Category: Upcoming Trips

  • 2013 Trip: Quetico, Heart of the Park

    MOS Adventurers-

    Ready to shake off the winter chill?  Just imagine paddling across a cool lake on a warm, sunny summer day, in the middle of millions of acres of rugged wilderness beauty.  Or seeing the setting sun, bathing wisps of clouds in orange and red, while the loons begin their evening calls.  Oh yeah and, after 6 days in the woods, the best hot shower, cold beer and hot tub soak you’ve ever had.  That’s right kiddies… after 4 years in other locales, we’re headed back to Quetico!

    Details…

    WHAT: 6 Days of canoeing (and portaging), camping, fishing, exploration and fun

    WHERE: Quetico Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada

    WHEN: August 17-24, 2013

    WHO: Group size is limited to 9 people.  We’ll take people until we’re full-up, so first-come first-served!  ***UPDATE 4/22: 8 of the 9 slots are taken, only 1 remains.  Get your name in by 5/1 if you want to go!***

    HOW MUCH: Budgeted from Chicago and back, about $600-$800 per person.  Includes: permits, all in-park food, canoe rentals (if needed), group meals in transit, hotel nights (1 in, 1 out), group gear (packs, stove, etc.), gas for the drive up and back from Chicago, and any other group outfitting needs.  Does NOT include beers to drink in the hot tub after we exit the park, that’s seperate.

     

    Quetico Provincial Park is the Canadian mirror to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.  Bigger and much less travelled than its border-sharing American cousin, Quetico and the surrounding crown lands make up a nearly 2 million acre roadless wilderness of lakes, streams and ancient forests clinging to ancient rock.  The only way in, out or through the park is with a canoe to paddle and 2 feet to portage from lake to lake – no motorized boats or vehicles of any kind on these waters.  You can go days or more without seeing another human soul, but you won’t likely leave without seeing a moose or two, or maybe hearing wolves howling in the distance.  Fishing is superb for walleye, northern pike, smallmouth and largemouth bass, and lake trout.  There are archaelogical sites scattered throughout the park, reminding you whose path you are following.  The night sky is a riot of stars and sometimes, the Northern Lights.

    So what does a Quetico trip look like?  For those uninitiated, here’s how this goes.  The group leaves in cars from Chicago early on Saturday morning, to make the long drive up to Ely, Minnesota, where we will stay (with the outfitter/resort in a cabin) for the night (do final gear shake-out, out to dinner, etc.).  Sunday morning (early again) we put our boats, our gear and ourselves on a motor boat, and the outfitter drives us across some lakes to the edge of the park to drop us off.  That is where the trip really starts.  We will spend 6 days and 5 nights canoeing, portaging, camping, fishing and exploring in the park, probably in a 2-days-in, 2-days-base-camp, 2-days-out format.  Most of the travelling is done in canoes on the water, but some connections between lakes require portagingfollowing a trail (sometimes a rough one) ranging from a few yards to a mile, carrying the canoes and gear to the next lake.  The camping is primitive – there are no facilities or enhancements, the campsites are just areas where you can put a tent or two down, and might have a fire ring to gather ’round.  On the final day we get a boat hop back out to our cars from the edge of the park, and drive back into Ely to check into a hotel for much-needed showers, followed by dinner, beers, swimming, etc.  Then on Saturday, we drive back to Chi-town.

    And what about this particular trip – what route are we taking this time?  Each trip we do, we visit different places – if you don’t have a Quetico map this paragraph may seem like a foreign language.  This trip, we are putting in at Lac La Croix, which is the southwest of 6 primary put-ins, and the only one we haven’t yet used.  We’ll be headed east over the Black Robe Portage to McAree, Pond and Wicksteed lakes, to camp the first night on Wicksteed or Darky.  2nd day in, its Darky, Brent, possibly William and on to either Suzanette or Conmee for a base camp.  We camp there 3 nights and 2 days, doing day trips into the very heart of the park – Delahey and Veron, Camel, and anywhere else we want to visit.  On the way back out, we can either do the Memory Lane portages to Poohbah and then the Maligne River out (Via Minn), or one of a few other routes, back to Lac La Croix.

    In terms of personal gear, you’ll need a sleeping bag, appropriate clothing/shoes and either a passport or similar identification to enter Canada.  A gear list will be sent out to people going with further details, and if you don’t have a passport, we can discuss with you what your other options are.  Also, IMPORTANT: YOU MUST KNOW HOW TO SWIM TO GO ON A QUETICO TRIP.  You don’t have to be a life guard or anything, but you need to be able to handle yourself in the water.  We will have life vests and other safety equipment, but strange things sometimes happen, and we will be spending a lot of time on the water.  If you don’t feel comfortable in the water, but want to go, then you best get to work on some lessons.

    A brief warning, as we do with all of our trips, especially if you are new to the wilderness… a wilderness is by nature and name, wild.  We will be, at times, multiple days’ travel from any sort of civilization or help, and you are exposed to all the elements while on the trip.  Weather can be erratic, trails poorly marked and maintained, and waters unforgiving.  Make sure you are mentally and physically prepared for that.

    Now with all that stuff out of the way, what is your reward?  All the beauty of a unique wilderness, stunning sunsets and night skies, tranquility, comraderie and an adventure unlike any other.  Sound good?  Are you ready for the challenge?

