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Kinds of Winter: Four Solo Journeys by Dogteam in Canada’s Northwest Territories
Kinds of Winter: Four Solo Journeys by Dogteam in Canada’s Northwest Territories
Kinds of Winter: Four Solo Journeys by Dogteam in Canada’s Northwest Territories
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Kinds of Winter: Four Solo Journeys by Dogteam in Canada’s Northwest Territories

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Chapter Five West

2005, out to the far shore of Great Slave Lake, near its outlet at the Mackenzie River. The longest of the four journeys by mileage, and included a thought-provoking stopover at another family homestead. Musings about that, and about life passing, and 25 years of travel back and forth on “the big lake.”
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 5, 2014
ISBN9781771120708
Kinds of Winter: Four Solo Journeys by Dogteam in Canada’s Northwest Territories
Author

Dave Olesen

Dave Olesen has a B.A. in Humanities and Northern Studies. A veteran dog musher, he finished the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race eight times. Olesen has lived since 1987 on the northeast tip of Great Slave Lake with his wife, Kristen, and thirty huskies. He works as a bush pilot and guide. Kinds of Winter is his fourth book. His 1994 collection North of Reliance was re-published in a 2016 edition by Raven Productions of Ely Minnesota.

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    Kinds of Winter - Dave Olesen

    navigation.

    Compass Points,

    Over the Boulders, Eager…

    As the sun went down in late afternoon on the 28th of February 2003, I raised my voice above the roar of wind, calling out gently to the team of huskies stretched ahead of me: Who-o-oa there now, who-o-oa. The low tone of my command was muffled by the ice-encrusted hood surrounding my face and it did not carry far. The dogs heard me but they hardly slowed at the sound. What? Surely he’s not thinking of making camp here? I stood heavily on the sled’s steel brake claws, forcing them deeper into the wind-packed snow. Our momentum fell off and ten frosty dog faces turned back, baffled, to see what I was going to do next. Whoa, I said again, and dropped the snow hook. I kicked it down with my thick mukluk. That’ll do. Home sweet home.

    It was time to camp, and the blank white sweep of tundra offered no shelter. The northwest gale had dominated our day, howling at us head-on, shifting slightly, probing for weakness like a tireless sparring partner, hour after hour. The rush of air had dropped perceptibly at day’s end, but it still packed a wallop. With the temperature near 40 below zero, the wind was still eager to freeze any skin I might carelessly expose to it. I moved forward up the team and unhooked the toggle at the back of each dog’s harness. Now my intentions were clear to them all and as they felt the toggles come free they each pissed, shook, circled, and curled up on the snow—tail over nose, furry shoulder turned toward the brunt of the wind. Work done, day over … call us when supper’s ready, boss.

    The dogs and I were about halfway between the upper Thelon River and the east end of Great Slave Lake. We were westbound for home, with about a hundred miles to go. It was time to stop the day’s marching, dig in, pitch the tent, cook food for us all, and rest for the night. We would find no oasis of spruce trees, no cozy hut on these rolling plains. One barren hillside was as good as the next and darkness was coming on.

    I started the chores. The dogs would sleep in harness that night, stretched out in pairs across a smooth blank slope, so I only had to secure the forward end of their gangline to one of the stout aluminum pickets I carried in the sled. I walked to the head of the team again, poked the 30-inch stake into the packed snow, and made the gangline off to it. That done, I set up and lit the two-burner camp stove, heaped big chunks of snow into a square cooker kettle, then sheltered the cooker and stove with a sheet-metal windscreen. Over the next half-hour or so that snow would grudgingly become hot water. With that hot water I could melt big blocks of frozen fat, then pour the water-fat soup over the dogs’ dense kibble. I moved up and down the team, putting a bright blue windbreaker on each dog and taking off the cloth booties that they often wear on long runs in deep cold. Next I staked out and raised my red tent alongside the sled, only a few feet away from Jasmine and Schooner, the two wheel dogs at the very back of the team. Every time I set something down I secured it somehow or threw something heavy on top of it, and by doing so managed to make camp that night without losing any bits of my gear to the wind.

    Through the two hours of dusk and deepening twilight I worked steadily. Finally, with everything done outside and the dogs all fed, I could retreat to the tent to cook and eat my own supper—a steaming kettle of caribou meat, rice, and butter, seasoned to simple perfection with salt and pepper. An hour later I could begin to get ready for sleep. This is a laughably laborious half-hour project when tent camping in winter: change clothes, arrange bedding, prepare the stove for quick lighting in the morning; wriggle into double mummy bags with their confounding tangle of drawstrings, cord locks, snaps, and zippers. At last I rolled sideways in my cocoon of goose down and synthetic fluff, and blew out the candle.

