Just back from a banner trip to the Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada with one of my oldest cousins Chris and her husband John. Her parents – my mom’s sister and her husband, and husband’s brothers – bought islands at the mouth of Henvey Inlet in the late 1940′. They had a super cool, one of a kind log cabin built that’s still standing. It’s the only place outside of Alaska I’ll travel to fish. I’ve been going there since I was about 10 years old, and because the place is surrounded by Crown and Ojibwe lands, there’s been virtually no further development in terms of cabins built or facilities since then, so it’s still the same wild place, with no significant increase in boat traffic, etc over the last 50 years. .
Except, of course, for the windmill farm that the Ojibwe put on their lands on either side of the Henvey Inlet. It’s like finding oil or gold on your land, sort of, only this land use is not an extraction of a non-renewable resource, but simply capturing the energy of the abundant winds there and feeding it into the Canadian power grid. The windmills are silent – you can barely hear them if it’s flat calm- a slight wooshing sound – but that’s it. And of course, no emissions. Some see them as visual pollution in an otherwise flat landscape of low islands covered with scrubby pine – but they are magnificent to me. I saw more wildlife this trip than any other trip there. So, while I’d not say the windmills are the cause for the abundance, I also would not say they’ve negatively impacted it, either. And the fishing. Still fantastic. Welcome to what the future could look like. From what I read on the wind farm, it produces enough power for 100,000 Canadian homes – so in theory, less than four of these farms could power all the homes in Alaska, but of course we have the little problem in that our communities are largely on their own grids, and not part of a larger grid, except on the road system from Homer to Fairbanks. But still, I can see the potential and power of them. You can have all the oil you want, but it’s got to be transported to some distant refinery, then transported back, and then it can provide power. With grids already in place, a windmill can be set up, wired to the existing grid, and start providing energy with the first breath of wind. The Ojibwe at Henvey Inlet looked for a decade for just the right project for and economic endeavor on their lands, and landed on this. They own a 50 percent stake in the project. Their lands are leased for 20 years for the project, and if they end the project at that time, the windmills will come down. They voted overwhelmingly to approve the project first, and then even a greater majority voted to put some of their income in trust for future generations. I hope to talk to someone there someday to find out more about the project.
I flew into Milwaukee, where my first cousin once removed Aileen – the daughter of the cousin I was going to Canada with, lives with her husband and 2 pre-schoolers. Her parents drove there from their home in Iowa, picked me up, and north we went. I’d never been to this part of the Great Lakes nor gone this way to the Georgian Bay cabin, so it was all new to me. I’ve never seen Lake Superior, and it was neat to drive by Whitefish Bay, from the lyrics of my favorite singer of the north country, Gordon Lightfoot – who grew up, I think, not far from the part of Canada we were heading to. Then the Saute St. Marie bridge, the straights of Mackinaw – places my great uncle Carl spoke about from his merchant mariner days out of Lake Huron on the Thumb of the Mitten in Michigan. We drove on to Blind River, Ontario and spent the night. I was surprised at the number of immigrants from who seemed, from their accents and appearance, to be Indian or Pakistani, but maybe another country in that part of the world. From lawyers on billboards to the clerk at the hotel to the gas station convenience store attendant. Kinda cool they’ve found a new home far from home in rural Ontario. Hope they feel welcome there.
The next day we headed to Sudbury, then south again around the Georgian Bay to Camp Dore at the Key River. We launched the boat, and John handed me the keys to drive. Now, I’ve run boats in a lot of waters. Mostly ocean waters and rivers. And no where have I boated where there are more random rocks in water, just below the surface, than in these waters of the Georgian Bay. Of course, my cousin started boating here well before there were boat electronics. The only electronics on her Bayliner Capri ski boat was a cigarette lighter outlet. And not a backup kicker motor in sight, either. Away we went.
Luckily, both of them had been to the cabin many times, and they became my chart plotter and GPS. The Key River itself is easy to run. Just stay in the middle till you get to navigational markers. Once we got out of the river, Chris and John became my GPS, directing me to the next set of markers as needed, and giving directions otherwise to avoid rocks. Miraculously, we made it to the cabin without incident. When I was a kid, this trip seemed like it took an hour or two and was a 25 mile run. I’m guessing we made it there in about 40 minutes, and my phone app said 13.7 miles.
