I woke at around 6:00 am and finalized packing. I wasn't hungry, so I just got on with it. I needed to leave by 7 anyhow, to give myself some time at Kettle lakes to explore. After everything was packed, I hit the road. I find a good audiobook just helps pass the time. I stopped at white river to check the whinny the pooh statue.. unfortunately it hasn't stood the test of time, perhaps the town council isn't looking after it, or something. The paint has all worn away in the sun and he's all grimy with age. It really is unfortunate. The town seems to be tight knit still, I got a sausage and egger from the A&W there when I used their facilities. The man working the counter was a black man who must have been around my age or a bit older, judging by his greying moustache. He was running the place like a café, and had everyone's orders memorized, he as chatting with some locals when I came in and took my order and it was served up pretty quickly. I was back on the road after about 10 minutes of stretching my legs. In Wawa, I filled up at the Esso, and picked up two cans of 'peace tea' for the road, I'm still low on fresh water, so I want to stretch it for the final go. Now for the long drive. Learning from my mistakes last time crossing this span of emptiness, I stopped whether I needed to or not, anywhere there was a turn-around or a rest stop to stretch my legs, and this made the trip a lot less trying than the first time - though I might just be used to it. Before I knew it I was on the other side fueling up at the Canadian tire gas bar in Timmins like hardly any time had passed. This trip has been like a whirlwind, It seems like all the time I spent trekking around, driving, cooking, etc. is just is gone now, and unfortunately I bet the next time I notice a change I'll be sitting in the car, with Cola sleeping beside me on the way back to Toronto, and then I'll be back at my desk at work, wondering If I even went in the first place. I guess I need to make an effort to actually go out more. I should go somewhere the weekend after next, even if it isn't too far, even if I don't take my full kit. Just to get out, just to try to keep some of the fitness I gained on this trip. Once I arrived at Kettle Lakes I did a walk around the park, the place is pretty much vacant this time of year, other than the odd trailer that appears to be also vacant.. like these folks just rent the site to store them? Anyhow, I did one trail as well. Unfortunately there’s not much to see here, but it’d be a great family park with nice beaches. I had a good sleep, and the next day I headed out early and then I arrived back at my parent’s place just before sunset, tomorrow I have to get everything organized for the trip back home. Maybe next year I’ll have to do two weeks and go somewhere else, at a more relaxed pace.
Pukaskwa in the Spring Day 5, May 23 2024
2:30 AM
It seems the great lake isn't done with me. I woke to heavy rain and howling winds. I hope this blows over. I'm typing this up and the rain seems to have stopped, but I can hear what sounds like a hurricane outside. I can't hear my tarp flapping anymore, so I'm betting it may have completely collapsed. Something else I noticed is that my house battery is reading 12.9v which shouldn't be the case with this inverter charger on it. As an experiment, I pulled the battery cut off I have directly on the inverter, since it has about a 1.9a parasitic draw when not in use, and then reconnected it. Low and behold, it started charging the battery at about 67A according to my flow meter. I wonder why that is? does it get a full charge and then just not provide any more charging after that? It must be the case, because I am looking at the meter and it is once again registering a -1.02 A draw. I wonder just how flat the battery needs to be in order to cause the inverter to charge it again? do I need to manually flip it? I'll have to write Renogy and see, this thing was a factory second, it is way out of warranty.. maybe there's some sort of firmware update I can get or something. I'll have to ask and see, the manual is pretty vague about anything to do with the charging system. One final point. I am thirsty. I have one of the canteens I filled with boiling water, you know, one of the ones that is a vacuum bottle.. like all of the rest of them. Can I say they are exceptionally good at holding heat? How do I have a nice refreshing glug of boiling hot water? I suppose its time I have to get a 'regular' bottle. But I'm not putting boiling water into plastic, that is for sure. I guess I'll just have to leave the cap off somewhere safe like inside the car to let them cool or make them all into tea. Nah, scratch that, tea residue is a PITA to get out of stainless steel bottles.
Off to sleep again.
6:00am
Holy crap, I slept in. I'm just going to use the single burner backpacking stove to make coffee, have granola and some protein powder and get on with it. The sun is already up, not that there's anything to see but gray. First things first though, off to the comfort station. On return, I saw movement on my campsite.. I crept in slowly and watched carefully, and I saw a football sized grey rabbit meandering through. Of course, I didn't have anything on me at all that could take pictures, so this will just have to be a personal memory. He hopped off across the road and disappeared into the bramble on the far side, never to be seen again most likely. After breakfast, I did as I said and swapped out my boots for the old ones.. they already feel more comfortable and supportive. I'm actually a little ticked - if I'd worn these on the trip to the suspension bridge, would I be as sore as I am? Probably not. These ones are being relegated to donation or possibly just used for walking around town. I can't afford to use them for work, they'll kill my feet especially when I'm walking on concrete back and forth. I got some snacks into my backpack, and off I went. This is my last day, so I wanted to cross things off as much as I can. I actually am considering packing my tarp and such before bed tonight, but everything is still wet, and I don't want to pack them away wet unless I absolutely have to. Tomorrow is supposed to be partially cloudy, so with luck they will dry overnight. I'll just have to decide after I get back from my hike. I'm a bit bummed that weather wasn't better, but on the other hand there's lots of bonuses to bad weather - like, the half of the campground that has utility power is relatively full, but the other half isn't. Most of those people get in their cars in the morning and drive off to ??? and aren't seen again until 1-2pm at earliest. The remainder as far as I can tell just hunker in their RV's the entire day, leaving the trails essentially to my prerogative all day. I have only seen one set of people out on the trails other than me, and they must have saved my ass by finding my canteen. There's been fresh tracks of course, but I’ve never met or seen anyone else this entire time actually on the trails. As a result, I walked over to the trailhead for Manito Miikana which is in the non powered part of the park, and that part of the park appears to be vacant. Unfortunately, there is ONE powered site over here by itself, not on the map.. I wish I would have seen it when I came in otherwise I would have taken it and been absolutely by myself. Having the power has been a game changer here, compared to killarney last fall, just being able to use the heater all night to keep things warm in here. Especially since last night I considered using my sleeping bag just for some weight when I was having trouble sleeping (backpacker's muscles are sore) and the zip from the zipper just.. came right off in my hand. I tried to re-attach it.. and tried to pry the two halves apart to open the duffel, but in my sleep addled ability it was an insurmountable challenge. The Trail head was sort of 'part of the trail system' so I had to start on the boardwalk, I could have for instance just gone and done the headlands, beach, and then reach the trail, but I opted to cut to the chase and start at the beach boardwalk, which helpfully puts you right at that observation deck I found yesterday. And boy are the waves coming in. The weather radio said 2-3M waves and it wasn't kidding, they are coming straight at shore, the wind is blowing much more fiercely and I’m barely able to keep my hat on. I'm very glad I dug into the 'winter' clothes bin I brought on a whim, I'm equipped with the merino wool t-shirt, covered by a sweatshirt, covered by my raincoat. That is pretty good insulation and wind breakage. I also am wearing the gloves I wore at killarney which are a bit thicker than the other gloves I used to use, but also water resistant and still provide enough tactile feedback that I can understand the camera buttons by touch alone. I'm still rotating through pairs of 'darn tough' hiking socks. They are also excellent, and even though they're usually $40 a pair they are wool, and hug your feet extremely well. I still prefer my mom's wool socks for general use though. I haven't broken out the electric socks yet, if I didn't have the heater in here I'd for sure be using them. I'm digressing again, suffice to say, I was prepared for the ~40kph wind gusting to ~70kph at 5c though my eyes and nose were watering. That old outback hat that cooks my head in the summer, keeps it warm in the shoulder seasons, especially with the lupa under it. I spent probably 20-30 minutes on the beach overlook shooting hundreds of wave shots. I got long clips with the 360 as well. I hope I can do something with it, piecing this section of the trip into a coherent video will be difficult since it is too windy in most cases to explain it. Voiceovers kind of suck, though I generally lean on them.
