The ‘Sharing Adventures Together’ Thread

PeppermintPatty

🐢. 🐳. 🐢
Location
Canada
While labelled diary, this thread is dedicated for members who wish to discuss their outdoor adventures, so whether that’s sailing around the world, interior canoeing, kayaking, fish or lobster boating, hiking, ATV’ing, bicycling, dog sledding, white water rafting, zip lining, horse back riding, cross country skiing, or shoe shoeing, this threads for you. Please feel free to add your own category.


With so many serious issues currently happening around the world, I wanted to open a thread where we could share our JOY of ADVENTURE. A place where we could kick off our heels and reminisce about exciting adventures we’ve had in hopes that we might share a different side of our character with others and magically connect with each other through these stories.
 
I have spend a good amount of time canoeing. Once was a trip to the Canadian Quetico Canoe Area with my father where we spend 10 days fishing and traveling over 25 portages on a hundred mile trip. I also took a trip down part of the Missouri River that went for 4 days, with three other canoes. My wife and I each had our own Kayaks for that one. I also canoed a river in Norther Maine with another canoe and my inlaws. I can't even remember the name of that river, but it was isolated and a lot of fun. The outdoors has always been my most ongoing passion, and it still is.
 
From a deleted post by Patty:
"Was your 100 mile canoe trip with portages on a designated or marked route?"

I suspect it's the same as it was 50 years ago, when we had the place to ourselves. The Quetico is a huge area of lakes. There are so many that it seems like the area is more lakes than land, Some lakes are so close to each other than they may be 25 feet apart in places. Routes through the area are unlimited. Upon entry, we were given a map by a ranger, who asked how many miles we expected to travel. With that, he described several routes out of possibly thousands we could have chosen on our own. We took some of his advice, and of course the map, and modified our trip on our own as we progressed. I don't think it made any difference which way you decided to turn, or what lake you decided to "hop" over too. It was all isolated and virgin. I understand today it is becoming quite crowded. I think we probably saw it at it's best.
 
@PeppermintPatty thanks for starting this thread!

I used to love canoeing, probably still would its just been a while. I still have my old Grumman aluminum canoe, so maybe one day.

My "first" canoe was kind of homemade, I was about 12. I found an old wooden canoe frame a neighbor was throwing out and fixed it up. Repaired the frame and then put an all to thin layer of fiberglass on it. The canoe was very unstable, bottom too round, and easy to put holes in. After a few repairs I gave up.

Then I salvaged a real one after a hurricane. Found it on the beach full of sand, we cleaned it up and used it a lot until the rightful owner was found. Got me hooked. I bought my first Grumman at about 20 and drug it around for a long time, canoeing in Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Utah and Wyoming that I can remember. Lost it in a 2005 hurricane but soon replaced it with the one I have now.

Can't say I have any any great adventures, nothing to match @PeppermintPatty or @JustDave 's but I have had a lot of fun. I did my first "alligator hunting" in the one salvaged from the hurricane. We'd go out at night with a bright light spotlighting the gators eyes and then try to sneak up on one. You had to be very quiet, which was hard in an aluminum canoe, slowly paddling without lifting the paddle out of the water. The goal was to get close enough to be able to lean down and hit the gator between the eyes. Managed to do it a couple of times. Then the startled gator would rapidly depart, sometimes knocking the canoe pretty good in the process, never turned over but came close a couple of times.

Longest trips I have taken were on the Green and Colorado Rivers in Utah. My favorite was a September trip down the Green in Canyonlands from Mineral Bottom to the Confluence with the Colorado. We took 7 days on a slow trip. It is amazing scenery, feels like you are at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. First time I did it we did not see another person the whole 7 days, its gotten more popular since. Here is a link to someone who offers the trip now http://moab-rafting.com/green-river/self-guided-multi-day-canoe-trip-stillwater-canyon/ Have done a similar trip on the Colorado from the last road access below Moab to the Green confluence. Just to show how old I am the last time I did it Princess Dianne died just as we were taking off, did not hear the news until we got out.

Lots of shorter trips on other rivers, seeing manatee in Florida is a favorite memory. I've done a little whitewater, not much, even tried surfing in mine once near Pensacola. Found out why canoe surfing isn't a thing, LOL.

There seems to be an interesting post from Patty that has been deleted. There was a lot in it that could have been discussed.
Sorry to hear that, hopefully @PeppermintPatty will post it again. I missed it and was looking forward to hearing her stories.
 