Most years, the last group to visit the cabin would be sometime in August. This year, it was in mid-September, whic. is between fishing and deer hunting season for me here. Sara just had her knee replaced, and was back to driving herself to her appointments. “Go”, she said. And for once, I heard her the first time.
We arrived at the island. Just as it’s always been for 75 years. Propane lights. Propane stove. Propane refrigerator. Propane water heater. Bay water is transferred by a small gasoline pump from the bay to a large tank high in the rafters of the kitchen, so running water all around. Even a shower and flush toilet.
And there’s a smell to this place. An earthy smell of dry pine trees and brown pine needles and the lake air. The smell immediately tells me I’m back to this home, of sorts. A place I’ve been coming to for 50 years. Paradise, as I said. It’s a place where kids can sunbathe, swim from island to island, jump off the diving board or slide down the water slide. water ski, canoe, kayak, sail, boat, put together puzzles, play cards, and maybe learn for the first time to work as part of a team moving groceries and goods from the water up to the cabin. As a kid, I remember watching my cousin’s husband Mike magically help me get an old outboard running. All the workings in the cabin, from the propane appliances to the plumbing, were new to me then. After spending most of my life in Alaska doing the stuff I love to do, now I was the fix it and set up guy. And I loved it. I coaxed the water pump engine to life. Took down the window covers. Fixed some leaks in the plumbing. Removed an ice-split valve in the water line and spliced it. Re-spooled a fishing reel and got lures out of the fishing net with my younger eyes. Took apart a 9 volt battery to make a connector for a 9 volt wire feed to the fridge. Cleaned and cooked the fish for everyone. Life was all about fishing when I was 12. Now, it was still about fishing, but also keeping the camp running with a lifetime of practical skills learned, the training of which started right here.
The cabin is unlike any I’ve ever seen. A central square made up of about twelve, 8 to 14 inch diameter logs, with another square log room added off of 3 of the sides of the center square. The front side of the center square looks out on the bay. Two of the side squares make up 2 bedrooms, each, for a total of 4. The 3rd side square is the bathroom and kitchen. There are lofts above the bedrooms – coveted sleeping quarters of teens and pre-teens. I remember there being so many at the cabin that I slept on 3 chairs – two chairs facing each other, with one to the side between them to form a sleeping platform – and never thought anything of it. When you’re 12, you can sleep anywhere. I was just happy to be there.
We got the cabin opened up without incident. John and I removed the plywood window covers with his cordless drill – a nice invention from the early days of coming here, for sure. Once inside the cabin, Christine got to cleaning and John to putting the plumbing together. I got the water pump out and John helped me carry it down to the waters edge. John put the intake pipe into the bay, and I hooked the other end to the pump, then hooked up the outflow pipe, primed the water pump, and cranked up the engine. It soon started and hummed along for a good 15 minutes before it quit. And wouldn’t restart. I went through the diagnostics from a lifetime of doing this now with outboard engines and generators and the like. Got gas. Yep. Got spark. That took awhile to actually see a spark, but finally did. Note to self: put spark plugs on the list for next group. So now to drain the carb bowl. Actually didn’t look too bad in there. So put it all back together, and with a lot of pulling on the starter rope and adjusting the choke from full to half when it would fire, I finally got it running and it stayed running and we filled the water tank. There’s a ball valve by the front steps of the cabin that serves as a check valve so all the water you pumped up into the tank doesn’t just drain back out, as the fill line goes into the tank on the side, and not at the top. When I shut off the valve, I saw it was leaking. Looked like water got trapped in it over the winter and the ice split the side. So, I got to looking at the plumbing pieces that were around. Eventually I found a nipple to splice the section, but it was not tapered enough to want to easily go into the plastic pipes we were connecting. I remembered seeing a you tube, from the Developing World somewhere, where the person used a torch to loosen up the plastic pipe for just this purpose. We found a torch, heated up the end of the pipe, and the pipe slid right in. When the pipe cooled around it, it was water tight. We put on a hose clamp, just for back up.