After I was done with horseshoe bay, I walked to the end of the beach and into the forest again, turning left on the trail where it reaches a junction. Going straight will take you to the next beach on the beach trail, which depending on how I feel or how the weather goes I may walk this afternoon. The trail immediately climes a set of sturdy stairs, and up into the rocks, this would surely have done me in on the first day, but I believe I’ve finally worked all of the 'Toronto' out of my body and it is responding like it should now instead of having the usual delay. This trail is probably the best so far for views, it goes around so you can see the area where the headlands trail does, and also you can see the huge muddy swath of the pic river inlet, the deep and light blues mix with the milky coffee colours of the pic river in interesting ways. The winds are so fierce here that a seagull is just hovering while gliding right in front of me holding something in his beak, I got lots of shots of him, I hope they aren’t overexposed. He dropped whatever he was holding I think I might have gotten that in frame as well, focus is another consideration, since I have it set to single shot at the moment. Continuing out onto the point I got several more opportunities to get wave and rock action, and finally got to the first proper lookout. This was a nice enclosure with plexiglass and I set up some long exposures here, which hopefully turn out good. The previews look interesting at least. I then hunkered down sitting on the platform so most of me could hide from the wind, though unfortunately it was still shooting up through the planks and also up my back. It still gave me some welcome relief, I think I may be getting wind burned because my face feels like it has a sunburn. After a quick snack and some warm water (not complaining that it is warm now am I?) I continued to the second lookout, which was overlooking horseshoe bay and Hattie cove's entrances. I got some shots here, but really think the other location was superior (lol). And then returned back down the trail to Horseshoe bay, things were a bit quieter now and there was a flock of sand pipers daring the waves. They literally don't give a crap I'm here. I thought they were going to fly right into me as they were hunting for bugs washing ashore. I got some pretty personal shots, hopefully some of those are going to be in focus, because like the waves they run in and out, and all fly away in circles looking for the best place to land and feed. After about 4.5 hours I've returned to my campsite. Its still pretty cold at 8 degrees, but I still have my door open as I type this and copy today's pictures to storage. The sun seems to be coming out, and I've been watching a couple warblers jump around not too far away looking for scraps or bugs on the ground. Probably should get some lunch and see what the afternoon has in store.
So all things considered, I want to try and get to Kettle lakes right at 2:00pm so I can have some time to explore that I didn't get last time, I'll have some time in the morning of Saturday for sure, but once again, I want some time at my parents place on Saturday to get everything squared away so I'll have Sunday to edit photos and rest. That leaves the evening to get things done at kettle lakes, and I could rush there and get there before 2pm but I don't want to. IF I get there and my site has someone on it still, I have to drive around with the trailer and waste fuel and time I could be setting up camp and then walking around. So the only option is for me to have a big breakfast for dinner early, and that means I skip lunch and go to the end of the beach trail while the sun is still out. I removed the reflector in the skylight before I left to allow the sun into the trailer to warm it up a bit since I’d had the door open, and grabbed just the 360 and the 5dmkiv and my camera bag and went. And holy crap I saw 3 other people. I guess the sun roused them like reverse vampires from their RVs All older than me, they looked pretty surprised to see me, but we passed by with general pleasantries said to people who will likely never see each other again, and I headed for the big beach. There's driftwood as far as the eye can see. I guess it all washes down from the pic river and then washes ashore here. The brown water from the pic has overtaken this entire bay as well. The photographic opportunities here kind of lie in the small things, and I got a few, but generally I couldn't find a good composition here. The sun has obviously gone to hide again, because I'm outside and not inside where it thinks I belong I guess. I went to the very far end of the beach where there was a sign explaining about an endangered thistle that was going to be wiped out by natural means, that they rescued and replanted here. They further replanted it in other areas. I guess it is too early for this plant because I saw some leaves that looked similar, but nothing flowering. I generally try to not step on plants so I just was extra gingerly as I explored the beach to the smooth rock point at the other end. While I was there I saw a pink coat photographer in the distance by herself shooting various things on the beach, but she was long gone by the time I got over to see what she was shooting, and honestly didn't see anything of interest there myself. I set up the tripod to add to my growing collection of waves exploding over rocks pictures, and then returned. On my way back, I came across a single sandpiper who was just sort of hiding in one of my footprints from this morning. When it saw me, it jumped up and started doing sandpiper things in the surf. It kept looking back at me... was it hamming itself up for the camera? I walked around the strange sandpiper and back up the beach, where I saw a couple of guys working on the platform I was using earlier this morning. So I had to go back along the secondary trail.. and I saw a flash of orange flit by and crash in the sand in front of me. My gosh! Is it the first Monarch? because It sure looks like one. maybe not 'the first' but 'a first' for sure. It had a death grip on a twig and was fluttering trying to get into the air but the wind was too strong. So I picked up the twig, and used my body to shelter it from the wind, and carried it further back into the forest where the wind wasn't so bad. I deposited it on a tree. I wonder if it will survive? There's no milkweed over here yet.. there is tons of pollen though. I returned to the trailer to find that the two idiots had been replaced by a canadream RV. and I also saw that there was a notice attached to the door of the rv one site to the east of me, they were supposed to leave this morning, according to the post.. I didn't read the notice.. something creepy about that rv. I saw a car there that couldn't possibly tow that one day one, and they were hanging out there, but after that there hasn't been anyone else. I returned to my site to find everything dry, so I had my 'lupper' tidied up and tore down the tarp and poles, removing as much pollen as I could and then folding it and storing it where it belongs under my bed in the trailer. The table cloth is looking a bit worse for wear.. I think I stored it wet last time and there was mold on it when it came out here.. I scrubbed it the best I could, but there's also holes and stains in it. This may be the last trip for it. Some of that was my fault, but I figured it'd be ok because it is plastic. Live and learn. I took my garbage over to the waste station and brushed my teeth at the comfort station. I'm going to probably have a hobo shower tomorrow morning and change into some fresh clothes for the trip back south east. The weather radio said there's going to be rain again tonight and then clearing in the morning, so at least I won't be driving in the rain. I will miss this place. This is a long drive, it takes a lot out of you, and you leave behind parts of yourself here. If it were up to me I'd spend spring, summer and fall here, or at least around Lake Superior. Watching the way it changes, documenting it, understanding it. I could never do it, though, maybe if I do get that van thing going, or a mid sized trailer and vehicle to tow it. But I still wouldn't be able to afford it. With this feeling of melancholy I'll sign off here. Tomorrow is going to be busy, I might as well get some photos edited before bed. 5:14 PM.
I finished my first round of editing by 8:30PM I have to say, I'm starting to wonder if I took these or if someone else did. It seems the tips I've been reading have made some improvement. I think there are even some portfolio worthy shots in there, but none good enough for the world photography contest..