    Pure blackness. The incessant wind still battered the fabric of the tent. Almost at my elbow Jasmine shifted in her snow bed, and sighed as she settled again. I marvelled, as I teetered on the brink of consciousness, at how utterly alone a man and ten dogs are in such a place on such a night. A warm glow of deep rest crept up and down my limbs, then deep, dreamless sleep.

    And suddenly dawn—the first morning of March. Daylight tinged orange by the red-and-yellow fabric of my tent. And—could it be?—silence! For the first time in four days the wind had calmed.

    Once I had the stove burning full bore I made a brief foray out from the warm tent. Tundra and sky all around, shaded pink to the east-southeast where the sun would soon rise. Forty-one below zero, according to the little thermometer slung from the handlebar of the sled. Dogs all drifted in, some completely invisible beneath the snow, and not one of them even stirring at the sound of my footsteps. After a couple of minutes outside in that ever-astonishing cold, I dove back into my little nylon haven and the comforting hiss of the camp stove. Just as I sat down and began to fuss with making coffee, one of the dogs barked, and another: short barks of alarm which told me something was amiss, something was moving or approaching our little camp. Reluctant to leave the warm tent again, I poked my head through the door flap.

    Eighty yards or so beyond the lead dogs stood a truly enormous white wolf, thick with frost on his mane and pelt, staring at the camp and the dogs as if transfixed. A second wolf, tawny grey, stood just behind the white one. All the dogs were on their feet now, some with clumps of snow still clinging to the sides of their heads, shanks, and nylon jackets, giving them a dishevelled just-woke-up look. No one moved or made a sound. A third wolf, white and slightly smaller than the others, probably a female, trotted in from the northeast.

    By then the tips of my frost-battered ears were going numb, and I pulled back into the tent to fetch my hat. When I stuck my head out again the two smaller wolves were ambling away, but the big white fellow still stood and stared. Finally he turned, stepped away, paused once more to study us, and slowly followed his comrades out of sight over the rise. I crawled back into the tent as the dogs settled into their beds again.

    It seems necessary to begin every piece of writing about Canada’s Northwest Territories with a refresher in North American geography—even for many Canadians. Because my family and I live in a little-known corner of these remote territories, we spend a lot of our conversations when we are down south in exchanges like this: No, not the Yukon. No, not Nunavut. Not Alaska … Puzzled look, scratching of head. "What’s next, going east … Greenland? What the heck is straight north from Alberta and Saskatchewan, or straight north of Montana? Pass me that atlas, please."

    That blank in popular geography is part of the wonder, and at times the frustration, of living in this place so far on the fringes of modern North America. It is an enormous stretch of land and waters over a thousand miles across, yet its entire human population could easily take seats to watch a ballgame in a metropolitan stadium. In 1999, when Canada officially established the territory of Nunavut to the north and east of us, the diminished yet still enormous Northwest Territories faded even further from the southern consciousness—perhaps not such a bad thing, considering the implications of the alternative.

    The journeys I describe in this book took me out from and back to my home at Hoarfrost River, at the northeastern tip of McLeod Bay on Great Slave Lake. Once a year for four consecutive winters I hooked up a team of dogs and set out on long trips away from our homestead, travelling toward one of the cardinal points of the compass: south in 2002, east in 2003, north in 2005, and finally west in 2005. Having gone out, I turned home again. It was as simple as that. My narrative will make many digressions, but the days and nights and miles of those four trips are the main trail wending through the pages ahead.

    As I look back on these journeys a steady stream of images comes to mind: that bare-bones camp on the tundra; the stunning cold morning after the wind died; those wolves. Other camps and fleeting moments are fixed permanently in my memory as all the little details begin to fall away: The headwaters of the Back River on a bright, amazingly mild day in late February 2004. I knelt to chip some ice with my knife, since I had boasted to my two little daughters that we would raise a toast to my return with lemonade poured over Back River ice chips. A moment on the first trip, south, on the divide between the Snowdrift and Taltson watersheds, standing alone on snowshoes miles from my camp and dogs, on a day so clear and frigid that the air was like some new solid, some surreal essence of cold. And a sunny pastel afternoon on the final trip, moving west across the enormous expanse of Great Slave Lake, mile after mile, slow hours passing, until the far western shore, a land of wood bison and sinkholes and poplar, rose into sight like a new continent in the distance.