Meanwhile, Chris was getting out the bedding and making up our beds. John was trying to get the propane refrigerator to run and I looked at with him. First I checked that the propane tank valve was open. Check. Now to check if we have propane by checking the cook stove. Nope. So changed the 100 lb bottle out for the full 40 lb bottle, and check the cook stove. Burner lights. We have propane. There’s a 9 volt battery on the refrigerator that somehow is a safety check to a CO sensor, I think. If the sensor sniffs CO, then it turns a valve to stop the flow of propane. Well, we had to hook a 9 V battery to a set of wires. The last group taped the wires to the battery terminals, and that didn’t work for shit. And we couldn’t test the 9 V battery to know if it was the problem, or the wiring was the problem, since we didn’t have any other 9 V appliances to test it on, nor a volt meter. So, we got out a fresh 9 V battery, and I took one of the old 9 V batteries, peeled off the outside cover, removed the top terminals and the flat metal strip that is attached to each terminal. I took a nail and punched a hole in the end of each of the metal strips. We noted the attachment of the + and – wires as they came to the old battery terminals, and I threaded the wires to the opposite strips of the terminals on the home made battery connection, then snapped the male to female and vice versa connection onto the battery. Permanent fix. Refrigerator lit up and ran like a dream.
By evening, we were settled in for now. I started lighting the propane lights – the same kind I had at my cabin near Juneau. Some lit easily. Others pulsed and had to be shut down. A few needed new mantles, which I replaced the next day. Chris made salad and sweet corn and brauts for dinner. None of us drink alcohol anymore, and this may, indeed, be the first group ever to the cabin where that was the case. It sure saves on garbage hauling, I noticed, when there were no beer or other alcohol containers to haul out at the end.
The next day, I was up early. I was eager to go fishing, of course, but not sure if John or Chris wanted to go as we hadn’t made a plan the night before. John doesn’t drink coffee anymore, either, and Chris has one small cup a day. As a result, the coffee they brought from their house had been opened a good long time. When I loaded my usual amount into the perculator that first day, the coffee was way too weak for me, so I made a note to self to fill the basket right to the top in the future. I filled my thermos with the weak coffee, and headed outside to sit on the nearby deck to enjoy the morning. The other two rolled out of bed about 11 am. Chris made bacon and eggs for breakfast. After breakfast, I took care of a squirrel nest from the front wall cross beam on the inside of the cabin. The squirrel that made it was dried up on the floor below, with some of it’s nest covering it. I got it all bagged up and into the trash can so Chris would have one less thing to clean. About 1 pm, I was getting kind of twitchy, and broached the subject of fishing to John. “Hell Yes” was the reply. Like he’d been waiting for me to ask. That’s what I wanted to hear, I told him. Chris said she’d stay put and continue cleaning and tidying. I think she was happy to spend a good bit of alone time with her memories in her cabin, none of us knowing if this might be the last visit.
I think most people fish this area by drifting and casting. Only problem with that is you need to know where to drift and where to cast. And there are so many options fishing among all the little islands near the cabin. Me, I like to troll. I especially like to fish this way when I’m fishing with people that don’t often fish or are new to fishing. All they have to do is let their rapala out behind the boat and hang on. Then I do all the fishing with the boat. If we catch a fish, I turn around and go back over the spot. If nothing on the back tack, I turn around again over the same spot and if nothing again, I keep going. This method usually leads to a stringer of bass and pike, and a card catalog in my head of where the fishing spots are. We may try a new spot the next day, and add to the catalog. And if we don’t catch in the new spots, we go back to the old spots. It seems to work.
John had a “conservation license”, which he said suited him because he was lucky to catch the one bass and/or one pike a day limit on that license, fishing out of his kayak. From what I can tell, this license was added by the Canadians to accommodate catch and release fishermen. I, of course, had the “sport fishing” license, which costs a bit more than the conservation license, and has higher bag limits. After I came home from Africa, catch and release fishing was never a thing for me. Fishing was for food, and when we had the fish we were going to keep to eat, I quit fishing. Of course, there’s usually some catch and release to it to let the little ones go. There are no minimum size limits for bass or pike where we were fishing, but there was a limit to the “trophy” pike an angler can keep – you’re only allowed one pike over 86 cm (about 33 inches) in your possession. We didn’t catch any such beast on this trip.
