|

By Frank
Wolf
A lofty goal. A
long trip. A simple philosophy. In successfully completing
the C2C expedition, my partner, Roman Rockliffe, and I became
the first people to canoe across Canada in a single season
and the first to go from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific
coast. Along with this feat, we carried out a fundraising
and awareness campaign for AIDS research. This 9000 kilometer
trip from Saint John, NB to Vancouver, BC required a fast,
durable canoe that could perform in any paddling conditions
imaginable. We decided to go with a Clipper Ultralight Tripper
in Expedition layup and throughout our trip were time and
again ecstatic that we had chosen this incredible canoe. Our
secret to success was simple: Take the trip one day at a time
and stay consistent. Consistent meant putting in 12-14 hours
of paddling a day, every day, until we got to the Pacific,
and the end.
| On April 18, 1995 we paddled
out of the Bay of Fundy and headed upstream of the Saint
John River. The river was in full spring flood which required
that we hug the shoreline all the way up. The Tripper
tracked well as we paddled up small rapid sets for several
days, averaging 40 km per day. Its durability was apparent
immediately as the hull withstood a steady beating from
the rocks submerged just beneath the murky surface. I
got to know the Tripper very intimately on two occasions
as we were forced to portage around two 32-km stretches
of ice pack above dams on the river. I carried the canoe
on both portages and found its balance and lightness to
be ideal for "humping" over land. |
 |
After a portage (80 km) via Canadian
Boat Walker, provided by Western Canoeing & Kayaking,
to get around the frozen water systems in northern Quebec,
we accessed the St. Lawrence Seaway at Riviere du Loup and
paddled down to Montreal where we had the honour of lunching
with canoe fanatic Pierre Trudeau. The St. Lawrence was our
first taste of big open water and the Tripper (with spray
skirt) was high, dry and stable as we made our way through
a couple of days of eight foot swells and a few more days
of vicious headwinds with 3- and 4- foot chop.
The next section of our trip
took us through the relatively calm water of the Ottawa River,
the Rideau Canal, Lake Ontario and then the Trent-Severn system
on up to Georgian Bay. We hopped about 70 locks in the canals
and the Tripper really grooved in the flat water. Georgian
Bay gave us some good big water days and further tested the
strength of the Tripper's hull as the waves would throw us
onto and occasionally strand us on some of the thousands upon
thousands of granite shoals characteristic of the area.
By mid-June, we found ourselves
paddling on the legendary waters of the north shore of Lake
Superior. Although we had three days of dense fog, we were
blessed with dead calm water and paddled from Sault St. Marie
to Thunder Bay in 10 days. With the fast-tracking Tripper,
we averaged 65 km per day and our confidence was riding high.
 |
After Superior, we made
our way through the tripping nirvana of the Boundary Waters
and Quetico and then on up through Lake of the Woods and
the Winnipeg River. I spent much of the time here with
the canoe on my head again as we portaged from lake to
lake along dirt trails, including the 14-km mosquito-infested
Grand Portage of Voyageur lore. The
wild, unpredictable waters of Lake Winnipeg and Cedar
Lake were next. The wind blew hard every day on Winnipeg
and would switch directions several times a day. We
faced at least 5-foot, steep waves daily and sometimes
10- and 12-footers. I remember several hours where I'd
be in the front of the Tripper being pounded by huge
waves as they crashed down on my and I'd think to myself
"The boat's going to sink. It can't take much more
of this crazy water!" To my great relief, though,
the Tripper always passed these tests with flying colors.
|
| By early August we were
off Cedar Lake and paddling up the Saskatchewan River
which would take us through the prairies, via its North
Arm, to Edmonton. The word that comes to mind when I describe
this river is "relentless". The current is steady,
strong and unforgiving. After five and a half weeks of
paddling against the flow, we made it to Edmonton. En
route, my partner separated both his shoulders, we suffered
several bloodlettings at the hands of mosquitos, and at
one point, had to pull up 35 straight kilometers of heavy
rapids. The Tripper was great as usual and handled as
well as it had going up the Saint John. The only difference
was aesthetic as the canoe had gained a solid interior
mud coating from this muddiest of all rivers. |
 |
 |
After a 400 km portage from
Edmonton, we accessed the Fraser River 40 km from its
source and rode it down to Vancouver. Although we portaged
around the unrunnable sections of the river like "Hell's
Gate" and "Bridge River Rapids", we still
paddled a lot of big whitewater. The Tripper was extremely
stable in the 5- to 8-foot standing waves we faced and
gave us all the maneuverability we needed in the trickier
sections. |
On October 14, 1995, we pulled
into Kitsilano Beach in Vancouver. Our Tripper didn't look
much different than it had 9000 km ago and never required
any structural repairs on the trip. We put the canoe through
hell but it still performs like heaven. I honestly believe
it could do the same trip again. Best canoe I ever paddled.
|
|