Feeling great as every stroke took me farther from civilization toward the wilderness I love so much, I felt wonderfully independent with enough experience to go almost anywhere. At Point Separation the Mackenzie begins to split into many channels and spread out into the vast delta. It’s a tremendous maze of channels’snaking through a vast area of low-lying islands, ponds, lakes, and bogs stretching nearly 150 miles to the Beaufort Sea. We traced our route on the map through the southwest portion of the delta where we would leave the Mackenzie, go up the Peel River to Husky Channel, and follow it to the Rat River, which would be our path to the edge of the delta.
We had naively thought the current in the Peel River would be insignificant but were wrong again. Progress slowed as we paddled upstream, a new experience. The wind, of course, shifted, meaning we paddled against wind and current in exact accordance with the second law of canoeing. However, we were thankful for the breeze since we were paddling very close to shore to take advantage of the shore eddies and were collecting mosquitoes in great clouds.
I thought all day about time and how it is the only thing of real worth that we have, the very core of our existence. We cannot conceive of a world without time. Try writing about an event without making reference to time. And yet time can rob us of happiness and peace of mind. ‘No, it’s not time but our sense of urgency, that feeling that we have only so much time to live, that steals peace from us. The problem comes when we make a choice of how to spend our time using all the evidence we have, and then while doing that very thing we don’t enjoy it because of our sense of time urgency and the feeling that we should be doing more. It’s a false feeling. The desire to get the absolute most out of life is good only when it’s kept on a tight rein. It can all too easily run on and drive us into such a whirlwind of plans and activities that we will wake up in thirty or forty years wondering, “What happened? Where did my life go?”
By night we were riding on a cloud; we had paddled the Mackenzie River from the lake to the delta and thought we had the right to feel a little proud. I thought back on the magic moments spent on it and decided, “Yes, I got a tie with Mother Nature.” In my theory, no one can beat Mother Nature in her own ballpark, but if you’re lucky, she’ll let you off with a tie. If you don’t make it or don’t enjoy the journey, you lose, but if you can say at the end, “I thoroughly enjoyed it,” give yourself a tie.
Next morning we set off to find the fabled Rat River, first made famous by fur traders, explorers, and then Albert Johnson, the Mad Trapper of Rat River. He attempted to run the Indians off and take over their trap lines. Albert Johnson successfully eluded several posses sent to arrest him, survived a dynamiting of his cabin, shot several RCMP officers, and finally killed himself as he tried to flee in the dead of winter to Alaska.
I was surprised to find it muddy as somehow my mind had pictured a clear mountain stream. The channel meandered with a sluggish current in a wild series of loops and bends. At one point, two meanders came within fifty feet of each other, separated by only a high thin bank. After climbing the bank and debating the relative merits of portaging over the bank or paddling three miles around the big loop, | chose to paddle even though the portage would have been quicker.
With banks only a few apart and no place to get away from them, the mosquitoes were terrible, but as soon as we camped, surprisingly, they became almost non-existent. I said, “Boy, I’ll tell you, I sure feel dirty. A bath is going to feel good.”
“Why are you going to take a bath?” asked Doug. “Why, I can still see your skin in spots; you can’t be very dirty.”
Although we knew the next stretch would be the most udialiles and physically demanding part of the journey, we were psyched for it and were not going to let anything stop us now. Several books described it as the toughest fur trade route in North America. That night we were forced out of our warm sleeping bags to put the tent fly on when rain began to sprinkle lightly, and it seemed most of the mosquitoes in the Mackenzie delta got back into the tent with us resulting in a battle to catch them. The rest crawled between the tent fly and the tent. When we awoke, the top of the tent was biack with mosquitoes, and it seemed as if we were between the prongs of a tuning fork someone had just struck. If we ventured out, we were likely to be picked up and carried away. When we did go out and removed the tent fly, we saw an incredible sight. Mosquitoes were piled solid an inch thick on top of the tent! A huge swarm arose, and we hurriedly stuffed the tent into its stuff sack and took off.
Avoiding the mosquitoes was hopeless. They were everywhere. Then rain began to fall, and all morning we suffered royally. We put away our maps to keep them dry and by noon felt a little consternation about our location. During lunch by a delightful little creek winding gently through lush meadows, dragonflies filled the air feeding on the countless mosquitoes. They took a liking to my red raincoat and used it as a landing strip and a dining table. They flew around, dipping and darting, until they had caught a mosquito and would then land on my shoulder to eat it. I silently cheered each time I saw a mosquito disappear into the ravenous chopping jaws. Usually the dragonfly stuffed in the mosquito headfirst and, chewing rapidly, spit out the legs and wings.
