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Trip Stories

Everyone has a trip story to share and one of the best
places to share your stories is with-in our online
community. Membership is free and it only takes a couple
of minutes to join. Algonquin Park means so many different
things to different people.
People come to the park to:
- go on a wilderness canoe trip
- experience the scenery of the Canadian Shield
- enjoy family camping at a roadside campground
- attend a summer camp, like Camp Pathfinder or Tanamakoon
- explore the Park Visitor Centre
- stop for a day hike or even a picnic
- view wildlife in a spectacular natural setting
- catch a brook trout in a remote lake
All of these activities, and more, lead to unique experiences
that just have to be told in our Trip Stories section. Read
our featured trip story below and find more posted in on
our community, by people just like you.
Featured Trip Stories
View Algonquin
Park Access Points in a larger map |
Access Points
1. Kawawaymog L.
2. Tim River
3. Magnetawan L.
4. Rain Lake
5. Canoe Lake
6. Smoke Lake
7. Source Lake
8. Cache Lake
9. Rock Lake
10. Sunday Creek
11. Opeongo Lake
12. Pinetree Lake
13. Galeairy Lake-Whitney
14. Hollow R.-Dividing L.
15. Kingscote Lake
16. Hay Lake
17. Shall Lake
18. Aylen Lake
19. Basin Lake
20. Mallard-Sec Lake
21. McManus Lake
22. Grand Lake-Achray
23. Lake Travers
24. Big Bissett Lake
25. Wendigo Lake
26. North River
27. Cedar Lake-Brent
28. Brain Lake
29. Kioshkokwi Lake-Kiosk |
#11 Lake Opeongo - Hardcore
staff trips
Not
looking totally into night paddling, our heroes depart the
Opeongo dock. A few of the many perks of working at Algonquin
Outfitters are access to canoes and tripping gear, proximity
to Algonquin Park and the opportunity to enjoy the great
outdoors at your doorstep. Trouble is, we all still work
five days a week like the rest of the world, so some of
our staff try to cram a lot of paddling into their limited
time off. Chris Bosworth and Brad Coultes went off the scale
this week with an unprecedented (to my knowledge) circuit
of the "Opeongo - Lavielle loop" in 16.5 hours,
without using the Water Taxi. To put this in perspective,
I would generally recommend that the average canoe tripper
take 5 days for this trip.
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| Photographic proof - they were there! |
Hardcore tripping is not for the average paddler. This
type of paddling adventure requires commitment, experience,
teamwork and a willingness to put up with a little hardship.
Both fellows have previous experience with Hardcore tripping.
A few years ago, Chris paddled the Meanest Link route from
our Brent Store to Opeongo (via Cedar, Radiant, Francis,
the Crow River, Lavielle and Dickson) in 18 hours, with
colleague Rob Finkbeiner. Travelling with Jon Wilke, Brad
recently completed the Opeongo-Oxtongue Lake-Huntsville
leg of the Meanest Link in under 30 hours, including one
camping night.
Hardcore tripping is not a new thing in Algonquin Park.
Back when he was a Camp Pathfinder trip leader, AO founder,
Bill Swift, AKA the Mean Dude, claimed he did the Dickson-Bonfield
portage in 41 minutes, fully loaded. Back in the early 50s,
"fully loaded" meant carrying a canvas tripping
pack and waterlogged cedar-canvas canoe, not modern lightweight
gear. Paddling solo, our Opeongo Store manager did the Smoke
Lake loop in 8 hours (a few years ago...). Many other hardcore
trips by AO staff, park staff, camp trippers and others
have gone unrecorded over the years.
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| Yes, you are allowed to take a rest. |
Here is Brad's account of the trip (for those not familiar
with the route, Dickson-Bonfield is a 5 km portage):
"Bos and I completed another Hardcore trip yesterday........leaving
Ope at 4:10 AM paddling up Opeongo in a meteor shower.......up
through Proulx, down the Crow River to Lavielle and Dickson,
back to Ope (Dickson-Bonfield took one hour exactly), then
met up with Andy and Adrianne where Opeongo's three arms
meet and back to the store.....it was a 16.5 hr trip! Thank
God for the wind!"
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| OK, one night paddle a day is enough... |
Cruising with friends down Opeongo in
Sawyer
Cruisers.
We still have a few Cruisers in the fleet and they are
our fastest rental canoe. |
Back at the Opeongo Store by dusk! |
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community to read more.
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