Pukaskwa in the Spring Day 4, May 22 2024
Author’s note: Had a bit of a block and just didn’t feel like it, for several months. But let us continue now.
2:27 AM
The thunderbird is slightly angry, but not like it has been in my memory. I awoke to thunder and heavy rain on the roof, some of which was splashing through the top vent, which I quickly closed. nothing too bad though. I spent some time rolling around trying to go back to sleep, and finally did, used to the constant drumming of rain on the roof.
6:00am
I woke up again, feeling quite well rested. I guess this is what? 14 hours in total with the nap yesterday? I don't know what time I passed out. I did take a Sleepeze, which has a double effect of putting me under and since it is also an antihistamine, it helps control this stupid rash I get on the inner elbows during the spring and summer up at my parents. Perhaps whatever it is is also here, because it really flared up during the hike yesterday. This morning it seems to have mostly scabbed over.
I'm still not particularly hungry, but I know I need to provide at least something. So I decided to go with just pancakes this morning. I know, I should be getting protein, but I don't think I can stomach more right now. I made coffee as usual, I have a slight amount of 'stick man syndrome' from yesterday, but it isn't as bad as I thought it would be. I guess making sure I had that BCAA stuff before and after the hike may have really helped. I eyeballed about half a cup of pancake mix into the collapsible silicone bowl I got for this purpose, and whisked in water with my fork. I only have about 2 liters of water left now, so until I get the other container from Marathon I need to be super sparing with 'non drinking' usages. I got the batter to a good consistancy, and then poured out a bit into the waiting cast iron pan, which had a bit of butter. I got the heat a bit wrong the first try, a little black around the edges, but still edible. Since I do not have plates, the resulting pancake was split in half and put in the cook pot to wait on the back of the stove grill for the other ~2 pancakes I made one at a time. They turned out pretty good, other than the first, they were light, fluffy, and crispy around the edges from the butter. While I was doing this, I had prepared my coffee, and sat down with some real maple syrup and ate. Cleanup was pretty easy, I just used the leftover water from coffee making, plus the water that I collected from the tarp I have over the picnic table. Once done, I packed up the kitchen, locked up the trailer, and headed for Marathon. I left around 8AM, thinking that Canadian Tire would be open at 8, and after about a half hour I arrived. I had mistakenly thought Marathon was where the Terry Fox statue was, you know, because the town is named "Marathon" but I was wrong. It is funny how childhood memories flip together and get compressed. The actual memorial is by Thunder Bay, which is over 4.5 hours away. So, sorry Mr. Fox you won't be getting a visit from me this trip. I arrived at the parking lot of Canadian Tire during what I hope is the worst of the windy part of the storm. The wind is pretty warm actually, but according to my weather app (which now has signal) the wind is 20KPH and gusting to 60KPH. This explains why my car is rocking sideways around 3-4 inches as the wind gusts. I made the mistake of taking my raincoat off for the drive, and when I stood up in the parking lot to put it on, the wind nearly tore it from my hands as I tried to put it on. I walked over to the door, and found that this Canadian Tire opens at 9:00 am, so I visited the LRV out front and snapped a tourist shot with my smartphone, before retreating to my car again, before *I* was blown away. I tried calling my parents a few times but there was no answer, so I spent some time checking the next few days weather models. Since tomorrow is my last day here I want to make the most of it. Judging from the models, the worst of the storm should blow over tonight. I want to do the lookout trail, which is a short but somewhat steep one, and visit the dunes, which are along the trail. This might mean this afternoon I can scout it, get some stormy pics.. and do it again tomorrow, though I think my chances of getting a clear sky at all are probably Zero; But you never know, Lake Superior creates a zone of uncertainty in every forecast, and since it tends to boost or suck the energy of storms, this could burn out early and give me a nice day tomorrow. I got my water bottle and some extra paper towels from the Canadian Tire, I was going to go to the grocery store and look around, but there's not really any point, since I have more than enough food for two weeks most likely. So I decided to head down to pebble beach, which had apparently received a massive overhaul with huge cedar boardwalks and railings. The wind has died down some, but the waves are still coming in. These are nothing compared to the huge ones that I experienced with my parents last time I was here, but they are still pretty impressive. Considering the wind is coming straight into the shore I'm kind of confused why they aren't massive ocean sized waves. I got some snap shots, and some establishing shots. Nothing great, these aren't planned or artistic, just hand-held.. but maybe there's something here. I went down from the lookout to the beach proper, and layed down on the stones right behind the ridge where they've been pushed up from the ice and waves crashing, so I was reletively safe - note there is another ridge pushed up behind me from when things are extra insane, but that apparently is not today. From this vantage point I shot quite a few pictures at 'eye level' with the crashing waves, which will hopefully be interesting. After getting a few more shots down the coast, I climbed back up and made one final attempt to call my parents. This time went through and I spend about 20 minutes updating them on things, before heading back to Pukaskwa. Oh, I did top off my gas tank, which was hovering around 50% as well, It pays to be topped up out here. I returned to my camp site, to find the tarp that had stood through last night finally collapsed.. so I had to fix it.. some of the pegs and ripped right out of the ground, and especially interesting to find those were the ones I had to hammer in with my folding shovel because the ground was so hard. After fixing that, I went back to the car, and unboxed the folding water tank. I also pulled out the wet hoodie from my backpack so I could hang it up, and cleaned out the wrappers and such I had packed out. I got the cameras and took them to the trailer, i will copy the memory cards to the big laptop and maybe edit some in the evening. (it is copying over as I type this - multi-tasking!) once that was done, I locked everything up and walked to the comfort station, which also is where the water tap is. I had to do some other business, and once that was done, got some soap out of the dispenser, and waved my hand under the automatic tap. 'click' no water. I tried again 'click' no water. Shit! now I have soap on my hand and no water, I tried to shake some off.. but it wouldn't come off. so i walked outside to the water spigot with my new tank, and turned on the tap - nothing. Perfect.. I walked back to my site, empty jug and soapy hand. I did wash my hands with water off the tarp.. but I guess getting more 'contaminated' water will maybe require me dipping the tank in the lake, which right now, would be likely to have me washed away. I'll have to check later. At least the clouds appear to have gone a bit higher, so the tree tops aren't obscured anymore. This means going on that lookout trail this afternoon might be a good idea. I'll have lunch and then decide what to do.