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Yesterday I was sworn at and cursed out unexpectedly but that persons now on ignore. Here is the post I had written about some of my canoeing adventures.


You sure are adventurous Dave. Was your 100 mile canoe trip with portages on a designated or marked route and did you encounter any bears or other large animals?

I’ve done a 4 day canoe trip with 10 or 12 others along the French River . One of the people was a past high school music teacher and his wife, who was a friend of mine. Many of the others were from our jazz band so I knew most of them. It was a great trip. Unfortunately I have no pictures of it.

My husband and I have hiked and gone interior canoeing up at Killarney. It was a 100 kilometre route.

The first day in I thought the mosquitoes were going to carry us away they were so bad but as the day progressed, the mosquitoes lessened substantially.

It was a fun trip that lasted about 7 or 8 days. The first night we were there we were near a bog and at night the sound of frogs was loudly comical. We couldn’t stop laughing.

The next morning we had a mother bear peering through our back window. I’m not sure who was loudest, my screech or our dog barking but she ran away.

Once at a safe distance, we got out of the tent and saw a brood of baby bears up on a ledge nearby. A close call. I’ve got a photo somewhere of the bear that I’ll try and find.


Our next two trips were in interior Algonquin Park. We started off at Canoe Lake and our route was similar to this one. We did go out of the park for a portion of it.
IMG_0113.jpeg

It was a very long trip that took 18 days but I can’t say how long in kilometres/ miles it was. All I can say was that some of the portages took all day and some more than a day. The first trip I carried all our dogs food which was a lot since she was a shepherd. The second trip I made her a doggie backpack so she could carry her own food and she did really good with it.

On two of our portages we ran directly into a bear and made the decision to keep marching along with the canoe on our shoulders. With our dog barking, they’d always run away.

Did I mention that the portages were a LOT of work. Carrying a canoe for miles at a time is one thing. Carrying a canoe along with a heavy backpack is truly something else.

Our route was so much fun though. The beginning of the route is basically a river leading to many small different lakes. There was canoe lake , little lake, otter lake, big trout lake. When we stopped at Otter Lake and set up camp, I actually went swimming and met some otters. They were playing in the flowing river that entered the lake and I got a chance to swim really close to them. It was such a magical moment. I never realized otters were so playful before.

Another lake we stopped at we made some fishing rods and caught some sun fish, white fish and bass fish. I never caught any bass fish though. My husband caught those but I was still stoked that I even caught fish with a DIY fishing pole.

We cooked the fish over an open fire and it was really good. Unfortunately all this attracted bears. Being woken by a bear sniffing underneath your flimsy tent is somewhat frightening but once our dog barked it ran away and the next time we caught fish we were smarter about it.

At night you could hear the loons echoing off the water and it was so beautiful. Early morning mist was often settling on the lakes; with the loons echoing off the water, it was so very peaceful. It sounds like a Dan Gibson Solitude album.

We both looked forward to the mornings since back then we drank and we ‘d have fresh percolated coffee with Baileys Irish cream withMy reasoning for this was that it was a cream that we could have with our coffee that wouldn’t go bad and I’m sticking with that excuse. Lol ! We both no longer drink but it was fun at the time. We were young.

The only time I was a bit scared was the last night. All day we were paddling hard and in the pouring rain. My husband smoked cigarettes back then and had run out of cigarettes and we really should have stopped paddling before it got dark and didn’t.

It was so dark that we couldn’t tell where the land ended and the ground began. With no way of navigating we had to wing it by banging into the shore. Unfortunately the shoreline was so dense with brush that setting up a tent was not possible. It literally took us hours before we found the trail and a place where we could set up our tent. Our dog looked like she lost all our trust that night and I can’t blame her. We messed up.

The next morning we got out of there as fast as we could and headed to the nearest place that sold junk food. Just sitting in a car feels so surreal when you’ve been paddling for days and I don’t think I’ve ever been happier to sit in a car as then.

We do have pictures of some of these journeys and I shall try and find them.

I forgot to mention that we saw a lot of moose as well as bears in Algonquin park. They mostly hung out in the water. We paddled by many of them. That was exciting.
 
From a deleted post by Patty:
"Was your 100 mile canoe trip with portages on a designated or marked route?"

