From Reindeer Lake to Eskimo Point - Dundurn

From Reindeer Lake to Eskimo Point

Published November 2003

Description

Canoe across large lakes, up and down rivers and rapids; labour over portages and through a miasma of blackflies; bask in the golden evenings of the Subarctic. In this account of an 800-mile canoe trip – which begins at Reindeer Lake on the Manitoba/Saskatchewan border, continues into Nunavut past the treeline, and ends on Hudson Bay – Peter Kazaks conveys the experience of being in the north by describing the daily details that bring the trip to life. He captures the flavour of an extended wilderness canoe trip and reflects on living in unfettered wilderness. The reader will also grasp something of the serene beauty of the barren lands and begin to understand why its intoxicating nature keeps drawing some back.

The first half of the trip, essentially from Reindeer Lake to Nueltin Lake, retraces P.G. Downes’ voyage described in his classic Sleeping Island. Next the four men of this expedition, led by George Luste, entered the barren lands and followed the Thlewiaza River, the Kognak River, South Henik Lake and the Maguse River north and east to the shore of Hudson Bay. These lands, seldom visited, are close to a true wilderness – one of the few remaining ones.

Contributors

Peter Kazaks

Peter Kazaks studied at McGill, Yale, and the University of California. He was physics professor and administrator at New College in Sarasota, Florida, from which he took early retirement. He now lives in Davis, California. In recent years he travelled with one or more of his children in the Pacific northwest, Nevada and Utah, but future trips will probably take him to visit his children and grandchildren who are dispersed along the east and west coasts of North America.

Book Details

ePub
November 2003
-
176 pp
9781770706422
ePub
November 2003
-
176 pp
9781770707122
Paperback
November 2003
6x9 in
176 pp
9781896219844