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Meanest Link
Easily the most unusual canoe route
in
Algonquin Park and possibly the most challenging.

What is the Meanest Link?
The Meanest Link is a canoe route created
to honour the memory of Bill Swift Sr., one of the founders
of Algonquin Outfitters. Swifty, as he was most often called,
had other nicknames, such as Mean Dude, or Meanest, which
were a tribute to his gruff exterior persona. How he got
those names is another story.
"The Link" was dreamed up by Alex
Hurley and Gordon Baker in the summer of 2004. The trip
consists of four challenging canoe routes connecting the
four Algonquin Outfitters stores serving Algonquin Park:
Oxtongue Lake, Huntsville, Brent, on Cedar Lake, and Lake
Opeongo. Meanest's love of canoe tripping and numerous feats
of endurance on the trail were legendary, so Gord and Alex
felt that a canoe route linking Algonquin Park and Algonquin
Outfitters would be an appropriate way to honour him. Paddlers
must follow a prescribed route between each location and
follow a few traditions along the way. Each leg of the trip
must be done as a single canoe trip, with the exception
of the Huntsville/Brent leg, which due to the difficulty
and time required, may be split into two sections. Ambitious
paddlers with time on their hands can attempt the "Full
Link" and do all four sections one on canoe trip.
While the "Link" is not intended
to be a speed trial, several amazing feats of marathon paddling
have been recorded. Chris Bosworth and Rob Finkbeiner, for
example, left the Brent store at 4 am (in fog and darkness)
and landed at our Opeongo store 17 hours later. The average
canoe tripper would probably take at least four days to
do the route down the Petawawa River, up the Crow River
to Lake Lavielle, over the famous Dickson-Bonfield portage
to Lake Opeongo. Jon Wilke and Brad Coultes paddled from
Opeongo, through Oxtongue Lake to Huntsville in just under
30 hours. These two sections contain many portages and route-finding
challenges, not to mention the mandatory stops at Camp Pathfinder
and Oxtongue Lake. On the other side of the coin, several
parties have had misadventures along the way, frequently
due to underestimating the challenges of the route. These
paddlers shall remain nameless. Anyone who attempts the
route should be celebrated for trying and, if necessary,
having the sense to call it quits.
In the fall of 2004, the
first attempt at doing the route as a single continuous
loop trip was accomplished. Up until then, no one was able
to take the time to attempt the Huntsville/Brent leg, let
alone the entire route. The Huntsville/Brent leg goes up
the Big East River to Algonquin Park's western boundary,
up the boundary via McCraney, Rain, Ralph Bice and Big Bob
to the Nipissing River, then down the "Nip" to
Cedar Lake and the Brent Store. This is a TOUGH section.
Except as a spring whitewater run, the Big East is rarely
travelled up steam of the Williamsport Road bridge. Will
Lougheed and Randy Pielsticker tried to complete the whole
loop in early November 2004 but had to cut their trip short
due to bad weather, low water and the fact that they were
running out of food. Given the marginal weather, short days,
unknown terrain on the Big East River and generally challenging
conditions, their accomplishment is significant.
In
June of 2005, four determined young women quietly
booked time off, planned, packed and started paddling from
Oxtongue Lake. Fifteen days later, Janet Thomas, Jaime Capell,
Sarah Strickland and Leah Sanders became the first party
to complete the "Full Link" as a continuous canoe
trip. Their timing was chosen to give them ideal water levels,
at the cost of traveling in the peak of black fly season.
For the full story of the Meanest Link and a detailed account
of their trip, as written by Huntsville writer Don McCormick,
please start at "Meanest
Link, part one" on our blog and go from there.
Since then, many staff members have done sections of the
Meanest Link, more "Full Links" have been completed,
and, best of all, participation in the Meanest Link has
extended beyond Algonquin Outfitters staff to include customers,
friends and "Full Link" groups from Camp
Pathfinder.
In June of 2008 Will Lougheed
and Chris Bosworth set out to become the second group to
complete the full link. Leaving early June, Will and Chris
were giving themselves 14 days, and 2 food drops to complete
the trip. A family friend Clarke Wallace passed the day
before the trip. The carbon Mattawa being used was named
C.W 1 in memory of Clarke and the trip dedicated to him.
With Clarke looking over the waters stayed
calm, the weather clear the trip was looking very positive.
Will and Chris travelled an average of 14 hours a day under
grueling conditions, sun stroke and a bit of foot rot but
their determination overcame and the link was completed
in 9 days. The time set is a record that will be hard to
beat. They said that should there record ever be beaten
they would do the trip again, but in old tripping fashion.
