn't seem like they did as much when I was growing up, so I never was as interested in joining them. Our first trip to BWCA was a 10 day trip in 2006 with 11 people in 2 separate groups. It actually felt safer than a state park since I didn't have to listen to drunk camp neighbors that might decide to shoot guns in the middle of the night. We have been back many times and I still hate leaving. |
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missmolly |
Jackfish: "Dogwoodgirl... what an awesome post. Great pics, too." Dogwoodgirl is on a roll! |
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dogwoodgirl |
missmolly: "Jackfish: "Dogwoodgirl... what an awesome post. Great pics, too." Thank you! |
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SkiYee |
Summer of '17 I missed going up there and by the time summer of '18 was rolling in I felt a call to head North. I talked to one of the other guys that chaperoned the church trips and he was all in. He and I have been heading up each year since. Yes, we're relative "newbies" at this, but we love it. Here's one of my favorite photos of the camp. |
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Spartan2 |
I grew up in west Michigan where inland lakes are numerous. At age 8, I started going to a week-long YMCA Camp, Camp Wakeshma, near Three Rivers, and I enjoyed several summer sessions there. During middle school years I added Girl Scout Camp at Camp Fort Hill on Klinger Lake to the mix--and that was my first time in a tent (big tent with a wood floor), and also my first experience at sleeping outside under the stars. In my memory, I didn't do any canoeing in those years, mainly swimming and rowboats, and a little sailing. But, even as a child, I always loved being outdoors. My husband grew up in Michigan's "thumb" area, where there are no inland lakes, and the land is all flat farm land. I think he did have some church camp experience, and his family did a little camping on vacations. (Mine did not.) In 1965 he took a summer job at Camp Easton for Boys, on Little Long Lake, near Ely. He was a cabin counselor and riflery instructor. We met in December of 1965 on a Greyhound Bus taking a group of MSU students to Pasadena for the 1966 Tournament of Roses. After that experience, while we were dating, we did just a little bit of canoeing on the Red Cedar River that runs through campus, and Spartan1 was already laying the ground work for my canoe-tripping days, but I had no idea! Spartan1 enjoyed another summer at Camp Easton in the summer of 1967, and that was when he experienced his first real canoe trip with a group of fellow counselors. He came back with stories of how fantastic it was, and he really wanted to share this adventure with me. Just the two of us! I was not enthusiastic. We were married in December of 1987, and by the summer of 1971 Spartan1 had convinced me to go on my first wilderness canoe trip. We did a six-day trip out of Crane Lake, into LacLaCroix, and then took the Namakan River Loop. It wasn't an easy experience for me, but at the end, I realized that I loved it and I wanted to go back. If you would like to read about that trip, here is a link: How It All Began We were in our mid-20's when we began our canoe-tripping. We had almost no gear, and what we couldn't scrounge from friends, we rented. We started out in the days of canvas tents, aluminum canoes, and Duluth packs. Our last canoe trip was in 2013, so that was 41 years later. Our gear changed, our family changed, and we changed. We were no longer as mobile nor as strong, and it became obvious that we needed to find other ways to enjoy the canoe country as we moved into our 70's. So now we go to the Gunflint each summer and rent a cabin. |
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merlyn |
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straighthairedcurly |
Age 7: moved to a house along the MN River and my siblings and I spent hours playing in the woods and exploring the creek and river Age 8: my dad taught me to stern my taking me to the canal between Lake of the Isles and Cedar Lake and let me zigzag from side to side until I figured it out Age 10: started going to YMCA Camp Iduhapi and was counting down the years until I was old enough to go on their overnight canoe trip Age 13: The year I should've been able to go on the Iduhapi canoe trip but they raised the age so I switched to YMCA Camp Menogyn. Did a 2 week session in the BWCA and was hooked! |
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LaVirginienne |
Great Lakes sailing and dirt bagging adventures with my father from age 3. Bathing off the side of the boat and learning to skip Petoskey stones. Dead reckoning navigation to First Nation outposts. Wild rice gathering. Ceremonial dancing and smoking, storytelling. Some understanding of skies and charts. Ghastly galley food. On trips in launches out of Harbor Springs, always seemed like endless problems with engines and fuel pumps but liked making good money polishing the brightwork. From age 5, riding out in all weather and walking in the woods with a shotgun behind bird dogs in pursuit of dinner. Cold duck blinds in Canada and ice fishing in Michigan and Montana. Lotsa heavy layers! Kept bees, tapped maples, sold the honey and maple sugar, and learned bushcraft. Camp Minne Wonka Lodge in Three Lakes during the summers from age 6. I was lonesome then made lifelong friends. Won awards in campcraft and did weeklong canoe trips in big heavy wooden canoes. Paddling and rescue skills big time. Lots of sailing instruction too. Appalachian trail solo with my dog in my 20s. That’s when I started motorcycle touring as well. Lotsa backcountry alpine adventures ever since, all over the world, including a three day walk of the Minong Ridge on Isle Royale a decade back, which rekindled my love of Gitchiegoomie and BWCA. (To feel more like a part of the community, got active in local outdoor initiatives when my daughter started camp at Concordia in Bemidji age 5. That put me up here on a regular basis for weeks at a time. Was very encouraged by the effect folks like us had on reintroducing a wolf pack on Isle Royale.) Have been enjoying a mix of guided trips and solo touring for the past 5 years. It’s a long drive from Virginia 2x per year but worth it. Meantime in my 30s got my WFR with WMA and kept recerting every 3 years… |