Lunch was 'expensive' ramen ($1.99) and maple tea, with some Kool-Aid, because it is a bit spicy. I thought, hey, I need some protein, and dropped an egg in for the last ~1 minute and still managed to over-cook it. I guess you really need to take it off the heat for that to work. The white fully separated from the yolk and somehow managed to burn to the bottom of the pot. Titanium pots don't seem to do well with 'anything' that can stick. I guess the oxide layer provides tones of surface area to stick to. This is why the Stagg Silverado is still in its can. Perhaps the last morning with some wieners, when I can just say 'fuck it' and pack it away with stuck bits to scrub at my parent's place. Anyhow, the water situation is pretty dire, so after packing up, and deciding to do the headlands trail, I cruised by the comfort station again, to ensure I'm empty as there's literally no place to squat on that trail, and try to get water. The water is back on! I filled the floppy jug most of the way before it got too heavy to hold the stupid mouth straight. I now remember why these things are shit.. but if it is a container you only need sometimes, its good because it takes up hardly any space. I returned to my campsite, just in time to watch the two idiots with the inflatable boat, truck off down to the lake with it. Well, I guess they'll either get blown back to shore, or end up as a darwin award. I locked up and proceeded to the water access, where the headlands trail's closest access was. It seems the two idiots are just messing around near shore, it is fairly sheltered here, but the waves are raging just a few hundred meters away. I started to wonder if I was the actual idiot, because; Holy crap, this is dangerous. the rocks are soaking wet, and covered with lichen. I can barely manage to progress, and it is getting very sketchy. I thought, well, I'll just find a nice place to stop, and sit and watch the waves.. maybe record some 360 video, its too windy to actually do a real video, and even if I had the lave mic on the water is spraying at me so much I'm sure it'd get inside the camera, because the door needs to be removed for the external microphone to work, and it is no longer fully sealed when you do that. So I found a good vantage over Hattie Cove and held onto the invisible selfie stick with a death grip as the wind battered the little camera around. The cloud deck was too low for much in the way of a good shot, so I just sat there, it was surprisingly warm even with the wind, and I was wearing my merino wool T-shirt under my raincoat which is an excellent barrier. I sat like that for what must have been twenty minutes. The clouds started to clear a bit, and the wind wasn't spraying rain everywhere, and in fact the rocks were drying quite fast. So, I tried to push on a bit, and found the going was a lot more 'safe'. The trail seemed to be pretty inconsistently marked, and I actually found quite a few side trails that could very well have been just animal trails, or places water had run and destroyed the vegetation. This is a difficulty with places like this, because, if there isn't strict marking, people go off on anything that looks like the trail, and come to a dead end, and turn back - so now you have something that could have been just an animal trail, or an erosion trail, that people have walked on, so now it looks like the actual trail. Compound that with thousands of visitors yearly, and you really can't tell the difference anymore. This is another reason I say, have a map and a compass, or a GPS, or all of the above. People might laugh at you but you'll be getting the last laugh, trust me. Anyhow, there are some pretty nice views from this trail, and I found the Adirondack chairs, bolted to one of the best overlooks of Hattie Cove. I did not partake though, because they were soaking wet, even though they are made of plastic. Continuing on, the weather continued to clear, though the temperature is definitely dropping now, and the winds are becoming far stronger at least out here. It could be because I'm out of the shelter of the cove, but the waves aren't huge so there has to be some cross-winds. I can see the waves definitely have an 'interference' pattern to them out in the distance, so that must be why they aren't as huge as I remember. They are still plenty deadly to the unprepared, that's for sure. The wind being as it is would have taken my old clipper canoe and pinned it against the rocks so the waves could grind me to pulp there, that is absolutely certain. I came back around the trail and ended up on the beach in Horseshoe Bay, where there's an old look-out deck, and a painting by the group of seven immortalized, I looked at it every which way, and I'm pretty certain that it wasn't actually painted here.. some of the elements lined up, but most did not. It looked like he was painting from a spot in the sky behind where I was, and there is no ridge like that back there I can see. Anyhow, since it was still kind of gloomy, I decided to do some painting of my own - using light. I set up my tripod and got it firmly set, and got out the ND100 square filter, and got some 30s open shutter shots, that should be interesting, they make the water seem a placid pool, when its actually a raging torrent. Afterwards, I got out the 'bigma' and shot some more action packed shots to capture the waves crashing, far out in the distance. I hope they are sharp!
The return was along the coastline, and the wind was just howling, I could feel the water evaporating from my eyeballs, there were tears coming down my cheeks that were dry and gone before they even reached my beard. But I found a spot, and set up and got some more 360 footage and some more handheld shots. I nearly lost my lens cap when I accidentally dropped it and the wind took it and threw it about 20 feet behind me into a crag! From now on those go in my pocket! I finally returned to my campsite after about another 20 or so minutes of hiking. My feet are sore again, and itchy. I really think these new keens I got aren't as good as the old ones. In fact, tomorrow when I go on my last planned hike - I'm going to wear the old ones and see if they're actually more comfortable. Sore feet are hard to deal with when hiking, they make everything worse. Anyhow, I'm in the trailer now.. its 10c outside and I'm running my little 500w heater to get the temperature up. It is brighter outside, but still overcast. The radio says that it is supposed to rain overnight, but should just be overcast and windy tomorrow. We'll see.. I saw something that looked like blue sky hanging out over something that couldn't possibly be the sleeping giant to the north west when I was up on the headlands, I'm good with mixed sun and cloud, because it offers far more opportunity for interesting shots during the midday period.
I guess I'll have to get off my ass now, as it is 5:00PM I am finally hungry again, but since I had such a lavish lunch I don't want to overdo it. I am down to about 1 Liter of drinking water, and all my canteens are empty. Guess I'm going to be boiling - a lot. 10 LBS of propane was a great idea if I do say so myself.
I had Mac n cheese with a hotdog in it, and then after cleaning up I started the boilathon. I have two containers that hold one liter, and two that hold 500ml and that is four rounds of boiling. Once those were full, I added one liter of boiled water to the blue jug, which has my remaining fresh water. I guess it isn't fresh anymore. Boiled water tastes 'flat' to me, but mixing it with fresh water should help a bit.. I edited some photos with luminar until around 8:30 pm and then retired for the night. The temperature is dropping outside pretty fast. It is already 8c degrees outside. My little heater is keeping the inside relatively nice at 18-19 degrees, so no worries there. One of the problems with my trailer is, it is too well sealed. I mean, carbon dioxide builds up inside if you close the windows doors and roof vent, so to keep my home-away-from home from being my tomb, I have to keep the window and vent open. I've experimented with a C02 meter, and while I can only get the levels very low by leaving the door open (might as well just sleep under the stars) I've found that I can keep the levels moderate by leaving the top vent open a crack, and the window open by about 1/3. This is a good balance between fresh air and not freezing, but I want to figgure out a better solution, like a floor vent. The problem with that is keeping critters out, and not letting rain in when driving. I need to find something that can be closed and waterproof during travel. The idea, is that since C02 is a heavy gas, it should just find its own way out the floor vent, and since heat rises, the cold air should also find its own way out. I need to spend some time on this topic and see what others have done.
