While on a canoe trip in the Boundary Waters this summer my wife and I took a day trip to see the Picture Rocks on Crooked Lake. We took a lunch of crackers, summer sausage, cheese, and trail mix along. My satchel that I use as a day pack did not have quite enough room for all that and my EDC gear so we improvised a day-pack for my wife to carry. Know what it is? It is a large compression sack!
I shortened two of the straps (facing camera), and lengthened the other two (not seen) to act as shoulder straps. Once the food and a couple of water bottles were stored inside and the drawstring was tightened it is placed on your back and then you tuck the drawstring end beneath the "lid" of the compression sack and you are ready to go.
It worked great with the light load and we did not have to take along an extra pack that would have been taking up space during the rest of the trip. Let me know if you try it out!
“High technology has done us one great service: It has retaught us the delight of performing simple and primordial tasks - chopping wood, building a fire, drawing water from a spring”~Edward Abbey
Showing posts with label Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Stuffed Crust Pizza on the Trail
Boiling water and making stuffed crust pizza |
- Two flour tortillas
- pizza sauce
- cheese
- toppings of your choice (ours was pepperoni)
Improvised dutch oven |
- Tortilla
- Pizza sauce
- Pepperoni
- Cheese
- Tortilla
- Pizza sauce
- Pepperoni
- Chesse
On top of the smaller fry pan I placed the large fry pan, right side up and filled it with hot coals. When cooking with a dutch over you usually want to err on the side of more heat on top and less on the bottom. Heat rises as you know so the underside will tend to cook faster than the upper side.
Melting cheese |
Once the cheese was well melted on top , but not fully browned, I slid the smaller pan over the flames and replaced the top pan still full of coals. This causes the bottom tortilla to crisp up nicely while the top brown.
Ready to serve! |
I am hoping t make it again soon with alfredo sauce and to add more ingredients. I will let you know how it goes. What is your favorite deceptively simple trail food?
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Packing for a Canoe Trip; My Opinion
A packed and balanced canoe |
Canoe camping is a great way for people who are a little leery of "roughing it" to get started in outdoor recreation. I see it as a perfect next step after car camping. It is also a way for experienced outdoors folks to hone their skills and push their abilities. Hiking a pack with the bare essentials does indeed take skill, but paddling a canoe across a bay with a 20 mph breeze 4-points abaft your larboard beam? That is poetry in motion! (Plus you get to say things like "20 mph breeze 4-points abaft your larboard beam")
In this post I am going to cover what I took on my last Boundary Waters canoe trip. Did I pack light? No. Why? Because I am big for one, and because I didn't have too because we only had three short portages to worry about. At the end of this post I will go over the items that I did not use and would leave behind next time, as well as the items that I did not use but would take again anyhow.
Our gear |
In the above photo you can see the three packs that my wife and I took along on our trip. The grey one on the left was our food pack and you can see our bear ropes daisy-chained and carabiner clipped to D-rings on the front of the pack.
The red pack in the center is a water proof dry bag made from a rubberized canvas type material that my wife used as her personal pack.
The green pack on the right is a "Duluth" style pack made from a East German Army duffle obtained from Sportsman's Guide that the Amish added leather closure straps and buckles to convert it.
Shelley's pack~33.8 lbs |
My wife carried a vintage Eureka Timberline tent (oblong green bag), poncho liner (camo), sleeping bag (beneath tent and poncho liner), toiletries (in zip-lock bag), compression sack with clothes (black), and Thermarest sleeping pad.
To pack the dry bag I first loosely rolled the sleeping pad up then inserted it vertically into the bag and allowed it to unroll again. The sleeping pad then forms a tube in which the rest of the content of the bag goes The sleeping pad acts as a barrier between your back and oddly shaped, hard items like mess kits, camp stoves, etc. Works really slick. That is a trick I learned in the Forest Service. At the bottom of the pack I placed the compression sack with the clothes and the sleeping bag, next was the poncho liner, followed by the tent, and topped off with the toiletries.