Strolling through the green meadows, I found a large pond with a muskrat seemingly oblivious to my presence. Terns, yellow-legs, ducks, and geese filled the shoreline while frogs leaped into the water in a panic, and schools of tiny fish darted here and there. The Richardson Mountains, snowcapped and beautiful, rose majestically against a thunderhead sky filling the horizon. I felt full of life from watching the teeming life all around.
In a mile or saw I caught up to Doug and Byron sitting in the middle of a lake wondering which way to go. The lake wasn’t marked on the map, and no one could say for certain where we were, so we paddled around the shoreline and found the river coming in on the other side of the lake. All afternoon we paddled from lake to lake through channels and found having three canoes a great advantage because we could cover three times as much shoreline. At one point we couldn’t seem to find the river anywhere, but we meandered through a marsh and finally found what looked like the river.
When we camped in a grove of spruce trees, I busily ate spaghetti and meatballs while some little blue damselflies busily ate mosquitoes. They seemed to like me, and one little fellow sat on my knee and ate five mosquitoes in about as many minutes. He was a much more fastidious eater than his big dragonfly cousins. He carefully bit off the head, worked his way through the body, spit out each wing and leg as he came to it, until with one final gulp the body disappeared.
We expected to be out of the delta and starting the rugged ascent into the mountains by noon next day, but that was not to be. We found ourselves in a series of big lakes with no river coming into them. We split up, diligently searched the entire shoreline, and then began to shoot bearings off the mountains with our compasses to locate our exact position. The compasses didn’t seem to work properly; sometimes our position would come out one place, but by moving 300 yards away and shooting the same bearing, our position could jump up to six or seven miles away.
Byron said, “I think we missed the river just before we stopped last night. Remember how we wandered through that big marsh? I’Il just bet we lost it right there”
Doug disagreed, “I don’t think we could have missed it there. We searched most of that area, and the only channel went this way. | think we ought to start portaging our canoes between the lakes and just head in the general direction of the mountains. Sooner or later we’re bound to hit the river again.”
“Well, I don’t have any desire to portage anywhere,” I protested carefully. “Why don’t we go back and check out Byron’s theory before we do anything too radical?”
We returned to the marsh and sure enough, we had missed it there. Our river was in plain sight. But a short distance later a huge logjam over 150 feet long blocked our progress. We slid our canoes through and over the jam, slipping and sliding on the muddy banks and the slippery logs, nearly falling in at every step. It was a little discouraging to stop for lunch only about two miles from camp and Byron said, “I sure hate to admit that we got lost. It sounds as if we didn’t know what we were doing.”
“Hey, we didn’t get lost,” Doug said. “We just spent the morning exploring some pretty lakes.”
The current increased as we came closer to the base of the mountains and so did the size of the river. According to the map, we were on the main channel, but we were twice joined by other channels, one about twice the size of the channel we had come up. I wondered then if we should have brought smaller scale maps (we had the one inch to four miles) or whether the smaller scale maps would have the same errors in larger form.
That night Byron pitched his tent for the first time. I wasn’t sorry to see him pitch it because he has the worst snore of anyone I know. Not satisfied with an ordinary snore at high volume, he added a variety of snorts, wheezes, grunts, gasps, and sighs to his nightly performance.
Next morning we reached our first rapid, just a riffle but too strong to paddle against, so we broke out the tracking lines. I tied 90 feet of quarter inch rope in a big loop to the bow and stern of my canoe. By pulling on both lines I could maneuver the canoe out into the stream and tow it along while walking on the shore. That is the theory anyway. In practice, we were in the water about as much as on the shore.
I nearly swamped my canoe when | lost control of the bowline. It swung broadside and threatened to fill with water before I managed to swing it parallel to the current again. Another time when we tried to ferry across the river at the head of a rapid, Byron and I were both swept down the rapids backward.
The little adventure continued all day long as we slowly worked into a pattern; we lined our boats until we ran out of footing and then we would ferry across the river and continue lining. This part of the Rat River, known as the Canyon, is a continuous series of rapids and cascades in a multitude of braided channels. Since the river was running high and drops up to 35 feet per mile, the current is very strong. We passed Longstick River and the rapids known as Destruction City. At this point miners heading for the Klondike in 1898 were forced to abandon gear and rebuild their boats to make them smaller so they could pull them over the mountains.