Pukaskwa in the Spring Day 3, May 21 2024
"Recovery time 120 Hours"
I woke up just before the sun. Today I’m having a large calorie dense breakfast, because I suspect I will be grinding myself down to nothing. I set up the kitchen and cubed my potato, then got it into the cast iron. I then started some water heating for my fresh ground pacific pipeline. There's another photographer who is far more famous and far skinnier than I am that swears by the stuff, and you know, I may be swearing by it too. It really gives you a kick in the pants, without being too acidic. I was going to try making this cowboy style, but it is a bit too messy, so I packed up the old myleta (sp) one cup filter that was over at the cabin. It works wonderfully, you just have to be careful not to pour too much water in at once, keep it on the grounds and not touching the paper. It takes a while, but the result is pretty amazing. I have a double walled vacuum mug my dad bought me once Christmas, I think it was supposed to be a beer stein, but it works for everything pretty well, and keeps the heat for lots longer. It is hellish hot if you drink immediately. Best to let it sit, which is perfect while I finish the other components of breakfast. Since my second burner was free, I put the old 4" cast iron pan that I somehow thought was a good idea, it isn't seasoned well, and it is so thin it is difficult to manage. However, it seems perfect sized to brown a piece of Lou's peameal bacon - this time I got one of their other products, the smoked back bacon. It doesn't have much fat, so about a pinkie sized bit of butter is in there as well. I tried to put a second piece in there, but it didn’t work that well. I babysat those for about 15 minutes while gingerly sipping my coffee, testing the potatoes from time to time to check for doneness. Once they were done, I unloaded both pans into the lid of my pot set, which serves as a bowl, and placed them at the back of the stove to keep warm. The bacon stuck badly to the little pan so I’ll need to go back and scrape it after. Unfortunately, this will wreck most of the already wrecked seasoning. We'll hopefully fix that this trip as well, but it might need a trip back to the sander. In my bigger pan, which is still only 10" I cracked two eggs and fried them up. They slide around like they have the leidenfrost effect; perfect. I broke one of the yolks though. Over-easy it is. Once done that goes on top of the other two, and I sit down to eat. Complimented with a juice box, some Metamucil, and a preparatory scoop of LBCAA powder, that is breakfast. I also made sure to pre-pack myself with plenty of water, since today doesn't look like it is going to be cold and rainy like the evil AI voice on the weather radio said last night. Seems I’ve been too coddled, being able to use windy.com and some other sites to basically flub my own forecasts for the next day which generally contradict whatever the talking heads say.. the truth usually ends up being somewhere in the middle. I decided to err on the side of 'I can take it off if it gets too hot' and wore my merino wool t-shirt and light hoodie, with my raincoat stuffed in my camera bag. I then put in a couple oranges, some cheese sticks, and 4 trail bars. I fixed one liter of fresh water to my backpack's horizontal rear carrying straps like a bedroll, and then another thinner one liter container in the side pocket - this one has electrolyte mix intended for dealing with heat stroke, I run it a lower concentration for just dealing with 'oh god, my sweat stopped' or 'oh man, I’m getting kind of dizzy' the second one is pretty scary when you're about to cross a god damned evil suspension bridge, oh and on high rocks too. After cleaning up the kitchen and putting things away (I found out that the propane hose actually DOES NOT disobey the main valve; it is just that the Coleman stove will quite literally run for about 6 minutes with the contents of the hose. Talk about efficiency.) I decided to drive up to the front gate and return the 'temporary' laminated thing they gave me by sliding it under the door. Once done, I just parked at the visitor center, which is basically the trail head for most of the trails (it appears to closed at this time in the season, it is also where the famed 'Wi-Fi' comes from, as I found out on the map - there is no Wi-Fi while it is closed, I scanned for signals, believe me. I will have to go back during '11am-4pm' which is the park operating hours and see if it is open, because I believe after today's stupidity, they owe me a free badge.) And you might ask, why not just walk there? It is only about 500 meters away from your campsite. and to you I say 'bah humbug' you have no idea how disheartening it is to have to walk 500 more meters after you've already trekked 16.9 kilometers over 8.5 hours up and down rocky hills, scrambling under fallen trees, slipping and falling on your ass.)
Once I parked, I unloaded and checked my gear. Set up my smart watch heart monitor belt - the battery was dead, replaced then set up my backup-gps - the database was corrupt, the memory card had gotten loose, which is behind the battery compartment. and I dropped one battery that rolled under my car, so I had to fish it out on my hands and knees but it working after all that. Did I mention, I'm wondering if my camp site is haunted? and that thing is following me? and that maybe is why the last people left early? I found my sleeping pants - that I wore last night waaay on the far side of my camp site after I locked up my trailer to go to the comfort station and brush my teeth this morning... I hadn't been over there at all today. I took them off before leaving the trailer.. W.T.F? I digress. Once everything was set, I locked the car, shouldered the 30 odd lbs. of backpack and gear.. and headed off down the trail. I spent time lolly-gagging at the beginning of the trail, since there were so many informational posters about operations in the park. For instance, there was a prescribed burn area in the early 2000's which can't have been all that long after I visited here with my parents (I think it was 1998? I was still in high school, and I think they took me out to go, but I’m sure mom will correct me.) The area burned was small. I think we need to do this on a more regular basis. While the area is clearly damaged, the amount of new life there is immense. There's even a special stand there set up to orient a camera and take a picture and send to the park so they can see the progress, that way everyone can participate. Of course I will be too, because as far as I can tell... there's only one or two sets of footprints on the trail so far, though possibly others have been washed away. There weren't too many photographic opportunities, a few snaps I took with the main camera, but mostly macro with my phone.. I did bring macro tubes this time but getting them to work on the trail is a bit cumbersome. Unfortunately, I'd hoped that there would be a lot of flowers blooming but there's hardly anything. There are orchids probably as far as the eye can see over in this part of the trail, but they are just barely starting to bud. So, Swamp Marigolds, and some other tiny flowers that I can't yet identify are on my phone and camera where appropriate. as a rough guestimate I reached the floating boardwalk around 30-40 minutes in... and the light was amazing here. nice yellow side light... it was also bloody hot. So much for the 'cool and cloudy forecast' once again. There were a pair of bluebirds flying around from stump to stump, and then one stopped to sun bathe... so you know, I carry that huge 6 lb. 'bigma' lens around and feel like I should just not do that, but it always seems to be needed. I set up my tripod and... of course it left. I spent around 20 minutes being quiet, and waiting, and finally a swamp sparrow (I think) took the spot, and stayed nice and still for me to get several relatively close up shots with the big boy. I waited a bit longer, but the sun was getting around, and there was a grackle swearing at me from the top of the highest dead tree. With him around no one else would show up, so I packed up and headed on. At this point I was feeling pretty good. I was about to be un-good. Somehow in my mind '15 feet' was transposed with '15 meters’ well, 15 meters, isn't quite three times 15 feet, but it is pretty close. Unfortunately, this being the north country, those meters can't just be spread out over a long distance, they must come and go within a few meters. So, up and down, and rest. up and down, and rest. up and slide on my ass and rest... and this went on for about 3 more kilometers before the trail levels out again. At this point, I was worried because I'd already wasted about 2.5 hours and hadn't even covered 1/3 of the distance. but since the trail was level for quite some time, I was able to cover about 2/3 of the distance in around 1.5 more hours. I was still tired, but I rested and took drinks and snack breaks, and mostly used my freshwater canteen... saving the electrolyte one for the return, when I’d need the extra boost. I already had salt crystals on my brow and around my eyes. the heat was according to my watch around 30 degrees Celsius... probably minus 5 for my body heat, still not at all what I expected. I only had to take a leak once this entire time, every other ounce of liquid was being used for sweat. I passed by a lovely outhouse close to the first campsite on the trail. I still felt good enough to go check it out, but I could clearly see there was someone staying there, so I just moved on. The remainder of the trail was relatively flat, with some more ridge crossings that weren't fun, some rotten old bridges, but mostly new bridges, and a lot of fallen trees that were at the annoying height - too low to really crawl under, and too high to climb over. The forest was thick in some of these areas, so I was forced to crawl under, my backpack barely making it through, but I did it. I made it to the bridge. I set down my gear, pulled out the camera... and... crossed it. My heart was in my throat. I didn't look down much. The bridge swayed wildly with each footstep. I thought of all of the ways suspension bridges failed that I’ve ever seen, and harmonic swaying was one of them... I decided to not walk so evenly... and the swaying was lessened. I then thought 'oh yeah, wasn't the environment minister saying about not wanting to invest in infrastructure? Isn't he in charge of this kind of thing? and then I remembered how the cables at the radio telescope failed. And then, I was on the other side. I turned around... and pondered whether I could just stay on that side for the rest of my life, then remembered that White River holds the record for the coldest winter... and came back across. The second time wasn't as bad as the first. My heart rate was still peaking at about 150, higher than it had been on the entire hike. I stopped, got video, and even went about halfway out again and got some freaking dizzying shots with my ultrawide - the one so wide it can get your feet in the picture. Yes, I did that on purpose. After the excitement was done, I switched back my lens, and sat down for about 15 minutes to have 'lunch' since it was now 12:00. I drank water, and I saw something out of the corner of my eye. It was about fist sized and had the face of a groundhog. It was watching me. It wouldn't move while I was looking, so I quietly got the camera out and waited, sort of pretending not to look. He was brown, with a long tail, but I couldn't manage to get a shot of it. I took a faraway picture of him, when I moved too much he bolted. He is brown with dark hair on his back. I wonder what he was?
