the border country`s inside story
Transcription
the border country`s inside story
THE BORDER COUNTRY'S INSIDE STORY SELBY N O R H E I M Millions of Americans are attracted by the adventure suggested by the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, thousands enjoy the adjacent campsites and fringe areas, but few are willing to sacrifice the time, somewhat excessive labor and periodic misery necessary to portage into the remote areas where the real rewards are found. The BWCA is like a coconut. Anyone who penetrates the rough exterior will find tasty meat, delightful camping areas where tables, fireplace grills and latrines are provided and where fishing is good. But anyone willing to bypass the tasty meat to reach the sweet coconut milk will find cathedral-like forests, magnificent rivers and lakes where fishing is excellent and an indescribable solitude and contentment which drains away the stress of everyday life. Our trip into the BWCA — your reporter and his 15-year-old son — began like that of all other canoeists, with a visit to the Forest Service office to register and obtain a free permit. Along with the permit you receive a variety of literature, most of it interesting and Mr. luth Norheim, for the Du- News-Tribune, takes on staff writer an "in- side" trip t h r o u g h the f a b l e d Waters Canoe Country. J A N U A R Y • FEBRUARY 1968 Boundary all of it educational, having as its objective an enjoyable excursion for you along with the preservation of the irreplaceable forests. Everybody gets something. Smokey Bear comics for the small fry, Smokey's Story of the Forest for the older youngsters, and for the adults, canoeing and camping tips, codes of ethics, campfire safety rules, a general map of the area, a booklet on passages in the Bible relating to forests and flames, and a statement made by Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman on regulations for the BWCA. Next we stopped at Sawbill Lake, 24 miles up the Sawbill Trail from Tofte on the North Shore, where we informed outfitter Frank Hansen that during this visit — our fifth — we wanted privacy. He routed us into an area where, in his words, "not a hundred people in a year go," and we were into this area in less than an hour. A short portage f r o m Sawbill Lake brought us to Kelso Creek and suddenly we were cut off f r o m civilization. Two and a half days later we reached more popular areas and met other humans and they were the only ones until the fourth day out when we saw a second party. We paddled up Kelso Creek, lake 17 and river and across Lujenida Lake where we found over first portage. The Forest Service sign said Zenith Lake was 422 rods ahead. Our m a p said 480 rods, but we maintain that the combined figures is much closer to the truth. (Rods become shorter each day on the trail.) The trail was often barely discernible and at two points it disappeared into the water which had been backed up by beaver dams. At the first trouble spot we had to detour through the brush, dragging the canoe along for 100 yards or so. At the second spot, encountered our third day out, the trail disappeared into a swamp and after traversing that area we were certain the 18 Louisiana bayou country would be a snap. But this effort and misery only spiced the experience that lay ahead. We were in an area where we aroused curiosity in the forest animals, instead of fear. Instead of the distant lonely whistle of an occasional loon, many of them played a noisy concert while the beavers, swimming close by our island campsites, provided the percussion section of the wilderness orchestra with the explosive slap of their tails. Then, the concert completed, the sounds subsided and the wilderness was turned over to the quieter denizens for the night. And we slept. As we paddled along various rivers, CONSERVATION VOLUNTEER ducks would wait until we were almost upon them before moving out of the way of our silver canoe. Between fabulous Malberg Lake and Kawishiwi River, a healthy spike buck spotted us and bounded to the top of a 30-foot river embankment where he stopped to watch us for several minutes and then turned, disdainfully kicking his hindquarters into the air before disappearing into the trees. Although we saw no moose, their tracks were everywhere along the portage trails and we concluded that either the forests were well-populated with moose or the same huge moose was preceding us down every trail. Many portages were unmarked, and this we considered a deficiency that should be remedied, but compasses and the shapes of the lakes on our map were invaluable in locating the routes. Mosquitoes were bothersome only during the longer portages, when we used repellent effectively, and for a brief period during the evenings. But our small mountain tent was a fort repelling the invading forces. And if a few of the enemy infiltrated, they were bug-bombed in short order. On famous Little Saganaga Lake, we met the first bunch of humans, a group of five fishermen who had portaged down from the Gunflint Trail. They had beautiful messes of northerns, walleyes and trout. The next day we met them on Kawishiwi River — 10 portages to the south including two small ponds provided by the beaver — and they had made the trip just for the fishing and then portaged back to their base camp on Little Saganaga. Again they had strings of four-to-eight-pound J A N U A R Y • F E B R U A R Y 1968 fish and