Jerry Fruetel
A well built wooden canoe is a work of art
You may have read recent reports of the large Pagami Creek fire in Minnesota's BWCA. Friends and I saw it up close while canoeing there last week and took a few pictures (attached). Four of us in two canoes went in Sept. 8, aware that a small lightening fire was burning near our intended Sept 14 exit point. Firefighters were monitoring it and the rangers predicted it would be out by the time we got there. From the start, we could see the distant smoke plume, but assumed it was under control and thought nothing of it. On Sept 11, the plume seemed to grow, but we attributed that to windier conditions. By the morning of Sept 12, we were two thirds of the way toward our planned exit point, but we could now smell the smoke, feel the heat, and hear the fire’s dull roar. It was obvious the fire had spread, and we estimated the wind gusts were 40-50 mph. We decided to abandon our plans, reverse direction and paddle out the same way we had come in. It was a rather hairy paddle out in the wind and waves, and we could see the flames leaping from treetop to treetop.
Only after returning to our car and turning on the radio did we learn that the Pagami Creek fire had burst out of control and become one of the largest fires in Minnesota history. It’s still going, and as of today has burned 150 square miles.
Our canoes were a Bell Northwind kevlar, and a skin-on-frame (ballistic nylon and fir) made by at risk youth in St. Paul's Urban Boatbuilders, Inc. program (http://www.urbanboatbuilders.org/). The Bell is a very nice canoe, but over seven days in all kinds of lake conditions, including strong wind and whitecaps, the skin boat outperformed the kevlar.
Only after returning to our car and turning on the radio did we learn that the Pagami Creek fire had burst out of control and become one of the largest fires in Minnesota history. It’s still going, and as of today has burned 150 square miles.
Our canoes were a Bell Northwind kevlar, and a skin-on-frame (ballistic nylon and fir) made by at risk youth in St. Paul's Urban Boatbuilders, Inc. program (http://www.urbanboatbuilders.org/). The Bell is a very nice canoe, but over seven days in all kinds of lake conditions, including strong wind and whitecaps, the skin boat outperformed the kevlar.