around 12:30 I started my trek back. Happy that I will never have to do that again. At this point, I was sore, and tired, and just wanted to be done. The day is way hotter than it was supposed to be, and my black canteen with fresh water is down to one mouthful. At least I have my ... blue... canteen gone. I do not have my blue canteen. What the hell! I did have a couple sips out of it mid trail, but it is gone. Well, I pray to whatever god will listen it is just at one of the last places I sipped on it, or I'm going to be in trouble. I didn't hear it fall out, so it must have fallen somewhere soft. I started the long slog back, taking tiny sips of the water I had remaining, but by the time I'd crossed 1/3 of the way back... the final mouthful was gone. To deal with this, I decided to go in roughly 500m sections, rest, let my heart rate go down, and continue. This worked fine, but I was still feeling kind of sick, and a bit dizzy. Not enough water, lots of heat, and heavy exertion isn't a good mix. The bars I brought are dry, they need water to go down, so I can't even power through with calories. The cheese was moist, I had one more tangerine left, which helped quite a lot. and just about as I was about to lose hope... there was my bottle. It sitting in the middle of the trail, bathed in a patch of sunlight like an idol of health. It was right past the outhouse to that campsite. The campers were gone, but it was there... I picked it up, opened it to check the contents, and nothing looked out of place... and drank. I was immediately energized. But I had to council myself not to just pour the whole thing down my throat... I still had 3ish kilometers to go, and they were the worst kilometers. I took it slow, taking breaks, sipping at the water, and ate one bar washing it down. My feet were sore, it took everything I had to just stand up again, but stand I did. I crawled under the trees that I'd climbed over earlier, getting my pants and shirt dirty, but I did it. I can't even relay how relieved I was when I saw the edge of the burn zone, which was only about 300 meters from the parking lot. It was closing on 4:30pm now. I tossed my gear into the car, grabbed my last canteen of water, and reclined in the driver’s seat, letting the cool air conditioning wash over me as I drank the whole half liter at once. I stayed there for about 10 minutes before I drove back to my campsite. My feet were cold, this is not good. this is probably some sort of warning sign, so I got back... I wasn't hungry, but forced myself to eat a bit of granola, and drank a serving of that protein powder. I also drank another two canteens of water, and immediately needed to pee. What came out was... not natural coloured. I suddenly was very tired, I stripped off all my clothes... had a quick 'hobo shower' with the body wipes I had, and changed into my bed clothes, with fresh underwear. My feet were still cold, and were slightly blue. I massaged them and drank more water. Finally, when they started to return to normalcy, I passed out for two hours. It is now about 6:50, and I’ve spent about 50 minutes typing this. My feet are fine now, and I’m cozy and warm. Still not hungry, but thirsty. I’m sipping away on some water while I type. I had a bit of a fever for a while, but it seems fine now, and I’m not dizzy anymore. Panic averted. The storm alarm on my watch went off a few minutes ago, and clouds seem to have come in, but the forecast on my trailer weather station is still showing sunny. I guess we'll see. I'm going to read for an hour or so and probably go to sleep for real. I still need to brush my teeth... but maybe I’ll just spit into a garbage bag.. not sure I want to walk over to the comfort station right now. Tomorrow - going to marathon to get gas, visit Mr. Fox and get that jug I mentioned. Maybe pick up lunch, we'll see how long all that takes. Marathon is one of the few places left that has A&W Chubby Chicken up here. I might sit down and steal their internet for a while too, try to answer some of these questions I've come up with.
Pukaskwa in the Spring Day 2, May 20, 2024
forgot to mention on the previous day, that well, there are a lot of people at this little park. A lot of noisy people with music, the camp site up the hill is having some sort of dance party, and while the one next to me is pretty quiet for now, I can't help but notice they have a huge Napoleon BBQ and a Webber smoker sitting out. Around 8pm when I was turning in for the night, I heard' click-clock click-clock... CLICK CLICK CLICK CLICK CLICK I looked out the window and saw a half naked man furiously pressing the igniter button on the front of the BBQ. I guess those igniters fail whomever makes them. I suppose they will be upset at me tomorrow morning when I rouse to make breakfast.
4:52 am
I've actually been 'awake' for about an hour apparently I didn't get enough fluids yesterday, something I need to remedy today. My mouth feels gross. I checked the outside temperature at 10.6 degrees. much cooler than yesterday. This is more like it. it is a reasonable 15 degrees inside the trailer. and the humidity is pretty low at 33%. Going back to what I was saying about fires in the boreal forest.. i can quite well see how it happens easily. I know a few people were having campfires here last night, I could smell wood smoke while I was trying to get to sleep. It wouldn't take much to get things going here. Surprised there isn't a fire ban, whomever sets the fire bans must be asleep up here. Anyhow.. I need to get breakfast going. I think I'll just have granola this morning as much as I want to go all out, I have a 7 hour drive ahead of me at least. I didn't get to see much of this little park. Hopefully I can spend a bit more time here on the return trip when there shouldn't be so many people, and I won't be as pressed to get to my destination before the office closes. Time to get at er, as they say.
