The Telegram (St. John's)

Canoeists navigate fur trading routes

Newfoundla­nd brothers-in-law travel more than 2,700 kilometres to retrace path of voyageurs

- samuel.mcneish@thetelegam.com SAM MCNEISH

It took three days longer than he projected, but a St. John’s man was able to navigate the fur trading routes of days gone by.

Herman Perry, a retired outdoor enthusiast, and his brother-in-law, Paul Snow, departed La Loche, Sask., on June 16, and 53 days later — on Aug. 7, made it to Arctic Red River/tsiigechec­k, N.W.T.

“Along the way we chatted with moose hunters, duck hunters and fishermen who were living off the land and enjoying their subsistenc­e-type lifestyle,’’ Perry said.

“In addition, we kept in contact with my brother, Larry, who was driving up to Arctic Red River to pick us up and kept abreast of progress in spite of weather delays and recent cold wind and rain that had lasted for several days,’’ he added.

They had been dropped off at La Loche by Larry, who lives in Saskatoon.

They paddled across Lake La Loche, up the La Loche Creek for a kilometre from Wallis Bay and then carried their food, gear and canoe across the legendary Methy Portage to the Clearwater River.

“We brought along a two-wheeled cart for moving the canoe across the 20-kilometre Methy portage, but unfortunat­ely the axle broke shortly after we started and this canoe portage became a slugfest,’’ Perry said.

“The temperatur­e was around 30 C and we blistered our feet badly while walking back and forth with our backpack loads.’’

They paddled the Clearwater, Athabasca, Slave and Mackenzie rivers, and Great Slave Lake, as they followed the historic Old Voyagers Fur Trade Route for 2,752 kilometres to the northwest.

They had estimated 50 days for the trip, but with portaging delays and weather delays it took them 53 days.

FUR TRADE HISTORY

The fur trade is part of Canada’s resource-based economy and one of Canada’s oldest and most historical­ly significan­t industries.

The commercial fur trade continues — 400 years after it started — and is an important contributo­r to the Canadian economy and ecology, Perry said.

This 2019 trip from La Loche to Arctic Red River was a continuati­on of the 2018 canoe trip along the Old Voyager Fur Trade Route between La Loche, Sask. and York Factory on Hudson Bay.

Another trip is planned. The 2020 canoe trip will be a 2,500-kilometre paddle. It will likewise last about 50 days and be a continuati­on of this year’s canoe trip.

It will start in Arctic Red River, and proceed down the Mackenzie and Peel rivers to the confluence with the Rat River. From the Rat River it will be nine days of tracking and portaging up and over the Rockies to Summit Lake, then from Summit Lake they will paddle due west on the Bell, Porcupine and Yukon rivers across Alaska to Emmonak on the Bering Sea.

“On hot days we relished wading and swimming in the rivers and lakes, but we also looked forward to the hotel showers, clothes washing and restaurant meals during rest days,’’ Snow said.

“At the villages we came across, we located and took photos of some of the old Hudson Bay Co. trading post structures in various states of disrepair.’’

SUPPORT AT HOME

Perry fell in love with canoeing when he moved to Labrador in the late 1960s. He has been involved in that love affair ever since.

To be able to pack up and go on prolonged journeys like this requires a great support group at home — especially for a wife who was left to care for two children. Through it all and through 48 years of marriage, Sheila Perry said, she grew to accept it.

“As you get older, and the children have moved away, I got very comfortabl­e being by myself,’’ she said this past spring.

“Herman worked many, many hours, most times 12-14 hours per day in his working life, so I was used to being on my own,’’ she added.

She said people have asked her how she can not worry about him, and she responds by saying you can’t sit and worry for two months.

“I always knew this was something he wanted to do. We are financiall­y stable enough for him to go and if anything were to happen, it happens. That is life,’’ she said.

“I have to have patience. He wants to do this and at the end of the day, I know he will be safe.’’

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Looking over the map is a key activity for Herman Perry during his exploratio­n of the old fur trading routes.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Looking over the map is a key activity for Herman Perry during his exploratio­n of the old fur trading routes.

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