    When a person lives in a place for many years, it becomes a centre point. Moving outward in any direction from that physical centre, the geographical place, one will eventually and certainly encounter change—or else all places would be the same. For my journeys and motives the four cardinal compass points provided suitable direct headings—I would hook up a team of dogs, and with them hold a heading until something changed. Vegetation, terrain, weather, animals, light, depth, distance—the specific parameters didn’t matter. And then, having moved out to that perceptibly new place, the dogs and I would turn for home. Of course anyone, from anywhere, could undertake such a series of outings, and many people have probably taken such journeys in their minds. But it was important to me to actually set out and do it, to make it a part of my life—a life so firmly rooted to a place called Hoarfrost River.

    The compass rose and its cardinal points provided a simple and appealing framework for my routes, year by year. Our little cluster of cabins and outbuildings, which we call our homestead for lack of a better word, sits just west of the mouth of the Hoarfrost, where that small river flows into the long arc of McLeod Bay. Here my wife Kristen and I have lived since 1987, raised our two children, and made a life and a living for ourselves. To journey out to each of the four directions, one winter after the next, rounding the compass and always returning to home, appealed to me. It was a simple plan, and that bare-bones simplicity was one of my goals. Over my years in the wilderness, I have often drawn wisdom from a snippet by climber and skier Dick Dorworth, writing in Mountain Gazette many years ago, something like: If you can’t plan the thing on the back of an old envelope, it threatens to become an Expedition, and should be seriously reconsidered.¹ Of course my planning for these trips did entail more notes than I could fit on a scrap of paper, but that advice has always served me well, and over the years I have tried to remain true to it.

    I was out for about sixteen days on each trip. Using my methods a lone musher with a sled and a team of dogs cannot travel more than about nine days (somewhere between 100 and 200 miles) without some resupply. Thus I needed to set out one or two resupply caches for myself prior to each journey. Being a bush pilot in my working life, I was able to set out these caches for myself, by ski plane, a week or two before each year’s start.

    I timed the first three journeys for the second half of February, and because of work pressures I made the final trip west in the middle of March. Given complete freedom to time the trips I might have taken them all in March, but that would have conflicted with my work as a pilot and guide. I intended these to be purely winter trips, not winter-edging-into-spring trips. The second half of February is the very heart of winter, analogous on the flip side of the calendar year to the second half of August. By February at 63° north the length of daylight does not impinge on a solid day of travel, and the equinoctial winds of March have not kicked in. So February it was, three times out of four.

    Wild country rewards those who approach it without fanfare. I did not want corporate sponsors, online interactive education, or any of the other trappings of the modern Information Age expedition. And, to be honest, they didn’t want me—the journeys I made were not intended to be dramatic or extreme. In Madison Avenue parlance, these trips just weren’t very sexy. On the most prosaic level, I only wanted to take the time and make the effort to go out and immerse myself in some of the vastness that surrounds our home, and thus to fill in some of the blanks in my own mental geography. On another level, I sought a return to the original motivations of my long career as a dog musher. From 1985 to 2000, I had been intensely focused on long-distance sled-dog racing. Eight times I ran teams to Nome, Alaska, in the Iditarod, and I competed in many other races like it. Finally, coming home after the finish of the 2000 Yukon Quest, I sensed that I had scratched that itch, and I made the decision to turn away from competitive dog mushing. It was time to steer my dogteam and myself toward less tangible prizes, or risk finding that all of us—canine and human—had grown too old and soft to make the effort.

    Early on in my ruminations about the four trips I decided to travel alone. Although the ideal companion would certainly have enriched these journeys in some ways, I never second-guessed my decision to go solo. For most of the sixty days and nights I spent on the trail I found that solitude could be, as Henry David Thoreau claimed, a pleasant and thought-provoking companion. It allowed me to sustain themes of thought over many hours without interruption, to linger over my journal writing on some mornings in the tent, and on other days to pack up and head out without any mandatory pause for introspection. I wanted time to think, to write, and to ask myself some questions; to mull things over all by my lonesome. Of course on a dogteam trip one is never completely alone. I could talk to my dogs, and with them I could savour—and at times simply endure—the ups and downs of our life on the trail.

