How Red Lake got its name
Pictograph at Artery Lake, west of Red Lake |
DB Dowling left his mark here in 1893
Initials carved in soapstone at entrance to Pipestone Bay |
Remembering First Nations peoples of Red Lake
Ojibwe men who guided for Bow Narrows Camp |
Which fish species are the oldest?
Lake Agassiz |
West Red Lake Mining Museum
Home site of Bill Brown, Red Lake's first postmaster |
How long have people lived at Red Lake?
Middle Narrows pictograph about 1,200 years old |
Stromatolites made life as we know it
Bob Leis with book and stromatolite |
Jim Paishk: pipemaker, master storyteller
Jim Paishk |
It just didn't seem possible
Guide Jimmy Duck with hunter couple |
The lone man in the canoe
This is how it all started
The Trapper's Cabin. Who was the trapper?
The cabin at the east end of West Narrows |
The camp telephone back in the 1960s
Bill Stupack and my mom, Del, with CB-style telephone |
Refrigeration system 50+ years ago
Ice house at Bow Narrows Camp 1948-1967 |
Traveling on thin ice a half-century ago
Frank Paishk and canoe |
Bow Narrows Camp back in 1961
Bill Stupack, my mom, Del, and me with bear trap |
Lime kiln last remnant of '26 gold rush
Lime kiln in Hall Bay |
9 comments:
Great Pics Dan
Hey Dan always look forward to seeing your latest blog out of curiosity do you think there will be any trouble crossing the border when we head north this spring,especially with this coronavirus thing!
Hi Dee,
Good to hear from you.
No, I don't anticipate any problem at the border. Red Lake is bound to be one of the safest places to go because there are so few people here, even fewer at camp, of course. Canada has not banned travelers from any country.
hey dan good reading really enjoyed, i can remember adam showing me how to catch lake trout back in 82.
Hi Ken,
Adam was a wonderful guy. He made several head and footboards for the cabin beds out of peeled spruce logs. He also made a log cabin to be used as an outpost for us on McIntosh Lake. Tragically, it burned down at the end of the first season we used it. Doubly tragic because Adam planned to use it as a trapper's cabin in the winters. He also made me a couple of toy airplanes when I was little. One was a floatplane made from pieces of aluminum roof flashing. The other was a wheeled plane made of wood and which hung from a pole with three strings. It had a roof-flashing propeller that spun easily and turned the plane into the wind. I had a ball with it for years, flying it around camp and making it land and take off on the paths worn into the clay. Adam also showed me a neat trick: if you puncture a balsam fir blister with a small stick, then throw the stick into the lake, it shoots forward as the resin escapes the twig into the water. It is almost as if the stick is under power. I think it was also Adam who showed my dad and me how to make a quick drinking cup from a piece of birchbark. You fold a small piece of bark into a cone, like you might get at a water cooler. You can even split a small branch a little to hold the cone together and turn it into a dipper. He was a great guy.
Dan
You don't have to write a book, just make a compilation of your blogs along with some tales of the boreal forest, and you have a best seller. Keep it up! Too bad we're in camp so early, We would love to have a cup of coffee with you and Brenda. Yes I said COFFEE!
Hi Joe,
Thanks for the encouragement. I hope to be at the cabin site as soon as the ice is off so hopefully we can connect. If the dock and boat are there, come on over! I like coffee.
Dan,
I enjoyed re-reading these. Amazing how much I'd forgotten- must have something to do with old age! I'm definitely looking forward to your book. Hope to see you and Brenda this summer.
Update to my comment of March 9, the border is expected to close to all but commercial traffic today, March 20. This is an indefinite closure that was agreed to by both U.S. and Canada. When will it re-open? I'm sure that will depend on when the Covid 19 or coronavirus spread has been halted. Just about everything is shut down here in Canada in order to keep people at home. We now must watch the infection spread numbers. They will certainly increase for a while but if they don't increase exponentially we will know we are halting the spread. It will probably take at least a couple of months to achieve this.
Post a Comment