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Lobster Stream to Chesuncook Lake

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This was a long awaited five day/four night trip, 9/10 to 9/14 2018 taken in my home built cedar strip canoe (A Slow Boat to Nowhere) and testing out my homemade reflector oven and homemade cooler (NYETI).

My paddling buddy and I drove to Allagash Gateway Campgrounds arriving around 12:30 PM on 9/10. Transferred the canoe and gear to their truck and were shuttled to the put in on Lobster Stream. It was immediately obvious that we had seriously over-packed for two people.
fullsizeoutput_b5c.jpegWe moved down Lobster Stream, noting with some trepidation the small waves pushing up the stream. Isn't this supposed to be current free? Arriving into Lobster Lake, we were greeted by a steady headwind and waves from 12-15 inches high coming straight at us. A few came over the bow. White knuckles, we headed straight into them and made a dash for the protected Sandy Cove. The weather broke and we were treated to a nice sunset over Lobster Lake.
fullsizeoutput_b62.jpeg We had a small campfire.
fullsizeoutput_b60.jpegThe next morning (Tuesday) it was time to test out the reflector oven. It worked!
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After breakfast, we paddled around Ogden Point and down to Jackson Cove where we picked up the trail to the top of Lobster Mountain where we ate lunch overlooking the lake.
fullsizeoutput_b5f.jpegThe next morning (Wednesday), we paddled back up Lobster Stream to the West Branch. The water level was low. We had to walk the canoe for a few hundred feet around Big Island. While we saw some fly fisherman around the island, we saw nobody as we headed down stream. This is supposed to be placid at regular water levels, but the water is very low -- "November level" per the folks at Allagash Gateway. There were some riffles and rapids. Nothing that would cause you any trouble. Until we got about 2 miles upstream of Pine Stream. There was a rapid there. It looked quite passable but we hit something, hard, and capsized instantly. I kept a death grip on my paddle and the stern rope. My partner just went for the swim. About a half mile later, things calmed down and we began to retrieve our gear, which was spread out over another half mile or so of river. Never found the tent. But we pulled up at Pine Stream, which was high and dry.
fullsizeoutput_b63.jpegI was bummed that my tent was gone but thankful we recovered everything else. NYETI bounced off a few rocks but had no visible damage and only a couple of tablespoons of water in it despite its long float. We had tarps, so we set up a trap shelter. Luckily there were no bugs. And we were treated to an incredible sunset!
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The next morning (Thursday) we worked our way down Chesuncook's western shore. I was prepared for big waves, but there was no appreciable wind and the lake was like a mirror. We camped at Sandy Point and I took a photo of Katahdin.
fullsizeoutput_b65.jpegThe next morning (Friday) we had heavy fog but an incredible sunrise!
fullsizeoutput_b66.jpegIt honestly looked like a hydrogen bomb going off (which I guess it basically is).
fullsizeoutput_b67.jpegThat was it. We crossed in dense fog using a compass bearing, something I would not have tried except for the dead calm conditions. We took out at Allagash Gateway, loaded up the vehicle and headed home with a boatload of memories (and one less tent).
 
Thoreaus Rapid bit you??? LOL.. I don't envy you a capsize but how do you lose a tent in a foot of water? ( I know people do drown in bathtubs)
Nice shot of Katahdin. We knew it was there..always has been and the haze was so dense we never saw it.
Yah Pine Stream.. I am wondering how we missed it.. Its always been pretty obvious with its rip rap and tent platforms.. How did you find it in such low water?
 
Thoreaus Rapid bit you??? LOL.. I don't envy you a capsize but how do you lose a tent in a foot of water? ( I know people do drown in bathtubs)
Nice shot of Katahdin. We knew it was there..always has been and the haze was so dense we never saw it.
Yah Pine Stream.. I am wondering how we missed it.. Its always been pretty obvious with its rip rap and tent platforms.. How did you find it in such low water?

I don't know if it was Thoreau Rapids or some unnamed deal. 'Twas deeper than a foot, I assure you.

The sign for Pine Tree was missing; we saw the table from the river. Only saw one tent platform, and that wasn't visible from the river.
 
I went by Pine Stream twice 8/11-12. It looked like a Dr. Suess scene, a tiny putting green up on a boulder. I almost camped there, I was by myself and the putting green looked big enough for a solo tent, but I decided to head up the West Branch a bit farther.
 
Wow! What a nice trip! Really nice photos too. Thanks for this.
Too bad about the lost tent. It always coulda been worse as they say.
 