With cedar canvas boats, canvas packs and only gear that
was used the year the company was founded, 1961.
You can even join the Meanest Link community
on Facebook!
The route of the Meanest Link
The route outlines below are written for the
paddler going in a clockwise direction. In our opinion,
going clockwise takes the best advantage of elevation gains
and losses but there is no reason you can't go the other
way, particularly on a "one section" trip. Some
lake names have been abbreviated to save space. Thanks to
Camp Pathfinder for compiling this detailed trip outline.
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Oxtongue Lake to Huntsville route:
Oxtongue Lake, Oxtongue River, Lake of Bays, South Portage
Road, Peninsula Lake, Fairy Lake, Muskoka River |
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Huntsville to Brent route:
Muskoka River, Hunter's Bay, Lake Vernon, Big East River
delta, Big East River, McCraney Creek, McCraney, Little
McCraney, Rain, Casey, Daisy, Ralph Bice, David, Mubwayaka,
Pugawagun, Pezheki, Iago, Papukiwis, Manu, Shawshaw,
Tim, Chibiabos, Indian Pipe, West Koko Pond, Big Bob,
Nipissing River, Cedar |
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Brent to Opeongo route:
Cedar, Petawawa River, Radiant, Petawawa R., Francis,
Crow River, Lavieille, Hardy Bay, Dickson, Bonfield,
Wright, Opeongo |
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Opeongo to Oxtongue Lake route:
Opeongo, Sproule, Sunday, Little Rock, Kearney, Whitefish,
Pog, Lake of Two Rivers, Madawaska, Cache, Tanamakoon,
Little Madawaska River, Source, Ouse, Smoke, Tea, Oxtongue
River, Oxtongue Lake |
The "Rules" of the
Meanest Link
There are not many rules but they are important
to the spirit of the trip:
- "Linkers" must follow the official route for
each section and complete the section in a single trip.
One exception is the Huntsville to Brent leg, which could
be done in two parts: Huntsville - Rain Lake, then Rain
L. - Brent. See the complete route outline above.
- you can go either direction.
- you can do a section at a time, two or three sections
or attempt the whole loop. If you attempt the Full Link
but do not complete it, your completed section(s) will
be recorded on the Meanest Link Wall of Fame.
- no solo trips (for safety).
- take pictures of the portage signs (at the very least)
to prove you did it.
- you have to use the same self-propelled watercraft
for the whole section, or for the whole Link if you are
doing the continuous loop. Paddlers using anything but
a canoe will be scoffed at.
- you can travel as fast or as slowly as you like. It
is not a race.
- safety is of paramount importance. Travel carefully!
- when paddling the Brent to Opeongo leg, the party must
stop at (preferably camp at) Meanest's favourite site
on Lake Lavieille.
- each trip member has to drink a particular refreshing
beverage on that particular site. For more information
on rules 9 and 10, please contact the Meanest Link Advisory
Board at Oxtongue Lake.
- when paddling the Opeongo to Oxtongue Lake section,
you must go up the Little Madawaska to Source Lake and
stop at Camp Pathfinder, in order to pay your respects
to the place where it all began for Meanest in Algonquin
Park.
Meanest Link Accomplishments
| Year |
Name |
Oxtongue
to Huntsville |
Huntsville
to Brent |
Brent to Opeongo |
Opeongo to
Oxtongue |
| 2004 |
Jacob Biggar, Jaime Capell, Leah Sanders, Andrew Woods |
|
|
Completed |
|
| 2004 |
Leah, Sarah |
|
|
|
Completed |
| 2004 |
Will L, Randy P |
Completed |
|
|
|
| 2004 |
Drew Matthews, Kevin Thomas |
|
|
|
Completed |
| 2004 |
Bos, Rob Finkbinder |
|
|
Completed |
|
| 2004 |
Hurley, Chefy |
Completed |
|
|
|
| 2005 |
The Girls |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
| 2005 |
Rob Finkbinder |
|
|
|
Completed |
| 2006 |
Robbie Roberts, Donna Grieves |
|
|
Completed |
|
| 2007 |
Ben Briston & Crew Camp Pathfinder |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
| 2008 |
Will & Bos |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
Completed |
| 2008 |
Brad & Jon |
Completed |
|
|
Completed |
| 2008 |
Matt Gutpell, Shannon Thompson |
Completed |
|
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Completed |
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