I suspect it's the same as it was 50 years ago, when we had the place to ourselves. The Quetico is a huge area of lakes. There are so many that it seems like the area is more lakes than land, Some lakes are so close to each other than they may be 25 feet apart in places. Routes through the area are unlimited. Upon entry, we were given a map by a ranger, who asked how many miles we expected to travel. With that, he described several routes out of possibly thousands we could have chosen on our own. We took some of his advice, and of course the map, and modified our trip on our own as we progressed. I don't think it made any difference which way you decided to turn, or what lake you decided to "hop" over too. It was all isolated and virgin. I understand today it is becoming quite crowded. I think we probably saw it at it's best.
That is quite similar to how it is in Algonquin park. There are no definite trails marked but by following the river that hooked up the first 5 or 6 lakes, it made it much easier. Like your route, a couple of the lakes were VERY close making the portages so easy but the further we went the longer the portages making it ideal for those only wishing to do a weekend canoe trip which was probably most people.

I think I can safely say we weren’t the average canoeists and clearly neither were you.

Did you run into any bears? Any Moose? Fox? Wolves?
 
@PeppermintPatty thanks for starting this thread!

I used to love canoeing, probably still would its just been a while. I still have my old Grumman aluminum canoe, so maybe one day.

My "first" canoe was kind of homemade, I was about 12. I found an old wooden canoe frame a neighbor was throwing out and fixed it up. Repaired the frame and then put an all to thin layer of fiberglass on it. The canoe was very unstable, bottom too round, and easy to put holes in. After a few repairs I gave up.

Then I salvaged a real one after a hurricane. Found it on the beach full of sand, we cleaned it up and used it a lot until the rightful owner was found. Got me hooked. I bought my first Grumman at about 20 and drug it around for a long time, canoeing in Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Utah and Wyoming that I can remember. Lost it in a 2005 hurricane but soon replaced it with the one I have now.

Can't say I have any any great adventures, nothing to match @PeppermintPatty 's but I have had a lot of fun. I did my first "alligator hunting" in the one salvaged from the hurricane. We'd go out at night with a bright light spotlighting the gators eyes and then try to sneak up on one. You had to be very quiet, which was hard in an aluminum canoe, slowly paddling without lifting the paddle out of the water. The goal was to get close enough to be able to lean down and hit the gator between the eyes. Managed to do it a couple of times. Then the startled gator would rapidly depart, sometimes knocking the canoe pretty good in the process, never turned over but came close a couple of times.

Longest trips I have taken were on the Green and Colorado Rivers in Utah. My favorite was a September trip down the Green in Canyonlands from Mineral Bottom to the Confluence with the Colorado. We took 7 days on a slow trip. It is amazing scenery, feels like you are at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. First time I did it we did not see another person the whole 7 days, its gotten more popular since. Here is a link to someone who offers the trip now http://moab-rafting.com/green-river/self-guided-multi-day-canoe-trip-stillwater-canyon/ Have done a similar trip on the Colorado from the last road access below Moab to the Green confluence. Just to show how old I am the last time I did it Princess Dianne died just as we were taking off, did not hear the news until we got out.

Lots of shorter trips on other rivers, seeing manatee in Florida is a favorite memory. I've done a little whitewater, not much, even tried surfing in mine once near Pensacola. Found out why canoe surfing isn't a thing, LOL.


Sorry to hear that, hopefully @PeppermintPatty will post it again. I missed it and was looking forward to hearing her stories.
Great adventure with memories that are lifelong companions.
 
Thanks @PeppermintPatty , great stories, you really write well. So does @JustDave and you both have good stories.

I've never been anywhere I need to portage a loaded canoe, that must be hard work. I do like canoe camping, kind of like backpacking without having to carry the load. On the Green and Colorado trips we even took beer and ice cream in our coolers. Kept the ice cream on dry ice, it was a real treat after several days of camping.
Otter Lake
I have done a lot of canoeing on Otter Lake, probably the other Otter Lake though. More alligators than otters. Used to enjoy swimming in the lake by the alligator warning signs. One of them decorates my garage today.

ST. MARKS NWR: OTTER LAKE RECREATION AREA
https://floridabirdingtrail.com/trail/trail-sections/panhandle-section/st-marks-nwr-otter-lake/
 
Did you run into any bears? Any Moose? Fox? Wolves?
We saw moose, but no bears. The ranger told us that the ice had just gone out less than two weeks before we got there, It was in early May, and the bears may have been just starting to come out of hibernation. The mosquitoes had not even emerged yet, not until the last two days of our trip, and they emerged all at once, hungry and with vengeance. As far as wildlife, what I remember the most were beaver at every place we camped. back then we didn't cut firewood. We would just pick up two foot long sections of useable firewood left from the beaver chewings. I doubt that campfires are approved of today.
 
