When I left off yesterday, I was camped out on a beautiful sandy beach
in a cove of aquarmarine waters at Imogene Cove. I was just inside the
boundaries of Pukaskaw National Park, ready to take on the next 90 kilometers
of the Lake Superior coast, from the edge of the park down to Micipicoten
River. my expedition thus far. Like Pukaskaw, this too is a very pristine
and rugged stretch of coastline and made for some fantastic paddling.
I was packed and on the water by 8:00 AM, paddling into a very strong
wind. As soon as I rounded Pukaskaw Point I was met by winds so powerfull
I was forced to hold onto my paddle with a death-grip, paddling hard but
barely moving. According to the forecast, the winds will build during
the morning and afternoon and there wasalready a small craft advisory
on the lake. I checked my "speed" on my GPS and was knocking
off a staggering 2 kph! Frustrated by what will become an even stronger
wind, I turned around and took shelter on a stony beach just inside the
mouth of the Pukaskaw River, I' ll at least be able to get in a few hours
of paddling.
By about 5:00 PM the winds did indeed seem to have dropped and the whitecaps,
although still present, were not nearly as bad looking as earlier. I packed
up and got in a short paddle, still fighting against a stiff wind, but
at least wasable to get in a few kilometers of paddling before setting
up camp on a beautiful cobblestone beach.
The following morning I awoke to a very foggy day. It had rained overnight
and only just stopped minutes before I got up. There was athick fog for
most of the day and light winds. The lake had settled down somewhat and
I was mostly paddling small swells of 3 or 4 feet. In places, around headlands
and over shoals, there were some steeper breaking waves, maybe 5 feet
or so but nothing major. I paddled past a couple of beautiful waterfalls
today, water cascading down and into the lake from the freshly swollen
rivers due to last night's rains. One place, Broken Heart Bay, Broken
Heart Island and Broken Heart Flaas was particularly nice.A small bay
with a rugged heart-shaped island and a pretty waterfall. What a beautiful
place, I'll have to be sure and plan on camping here next time through
here.
As I was setting up camp tonight, my mood went from very good to , well,
not so good! My tent, which has been problematic practically from the
start, just got worse! As I was setting it up, one of the poles broke.
The end piece on one pole section literally shattered as I was erecting
the tent. Not good!Normally this would not bother me so much. In this
instance however, with the tent already leaking from numerous places,
I'd pretty much had it with this tent! I made the best of it though, making
a temporary repair of the pole section and then gently erecting the tent.
I went to sleep tonight thinking about whether or not I should buy a new
tent or just try to limp through the rest of the trip with what I have.
Well....what I day that came next! This one will likely end of being one
of the more memorable and interesting days of the trip. It certainly put
my tent problems into perspective!
Cheers...Joe O'Blenis
www.geocities.com/outrageous_outdoors
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