All of us nearly tipped over at times. I took water over the side of the canoe once when trying to cross the swiftly flowing current. I missed my intended landing spot on the opposite shore and careened backwards through a strong eddy. I was not prepared to be spun around, and the canoe was almost overturned before I could apply a brace stroke and steady it. We went on too long before stopping and really tired ourselves, but the cold water seemed to disguise our sore and aching muscles. When I noticed Doug and Byron starting to stumble on rocks, I realized how tired I was and suggested we stop. We camped right where we were on a gravel island in the middle of the river.
My hands and feet started to feel the strain as we continued lining our canoes steadily upstream the next day. The constant walking on rough, uneven ground in tennis shoes was turning my ankles into rubber hinges so, much as I hated to, I decided to use my hiking boots. Wading a river is definitely not the way to treat a trusty pair of boots, but my feet and ankles were worth more. My hands were also feeling the pressure from pulling on a small rope ail day, so I solved that problem by taping the sorest spots and occasionally wearing gloves.
As the river became even steeper and the rapids more violent, our canoes took a real beating from being dragged over rocks while pulled up the steep cascades. Two guys could have handled each canoe much more easily with one on the bow rope and another on the stern rope.
Next morning I looked at the ominous clouds and said unhappily, “Oh no, just what we didn’t need. A little more rain while we wade in the river. Now I’m going to wish for a wet suit.” Doug and Byron had both brought wet suits particularly for this section of the trip, but I hadn’t been able to afford anything but the bare essentials, and a wet suit seemed to be one of the things I could do without. I improvised with long underwear, blue jeans, and rain pants. That combination worked almost too well, and it kept me cooking hot from the ankles up.
Fortunately, travel became much easier. Long gentle rapids were the rule rather than the violent cascades we had previously struggled with. After we passed the Barrier River confluence, the river became smailer and confined to one channel. The valley appeared to open out, but suddenly we were in a canyon again. This time the river flowed in a narrow channel with brush choking the banks forcing us to wade in water over our waists at times for about half a mile.
The afternoon drizzle might have dampened our gear and the countryside, but it did nothing to dampen our spirits. Happy with our progress, we enjoyed our new experience immensely. Even if pouring rain drove us to the tent immediately after supper, Byron merely said, “I’m glad it waited until after supper to start to rain.” That night I listened to the drumming rain and thought how I would tell about the Rat River. I could show pictures of us lining our canoes up rapids and fast water through a picturesque valley surrounded by mountains, but that would mean little. It wouldn’t tell anyone that we lined our boats up a countless string of rapids just like the ones in the picture. It doesn’t tell about the mosquito biting me on the nose that I can’t swat because both my hands are busy trying to control a canoe dancing along in some big waves or my stepping over a rock into a deep hole while straining to get the canoe up a steep rapid, or the rope wrapping itself around my feet and tripping me into the cold water. But that’s the way it is, and I’m glad. I could write page after page and you would still have to experience it for yourself to really understand the Rat River.
I came very close to capsizing next day. We had lined our canoes up a side channel, and when it rejoined the main stream, we had to get into the canoes and paddle past some bushes on the bank to get more footing. The main channel was flowing just about as fast as we could paddle, and I put every ounce of effort into getting past the side channel. Just as I was about to make it, I struck a rock with my paddle and snapped the shaft cleanly. Immediately the current grabbed my canoe and swept it down the side channel before I could do anything but stare at the broken paddle in my hands. Then I grabbed for my spare paddle as the canoe swept broadside. Just in time I resumed paddling and reached shore.
After that little incident, I switched to using a double bladed paddle because it could be used more efficiently in shallow water. I could also put out a little more effort with a double blade. But for normal rowing, I stuck with my single blade bent shaft paddle. When we stopped to camp, my first priority involved repairing my favorite paddle. Using epoxy glue, I put the shaft together and used duct tape to hold it until the glue dried. The repair seemed strong enough for ordinary use, but I had a little trouble trusting it in crucial situations.
What a view we had from our campsite! Everywhere we looked mountains rose above a cascading river winding through them. Only a few trees struggled to survive on the mountainsides, and most of the landscape was tundra—green and rolling except where it crested into the high peaks of the Richardson Mountains. I felt sorry for anyone who flies into Summit Lake to go down the Bell and Porcupine Rivers. The Rat River is the way to reach Summit Lake. It’s hard work, it’s a struggle, but it’s worth it. Putting effort into reaching a goal makes achieving that goal so sweet. Arriving at Summit Lake by canoe is an experience worth a hundred times flying into Summit Lake because we put at least a hundred times more effort getting there. That’s the way it is with life. The things you have to work hardest for are those you value most.