Thursday, August 4, 2011

3rd Trip - Horse River I

So I am finally getting around to writing this blog. As I mentioned in my last post, I was unable to take pictures on this trip. It's been a while and I have had 2 trips in between, so I may have forgotten some of the finer details of the trip as well.

In summary, my crew (who were a lot of fun) paddled for 5 days for a total of 75 miles. I only did 65 of those miles because I stayed in camp for the other 10. We had Alumacraft canoes.

Day 1: Moose Lake (Base) to Pipestone Bay (Basswood) via Hoist Bay

Our first day we left base and quickly hit the portages in and out of Wind Lake. Both portages are about a half-mile long and can be rough for new crews. We had a floating lunch after getting passed Wind Bay. From there we pushed down through Hoist Bay, up Back Bay, and across into Pipestone Bay, where we made camp. The campsite we had is one of the biggest I've seen in the BWCA, which was nice. That night I tried making apple pie (with apples saved from lunch) for the first time. It was delicious.

Day 2: Pipestone Bay (Basswood) to Basswood River via Horse Lake

We pushed hard our second day. From Pipestone Bay, we portaged into Jackfish, paddled a creek, went through Sandpit Lake, Tin Can Mike Lake, Horse Lake, and up the Horse River. All told we had 8 portages and 4 or 5 river walks that day. We had lunch on Horse Lake and camped on a peninsula between Lower Basswood Falls and Wheelbarrow Falls.

Day 3: Basswood River to Basswood Lake

Day three was short. Before loading the canoes, we went west past Lower Basswood Falls to visit the pictographs on Crooked Lake. We ate breakfast at the falls. We then pushed back east up the Basswood River through the Horse Portage to our campsite, which wasn't far.

Day 4:

We were hoping to do a dawn paddle down the length of Basswood, but unfortunately the wind was still kicking when I woke up at 3:00 AM. We delayed wake up a while and still ended up getting on the water early. We saw a large group of bald eagles rounding United States Points: 3 or 4 mature and 7 or 8 immature eagles (immature eagles do not yet have the white head or tail feathers). Unfortunately, the campsites that I had hoped to stay at were taken by motor boater campers, so my crew decided to push on to Horseshoe Island in Newfound Lake. It was a good long day. The campsite on Horseshoe I. is great for swimming, so we took advantage of that.

Day 5:

Our last day we slept in (a little) before having oatmeal and cinnamon rolls for breakfast. My crew did the necessary laps around the island to push them up to 75 miles for the trip and we headed off to Scout Island and base.

For their skit the, the did a rewrite of "In the Jungle, the lion sleeps tonight." If any of you are reading this, I want the lyrics.

Although I'm generally not a fan of short trips, the crew was great, the trip was great, and I would have loved to make it longer.