Connected by canoeing

A Father-Daughter Adventure

During a kilometre-long portage into a small brook trout lake in Lake Superior Provincial Park, my 19-year-old daughter, Lillian, stoops to pick fiddleheads along a damp and mossy stream bed. I continue, canoe on my shoulders, toward the waters that appear through a break in the thick and shapely shoreline cedars.

I don’t often get time alone with my daughter. Although it is a priority, it’s one that is often thwarted by the great whirlwind of work and responsibilities that blows through our lives. But today, as I tread carefully down a slight incline towards the lake, the storms of life have abated; Lillian has a few days off from her new fire fighting job in northern Ontario and we manage to grab our dog, Simpkin, and steal away for a little father-daughter overnight adventure.

Part of Lillian’s firefighting training is carrying heavy loads for extended periods of time, and this works out quite well for a father who is used to doing the bulk of the carrying over the portage trail. By the time I slide the canoe off my shoulders and set it down on the collection of boulders and beaver-chewed wood at the side of the lake, Lillian is arriving with the heaviest pack and a few handfuls of fiddleheads.

We load the canoe and paddle along a steep shoreline, where angular boulders and waterlogged wood disappear into the depths of tea stained water. Above the waterline cedars, birch, and maple cower below tall white pine, permanently bent against the prevailing winds. We brought food for supper, but as we troll lures up to what looks like a great campsite, I catch a 16-inch brook trout.

Typical of her species, she is gorgeous, with dark hide, ivory-tipped fins and dappled with yellow and red spots within bluish halos.

My inclination is to let the bespeckled creature go but, after a quick discussion, Lillian and I embrace the idea of nourishing ourselves from the land, and the trout is earmarked for dinner.

The campsite is even better than expected. Waterfront promontories of rounded granite surrender to a cedar grove, where a fire pit and tent site are sequestered under arcing branches. While Simpkin works the perimeter with her nose to the ground, Lillian pitches the old Eureka on a bed of soft, golden pine needles.

Sitting on a warm flat rock that slopes into the water, I carefully cut two fillets of brilliant red flesh from the trout and season them with salt and pepper. Lillian has the flames dancing beneath a hot frying pan and I slide the fillets in, skin side down. They take on a deep pinkish hue as they cook. I flip the frying flesh then add fiddleheads to the flame-licked pan, along with a dollop of butter, more salt and pepper, and a drizzle of lemon juice.

With our canoe overturned on the point and a tired dog curled up under a spruce, father and daughter sit around the fire, plates on our laps.

Within the pine-charged air, amidst wafts of wood smoke, we savour every mouthful and every minute. There is a level of satisfaction that goes well beyond the satiation of hunger. Although it’s not spoken, Lillian and I both know that we’ve arrived at a place we can only get to by canoe.

MUST WATCH – THE CONNECTOR

Michell Savoie shares her family story of how canoeing teaches core values, skills and love of nature, and is best shared with your most loved ones.

About James Smedley

Professional photographer and writer James Smedley’s contributions—more than 400 pieces and close to 1,000 images—to U.S. and Canadian books, magazines, and newspapers have earned him over 40 national and international awards. In addition to teaching photography workshops, James is the travel editor at Ontario OUT of DOORS magazine. James has fly-fished for brook trout and arctic grayling in far northern rivers and continues to cast for trout, bass, and steelhead near his home in the northern Ontario town of Wawa where he lives with his wife Francine and daughters Islay and Lillian.

 

Visit James at www.jamessmedleyoutdoors.com

Recommended Articles

Love dogs?

Find a "pawlooza" near you.

ARe you tough enough?

World's longest single day paddling race

Big views, no big backpack

Lake Superior's 10 best hikes you can do in a day

Plan Your Adventure

10 amazing sights you can only see in winter in Ontario.

Ontario Ski Getaways

5 must-take ski vacations.

Hidden Gem: Rainbow Falls Provincial Park

Explore the trails, waterfalls and campsites of this little-known Ontario treasure.

All-Season Ontario Camping: 10 Incredible Yurts

Yurt adventures to discover in Ontario!

Canoeing in Toronto

Locals share best places to paddle in the GTA.

SUP in the city

The top 6 places to paddleboard in Toronto.

Go Foraging in Ontario

Learn the basics of how to harvest wild edibles found across the province.

Learn to Skijor

Cross-country skiing with your dog just got better.

Get Inspired for Your Next Adventure

15 photos that’ll have you trip planning in no time.

Insider’s Guide to Sleeping Giant

Everything you need to plan a trip to this iconic provincial park.

An Adventure Cycling Dream Come True

Explore a new leg of the Great Lakes Waterfront Trail.

Hiking Trails in Ontario

Find the path to your next outdoor adventure here.

be inspired on the algoma grand drive

James shares his top 7 Group of Seven moments

Feelin' the Vibe

Cycle touring on Manitoulin Island

Planning a Family Vacation?

Here's how to do it right.

Beyond City Limits

Must-see landscapes in Ontario.

Women only

Trips, retreats, and adventures.