By the end of the day, we had a stringer of bass and pike. I caught most of the fish, and think John and I realized by the end of the day why. I let out a country mile of line trolling, while John let out a lot less. And we had different crankbaits (I think that’s what floating rapala lures or similar are called). John’s lure was diving deeper into the weeds or rocks, while I think mine floated nearer the surface being back further, and so my hook stayed cleaner of weeds. John started letting out more line, and I gave him a lure identical to mine (I think this lure worked well the last time I was here, so I’d ordered several when I got home so I’d be ready for next time). His luck improved considerably the next few days.
I got to filleting the fish when I got back. So little fishing goes on here that there was not a fillet knife, or sharp knife of any kind, nor a sharpener to be found. I sharpened one knife as best I could on the honing steel rod, and got to work. We keep our fish on a live stringer during the day. These warm water fish are extremely hardy, and keeping them alive all day negates the need for keeping them on ice. I forgot, however, a critical step in fish care as a result. I forgot to properly bleed them before I filleted the. It took a lot of rinsing to get all the blood out of the fillets, but luckily, we’d eat all of this first day’s catch fresh the rest of the week. Chris made great lasagna and salad for dinner.
I was up after sunrise about 8 am. Chris and John got a couple hours later. Chris made breakfast of bacon and eggs. John and I headed out fishing about 130 pm. Where do you want to go, I asked. Back to the bass hole, he said. We motored out to it – it’s in sight of the cabin, mostly – and after awhile John said I wonder where we are with fuel in the tank. The fuel gauge was still pegged at full, so didn’t seem to really work. How many gallons does the tank hold, I asked. I dunno, said John. How much fuel does it burn an hour, I asked. I dunno, John said. Uh boy. We had a little Jerry can with maybe 2 gallons of gasoline in it – not always enough to run an outboard if the pick up tube in the fuel tank does not reach all the fuel in the tank. By now, we’d fished our way out away from the cabin and could see the cottages near the mouth of the Key River, where the lodge was that sold fuel. John suggested we just fish our way over there and fuel up. A great plan.
There’s lots of rock piles we ran up on on our way to the lodge. That’s why, of course, the navigation channel is marked well out towards the open Georgian Bay from where we were now. After the wind picked up a bit, and we caught a fish or two, we picked up and idled out towards the navigation markers and away from all the rocks just under the surface where we were now. We’d caught what I think is the 3 biggest bass I’d caught in a day. Another great day of fishing. We got over to the lodge to fill up. I went in the store and picked up a fillet knife with sharpener and a 5 gallon jerry can. We filled the boat up and then the Jerry can. No more running around without spare fuel. And, we found out the 125 2 stroke Mercury was pretty dang fuel efficient. We’d only burned 5 gallons getting to camp, trolling 2 days, and back to the lodge. I also determined the fuel tank was likely 23 gallons from the info I could find online, so 5 gallons of spare fuel was plenty. We returned to camp. On our way in, I hit something not far from camp. It felt like a log and not a hard strike of a rock, but neither John nor I had seen any logs floating around. So not sure what it was, and the prop wasn’t dinged up bad or bent.
At the dock, I remembered this time to bleed our fish first. I just broke a gill on each fish with my finger, and put the fish over the side of the dock. We took gear up to the cabin, and by the time I got back, the fish were ready to fillet. What a difference bleeding the fish and a sharp blade make. I was done in 5 minutes. After reading the regulations, I butterfly filleted the bass, keeping both sides of the fish connected at the belly in one piece, with the skin on, to individually freeze in zip loc bags in the freezer, so an enforcement officer could tell both how many bass I had, and that the fish were bass by the skin. The pike were different. For pike, unless you’re only going to keep 2 fish, you have to keep the fish whole so they can be measured because, as I mentioned earlier, you’re only allowed one big pike as part of your possession limit. I can’t remember ever cleaning pike (I’d always filleted them) and they were surprisingly easy to clean in the same way we clean troll-caught salmon here, first removing the gills, then the innards.
I cooked up a mountain of fish from yesterdays’ catch. It was a big hit, and we continued eating it as a side dish for breakfast and dinner the rest of the week. In the past, I’d dredge the fish in flour, coat the fish in an egg and milk batter, dredge the fish in Ritz cracker crumbs, then fry the fish in Crisco. Like my Grandmother taught me. The fish always come out great when eaten hot. Not so great as leftovers, however.
