|
Fraser River & the Giscome Portage to Summit Lake:
Monday May 24th - Wednesday May 26th.
The mighty Fraser River. Upriver paddling for 60 kilometers followed
by the famous Giscome Portage, a 13.5kilometer portage from the Fur Trade
era than linked the Pacific and the Artic watersheds by way of the Artic
Divide and Summit Lake.
After a frantic morning of packing and reorganizing my gear, I was back
on the water at 12:48 PM, at the same spot I took out two night ago. Joining
me for the first several hours would be Ian and Debbie, Faye, Phil and
Chris Cupp (last years Canadian C1 marathon canoe champion), all paddling
in solo racing canoes Back in the '80's, Faye and John Hallett canoes
across Canada from Rocky Mountain House Alberta to Montreal!. I was in
good company, no doubt about that.
The current on the Fraser started out fast but manageable. We hugged the
riverbank, taking advantage of the slower water and jumping in every eddy
we could see, an important aspect of upriver paddling. Jump in the eddy's
and get a free ride. Some of the bigger eddies were a couple hundred meters
long, it was a huge help. The Fraser is a big, powerfull river and full
of spectacular scenery, lots of varied wildlife, a mixed forest wityh
some huge trees, certainly a very scenic river. My fellow paddlers turned
back after about 3 hours and I continued on once again on my own, paddling
on for another 4 hours or so and camping out on a nice little beach just
about the antive reserve of Shelley. The last few kilometers had considerably
stronger current and I was certainly working hard to make any kind of
real progress. The payoff was after setting up camp though as I relaxed
around a campfire and enjoyed a couple of refreshing beer along with some
varied snacks picked upin Prince George.I stayed up until past midnight
tonight, sitting by the fire, the campers TV, contemplating the trip and
admiring the star filled night sky.
The next day turned into a 12 hour push with very few breaks as I fought
ever stronger currents as I tried to reach the trailhead for the Giscome
Portage at the Hubble Homestead. Some of my friends from yesterday would
be meeting me there to accompany me on the portage and we were scheduled
to begin the portage at 10:00 AM. Well, after extensive linintg the canoe
through fast water and some very tough paddling, i came up well short,
setting up camp in the dark on a small beach where I had a quick supper
by the light of my Petzl headlamp before falling into a deep sleep.
I figured I was only about 90 minutes from the portage so I left at 7:50
AM the next day. Well...not even close! It took another 4 hours of very
hard work, combining paddling and lots of lining to make my way to our
rendezvous. I arrived at noon with my friends, Debbie, Faye and John all
patiently waiting for me beside the river.
After loading the canoe onto the portage cart and then having a quick
lunch (compliments of my friends), Debbie and I began the portage, John
and Faye meeting us at the end of the trail near Summit Lake. The portage
trail was wide but in rough condition and it took some serious work to
get the canoe through. Several largetreesblocked the trail in places which
only added to the fun! We pushed on however and made it through in about
4 hours, taking photographs at the "Artic Divide" sign, a major
landmark of my route...this is where I left behind the Pacific watershed
and entered the Artic watershed, starting with Summit Lake and the Crooked
River. I camped tonight on the lake and enjoyed more fine foods that my
firneds ahd provided me with. Many, many thanks to my group of Prince
George wo made this hard push up the Fraser and over the Giscome Portage
into an amazingly great 3 days. It would not have been the same without
you all! Thanks also for the "surprise" you snuck into my drybag
at the end of the portage before we parted company, I was truly touched!
Thank you!
Tomorrow I'll paddle off of the lake and enter into the Crooked River
which will take me through to Macleod Lake, the Pack River and then Williston
Lake fro a 230 kilometer paddle to the WAC Bennett Dam, Dinasaur Lake,
the Peace Canyon Dam and finally the portage into Hudson's Hope and my
second resupply point 8 days from now. More on that later.
So far, the trip has been amazing. Tougher than expected at times. The
Fraser was a long, tough paddle, the portage had some difficult sections
but overall, it is turning out to be the most amazing trip of my life....and
I've only just begun! Stay tuned for more!
Cheers...Joe O'Blenis
|