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Savage Voyageur |
Here is a picture of me fishing on the trip in 1980. |
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fadersup |
missmolly: "Jackfish: "Dogwoodgirl... what an awesome post. Great pics, too." Amen to that. Great post!! |
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pswith5 |
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Gunwhale |
Likely you've looked at these? https://writers.com/best-places-submit-poetry-online |
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sedges |
We did our first overnight canoe trip in Forest County, WI in 1966 and were captured by the idea. In 1967 we spent a week in the Manitowish River watershed out of Region Seven Canoe Base. There we got a good education in the basics of canoe travel. Later that summer our adult leader visited the country north and west of Lake Superior on a family vacation. We were all for the idea when he suggested we travel the Voyageur's Highway route on a two week adventure. It would be the first of many annual canoe trips that the Voyageur Patrol of Troop 16 would do in the Boundary Waters and on the Saint Croix/Namekagan River." Read the trip report here Voyageurs highway 1968 |
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Canoearoo |
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TomT |
I remember we camped on sand bars, had lots of pancakes, it poured rain and our 2 man canvas A frame tents leaked water and especially mosquitos. My flannel sleeping bag with ducks on the print got soaked. We went swimming in the river and I got caught by the current and one of the counselors swam after me and pulled me to shore. At the end we are ere all tired mosquito bitten and sunburned with chapped lips. I was hooked! :) Camp Timberlee in middle Wisconsin is where me and my siblings went every summer. |
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nctry |
We also traveled and the Canadian Rockies was my favorite trip. But my dad had a couple canoe maps of the knife lake area. I drooled over them from the time I knew what a map was. They were hanging in his shop. Mid seventies I decided I was going all out and bought canoes, tents, packs and took whoever would go with me. My first trip I started fromLittle John up to South Fowl and west... friend Dick who’s dad and mine were best friends from early childhood joined me and my dog complete with holubar dog pack. At knife we stopped at island of the pines and saw Dorothy and Ruth. Dorothy upon hearing our dads had gone there in 1951 got out her ledger and could tell us even what our dads bought from her. I never looked back... never could get enough and spent three summers being a canoe bum I guess. Sitting here in my camper looking out at the lake isn’t the same. I miss true adventure but my hands won’t let me go... But I get out where and when I can. |
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dogwoodgirl |
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missmolly |
I was raised in a suburb, i.e. a warren of ticky tacky little boxes. Luckily, it was the outermost suburb in my city, so farms and woods were literally across the street. At 14, I bought the bike I still ride and started riding farther and farther, eventually to Canada a couple times in my teens, where I was smitten by the Canadian Shield. I convinced my father to deposit me on an island north of Chapleau, Ontario for five weeks, where I first found wooden bridges, long-abandoned trappers' cabins, moose, and the Northern Lights. It wasn't my happy place. It was my bliss place. |
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Gunwhale |
The Canadian Canoe folks have a poetry subheading on their website. Don't know how active that group is post Covid. Hope this helps. See: https://wildernesscanoe.ca/poetry |
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dogwoodgirl |
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HoJaf |
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deerfoot |
I got started with a rustic church camp in the 1950’s and then on to five yrs at scout camp. These experiences instilled the love of being outdoors in me. During the same time my family car camped each summer. My first BWCA trip was in 1973 and I have been going ever since adding Canadian tripping in when I retired in 2006. |
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Bearpath9 |