My diet now is carb- and refined sugar-limited. So, I tried something different. I lightly coated the fish in a equal mix of corn meal and flour, seasoned the pieces with Lowerys Season Salt, and fried the pieces in butter. Simple. Easy. And fantastic. Both hot, and as reheated leftovers. A lot easier and quicker from start to finish. And a lot easier cleanup afterwards. Everyone had seconds. And thirds. And lots leftover as side dishes for the rest of our week’s meals. One thing I didn’t have was ketchup for the fish. Luckily, I grabbed a small jar of mayo and Chris a jar of sweet pickles. I’d also bought a jar of bull kelp pickles I made this summer. I combined the mayo and pickles to make tartar sauce, which was also a hit.
The next day. I was up at dawn, made coffee, and enjoyed the sunrise on the deck. I saw a squirrel bound across the rock across the little harbor below me. Then I saw something big swimming out of the little harbor. A big. Freakin’. Beaver. I thought at first it might be a bear until I saw it go under and then resurface. Bears don’t do that. It rounded the corner, and after awhile, a bald eagle flew right over head. Then a mink scurried along the rock across the little harbor below. It got to the waters edge, and looked up at me a few seconds. Then it plunged into the water and swam across to my side of the harbor. It went out of my sight about half way over, and didn’t climb up to my level so must have run along the rocks at the base of the little cliff in front of me. I checked the time: 950 am. What a morning already, I thought.
Chris and John got up awhile later. I told them I was taking a walk around the island, as I needed some exercise. I wandered around the perimeter of the island as best I could. Some places you can’t walk along the edge because of brush or it’s too steep. There was lots to see on my walk. I found some tiny red cranberries low to the ground that were very good eating. I tried some other berries that were not. I found where a beaver – probably the beaver I saw – had cut down a tree and was now cutting up the tree further, with big wood chips all around. I found some surprisingly wet areas that held some bog grasses, etc. When I found some moose droppings, it now made sense where a moose might find some groceries in what I thought was an otherwise dry, rocky habitat. I came out to the channel behind the cabin, and there was Mr. Beaver’s house.
John and I headed out fishing early in the afternoon. I decided we’d try up the Henvey Inlet, as we’d not gone that direction yet. We came to a big cove I remember one of the nephews catching a pike in, and trolled around there, but no luck. We crossed the channel to another bay by a cabin owned by a person one of my cousin had befriended years ago. The bay was full of weeds, and eventually we found a pike. Then another one. Then a third one. All in the same little area. The fourth pike was a little one that I was about to turn back from the net. Neither John nor I remember just exactly what happened, but one second I’m getting the fish out of the net, and the next second one of the three hooks on one of the two treble hooks on my rapala is buried in my pinky. And I mean buried. Right up to the curve of the shank. Well past the barb.
Well, panic set in right away. Then I calmed down a bit. First, I got the small pike out of the net. Then I cut the lure off the line. Then I took my pliers and worked the hook in my finger off the key ring holding it to the lure. I handed the net with the lure to John, who was now in the stern, trying not to hurl. He recounted the time he had to push a hook all the way through his brother’s finger to remove it, and it was not a pleasant memory, nor was it a current pleasure seeing this hook buried in the palm side of the last joint in my pinky.
Luckily, I have been the fishing merit badge counselor for the Juneau scout troop, where I helped out when my nephew Samuel was in the troop. Part of the merit badge was learning and practicing how to remove a hook embedded past the barb into the skin. The technique calls for tying a string to the curve of the hook right where it enters the skin, pushing down on the eye of the hook to try to roll the barb of the hook towards the center of the puncture, and then pulling on the string to hopefully free the hook. I used the needlenose pliers instead of the string for the pulling part, but could not push down on the eye enough to free the hook. John told me about running the hook the rest of the way through the skin of his brothers finger, and when I tried that, the pain was too much. Then I thought about how when I get a hook into the twine of a landing net, I have to work it back and forth to form a larger hole in the threads of the twine, and then pull the barb through the hole. So I started to move the hook side to side in my skin, and I saw it was making the hole bigger each time. I finally got the hole wide enough and the hook pulled out. Oh, what a relief. More from the situation than from the pain, which wasn’t bad, actually. I let the wound bleed a bit as I got out the first aid kit, found the antiseptic wipes, and got to slathering the wound with that. Then I put some antibiotic ointment on it, and wrapped the wound in a band aid and more first aid tape. Good as new.