Yesterday I was sworn at and cursed out unexpectedly but that persons now on ignore. Here is the post I had written about some of my canoeing adventures.


You sure are adventurous Dave. Was your 100 mile canoe trip with portages on a designated or marked route and did you encounter any bears or other large animals?

I’ve done a 4 day canoe trip with 10 or 12 others along the French River . One of the people was a past high school music teacher and his wife, who was a friend of mine. Many of the others were from our jazz band so I knew most of them. It was a great trip. Unfortunately I have no pictures of it.

My husband and I have hiked and gone interior canoeing up at Killarney. It was a 100 kilometre route.

The first day in I thought the mosquitoes were going to carry us away they were so bad but as the day progressed, the mosquitoes lessened substantially.

It was a fun trip that lasted about 7 or 8 days. The first night we were there we were near a bog and at night the sound of frogs was loudly comical. We couldn’t stop laughing.

The next morning we had a mother bear peering through our back window. I’m not sure who was loudest, my screech or our dog barking but she ran away.

Once at a safe distance, we got out of the tent and saw a brood of baby bears up on a ledge nearby. A close call. I’ve got a photo somewhere of the bear that I’ll try and find.


Our next two trips were in interior Algonquin Park. We started off at Canoe Lake and our route was similar to this one. We did go out of the park for a portion of it.
View attachment 291037

It was a very long trip that took 18 days but I can’t say how long in kilometres/ miles it was. All I can say was that some of the portages took all day and some more than a day. The first trip I carried all our dogs food which was a lot since she was a shepherd. The second trip I made her a doggie backpack so she could carry her own food and she did really good with it.

On two of our portages we ran directly into a bear and made the decision to keep marching along with the canoe on our shoulders. With our dog barking, they’d always run away.

Did I mention that the portages were a LOT of work. Carrying a canoe for miles at a time is one thing. Carrying a canoe along with a heavy backpack is truly something else.

Our route was so much fun though. The beginning of the route is basically a river leading to many small different lakes. There was canoe lake , little lake, otter lake, big trout lake. When we stopped at Otter Lake and set up camp, I actually went swimming and met some otters. They were playing in the flowing river that entered the lake and I got a chance to swim really close to them. It was such a magical moment. I never realized otters were so playful before.

Another lake we stopped at we made some fishing rods and caught some sun fish, white fish and bass fish. I never caught any bass fish though. My husband caught those but I was still stoked that I even caught fish with a DIY fishing pole.

We cooked the fish over an open fire and it was really good. Unfortunately all this attracted bears. Being woken by a bear sniffing underneath your flimsy tent is somewhat frightening but once our dog barked it ran away and the next time we caught fish we were smarter about it.

At night you could hear the loons echoing off the water and it was so beautiful. Early morning mist was often settling on the lakes; with the loons echoing off the water, it was so very peaceful. It sounds like a Dan Gibson Solitude album.

We both looked forward to the mornings since back then we drank and we ‘d have fresh percolated coffee with Baileys Irish cream withMy reasoning for this was that it was a cream that we could have with our coffee that wouldn’t go bad and I’m sticking with that excuse. Lol ! We both no longer drink but it was fun at the time. We were young.

The only time I was a bit scared was the last night. All day we were paddling hard and in the pouring rain. My husband smoked cigarettes back then and had run out of cigarettes and we really should have stopped paddling before it got dark and didn’t.

It was so dark that we couldn’t tell where the land ended and the ground began. With no way of navigating we had to wing it by banging into the shore. Unfortunately the shoreline was so dense with brush that setting up a tent was not possible. It literally took us hours before we found the trail and a place where we could set up our tent. Our dog looked like she lost all our trust that night and I can’t blame her. We messed up.

The next morning we got out of there as fast as we could and headed to the nearest place that sold junk food. Just sitting in a car feels so surreal when you’ve been paddling for days and I don’t think I’ve ever been happier to sit in a car as then.

We do have pictures of some of these journeys and I shall try and find them.

I forgot to mention that we saw a lot of moose as well as bears in Algonquin park. They mostly hung out in the water. We paddled by many of them. That was exciting.
Great story. Loved it.
 
