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Quebec/Labrador canoe trip

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Here's a nice trip* of two brothers paddling a wood canvas canoe into northern Quebec and Labrador.

This summer, my brother and I took a trip in northern Quebec and Labrador, in our 17' Headwaters Prospector. We started on the Pekans River, putting in on the Rte. 389 bridge.


We spent three days going up the Pekans. Since it was mid-June, the water was very high. It was also quite cold, but the first week of our trip was almost completely bug-free - they hadn't come out yet!



We then went up the Pekans to a series of large lakes, which we traversed on our way to the height of land and the border with Labrador.



We then crossed the height of land (which was a series of small ponds in a bog) to get on to what would eventually become the Clark River. We spend about a week going down this. It started at barely at trickle, but ended up a decent-sized river when it flowed into Menihek Lake. After picking up a food resupply at the train camp at Esker, we began a week of traveling on truly enormous lakes.



Miraculously, we were only windbound for one afternoon, but we spent a lot of time hugging the shore and battling the wind. We paddled across Menihek, Marble, Astray, Dyke, Petitsikapau, Freeman, and Attikamagen Lakes. In this entire week we only had two portages! Unfortunately, our bug-free window had passed, and the mosquitoes and blackflies were in full force. For a span of about three weeks, neither of us ever left the tent without wearing our bug shirt and face net.




We crossed the height of land, back into Quebec again, and onto the Riviere de Pas. This is a popular access route to the George River, but instead we went in the opposite direction up the river. At the point we got on it wasn't much of a river, and it only got smaller. We portaged a lot here.



After going up the de Pas as far as it could go, we crossed over into the watershed of the Riviere Murdoch, which flows into the Wheeler River and the Whale River on its way to Ungava Bay. Our plan was to go down it all the way to the ocean and end at Kuujjuaq. Unfortunately, as we were paddling down Lac Murdoch, we noticed a plume of smoke rising up from where we were hoping to go.





After some communication with front-country contacts, we were able to determine that the fire was in fact right on the river we were hoping to go down. Rather than burn ourselves at the stake, we decided to turn around and head back to Attikamagen Lake, from which we got a ride to Schefferville and took the train south.



While it was not the two-month trip to Ungava Bay we had planned, we were still out for 41 days, covering a wide variety of lakes and rivers large and small















After our trip, we gave our canoe some much-needed TLC. It had been a camp canoe for a number of years before we bought it, and we inflicted damage of our own. By the end of our trip it was leaking pretty badly. Fortunately we rarely went more than an hour without having to portage, so it wasn't too much of an inconvenience.

We replaced six ribs, a lot of planking, recanvassed, and revarnished.








 
Very cool. Thanks for posting. Labrador is intriguing.

Alan
 
*I re posted this with the permission of the author. I thought it was an interesting trip, wood canvas Prospector canoe, wanigans, bed roll. tumps, and this picture really shows the "Prospector" canoe...beauty aye!

 
Very nice indeed!! I wonder how a new or rebuild/restore canvas canoe would do on trips like that? It would be interesting to see one after a trip like that of abuse and scarping and occasional hit etc etc!!
 
I think they bought the canoe from an old Maine wilderness camp (Darrow) and I read a trip report where they did a pretty rough trip through eastern Maine with it, so after the Darrow camp years, the Maine trip and this trip they are now restoring it speaks well for a wood canvas canoe. And the good news is it looks like they are having a good time restoring it and in the end they will end up with a canoe that looks like new and has a special meaning/bonding with lots of tripping time together with the owners.
Probably the best part of owning a wood canvas tripping canoe imo.
 
I'm trying to get one in the near future!! I know what I want, just need the $$
 
*I re posted this with the permission of the author. I thought it was an interesting trip, wood canvas Prospector canoe, wanigans, bed roll. tumps, and this picture really shows the "Prospector" canoe...beauty aye!

That's a nice one. You're right. I like it for exactly those reasons. Thanks for posting it!
 
Great looking trip, I enjoyed that. Thanks for posting, and thanks to the author for sharing it. I really like the gear along with the canoe. Seeing post trip photos of re-canvasing the canoe really added to the story. It'll be interesting to find and follow their route with on-line maps/satellite images. I wonder what kind of fish that was?
 
Awesome trip but OMG the bugs. I like going in Aug/sep like Alan did. The water is often lower but thebugs are way less. Super good looking trip though eh. In my dreams, I can still do stuff like that..lol.
 
That has to be one of the prettiest Lake Trout (Salvelinus namaycush), that I have ever seen. Must have been a outstanding trip.
 
Awesome trip but OMG the bugs. I like going in Aug/sep like Alan did. The water is often lower but thebugs are way less. Super good looking trip though eh. In my dreams, I can still do stuff like that..lol.
The trouble is that schedule does not work in Labrador/Quebec
Its a soggy climate.. maritime cool..

The blackflies are out in August. I have only been through in car.

I think I will enjoy nice trip reports like this from my computer instead!
 
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