I told John I was ok. And did he want to go back to the cabin, or to the bass hole. Bass hole, he said. I sure like fishing with John. We traveled back by the cabin and on to the bass hole. We only caught one there. I figured this was the last day of fishing, as we’d be closing up the cabin tomorrow to leave the following day, and a perfect way to end the trip with John catching this last fish and his biggest of the trip.
The next day, we all were up early and started taking care of chores to close the cabin. It seemed like we just got there. We boarded up most of the windows. I started the water pump, filled the water tank, then John and I brought the tank up to the cabin, where I changed the oil and wrote down the spark plug number so more could be purchased. By mid day, we finished all the chores we needed to. Why aren’t we out fishing, I asked. John did not answer in the allotted time, and away we went – this last day with cousin Christine.
Back to the pike hole, I thought, as we already had all the bass we could keep in the freezer. On our way up the Henvey, not far from the cabin, there was a black bear on the beach. Our only bear sighting of the trip. As we rounded the corner, we put our lines out. Over by the shore, I saw something making a wake in the water. Then three river otters were up on the shore and trotting away. We soon were catching pike. We could keep a total of three. We had 2 on the boat, and released some small ones. As we trolled back up the little channel, I looked up, and there it was. Something I’ve seen many times, but never outside of Alaska, and certainly not expected here in the east. A moose. And a big one. It was standing with it’s front feet in the water, looking at us. About 100 yards away. It didn’t seem too concerned. We didn’t approach it and now were whispering. John and I had trolled up this channel further yesterday and ran out of water, so we knew it was not very deep where the moose was. The moose than sauntered across the channel in water up to its knees and then up the bank of the island on the opposite side. Wow. Just wow.
When the moose was out of sight, I had to the boat what would have been our final pike for the day, and tried lifting it aboard. It came off. I’d lost that fish and one or two others, unlike other days, where I hadn’t lost any. I’d knocked all the barbs down on my hooks after my finger incident, so some of the fish were now self-releasing, which was okay, as that just meant we got to fish longer in the beautiful afternoon weather. Then fishing seemed to go dead. So, I headed out to deeper water towards the channel. I planned to fish to the channel, and pull up our lines and go home.
As we entered deeper water, John said he had a snag. He’s said this often during the week, as his lure seemed to fish deeper than mine and he’d get down in the weeds when I wouldn’t. I looked down and could barely see the weeds way down in the deeper water- but saw line was coming off his reel, so I turned the boat back towards the snag so he wouldn’t lose all his line. Luckily, we’d changed out the line on his reel earlier in the trip after he got his line wound in the prop and lost much of it. Otherwise, he might have got spooled here. John reeled in the slack as we caught up to the snag. I noticed the line was now under the boat for some reason. Must be I crossed over the snag and not paying attention, I thought. Then his rod doubled over, right into the water. We had not a snag, but a big fish!
I grabbed the net, and waited next to John. Christine clicked on her phone’s video. The fish was pulling the line dangerously close to the prop, then rubbing the bottom of the boat. I hope it doesn’t break off, I thought. I was so glad now we’d put fresh line on. The line was coming up, but from under the boat, so we couldn’t see the fish. John knew how to fish. He played his fish well, and didn’t horse them in, letting the rod and reel drag do their job. When the fish finally appeared from under the boat, it was just a few feet below the surface. Oh, it was a nice square headed pike with John’s lure in his mouth. The fish made one more run, and John let him go, then played him back to me. We got it in the net on the first try. As it fell into the basket of the net, the hook came out, caught on the webbing. There was screaming all around. Mostly by me. John said I can’t believe you’re bringing that fish into the boat with us. Like it was a dangerous snake or something. So, for the second day in a row, a perfect end to the day and trip, with John catching the biggest fish of the whole trip on the last day. I pray it’s not our last time here.