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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

Live & Learn



Weekend voyageurs
By Candace Savage with photography by Courtney Milne

A Saskatchewan canoe tour revisits a dark day in fur-trade history

THE STORM ROLLS IN under cover of darkness, unleashing torrents of rain and bringing me bolt upright in bed with its flash and fury. Only a few hours till morning, I think uneasily. Only a few hours until I am scheduled to set out on a two-day journey by car and canoe with a dozen other outdoorsy types from storm-lashed Saskatoon to the village of St. Louis, 130 kilometres northeastward down the South Saskatchewan River.



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Call me naïve, but bad weather has not figured into my plans. All I want is a lazy weekend paddle, full of sunshine and bonhomie, and a chance to bask in the romance of fur-trade history. And then, of course, there is Cliff Speer's reputation for spectacular camp cooking. Speer runs Saskatoon's CanoeSki Discovery Company, a purveyor of fresh-air-and-adventure outings and the organizer of our excursion down the river.

When I had talked to him about the trip earlier, it had sounded like so much fun. We would drive from Saskatoon to Batoche National Historic Site, launch the canoes, then paddle for three or four hours to the location of South Branch House, an old Hudson's Bay Company trading post that had been in business just over two centuries ago, from 1786 until 1794. What's more, the famous fur trader and surveyor David Thompson spent the winter there when he was a lad of 16, so we would enjoy a vicarious brush with celebrity. Best of all, once we had settled into camp for the night on a meadow across the river, there would be bannock and buffalo stew and saskatoon pie for dinner. The next day, another leisurely paddle would take us to St. Louis, where vans would be waiting to drive us back to the city.

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