When I was about 5 or 6, my grampa bought a cabin on Hinds Lake, which is between Menahga and Park Rapids, off of 71. This was before the interstates were built, and I remember it took most of a day to get there from Des Moines. When we moved up south of the cities, it was much easier to go there, and relatives from Iowa would come up, and if I could I would hitch a ride. After school let out for the summer, I would be up there for weeks at a time. It helped that my great-aunt and uncle lived in a cabin next to my grampas, so they would kind of keep an eye on me. To me, that place was heaven. I could walk for hours in the woods on old logging roads, my aunt would pack me a lunch sometimes, and I would just go exploring. When the parents decided I could handle a boat by myself, that was it. I would get up before anyone, eat something, sneak some coffee, and go fishing. My grandparents finally bought an air horn to call me back in to the dock. I didn't fish all the time though. Sometimes I would cruise the shoreline, and if I found a good spot, beach the boat and go for a walk. Pissed of few people off with my antics, because it was the only boat we had, and they also wanted to go fishing. My parents weren't into the outdoors at all, so when I got into Boy Scouts, I really learned how to do things such as setting up a tent, building fires, cooking,etc. My first trip with the scouts was up to the BWCA. I think I was about 14 or 15. Don't remember the lake, or much of any details. This was in 74 I think, and we had those delightful aluminum canoes. I did a couple more over the next 7 years, until I got married. With two kids now, we started car camping, going to kid friendly campgrounds. When they got to be about 7 and 9, we headed to the Black Hills. I had gotten a huge canvass tent, probably 12x12, and we would spend a week in that. Later we branched out, going to the Big Horns, where my mom and her husband were caretakers of a small campground. Then it was Yellowstone, still with that monster tent(free to whoever can give it a good home, btw). We took a break from that when my Dad got cancer, and started going on cruises to the Caribbean. That opened my eyes to a whole other type of wilderness. Did a lot of hiking and eco tours on the various islands, along with snorkeling. Really opened my eyes to the diversity of life in the wilds of other places. Now, we don't camp anymore, at least the wife doesn't. I give her credit, she would spend one or two weeks every summer for about 6 years living in a tent. But I think she understands my desire and need to get out there in the wild. So when I started going back, she politely told me no. So I latched on to my oldest grandson, and we went to the BW. He lasted 2 years, and decided it wasn't for him. There were other factors for him, drivers license, girls, his business(yes he had a business) and worst of all "glamping" with his parents. Now, I am a solo camper. Still learning about that, but I'm doing pretty good. We are fortunate to live in a city that has good parks. Almost every morning I go for a good mile hike(sometimes more) and other than the occasional jet, I'm pretty much by myself out there. Deer, fox, coyote, hawks, owls and the occasional turkey all live there, and when I'm lucky, I'll see them. But for me, that little cabin on Hinds Lake is where it all started, and it will always remain a little slice of paradise in my memory. |
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Gunwhale |
Nobody even batted an eye when a kid came down the road on his bicycle with a shotgun and a duck or two. Old retired guys would flag me down and want to know how the trip went, share their hunting stories from that pond or lake from their childhood. Life was simpler, easier. Did only one canoe trip with Scouts. Aluminum, waxed canvas tents, Army delousing bags that were sorta' waterproof. The first couple canoe trips were with friends in jr. high. No tent, just a tarp over and under us, later a WW II jungle hamock that fell apart while hanging from some island cottonwoods. Canoes kept me out of trouble during high school, helped by Grain Belt while I discovered girls liked canoes, sailboats and guitars. Guided a few canoe trips back east as an undergrad. In summers became a waterfront director for a YMCA camp (low pay, more aluminum but better hours.) Fifty two years ago returned to the west for good. Got a job river raft guiding whitewater and scenic trips on big western rivers, no motors, oar power. Guided in summer until back, shoulders, became a problem, then guided fly fisherman in God's Country (the corners of Montana, Utah, Wyoming and Idaho have wide, fast, boulder filled rivers.) First I rafted them, then canoed them. Got older, had a bit more income, bought and sold canoes looking for the perfect one. Found the one for me, then I got even older and sold that perfect canoe. She was Kevlar, feather light and sensitive to paddle, load and wind. Like a first love, I'll never forget that canoe and will overlook her deficiencies. The new owner will cherish it. She'll paddle her new canoe in the salt water bay near her home where the original people hunted whales and built dugouts from huge Cedar logs. Selling the perfect canoe was like losing a friend. But I nourish myself seeing the PNW tribes in their Cedar salt water canoes, that same design they perfected for whaling. The tribes still travel to potlatches from coastal town to town, some ceremonies are public. Eurocentric Americans pride our selves with our canoe journeys, but there are still tribes today that paddle hundreds of miles on salt water. Some honor their elders by having them paddle, some use the trip as boot camp for kids who need to learn discipline and teamwork. Preserving the culture is the goal for both groups. And so it goes. |
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RetiredDave |
When we were growing up my dad became the scoutmaster of our troop, and he was the best ever! We really got to do things in nature. We camped whenever possible, and in 1963, when I was 13, he arranged for a number of us to spend a week canoeing up in Boulder Junction, Wisconsin at the Region 7 Canoe Base. It was life-changing for all of us. I went again for the next two years. But at age 13 I hadn't quite reached puberty, and the Grumman canoes and the packs were so heavy! Everything was wood, metal, and canvas. Our Canoe Base guide (Chuck Patchin, may the golden light shine upon him!) taught us so much! In 1972 my dad asked me if I would accompany him to Quetico. He was taking his 'little brother' (Big Brother program) and wanted some help. My friend Don and I joined them, and I was introduced to the Quetico/BWCAW area. When each of our daughters turned 13 I took them up on a week long canoe trip, just the two of us. I've been returning on an off for the past 50 years. When I retired from teaching 11 years ago I started going every year. I leave for another solo in two weeks. There you have it! I am second from right, bottom row. > Quetico 1972. I'm the one hugging the sign in jean cut-offs! Thanks for the memories! Dave |