6:00 AM
After a quick breakfast of granola, I quickly folded up camp, secured everything, and hit the road. I feel pretty good today, so I think I will make good time. This is the hardest part of the trip, it is a straight shot across highway 101 west to Wawa. There is a several hour section with no gas stations so gassing up is very important. After about a half hour drive, I feel the call of nature for the first time, and pull over by a small river where there's a commemorative plaque to mining in the area. Just like most of the pit stops in northern Ontario, the washrooms are white concrete bunkers which are pretty darn clean, I think they literally just pressure wash them with javex solution every week or so. After finishing my morning business, I took this opportunity to call my parents, since I wasn't sure if the email I'd queued up went through. They had got my message, mom was frantic thinking something had gone wrong since I called. I thought this was strange because usually she's frantic when I don't call. I mean, I'm going to be 44 years old this year. I've made it through near half my life without coming to a hard end, so you'd think I had things figured out by now? (no, nobody does, everyone has no clue what they are doing)
I took a few pictures of the memorial, since I couldn't read the faded text, after inspecting it on the back of the camera to ensure the text was legible (it was printed in English, native of some sort, and French) I got back on the road. Next stop was Timmins, where I filled up my tank at just over 50% and grabbed a 1 liter of water, a sports drink, and a small can of wd40 for my leveling jacks which squeak like crazy. There was a short surly looking woman at the counter. I went to went to pay. And my card wouldn't read. for the second time. Holy shit, I was slightly panicking. This is the only way I have to pay now, and I'll be in deep shit if I can't get fuel. After a few tries, she handed me a piece of paper and i slid it under my card, just like at mattawa, it read. It was a releif. I continued on my way, this was my last fuel-up until Wawa, which was roughly 4 hours drive away. The land out here is sparse, the road has no shoulders, and only truck and snowplow turn-arounds every fifty or so kilometers. Suffice to say, there was no 'pulling off' to dart into the bush for a pee. I continued to drink like a fish though, knowing from experience that dehydration when driving sneaks up on you, and you can't just immediately remedy it. I'd already finished off about two litres of liquid by now, and was on the sports drink. I passed the time here listening to 'three body problem' which i'd downloaded from audible before leaving scarborough. It is quite excellent and I highly reccommend it. I hope the author isn't going to get in trouble with the CCP.. he goes way deep into the horrors of Chinese Comunism. There's enough balance there that maybe he's ok.. but those guys don't screw around. The other thing I considered is the geology of this place, since the sun was now deeply buried in cloud, and there was the odd passing shower. You see, this place is still relitively flat, and this bears looking up when I get access to the internet again. From my basic, high school level geology understanding (and the good high school from the 90's, not the garbage they teach now) The glaciers came down from the north pole, and up from the south pole. They compressed, and ground the landscape down to nothing, except where the rock was too hard to do as much damage. You can see some evidence of that in Hamilton where there's mounds capped with hard dolomite that stick up like strange squat pillars in the otherwise flat landscape. When the glaciers receded, the meltwater left behind whatever was in the ice. The heaviest bits were left behind first, and you see them in erratics - huge boulders just left in the middle of a field, usually made up of rock that is alien to the area they are in. And the smallest stuff, generally came out last. And that is what I see up here, mounds and mounds and mounds of gravel made up of rock just as far as the eye can see. the earth is sandy as well, and it is hard for me to imagine the forest I see growing in it. Anyhow, I might be completely wrong here, there is a lot of mining up here so it is possible this is just redistributed for road works from tailings piles. Something else that I find interesting in all this, is I remember as a kid that we used to see blasting mats all along highways like this. There seemed to be always some construction going on, blasting the rock away from the road so it didn't tumble down onto it or just to widen it. Now this place is barren. The road is in pretty good shape, but it isn't new for sure. anyhow, there were roughly two proper roadside stops for this four hour trip, and I found myself being almost mesmerized by the sameness of everything. On one of the stops closer to Wawa, something else struck me as strange. Something that bothered me at a fundamental level. The river by this stop, was running north. I don't know why this bothered me so much. It took a while for me to even understand what it was, since i’m not usually fully aware of my compass directions. but I felt like something was wrong. I stood looking at it. I knew lake superior was on my right, and by all logic you'd expect it to run that way, but no, it was running away from lake superior. It just made me feel like something was wrong when I stared at the golden water. Maybe that wasn't it, I've seen water run different directions all my life, after all. but this indeed was about the third one I'd seen like this, running north. I guess I'll have to check again on my way back on Friday. It isn't like there's anywhere else to stop along this route!
It was getting on to 2:00pm as I started to get back into the amazing hills and mountains surrounding the big lake, Wawa wasn't far. My fuel gage was at 1/3 ish and I was starting to get a little nervous. I was distracted to my right by a huge triangular mountain, and realized it wasn't that.. it towered above the natural rocks, and there were more of them. Tailings piles from an active mine. I didn't see what they were mining there. It looked to me like it was an open pit though, judging by the equipment I saw. I will have to see if I can find out later. Before too long, I was cruising into Wawa. Thankful as I was down to my last quarter now. The place seems to have sprouted even more geese statues since I was here last year. I filled up at the first gas station I found, which was a petro canada. The price was 1.83 a litre. I calculated my fuel costs at 1.80 I'm glad to see our horrible government can exceed my expectations even in this. I paid directly at the pump, and my card went through without issue. So maybe there are two malfunctioning card readers out there. I hope that is the case, I need to at least make it home before I can order a replacement. and then the fun of going around and updating all the insurance, CAA, etc to the no doubt new card number. I did add this card to google pay on my phone, but that requires the machines out here to support NFC - which is not entirely likely. The tap to pay on my card failed a few months ago, and hasn't worked since. So I guess maybe the card is just a defect, it is supposed to be re-issued next year anyhow.
This is the last leg of my journey, up through white river, over the massive brown pic river, and finally - around 3:00ish I pulled into Pukasaw and walked up to the main gate. It is manned by three young women, that couldn't have been much older than 16 years old, and one that was probably ninteen or twenty. Either that, or i'm just horribly old now. I was given a map, and a laminated card.. and told to go find a site, it is first come first serve. I found site 13, which is fairly secluded, with a power outlet. There will not be a repeat of killarney and being soaking wet and unable to dry out because my dehumidifier killed my battery. After a few false starts, I managed to back the trailer in where I wanted it, unhitched, and drove back to the gatehouse. To my terror, I heard 'clunk, clunk, clunk, clunk' coming from my right front wheel. Oh shit. The car finally got me where I was, how could this be? I replaced the struts, bearings, knuckles and brake pads and rotors all reasonably recently. Would I be stuck out here? Not horrible.. but I can't stay here forever. I pulled up to the parking area by the gate house, and did a walk around. There was a huge stone stuck in the treads of the right front tire. I thought 'shit, is it a puncture?' nope.. it was just wedged in there. no issue. with a sigh of releif I told the girls my site number. The nervous and youngest one was on the till. She said 'that site is taken' and I said, no one was there, and there was nothing on the sign... so she had to call the older girl over to help her out. She was able to remove that person who had apparently left a day early or something. my total bill for four nights is just $120. That is FAR and away cheaper than the provincial parks. She noted that the campground is 'B.A.R.E' certified, and that if I left food or anything like food out and unatended, a staff member would confiscate it and put it in a lockup, leaving a note behind. I usually leave my water jug out.. but I guess I won't do that either, it will stay in the car when I'm not around. I returned to my site, and began the process of setting up. I picked up the trailer and rolled it back and around so the back faced the road and blocked view of my table, then I pulled the picnic table over closer and strung up my tarp covering the table and just outside the trailer entry