That is quite similar to how it is in Algonquin park. There are no definite trails marked but by following the river that hooked up the first 5 or 6 lakes, it made it much easier. Like your route, a couple of the lakes were VERY close making the portages so easy.
The longest portage I remember may have been a half mile, but it's too long ago to remember. I remember carrying the canoe over huge boulders, and then making another trip to go back and get all the gear we left at the beginning of the portage. On the other hand, on another portage, we didn't even empty the canoe. We just drug it a few feet to the next lake without taking our gear out of the canoe. I don't know if that even qualifies as a "portage."
 
@PeppermintPatty thanks for starting this thread!

I used to love canoeing, probably still would its just been a while. I still have my old Grumman aluminum canoe, so maybe one day.

My "first" canoe was kind of homemade, I was about 12. I found an old wooden canoe frame a neighbor was throwing out and fixed it up. Repaired the frame and then put an all to thin layer of fiberglass on it. The canoe was very unstable, bottom too round, and easy to put holes in. After a few repairs I gave up.

Then I salvaged a real one after a hurricane. Found it on the beach full of sand, we cleaned it up and used it a lot until the rightful owner was found. Got me hooked. I bought my first Grumman at about 20 and drug it around for a long time, canoeing in Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Utah and Wyoming that I can remember. Lost it in a 2005 hurricane but soon replaced it with the one I have now.

Can't say I have any any great adventures, nothing to match @PeppermintPatty or @JustDave 's but I have had a lot of fun. I did my first "alligator hunting" in the one salvaged from the hurricane. We'd go out at night with a bright light spotlighting the gators eyes and then try to sneak up on one. You had to be very quiet, which was hard in an aluminum canoe, slowly paddling without lifting the paddle out of the water. The goal was to get close enough to be able to lean down and hit the gator between the eyes. Managed to do it a couple of times. Then the startled gator would rapidly depart, sometimes knocking the canoe pretty good in the process, never turned over but came close a couple of times.

Longest trips I have taken were on the Green and Colorado Rivers in Utah. My favorite was a September trip down the Green in Canyonlands from Mineral Bottom to the Confluence with the Colorado. We took 7 days on a slow trip. It is amazing scenery, feels like you are at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. First time I did it we did not see another person the whole 7 days, its gotten more popular since. Here is a link to someone who offers the trip now http://moab-rafting.com/green-river/self-guided-multi-day-canoe-trip-stillwater-canyon/ Have done a similar trip on the Colorado from the last road access below Moab to the Green confluence. Just to show how old I am the last time I did it Princess Dianne died just as we were taking off, did not hear the news until we got out.

Lots of shorter trips on other rivers, seeing manatee in Florida is a favorite memory. I've done a little whitewater, not much, even tried surfing in mine once near Pensacola. Found out why canoe surfing isn't a thing, LOL.


Sorry to hear that, hopefully @PeppermintPatty will post it again. I missed it and was looking forward to hearing her stories.
The fact that you were 12 years old fixing up an old wooden canoe, speaks volumes about your personality. That’s quite intriguing. I’m sorry that after all that effort that it didn’t work but glad the next one did. After fixing it up the rightful owners came forward to claim ownership? Well that’s disappointing.
Sorry you lost your first good canoe you purchased.

Alligator hunting? Are you kidding? I’d rather deal with bears and moose any day over alligators. You are clearly used to them but to annoy them in a canoe of all things. That’s a tad crazy Bob but I suppose we ALL have that bit of craziness in us. That risk taking is part of having an adventurous spirit.

Your trip along the Green and Colorado Rivers sounds exciting. I’ve personally been to the Grand Canyon so understood your feeling of overwhelming awe. Not seeing anyone for 7 days, I can relate to and was something I cherished about the trips.

Thanks for the link. Your terrain was so very different to ours. Today after walking the dogs, I shall look through my photos, many of which are NOT digital and post some.

Big horn sheep? I’ve seen plenty in British Columbia on my biking tours but none here. That must have been quite exciting.

Thanks for sharing your canoeing adventures. Your self guided info from the parks is very similar to the guidelines we had to follow. We even packed up our un- burnable garbage to take out.

Florida must be a very fun place to boat and canoe. I was there for 2 weeks back in 1989 and absolutely loved it. All the pink flamingoes, cranes, dolphins, whales etc. made it so colourful and exciting. We went in a whale sight seeing tour which was spectacular.
 
I am going to enjoy this thread! I'm not going to have anything to add, I'm afraid. My only real "outdoor adventure" was getting trapped atop the Blue Ridge Mountains/Appalachian Trail in heavy fog and having to sleep in the car. More of a nightmare than an "adventure" really... too scared to get out of the car to tinkle and I just "knew" that a bear was waiting for me if I would... or a snake to take a bite out of me if I tried. Yeah, pretty much a sissy here! :oops:

Looking forward to hearing the adventures of you brave souls!
 
