Paddling the Rankin River

by Rob Muylwyk

Eagle on nest in Boat Lake
Eagle on nest in Boat Lake

The excellent “Bruce Peninsula Paddling Destinations” produced by the Georgian Bay Committee, originally published in Qayaq and available on our web-site, ignores one of the Peninsula’s worthwhile interior paddling waters. These are the inland lakes generally referred to as the “Rankin River Route”, consisting of Isaac Lake, Boat Lake, and the river that connects them, named after surveyor Charles Rankin.

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Rendezvous with Whales

The giants of Trinity Bay have come to play...
The giants of Trinity Bay have come to play…

Nick Donovan

The sound of beating drums drifts over the water. Soldiers dressed in crimson-red tunics, one bearing a large flag, dash up the hillside amid shouts and war cries. Rising Tide’s The New Founde Lande – Trinity Pageant is in progress. This re-enactment of a very early and tumultuous time in Newfoundland’s history creates a very appropriate backdrop as we paddle out of historic Trinity Harbour toward Fort Point.

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Paddling in the Wake of Stephen King

Start of the Storm
Start of the Storm

by Melissa Hachkowski

I remembered learning about Lake Nipigon in elementary school when we read Holling C. Holling’s book Paddle to the Sea. “Paddle” was released into Lake Nipigon, travelled the river to Lake Superior and then out the Great Lakes to the St. Lawrence River. Since I am addicted to Lake Superior, I thought Nipigon had to be just as good. A fifteen-hour drive from Barrie got me to the northern Ontario town of Beardmore, one of two potential access points along the entire 350-kilometre coastline. The alternate is the town of Gull Bay on the western shore. Parking at the Poplar Point Lodge trailer park, at the end of Highway 580, I quickly loaded my kayak and headed out in the early afternoon for a light 24-kilometre start. Within the first five kilometres, I saw my first bear and was excited by sight of wildlife. From then on, I lost track of how many times I saw bears wandering the coast. I soon stopped looking at the shoreline because I found it disturbing to see THAT many bears.

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GLSKA New Members Trip Massasauga Provincial Park

by Leanne Hanna

My first experience with kayak tripping began after picking up my rental kayak and driving out to Pete’s Place in Massasauga Provincial Park. I’d been introduced to kayaking a year before at an introductory course in the pool at McMaster University. I’d enjoyed it, but had been unable to go on more than a few guided day-trips since then due to a lack of time and experienced paddling partners.

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Newfoundland: A Place in My Heart

Outport
Outport

by Wendy Killoran

Wind whistles again through the treetops on this August day, a relentless reminder that I’m a sea kayaker practising patience and respect for the sea. A tempestuous sea rolls wave after strong, white-capping wave in a spray of unfurled power onto the gravel beach. It is a land day. Again the sea is too omnipotent. I am chomping at the bit to complete this journey with 165 kilometres remaining to be paddled.

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