When packing up your gear be sure to put the last thing you will want first, and the first thing you will want last. The tent is left near the top so that if you are setting up camp in the rain or after dark it can be the first thing you lay your hands on. If it is raining and your tent is on the bottom you will have to lay everything else out in the rain in order to access it. Bad idea.
My pack~40.8 lbs |
The wool blanket is folded into a thick rectangle, roughly the length and width of the pack. It is then laid in first to act as a pad between my back and my gear. My compression sack and mess kit go in the bottom, followed by the tool bag, and tarp, then the first aid kit and my sweater and finally the poncho. If the weather gets cool I can easily fish out my sweater to add a layer, and if it begins to rain the poncho is on top to throw over myself, or my gear. We used the poncho to cover our firewood when it threatened rain. When I solo camp and have my hammock I lay out the poncho on the ground beneath it to keep my feet clean an dry when getting in and out.
The axe, tent poles, and sleeping pad were all tucked under the three leather straps that close the pack up.
The food pack and Lil' Bastard... |
Items taken and to be left behind next time:
- Some extra clothing was superfluous. I wore the same thing the entire trip and washed it every night. I had an extra set of lighter weight clothes that I only used as a pillow at night.
- Snacks; for some reason when I am in the woods I do not get as hungry as often as I do at home. Leaving behind trail mix and the like would have greatly decreased the weight of our food pack.
- File and stone for axe/knife; I need to invest in a small, lightweight, high-quality stone for sharpening in the field. Any suggestions?
Items taken, not used, to be taken again:
- First aid kit; fairly self explanatory I think
- Flares; the flares could be used for signaling, or starting a fire in an emergency
- Sweater; bulkier than it is heavy, if it had gotten cold I would have been happy it was taking up space.
- Tarp; had it rained on our trip the tarp would have been priceless. It can be stretched over the cooking area to provide cover. If you have ever spent rainy days trapped in a tent you will understand why it is worthwhile to pack a rain-fly.
Items we wished we had:
- Water purifier; we boiled the entire time which worked out well because our trip itinerary was so laid back. It might have been nice to have a purifier on our day trip though.
- More pizza ingredients! This will make more since later...
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Part II: 30 Miles There & Back
Soloing with the Ancients |
Planning the Route |
Portage Break |
Portaging...Like a Boss!!! |
I am not the only one to portage on the trip. My wife, who weighs only slightly less than our canoe, took more than her fair share of turns participating in this glorious torture.
At the end of the mile long portage we sat on the rocks listen to the river flow and gurgle by, took in the beauty of our surroundings, talked and laughed while enjoying our lunch of summer sausage, cheese, crackers, and trail mix. Then it was time to get back on the water and make our way down the rest of the Basswood River to our ultimate goal of Crooked Lake and the Picture Rock located there.
Lower Basswood Falls |
When we reached the end of the Basswood River at Lower Basswood Falls we took a moment to take advantage of the timer on our camera and snapped a quick picture for posterity. Then it was time to hoof it over that last portage on the river and into Crooked Lake.
We were approaching the terminus of the farthest I had ever been in this part of the Boundary Water so that every new experience that we had was a shared one. Around each corner, and in each new bay our eyes took in new sites for the first time together. I love that feeling.
Pictured Rock on Crooked Lake |
Canadian Border Marker |
We snapped a few pictures of the various hieroglyphs on the rocks. I have included a picture of one of my favorites which looks like a pelican and a large watercraft, which I think looks suspiciously like a viking long ship, but I am biased. Do I think that vikings painted on these rock? Absolutely not. Is there a chance that the ancients that did the paintings had seen a long ship on some distant trading sojourn to the coast and recorded their memory for countless generations to see? Possibly(hopefully).
Looking-up the Lower Basswood Falls |
Heading for home |
The following morning we packed up our gear and made the long paddle back to the Fall Lake Campground and our vehicle, stopping at an island on Pipestone Bay for lunch where I took a moment to get a shot of our faithful canoe loaded on the water.
The Last Portage |
Four days, 3 nights, 30 miles, and 12 portages later and we were, well a picture is worth a thousand words so here are two-thousand for me to send this post out on...
