Memaquay and Robin, thank you for the kind words. With all the work you have done to keep routes alive in the Greestone Area, it means a lot, memaquay. (I still need to do the Steel River btw. Been on my bucket list for years! I think next year, for sure!)
I have a buddy that brings a little battery-powered chain saw on some local trips here in the Kawartha Highlands. We use it to cut firewood at camp, but the power doesn't last very long. On bigger logs it would be useless. On these trips, I find I'm weighed down enough without a larger and heavier saw. One definitely would have come in handy a few times on this trip though!
Yep, I have never had cramps like that in my life, nor would I want to again! I learned my lesson, though. A week after returning from the Sultan trip, I did a ten-day solo trip in Quetico and brought along electrolyte powder. No cramps.
These past two canoe seasons have been the worst I have experienced for mosquitoes. Dad and I ran the Coulonge River in the third week of August, and we still had clouds of mossies around us at dusk. With climate change, is this what we have to look forward to every year? Yikes.
I'm so sorry to hear about your local lake, especially if you live on it. What a shame! Our family summer cottage is on a lake near Sudbury. At the south end of the lake is an abandoned gold mine that stopped operations in 1939. To this day, there are elevated levels of arsenic on the lake and drinking advisories. There are over 1000 residents on the lake...
I sincerely hope your lake is being treated better.
Anyway, thanks again for the encouraging words. The reports do take a long time to write, but I quite enjoy it. Despite the hardships we faced on the trip, there were also some incredible highs. I hope the report didn't come across as focussing on the negative aspects too much. I would like other adventurers to give it a go! That's one of the reasons I write the reports.
Steve