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Bill Layman & Lynda Holland's 2002 canoe trip from
Lac La Ronge to Arviat

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55 Days and 1000 miles
Entry Dates: DAY 1 Launching the canoe - June 10th to June 11th / June 12th to June 13th / June 14th to 15th / June 16th to June 17th / June 18th to June 19th / June 20th to June 21st / June 22nd to June 23rd / June 24th to June 25th / June 26th to June 27th / June 28th to June 29th / June 30th to July 2nd / July 3rd to July 4th / July 5th to July 6th / July 7th to July 8th / July 9th to July 10th / July 11th to July 12th / July 13th to July 14th / July 15th to July 16th / July 17th to July 18th / July 19th to July 20th / July 21st to July 22nd / July 23rd to July 24th / July 25th to July 26th / July 27th to July 28th / July 29th to July 30th / July 31st to August 1st / August 2nd to August 3rd / August 4th to August 5th / August 6th to August 7th / August 8th to August 9th / August 10th and August 11th / August 12th
 
Day #50 Monday July 29th, 2002

Awake at 5:30 and up by 6:00, and we fooled ourselves into moving. It was still blowing like crazy from the east and misting to the point of rain, but we had sat still for a day and we felt we have to move. By noon, we were stopped cold at the point where Smith Bay turns to the south. It turned out that the wind we thought was an east wind was really a south east wind.

 
Waiting on the Weather
   
  Gigantic breakers are rolling in where we are now camped and there is no way we are going anywhere until this quits. It's hard to believe that it was so hot a few days ago that we were leaping into the lake with all our clothes. Now we are so cold that even after three hours in our sleeping bags, our feet are still freezing. We paddled Mink Rapids and it was big but thankfully short. On a day like this, every rapid looks much longer and much more sinister. We stopped at the Schweder's trading post at the mouth of the river. This is the independent post that Fred Sr opened after quitting the HBC in 1939. With his sons, Charles, Fred Jr. and Mike, they kept this post open until 1948 when the bottom fell out of fur prices and they were forced to leave the country.must already be making plans for where to go. God I hope these dreams never end.

Gerry Dunning's book "When the Foxes Ran" paints a fascinating picture of this family through Charlie's remembrances. When Francis Harper stayed with the family he captured many priceless images on film. The ones of the Inuit coming in to trade at the post are vivid in my memory. But for me, perhaps the most compelling image is the one of Mike about age 10, with Kukwik even younger and her brother Anoteelik about 15 on a caribou hunt. And they weren't play-acting. They went out on their own and killed and butchered their own meat where they camped many miles away from their home. Charlie recounts meeting on their respective trap lines when he and Fred Jr were still in their early teens. He had 28 white foxes and his brother over 60. Adults in the bodies of children.

 
Not Much Longer We Hope
  We paddled for two hours along the edge of a huge barren tundra "almost" mountain called Josie's hill. This hill is named for Joe Highway who in the '30s hunted and trapped and freighted into this country. From Brochet, he fell in love with this land and spent countless hours atop these hills scouting for the herds of caribou. Perhaps those who knew this area and Joe would have called the hill ," Joe his hill," which became Josie's hill. His son is no less than the noted playwright and novelist, Thompson Highway. From the tundra to Toronto in one generation.  
 
 
  Day #51 Tuesday July 30th, 2002

Pity the unprepared in this country.

The skies are so low I can touch them. When it isn't pouring torrents, the violent north east wind literally drives fine sheets of mist into your very bones to numb and chill you. Pity the unprepared.

 
 
At worst I am growing bored by sitting. We are prepared. Layers of Northface fleece and gortex and a great little tent, a Marmot Swallow. Although my North face VE25 is a better bet for the extremes of more northern tundra wind and weather, the Swallow is a great tent. With its smaller foot print, I picked it for the leg of the trip where camp spots can be small and "tight". Today I would like the more spacious VE 25, but that is only a matter of greater comfort, not actual necessity.  
The Marmot Swallow
   
  Where I am writing, I am dry and relatively warm sitting under our kitchen tarp. As I said, I am getting restless to move. But, to go out in this would be foolhardy even if there was no wind. It would be to court hypothermia. I can see my breath and it can't be many degrees above freezing. Had I not previousl seen how fast this country can change its mind and go from a frozen wet desolate grayness to a warm welcoming paradise I would be worried about our trip.

As it is, I just have to wait. Right now, the way it looks, we could be here for weeks. As I said, pity the unprepared. Today we hiked to the top of the tundra hills that surround and somewhat shelter us from the wind. Large rocks of solid quartz are littered about. In several places, you can see where people long ago fashioned the stone spearpoints and arrowheads that they needed to kill idthen (caribou). Fed, clothed and sheltered by their friends the caribou, one can only wonder about the intense emotion that must have coursed through them as they saw the herds headed south. Is it any wonder that today their direct descendants the Dene can still be drawn into an animated conversation by one simple question, "Where are the caribou?"

This country and her mercurial nature are pure magic. For those who haven't seen it you can never know. And for you who have, her beauty will haunt your dreams until the day you die and, with luck, perhaps even longer.

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