    Setting out in winter, I travelled by the only method that I, a veteran dog musher, could imagine setting out. Had I made these journeys without the dogs—travelling by ski and pulk, or snowshoe and toboggan—both the philosophy and the nuts and bolts of the trips would have been changed utterly. I would have sacrificed a huge amount of distance covered, and would have subtracted a measure of comfort from my already spartan camps.

    And what if I had gone to the other end of the tundra-travel spectrum and set out by snowmobile—what then? I could have covered vastly more distance, hauled more gear along with me, and enjoyed the comforts of cozier camping night after night. And … at that vast distance, alone and unsupported, the machine might have broken down and demanded repair work far exceeding my paltry skills as a mechanic. What then? An ignominious rescue, a return home, a salvage, and a bill … failure and project over. The only thing I can say with certainty about the snowmobile option is that I never considered it even for a moment, because with every noisy, stinking mile I would have run that rubber track right over the essence of everything I treasure about winter and the wilderness. Harsh words, but true.

    Sled dogs have been such a huge force in my life that I do sometimes take them for granted. I suspect that my time with huskies has shaped me more than I will ever know. I am a dog musher, and good mushers take pride in viewing dogs honestly, in trying to plumb the deep magic embedded in our unvarnished partnership with our dogs. Critters are critters, as a friend of mine, a sort of horse whisperer in his own right, said one night as we sat and looked out at his pasture and herd. And in that simple statement lies a lifelong mystery.

    Poet Augustus Merrill, once an English professor of mine, remarked after reading a draft of this book that he found himself interested not so much in what I did as in why I did it. Fair enough—setting out alone in mid-winter, for no apparent practical purpose, into some of the most desolate and unpopulated parts of the planet, is not, I admit, an entirely rational act. Yet to me and to my friends and family it never seemed completely irrational either, given my background and my lifelong fascination with the North. I tried to put it this way: for a man to make a home and live out his life at a place like Hoarfrost River, with a team of huskies and the savvy to drive them, and never to venture forth on such trips, would be like living on a seacoast, with a capable boat moored in the harbour, and never to set sail.

    Some people, told of my plans, simply nodded politely. Their bewilderment was obvious, though—it was as if I had announced Over the next four winters I’m going to take a series of long swims in ice-cold water, just to see how it feels. For these puzzled people I can trot out reasons like those I have listed: the desire to explore my home territory; the chance to run the dogs without the pressure of racing; the urge to ponder, question, and write. Stacked up against the brute reality of a 40-below night alone on the tundra, huddled next to a camp stove in a flimsy nylon tent, words and reasons can all sound stilted and contrived.

    It has taken years for me to complete this book, to work my scrawled-pencil notebooks into some coherent forms and chapters. As those years have passed my journeys have receded from the sharp clarity of recent memory into the slippery haze of the past. The essences of them, concentrated or distilled like maple syrup or good whisky, have taken on a purity not apparent in the mundane details of days and nights, camps and weather and resupplies, routes and mileage. Those days and nights, that red tent on the tundra, those teams of dogs and miles of wind, have melded and become layers of my soul.

    It is a primeval act, this setting out and leaving home—especially for a man alone, from such a remote home as ours, into the teeth of winter. Some lines from Gary Snyder’s poem Tasting the Snow catch it perfectly:

    Out the door:

    Icy and clear in the dark.

    once I had thought,

    laughing and kissing,

    how cosy to be tuckt in bed

    let them sleep;

    Now I can turn to the hunt.

    Blade sharp and hair on end

    over the boulders

    eager

    tasting the snow.

    South 2002

    South

    Seventeen days, 20 February–8 March 2002

    Hoarfrost River to Nonacho Lake (Taltson River watershed) and return: about 155 miles

    Nine dogs, two resupply caches

    I began by heading south.

    My decision to go south that first year, 2002, was partly based in the need for a shakedown voyage, toward the compass point that I thought would be most forgiving in case of mistakes. Unlike the country waiting for me toward the three other cardinal directions, the route south lay entirely in timbered country, with its amenities of firewood and wind protection. Also, in apparent contradiction to that notion, I went south because I wanted to knock off the toughest physical effort first. I expected the southern leg of my four-year project to be gruelling, because of snow depth and unfamiliar terrain. Looking back with the unerring clarity of hindsight, both expectations turned out to be correct—especially the gruelling part. In fact my trip south in 2002 ranks among the most difficult dogteam treks I have ever made.