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One of my fav four day trips.. Portage free. This year with a little bouldery excitement.
How long is your canoe?
Glad you did not lose your oven..looks like that was tied in. We did not tie our stuff in all the packs were watertight.. We did tie the chairs in.

Nature has a way of reminding us of gravity.. If its loose and weighs more than water... ( I have donated a chair to Lake Superior)
Still amazed that the tent did not swim at least a little while..

I recognize the trees from your first campsite..Shallow Cove! That shallowness of the entire lake makes it easily riled!
 
The canoe is sixteen feet.

The tent floated for a ways, but we lost sight of it when we were emptying the canoe of water. By the time we got back in, everything had gone further downstream. We surmise the tent water-logged and sank although could have hung up on something too.

the reflector oven was bungied to the plastic box, which floated as did NYETI (my cooler) and the packs.
 
My paddling buddy and I drove to Allagash Gateway Campgrounds arriving around 12:30 PM on 9/10. Transferred the canoe and gear to their truck and were shuttled to the put in on Lobster Stream. It was immediately obvious that we had seriously over-packed for two people.


Alsg, love the photos. I would not have recognized Pine Steam with the water that low.

“Sandy Cove? My old maps show “Shallow Bay” (and “Ogden Cove”) as the first long sandy beach sites you see to the south across Lobster when exiting the inlet, and “Little Cove” a lovely sandy beach double site around the corner from the Ogden peninsula sites.

A mirror like lake, light winds and a dense fog compass bearing route down/across the lake would be my yet-to-experience preference for Chesuncook. Maybe someday.

I am very hesitant to say this, especially considering how absurdly I have at times overloaded canoes, and piled gear on decked boats with stuff strapped high and tippy to both decks, as well as paddling with crazy tripping friends carrying a full-sized Webber grill, a whole (still frozen) turkey, a load of firewood, a gigantic 20 person Pavilion tarp, potable water and ample beer, while needing a periscope to see over the towering gear load. . . . . but that is too much stuff above the sheerline, and (gulp) sticking out beyond the gunwales amidships.

Maybe not “overpacked”; in my Glamping world there is nothing wrong with bringing the kitchen sink, the kitchen table and a full bar with solar powered blender, but when the load gets to towering over (or out sideways out past) the gunwales, any residual stability is badly compromised, especially in fast water without an instantaneous “Oh crap” brace reaction.

Simply getting my weighty blockhead noggin out past the gunwales can be disastrous; I don’t need gear weight further reducing my angle of repose.

Please take this in the spirit intended, but you need a bigger boat for two paddlers and that kind of gear load.

And please take that kind of gear load, I can taste me some reflector oven muffins.
 
The tent has been found and cause most everyone in the North Maine Woods has connections( and the checkpoint staff marvelous) the tent is going to be reunited with its master
I have heard that in the last week the normally invisible rapid is approaching Class 3
 
I am very hesitant to say this, especially considering how absurdly I have at times overloaded canoes, and piled gear on decked boats with stuff strapped high and tippy to both decks, as well as paddling with crazy tripping friends carrying a full-sized Webber grill, a whole (still frozen) turkey, a load of firewood, a gigantic 20 person Pavilion tarp, potable water and ample beer, while needing a periscope to see over the towering gear load. . . . . but that is too much stuff above the sheerline, and (gulp) sticking out beyond the gunwales amidships.

Maybe not “overpacked”; in my Glamping world there is nothing wrong with bringing the kitchen sink, the kitchen table and a full bar with solar powered blender, but when the load gets to towering over (or out sideways out past) the gunwales, any residual stability is badly compromised, especially in fast water without an instantaneous “Oh crap” brace reaction.

Simply getting my weighty blockhead noggin out past the gunwales can be disastrous; I don’t need gear weight further reducing my angle of repose.

Please take this in the spirit intended, but you need a bigger boat for two paddlers and that kind of gear load.

No offense taken. I think you were right and the proof was in the overturn we had! Indeed, right above my picture of the overloaded canoe, I wrote, "It was immediately obvious that we had seriously over-packed for two people." After our swim, my partner repacked his giant 200 liter (!) dry bag, which is the one hanging over the gunnels, and we managed to pack everything much tighter and neater. Lesson learned.
 
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“Sandy Cove? My old maps show “Shallow Bay” (and “Ogden Cove”) as the first long sandy beach sites you see to the south across Lobster when exiting the inlet, and “Little Cove” a lovely sandy beach double site around the corner from the Ogden peninsula sites.

Quite right! Is was Ogden Cove.
 
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