they had been on the lake only a short while. We also found fishing terrific but caught only what we could eat, which was considerable. Total take — five three-to-six-pound northerns and a small walleye. Every campsite was completely free of litter and previous campers had left supplies of firewood. We followed suit. Only when we returned to the fringe area did we find empty cigarette packs, candy wrappers, etc., along the trails and at campsites. On Beth Lake, we found a favorite camping spot marked by the Forest Service, "Closed for Rehabilitation." This step has been necessary in several fringe areas, we were told, to allow the sites to return to their native state. On K o m a Lake, our fourth day, we met the second humans, a party of Explorer Scouts on a brief forray into the wilderness. On the fifth day we met two fishermen on Beth Lake, just a portage away f r o m Alton Lake, adjacent to Sawbill Lake. Five days, three groups equals privacy. As we left Beth Lake on our sixth day, we were acutely aware that we were in the fringe area when we met a party of four men and four women. We called them "fringees" and they played the part. Bermuda shorts exposed manly legs to the mosquitoes while jungle net hats protected their heads. One woman had a winter parka pulled so closely around her head that only her nose and part of her eyes were exposed. Boxes of delicacies dropped from their knapsacks and when they exhaustedly placed the packs on the ground, food spilled in 19 every direction f r o m the unsecured tops. One fellow, between painful breaths, asked the distance to the lake and I answered, "Two hundred twenty paces with the left foot." As we neared Alton Lake, I mistakenly asked my son, who had gone ahead earlier with a pack, how far to the lake and he answered, "Two hundred twenty paces with the left foot." When we discussed the fringees with Air and Water Pollution?... Now add "noise pollution" to the growing list of threats to our environment. Not that it's a new threat. Some 60 years ago, Dr. Robert Koch, renowned bacteriologist and Nobel Laureate, warned: "The day will come when man will have to fight merciless noise as the worst enemy of his health." Almost 30 years ago, the American Medical Association put us on notice that "the multiple and insidious ill effects of noise constitute an inadequately recognized, baneful influence on lives of millions of persons throughout the country." But man. in his infinite capacity to defile his environment, hasn't heard the message. Maybe he can't, what with all the noise. Result: Noise "is one of the chief drawbacks to the enjoyment of modern urban living," according to Dr. Vern O. Knudsen, physicist and former chancellor of the University of California at Los Angeles. Even if the decibel din should be held to its present level — which it will not — the total mix of environmental pollutants ought to jolt us into action. For as a task force reported to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare last summer: "An individually acceptable amount of water pollution, added to a tolerable amount of air pollution, added to a bearable amount of noise and congestion can produce a totally unacceptable health environment." About the same time, Dr. Leo L. Beranek, a leading acoustics expert, sounded this cheerful note: "In all probability the noise level will grow 20 CONSERVATION VOLUNTEER the outfitters, they commented, "You can tell some people over and over again how to dress properly but they still go out in Bermuda shorts, halters and whathaveyou." As before, we found the BWCA truly magnificent. It's a wonderland that more and more thousands will enjoy, but only through the cooperation of its users will it maintain its primitive state. The premiums are minute compared to the dividends. What About the Decibel Din? not only in urban centers, but with increasing population and the proliferation of machines, noise will invade the few remaining havens of silence in the world. A century from now, when a man wants to escape to a quiet spot, there may be no place left to go." The hope, of course, is that voices of sanity will break through the noise. Concern about noise spurted when large numbers of aircraft, piston and jet, started to fly low over communities in takeoffs and landings. It was further sparked by the feared effects of sonic boom from the proposed commercial supersonic transport (SST). But the sources of today's barrage of noise are varied and seemingly limitless: Traffic (particularly heavy trucks, scooters, motorcycles and sports cars, as well as horns of all vehicles); private planes and helicopters in addition to commercial and military aircraft; motor boats; sirens from fire engines, police cars and ambulances; garbage trucks and garbage pails; power lawn mowers, snow shovelers, snowmobiles and leaf rakers; outside air conditioners; construction equipment such as jackhammers, air compressors, riveters and pile drivers; gunfire; household appliances such as dishwashers, blenders, garbage disposals, vacuum cleaners, radio and TV sets (including those commercials which are louder than the programs); and a wide assortment of others such as public systems, twoway radios, telephones and transistor radios. Add them up and noise is clearly another waste product of our technological proficiency. (Contributed by the Conservation Foundation.) 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