I Love You Shelley! |
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
30 Miles There & Back: A Boundary Waters Adventure
A glass-calm bay in the Boundary Waters |
So on August 20th, 2011 after I worked my job's booth at an area farmers market I raced off to my parents where my lovely wife (and the best paddling partner I have ever had the pleasure of sharing 16 feet of Royalex with) was dropping off our two lovely daughters. Upon arrival, I was pleasantly surprised that my wife had actually come to a complete stop before unloading the kids. We parted from the children with some sadness and reservations which my wife exhibited in the somewhat strange reaction of doing a combination of cartwheels mixed with wild sprinting and shouts that might otherwise be construed as joy.
And thus began our 8-hour drive from Iowa to Ely, MN. The drive up foreshadowed much of how the entire trip (and following weeks) would go: almost non-existent arguing, lots of laughing and conversation. We arrived in Ely a touch later than we hoped and found the Fall Lake Campground to be completely filled up and, as luck would have it, so were ALL the hotels in Ely. We ended up staying in a little cabin at the Silver Rapids Lodge for the night; the only place available within an hours drive.
Silver Rapids Lodge Cabin |
Vermilion Community College |
It was amazing how many people that we ran into that we knew and remebered us after eight long years.
In the above photo you can see me standing outside of VCC where I obtained my A.S. in Wilderness Management.
View from Fall Lake Campsite |
While we camped at the Fall Lake Campground we had several friends that we went to school with at VCC, and later on , the U of I, stop by for a visit. We cooked up venison steaks on the fire and I made bannock in a reflector oven, but I'll save that for a future blog post.
Paddling across Newton Lake |
We paddled across Fall Lake to our first portage of 90 rods ( a rod is 16.5', or roughly the length of a canoe) and double portaged our gear into Newton Lake.
Lunch spot below Pipestone Falls, Pipestone Bay, Basswood Lake |
Normally the Newton-Pipestone Portage is as busy as an interstate, but this day it was very quiet, which I liked.
Once we had finished our hasty lunch below the falls we started our long paddle up Pipestone Bay of Basswood Lake, then into Jackfish Bay where we turned to the east, passed through the narrows and into Basswood Lake proper.
Here we debated whether we should continue paddling up the west shore of Basswood nearer to the Basswood River (and busier campsites) or opt to camp at the first nice site we came to. We opted for the latter.
Campsite #55 Basswood Lake |
We chose a campsite that connected what would have been a large island to the mainland except for a narrow stip of land no more than 30 yards wide. It had two beautiful sandy beach landings on either side of the isthmus and I thought it would have a good breeze to keep the bugs down. Did I ever hit the nail on the head, but more on that will come later.
Campsite #55 Basswood Lake |
My lovely wife started water to boil to purify it, and got supper on the fire while I started on the tent. Once she had everything going she came over to lend me a hand. As I got things more under control she turned to check on supper when she said in an amazingly calm voice "Oh look honey, there's a Black bear" and she was right.
The not too terribly large bear (I guessed it to be around 200 lbs) was bee-lining for our food pack so I bee-lined it for the bear. I ran straight at the bear, my heart pounding in my ears and I was mildly disconcerted that the bear wasn't leaving yet. I wasn't sure what I was going to do if I arrived at the food pack and the bear didn't leave but I thought I could take it. I mean Davy Crockett killed one when he was only three. How hard can it be really? But here I jest. The bear ran like it's ass was on fire once I was in 6' of it an thankfully didn't make off with a morsel of food.
Needless to say I felt like a real badass during supper having defended my wife in the wilderness from a wild animal that eats mostly berries and insect larve(I'm hoping someone over at The Art of Manliness will read this and want an article).
Campsite #55 Basswood Lake |
Luckily our tent withstood the wind and no trees fell on us or our gear. Late the second day in camp the winds died to nothing and the following morning we began the next leg of our trip which I am going to save for another post. Until then here is a route map of the trip we took. Stay tuned...!
Upper Basswood Falls, Basswood River |
Labels:
Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness,
Campfire Cooking,
Canoeing,
Ely,
Fauna,
Flora,
Mammals,
MN,
Wilderness,
Wildlife
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