way. I pulled it very tight and put extra lines to keep it strong. I barely missed stepping in a huge pile of Dog feces. Disgusting. I got one of the garbage bags i got from Killarney a long time ago, turned it upside down, and picked up the offending offal, and then tied it tightly, putting it in with the garbage bag in my car, and tied that as well. there's a garbage room by the comfort station, according to the map, so i'll take it up there and toss it when I go brush my teeth. Tarp strung, I then put the battery in the trailer and hooked it up. Then I plugged into the power receptacle outside, and turned on the breaker. Inside, I connected the secondary DC disconnect I set up for the Renogy inverter/charger under the bed - and took note that it didn't over-discharge the battery. The thing must have a huge capacitor array in it. Hopefully those never go kaboom while i'm sleeping, or things might be over pretty quick for me! finally, i pushed the controller button on the panel and the inverter came to life. The battery charge meter started rising - 1 amp, 5 amps, 10 amps, 50 amps, 70 amps - and then.. nothing. I was confused.. I started to hear 'electical noises' from the fuse area where I'd just installed the 200amp DC fuse.. but that shouldn't have blown. The amp meter shows a constant draw of .7ish amps. Did I blow the fuse at the post? I went out and checked, no.. I reset it anyhow, and confirmed that I was getting power due to the idiot light on the extension cord. Not sure what is going on here, but I am getting power from my outlets, so things must be ok? I hear the inverter working, it has a pretty loud hum. the fan cycles from time to time. I guess i'll just have to get used to that noise. I really should have gotten the 2000W model, but this one was cheaper.. 3000W probably should be fed by 30A may have to do something about that if this doesn't work out. I pulled out the manual and read the display, it is currently in 'bypass' mode so that means power is directly coming from the plug outside. Only issue appears to be the voltage from the plug is only 110V it should be 120V hopefully this doesn't damage the unit.. if the humming is so bad I can't sleep, i'll have to shut it down. I wanted to try and run my 500W heater overnight when it gets chilly, but if I can't, i'll just have to man up and live with it. It is nice to have the fridge running on AC as well, since it can run at full power and keep things cool more effectively. Anyhow, I made myself dinner after this, tonight its mac and cheese, and tapioca for desert. I'm pretty tired, but I headed up to the comfort station to brush my teeth, toss the dog poop.. and the girls didn't tell me what to do with this stupid laminated thing, so I stuck it in the post. I pulled out the weather radio to see if I could get the weather for tomorrow, since there's no internet access here. Seems like tomorrow is going to be cold, blustery and in the afternoon rainy. And then the rain is supposed to continue until friday. Great. Well, we're used to this by now. Tomorrow is the best day to challenge the white river gorge, so that is what I will do. I will turn back if it gets too difficult, but 6 hours at Killarney didn't kill me last year, so I don't think 8 will this year. The trail has a 15m rise and fall as well, which doesn't seem like much. I'm most concerned about the beach sections, which will do most people in. If it is super windy, walking along where the waves crash isn't really an option since the waves will be taller than me. Sometimes these beaches are all fist sized boulders as well, which isn't easy either. I can't remember which from when I was a kid.. so I guess I will find out. It is 8pm now, I'm dressed in my sleep clothes with the door open. The sun is peeking in but is golden yellow and will set very soon. I've prepared for tomorrow about as much as I can, filling water up etc. Oh yeah, and there's a boil water advisory here.. so I'm going to have to do with what I have in the blue water container and then I guess I don't know.. I don’t have a large container other than the blue jug, and i don't have any large pots either.. I guess I'll have to empty the blue jug into my good containers, and then fill it with bad water and drink out of the clean containers until there's room for water in them, boil enough to fill them and continue on. I'll have to javex the thing when I get it home.. or else, maybe go to the Canadian Tire in marathon and get one of those collapsible jugs for clean water. I could possibly do that on Wednesday, since that day is supposed to be pretty bad. It could all blow over in an instant though. Have to keep up hope.
Pukaskwa in the Spring Day 1, May 19 2024
This morning was spent with the last few steps of loading up the car, breakfast, and loading up what remained at the main house. Picking up the trailer, saying goodbye to my parents, and then onto the road by around 7:30. I went straight up the highway to Mattawa, a trip I'd taken several times, and other than a few pit stops to rest or refuel it was pretty uneventful up to this point. The only concern was the outside temperature which was skyrocketing.. 15,17,18,19,20 degrees. This is spring! what the heck?! At Mattawa was also where I kicked in the GPS for the first time, since the remaining trip was somewhat new territory for me. It showed that I would not arrive in time for the park to still be open (kettle lakes) they close at 4:00PM! so I had to opt for the more expedient and fuel costly route up 101 through Quebec. This took me past Timiskaming and the Parc Du O'Pemican which I had stayed at before and generally wasn't impressed by. It also took me past two different historical plaques for 'great fires' Boreal forests require fires to grow.. but it seems that people are still shocked that they happen. Today especially, is very dry, and pretty hot now at 28 degrees. This place is quite flat, I think I will call it 'the prairies of the north' there are a lot of farms up here, but the soil looks desert like, pale tan, it doesn't look like anything will grow here. Some of the farms have vast fields covered with plastic flowing in the wind like waves on a lake. I assume they are protecting their early crops from the mood swings of May. Hopefully they won't be killed in this heat! I admit, there isn't much up here in the north, and places to stop and get gas are few and far between. I happened to find an Esso station about an hour out from Kettle lakes, my gas tank was just over half. Knowing the following day would be bereft of fuel as well, I filled up there. When I finally arrived at Kettle lakes, I was served pretty efficiently, but once again, no park paper, no map.. I bungled my way around to find my site. Site 66, and it will be the same one on the way back. the site is, uh.. sand. Great. Usually I back the trailer in and then lift it with my hands to get it into the right position. On this sand though, it refuses to roll. At least I won't have to worry too much about it rolling away in the middle of the night. Since I have to leave early tomorrow, I set up the bare minimum, solar panels, stabilizing jacks. It is now 31 degrees outside, thankfully, I had the foresight to install the reflective panel I made into the skylight in the trailer.. so it is only 25 degrees inside here. I have the fan running and the door open, so it will equalize I'm sure. Unfortunately, there's no signal here, so I have no idea what tomorrow has in store for me. Weather forecasts for Wawa were showing a reasonably nice day tomorrow, but the temperature here is out of whack with what I saw.. it was only supposed to be 15 degrees. Lake superior makes its own rules once again. At least it is nice and breezy. Anyhow, it is currently 5pm, I guess I need to put my pants back on and make some dinner!
616PM
I had that 4patriots dehydrated vegitable soup for dinner, along with mint tea, and extra water for the heat. I had tapioca pudding for desert. The soup was good, it was like creame of broccoli, except it was rice, carrots and peas. The peas did not rehydrate well after 20 minutes, but were soft enough to just be pleasantly chewy. I already managed to burn myself on the camp stove. Did you know those adaptor hoses for propane tanks just ignore the valve position? no? neither did I. I turned the tank valve off and lit the burner to burn off the end of the propane in the hose, and it kept burning for two minutes before I realized it wasn't getting any weaker. As a result, the grate was hot and when I lifted it up to put the hose away, I burned the back of my hand. nice red welt there now. I'll have to see if it gets bad its usually best to leave these alone unless it actually opens up or blisters. I have my first aid kit anyhow, might have to put a bandage on it to keep friction off. anyhow, if this is the only injury I get during this trip I will be very happy (well, excluding my left arm which the black flies have turned into some sort of strange disease patient.) The sun is starting to lower. it has a halo of white around it but the sky appears completely clear. I'm not sure what this bodes, but it is getting cooler rather fast, which is very fine with me. Once I finish my tea, I'll get my teeth brushed, read a bit and then turn in. I figure I want to get out of here by 7am at the latest to get to Pukaskwa. I'm also low on camp soap, so hopefully I can swing by Canadian tire or something to get some more. Else it's just dawn or sunlight. I remember noting that it was low last time, but I forgot to do anything about it. I just assumed it had lots, because the stuff last forever. It seems forever is a somewhat imperminant amount of time.