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Captn Tony |
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Gunwhale |
Thanks for the meaningful post. |
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dogwoodgirl |
my folks were always sending me away the summer i was twelve they put me on a van up the north shore back in the spruce woods where the air was cool and magic canoes met us on the shore and we began to learn how girls could become voyageurs it was all that girl scouts was not we used knives and axes and fire i saw that perhaps i was strong and sharp maybe even dangerous five days into our journey the rain was constant it was cold i hated freeze dried eggs and my feet hurt and i wanted to go home once i got home all i could think of was please can i go back |
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Pinetree |
Had a dentist appointment after camping and my doctor said I see you had root beer for breakfast. |
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BonzSF |
Probably starting with the Russian River at … babyhood? Gramma had a cabin and all the aunts,uncles, cousins (20+) would spend the summer there. Parents in the cabin. Girls barracks the next floor down. Boys below that. It was built on a hillside. It wasn’t exactly camping but it was. The one of our dads knew someone in the logging industry. So 7 kids and three dads went backpacking when I was 7 in some LP logging land. No established camp site no latrine so that’s the first wildness. And haven’t stopped camping since then. At 12 my dad was really into archeology and took us on a tour of the Mayan ruins in eastern Mexico down into Guatemala. A trip of six seater private plane to Tikal then local busses to a river that’s the border between the two. Then my first canoe trip in a dugout canoe down river for three days. Stopping to see remote ruins along the way. Then were dropped of at some major ruins for another 2 days. Not technically a wildness cause the canoe had a motor. But pretty much a wild jungle in ‘72. Then we had two Cessna 150s pick us up to fly out of there. Stopping at some other amazing ruins along the way. Since then I’ve been willing to go on any adventure that came up for the next 50 years In my 20s a friend told us about dirt riding in the National Forest up north. That’s when I learned the term “ dispersal camping “. And we did a lot of it. We called it truck camping because we brought a lot of stuff. Backpacking came up next. Wanted to walk in and camp at some places i saw from the seat of my bike as we rode around the outside edge of wilderness areas. Did a four day hike down The Grant Canyon of the Tuolumne in Yosemite that was awesome. from there it was all over the west from Alaska to Baja to Utah. Mostly off road on an adventure motorcycle with all my camping gear strapped on. When I saw a nice place to camp, Bam , stop for the night. Sure love that dispersal camping rule. I remember reading a book on a BWCA trip way back sometime. I thought that would be pretty cool and I want to do it sometime. My cousin came out west to his mother's 90th birthday party and I heard him utter the words " Boundary Waters". wait what? He had gone the year before and was planning on going the following year. "I'm IN" was my immediate response. I went in 2020 (see my trip report Four cousins camping) at 60 and now plan to go every year until we can't lift a paddle. |
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carbon1 |
I came from a outdoors family. Live on the farm in the woods on the river. Hunting, fishing, trapping, camping. Using a canoe to get those done a lot of the time. Frist Trip to BWCA at the age of 12 in 1968. |
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Unas10 |
I read a lot. This had a huge impact on me. A lot of Louis L'Amour and local history also. Dad took us fishing often. The Wisconsin River, the Little Platte, Governor Dodge State Park, Yellowstone State Park, the Mississippi, and any other little trickle that someone claimed held fish. A Herter's 17' square stern fiberglass canoe was often employed. And then there was the Bois Brule River in northern Wisconsin. Dad first took me there in '73 or '74. I have been there almost every year since. Not for the fishing, just the beauty of the area. We are currently trying to schedule my granddaughter's third camping trip to the Brule. The seven sons of Una started getting together in the mid '80's for hunting trips in Wyoming. That lasted until it became cost prohibitive in the early 2000's. Two of my older brothers worked a couple of summers out of Ely for the USFS in the early '70's. They proposed a BWCA trip to Cherokee and, like the Brule and the Bighorns, I fell in love again. My son moved to Colorado several years ago. He and I tackled Mt Bierstadt in 2019. Bierstadt is one of Colorado's 14,000 foot peaks. Again, a new realm of God's creation has been opened for me. I will be back. I still have two weeks of vacation to use and I hear Mt Elbert calling. |
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chessie |
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eagleriverwalleye |
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