On Sunday June 12 myself, Grant, Thorsten, and his dog Yagger drove the 2.5 hours to the Torch River for a day of paddling. The forecast called for a chance of showers that was only supposed to amount to two or three millimeters of rain. Boy were they wrong! It absolutely poured on us, we were like a bunch of drowned rats. There were thunder clouds all around us but none were close enough to cause us to get off of the water. Now the grid roads in this area were a bit rough on the drive up, when they were dry. But the whole time we were on the water i had a nagging concern in the back of my mind that they would get worse with the rain. A couple of years ago while paddling the same river it rained so much that the roads turned to slop and we had to wait for an entire day for the roads to dry out before they were even close to being passable. Luckily, though, we had used the put in on the north side of the river where the roads were somewhat better and after a bit of slipping and sliding we got both vehicles off the dirt track that runs from the grid to the put-in and back onto the road. There were lots of wildlife on the river that day, we saw 4 moose, a couple of deer, bald eagles, and many ducks.
Yagger wasn't at all happy about the rain.
Even though it rained for most of the day I still think we got luck with the weather, it could have been windy as well.
The following weekend, June 18th, I joined a small group of paddlers from La Ronge for a day trip on the Montreal River. The day started off relatively nice with only a few drops of rain and a bit of a tail wind. As the day progressed the wind got stronger and seemed to switch directions. As we were nearing the take-out the clouds darkened the thunder began and without warning, for the second weekend in a row the rain came down like crazy. It rains so hard that the surface of the water became blurred. Again, the wildlife was abundant, this time we saw 3 moose, bald eagles, and many ducks.
3 comments:
Great stuff Mark. I enjoyed the pictures with the rain. Rain is often downplayed by photographs, it's usually hard to see how much it is raining in a photograph. With yours this does not seem to be the case. In fact perhaps your pictures also downplay the rain, and it may have been raining even harder than it looks!
Cheers,
Bryan
By the way, has Grant traded in the chevy minivan canoe transporter for a VW wagon?
I assume you need some decent clothing to stay warm in that weather?? Just curious what kind of layers you had on and how effective in keeping warm.
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