Most of my experiences were backpacking adventures. In one survival class I took, we had to snowshoe with backpacks into the Lassen wilderness and camp with no tents. We learned how to make snow huts called a quinzhee where each of us would pile up a huge mound of snow, then break off twigs from the trees and insert the twigs into the snow mound all over. Then you make a tiny entrance, and dig out all the snow till you reach the end of the twigs, and that way you know how thick the wall of the quinzhee is.
Then we cut off a few tree boughs for the floor, threw the sleeping bag down and climbed in. The surreal part was waking up the next morning. The sunlight made the inside of the snow hut into a blue bubble, and waking up in a blue bubble is something I will never forget. It is totally silent and just mind-blowing.
On another adventure, we learned how to cook vegetables with no pots or pans or foil. We brought potatoes, carrots, and onions as I recall. Anyway, we had to find some clay, then mix a little water with it and put a thick layer around each vegetable. We then built a bonfire, scooted the encased vegetables into the fire, rolling them over after a while, and waited for the fire to burn down to just coals. Then we cracked open the hardened clay and there was the fully cooked vegees, and very tasty (No flavor could escape). All great experiences.
 
Throughout most of the 1980's and 90's I was a dedicated sea kayaker. Puget Sound, to the north of me, was a paradise for that hobby, I was a member of an active club which sponsored day trips nearly every weekend and longer more challenging expeditions on a regular basis. At one time, I owned three boats, a 17 ft tupperware knock around, a sporty and agile 17 foot fiberglass kayak, and a 21 foot long cruising kayak.

I did a bit of offshore paddling with the big boat and made a few trips through parts of the inland passage. Sadly, jet skis became popular and the people with a nice boats but no brains throught it great fun to harass sea kayakers. For me at least, those clowns took all the enjoyment out of kayaking.
 
Most of my experiences were backpacking adventures. In one survival class I took, we had to snowshoe with backpacks into the Lassen wilderness and camp with no tents. We learned how to make snow huts called a quinzhee where each of us would pile up a huge mound of snow, then break off twigs from the trees and insert the twigs into the snow mound all over. Then you make a tiny entrance, and dig out all the snow till you reach the end of the twigs, and that way you know how thick the wall of the quinzhee is.
Then we cut off a few tree boughs for the floor, threw the sleeping bag down and climbed in. The surreal part was waking up the next morning. The sunlight made the inside of the snow hut into a blue bubble, and waking up in a blue bubble is something I will never forget. It is totally silent and just mind-blowing.
On another adventure, we learned how to cook vegetables with no pots or pans or foil. We brought potatoes, carrots, and onions as I recall. Anyway, we had to find some clay, then mix a little water with it and put a thick layer around each vegetable. We then built a bonfire, scooted the encased vegetables into the fire, rolling them over after a while, and waited for the fire to burn down to just coals. Then we cracked open the hardened clay and there was the fully cooked vegees, and very tasty (No flavor could escape). All great experiences.
That's impressive, I've done a little backpacking, not so much as you. Your winter thing and building the snow hut sounds particularly interesting.

I did once go on a two night cross country ski backpack trip. Took a tent though, no igloo building. The thing I didn't like about it was the long dark night, much longer than summer. Not much to do with the extra dark hours, not comfortable sitting around a campfire, it was too cold.
 
Looking forward to hearing the adventures of you brave souls!
I never considered it bravery. It was just fulfilling a need. I never approached any of this stuff with the intention of facing fear, although I have found myself in hairy predicaments from time to time, few of which involved any fear, although I was afraid a time or two, sometimes after the fact where out of ignorance, I had done something really stupid without realizing it.
 
I did a bit of offshore paddling with the big boat and made a few trips through parts of the inland passage. Sadly, jet skis became popular and the people with a nice boats but no brains throught it great fun to harass sea kayakers. For me at least, those clowns took all the enjoyment out of kayaking.
Yeah, I've been there too. It sad how stupid people can think it's great fun doing stupid things.
 
Alligator hunting? Are you kidding? I’d rather deal with bears and moose any day over alligators.
It's what you grow up with, for me lots of alligators. Had I come on a moose or bear back then I would have been terrified.

Alligators are a lot like moose and bear in that respect. They have all killed and injured people, but its pretty rare. Alligators are no more (or less) dangerous.
 
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