    On 15 February, Kristen and our two young daughters, Annika and Liv, left our home at Hoarfrost River and flew in a small ski plane to Yellowknife, 165 miles away. There in the boomtown Arctic capital (population eighteen thousand) they settled in to our little houseboat cabin on the ice of Yellowknife Bay, to take up with four weeks of city life: public school for the girls, days filled with errands and appointments, visiting with friends—a welcome mid-winter change of routine.

    As their plane departed my solo began. Although I would not leave home for days, and had no idea that first year how ridiculously long it would take me to get out on the trail, I was alone. I was free to focus entirely on the journey ahead of me.

    Solitude stretches time. After months of keeping steady company with Kristen and our girls, the sudden silence of our homestead seemed to come barrelling in at me from every side. It brought with it a strange sense of slow-motion, freeze-frame movement along with a vague and unsettling emptiness. My first hours alone were spent in this oddly disoriented frame of mind. Suddenly there were no distractions. One task could lead logically to the next, without a plaintive little tie my bootlace or I need a snack to be heard. Could lead logically, that is, if I could just settle into a methodical and productive rhythm.

    Afternoon, day one: time to set up the new tent I had purchased for these trips—a three-man (just right for one) Swedish arctic type that was beautifully strong, lightweight, and boasted a good pedigree of arctic and mountain expeditions. Over the next four winters I would come to deeply appreciate this tent, but on that first afternoon, on the hardpacked snow alongside the dog yard at minus 30 degrees, I struggled to politely make its acquaintance. Threading thin metal poles through narrow fabric sleeves, poking aluminum stakes into the snow, I clumsily rehearsed the process that would become so familiar over the coming weeks and years.

    There is pleasure in using a piece of gear that has been well thought out, well designed, and well made. I can put up with all the intrinsic frustrations of winter camping—the dark, the cold, the tired impatience at day’s end—if I am working with equipment I trust. That Hilleberg tent has become one of those pieces of gear, as familiar and comfortable to me now as an old parka, as trustworthy as a sharp axe. I like it, oddly, almost as if it were animate—even its red and yellow flamboyance is a source of real pleasure to me, a welcome contrast to the stark monotones of winter.

    Tent up, and taken down again, I wrapped it tightly in its groundsheet, making a long slender bundle that would allow me to set it up again without re-threading poles through skinny fabric sleeves. I moved on down the long list. Stove fuel poured into jugs and bottles; lard and canola oil melted and spread out in flat boxes to freeze for the dogs’ rations; a look at my homemade ski bindings … Soon it was dusk, and time to feed the dogs.

    A month earlier I had made a seven-day, three-hundred-mile trip down the lake and back, to deliver fifteen of our twenty-four huskies to a tourist lodge near Yellowknife, returning with only the nine dogs who would be my team on the trip south. The others would be earning their keep for a few months in the care of the lodge’s musher, giving short rides to guests. In that first twilight alone, my human solitude deepened my appreciation for my nine canine companions: littermates Ernie, Foxtail, Flynn, and Schooner; my main leader Steve; Murphy; Tugboat; Dandy; and old reliable Riley. They shattered the silence with their eager dinnertime barks. They were a strong crew, and they were tough as nails after our January trip to the lodge and back, when temperatures had dropped to minus 47 degrees on the way home.

    The next two days passed in a seemingly endless checklist of preparations, from maps to meals to fuel to dog food. Each evening I worked on my sled in the old log shack that had been our first cabin at the homestead, and that had over the years become my workshop. As I tackled each detail of my preparation, waves of frustration came and went. I checked dozens of pieces of equipment, and made some important discoveries: the Coleman stove leaked fuel at the tank outlet, the ten-gallon kegs for my food caches needed new sheet-metal covers, the high-frequency (HF) radio needed its battery terminals scraped and cleaned. Every piece of gear, right down the list, seemed to need some sewing or fixing or troubleshooting.

    Finally on a sunny cold morning, February 18th, I went through the winter ritual of heating up the airplane, using a portable generator and three small electric heaters. Once the engine was warm enough to start I crammed all my resupply provisions into the plane’s tiny cabin: metal kegs of dog food and my own food; plastic pails of dry goods like crackers and cereal; an old canvas wall tent and a small wood stove for use at my far cache site; jugs and bottles of white gas for the Coleman stove; spare dog booties; extra socks, books, and gloves; batteries for the HF radio and for my headlamp. Still saddled with the habits of my fifteen years on the race trails, where checkpoint bags bulge with items to meet every imaginable competitive contingency, I really loaded up that first year’s resupply caches. If I had seen need for a kitchen sink, there would have been a big one and a spare in that cache bundle.