     If you are interested in this trip, please contact Matt Cassidy (dwt -at- middleofsomewhere -dot- com), or talk to us on the MOS Co-op Facebook page.  We are taking names now on a first-come, first-serve basis, and we have a limit of 9 people (park rules).  So if you are considering it, you should get in touch soon!  Feel free to ask us any anything, we are happy to answer any questions you may have.

    We hope to see you outside!

    -DWT

  • 2012 Trip: We’re Going to California

    MOS Adventurers-

    We now have dates and a tenative location for our 2012 trip!  Exact location will be finalized a bit later, but we will be backpacking for 3 days, over the weekend of September 8-9, in northern California.  Current tenative locale is going to be either the Desolation or the Carson-Iceberg Wilderness Area, just west of Lake Tahoe.  But we are also looking at other nearby areas, including Granite Chief, Yosemite, Ansel Adams and John Muir.

    Details…

    WHAT: 3 Days and 2 nights backpacking in mountainous wilderness

    WHERE: Carson-Iceberg or Desoltion Wilderness Area, California

    WHEN: September 6-10, 2012

    WHO: Group size limited to 10 people, currently 8 open slots

    HOW MUCH: About $300-$350 per person, plus airfare to the area if needed, includes permits, group food and camping supplies, group meals, hotel night(s), group gear, vehicle rentals and gas.

     

    Desolation and Carson-Iceberg present some of the most beautiful and dramatic scenery in the High Sierras.  Both areas have well-maintained trail systems leading to countless glacial tarns (lakes), waterfalls, lush meadows and dense forests for endless exploration.  Altitudes range from 5,000′ to 12,000′ ASL, passing through numerous biomes and climates.  Desolation is heavily visited, but has some particularly spectacular vistas and lakes.  Carson-Iceberg provides more lush vegetation and more opportunity for seclusion.

    This trip will work like other long-weekend hauls that MOS has done recently.  Day 1 is a travel day, everyoone arriving in the Bay Area, acquiring supplies, and staging up near the wilderness.  Days 2 through 4 are backpacking in the wilderness.  The end of Day 4 is the traditional hotel/drinks/hot tub wind-down, and Day 5 we all go back to our “normal” lives.

    Because of the rugged terrain and altitude, it is recommended that participants be in reasonably good physical shape for such a trip.  We won’t be doing any technical climbing or running any alpine triathalons, and you don’t need to a superior athlete by any stretch.  But just walking these trails carrying 30 pounds of gear can be pretty taxing.  If you are unsure if you are up to it, just ask, we’ll talk you through it.  As long as you are mentally ready, you will probably find you are up to the challenge.

    Your reward for the hard work is the unparalleled exprience of adventuring in a true wilderness, and seeing all that nature has to offer the Sierras.  You will probably even make some new friends along the way.

    If you are interested in this trip, please contact Matt Cassidy or Scott Steiner, or talk to us on the MOS Co-op Facebook page.  We are taking names now on a first-come, first-serve basis, and we have a limit of 10 people.  So if you are considering it, you should get in touch soon!  Feel free to ask us any anything, we are happy to answer any questions you may have.

    We hope to see you outside!

    -DWT

  • 2012 Trip: TBA, Now Taking Suggestions

    MOS adventurers!

    We have not yet decided on the destination or timing for our 2012 trip(s).  But we are always interested in hearing your ideas!

    Here are a few thoughts we are throwing around currently…

    QUETICO: We do a canoeing trip to Quetico Provincial Park in Ontario, Canada, once every few years.  The last one was in 2009, so, 2012 may be time to go back again.  The great thing is, we’ve done Quetico over a dozen times, and never done the same route twice.  Lots of the park still left to explore.  This would be a week-long trip, in the summer months.

    CALIFORNIA BACKPACKING: Three of the Seven MOS Advisors currently reside in California.  The Big Bear state has some of the nation’s premier backcountry parks and wilderness areas.  And yet, MOS has never done a trip to Cali.  This should be remedied, soon.  Some of the wilderness areas we’ve looked at include Yosemite, Desolation, Carson-Iceberg, John Muir, Ventana, Sequoia – Kings Canyon, Lassen Volcanic and Siskiyou.  This could be a weekender, or a week-long backpacking trip.

    SUPERIOR TRAIL: When we want a canoeing trip, we hit the north woods.  When we want a backpacking trip, we head west.  Well, what about backpacking the north woods?  the Superior Hiking Trail is a 277-mile wonder that tracks along the rocky ridgelines along the north shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota.  Plenty of water sources, always a short walk to a beach, you can go campsite to campsite or town to town.

    WEST COAST TRAIL, VANCOUVER ISLAND: This would be our first backpacking trip north of the border, and also our first coastal hiking trip.  The trail is supposed to be spectacular, you can camp on beaches… what else could you ask for?  This is likely a week-long trip.

    MIDDLE OF NOWHERE: Being we are Middle of Somewhere, and we make such an effort to find pristine wilderness… how about a backpacking trip to the point in the Lower 48 that is furthest from any road?  That’s 22 miles as the crow flies, but more than 30 (each way) by trail distance.  This spot on the map is in the middle of the largest roadless wilderness in the Continental US – the River of No Return Wilderness, Targhee National Forest, Idaho.  The wilderness has 2,616 miles of trails, so no getting bored here.  If we intend to reach that mystical point on the map, it will take a solid week of hiking.

    Any of those have special appeal?  Have another suggestion?  Let us have it!