    Somehow, just barely, it all fit into the little two-seat plane with its backseat removed. I squirmed into the pilot’s seat wearing my bulky winter flying suit, taxied out, and took off. I felt tense, lonely, and—truth be told—a little uncertain. Why, I asked myself, had I decided to do this?

    It was a perfect day for winter flying—clear and not bitterly cold. The airplane was another of those trusted old inanimate friends, its control stick as familiar to my hand as the stanchion of a sled or the shaft of a paddle. So why that enervating tension? I have no good answer to that, but every year prior to setting out it was there, like a weight around my neck as I made my preparations.

    Once airborne and southbound I faced a choice with enormous influence on the days ahead: where to put the caches? If I put the resupplies too far out, I would not be able to reach them at all, or the effort of doing so would turn the trip into a grinding struggle dominated by time and mileage. Put the caches too close to home and the trip would be cut short and robbed of some of its potential. I would reach the caches before I really needed them, and the first of my four expeditions would become a mere outing. The choice was all mine—nobody else would care what I decided. I was both the drop-off pilot and the recipient of this airdrop, and on a day in February I could land the little ski plane on almost any small patch of snow and ice.

    I flew very low and tried to glean all possible hints as to travelling conditions on the land and lakes below me. My gut feeling was that the route south was going to be slow and difficult, the snow deep and soft, the terrain rugged and utterly trackless. Mile by mile as I flew along I took small clues from the look of the landscape and the texture of the sunlit snow on the lakes. I could tell there had been a few caribou drifting around, but only a few, and I saw none that day. There were no signs of human travel—that is, no snowmobile tracks, which nowadays are the only signs of local winter travel other than my own.

    I settled on two cache sites. The first, an intermediate stopover with about five days’ supplies, I decided to place on Robert Lake just north of the Snowdrift River. The second, my major resupply, with the wall tent and about ten days’ supplies, I placed at Noman Lake. Noman lies just across a short portage from the north arm of Nonacho Lake, in the Taltson River watershed. As I circled over a little rock island on Noman, I spotted an old cabin on the Nonacho side of the portage. This brought a sudden flash of hope: maybe someone, from somewhere, had an active presence in the area and there would be some trails broken through that deep soft snow. (As it turned out, the cabin was a wreck and the country untouched, but I would not know that for another twelve days.)

    I landed only briefly at each of the two cache sites that afternoon. I am never completely at ease when I shut down an airplane motor on a cold day far from home. I am always eager to hear it roar to life again, always happy to climb back up into the sky. On the island in Noman I clustered the kegs and pails along with the bundled canvas tent. At Robert Lake I took time to dig a pit in the deep snow along shore. There I buried my wooden crate of supplies and marked the spot with a red jug of stove fuel. I lifted off from Robert Lake in a prop-wash blizzard of powdery snow, feeling much more at ease and confident than I had that morning. I made the short flight home, still studying the route that would pose such a challenge in the coming days, and landed at Hoarfrost. As the sun set I put the wing and tail covers on the plane. Securely tethered to logs frozen beneath the lake ice, it would be safe while I was away.

    That night the trip began to feel more real to me. There was an end to all this getting ready, and I chuckled at a remark often quoted on preparation days around our place. It came from a Wyoming dog musher named Ray Gordon, who had lost parts of his throat to cancer by the time I knew him. Haarrumph, he had croaked to me one night before a race in Montana, Homehtimes hyou hujus’ hagotto ghuit ghettin’ haready anh’ hujus’ hafukkin’haGo!

    The Husky ski plane and the cache supplies on Noman Lake.

    Before I could hajus’ haGo, though, I spent yet another full day immersed in details of preparation, and another long night in the workshop, struggling to get my old warhorse of a sled up to some minimal acceptable standard—patches over patches, splines under lashings. At last the items on my lists were all crossed off. I could start closing up the homestead: a few token padlocks, some boards nailed over shed doors. It had been five days since Kristen and the girls had left, the longest it would take me to get on the trail over the series of four journeys. Finally I could harness up the team and start south.

    February 20th dawned overcast and mild. I woke early, feeling rested and calm. I savoured the little luxuries of cabin life as I sat and read for the first time an obscure essay by Thoreau, A Winter Walk.¹ We sleep, he begins, and at length awake to the still reality of a winter morning. Bare feet, porcelain coffee mug, the pulsating glow and soft hiss of gas lights. It would be several weeks, I knew, before life would again be so physically luxurious. I was finished getting ready, and I had made

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