Friday 5 October 2012

The of Canol for this year.

(sorry that it has taken so long to transcribe my notes, but the office sent be back into the field within days of being home, this time to northern Ontario working for a client that I’m not allowed to mention, on a project that I’m not allowed to discuss, because it’s highly confidential. However every place I went everybody knew what I was there doing and it was even on the local news.)
August 24,
Today we worked on Mile 222, that’s near to the Yukon border, there is a decent road coming into mountains from the MacMillan Pass and therefore lots of hunters. At this location there is a ranger station where the hunters have to process the paper work before removing any animals from the territory. The ranger on duty here at the time of our work was a young woman, who had already been in country for 3 weeks; working alone and still had 3 weeks to go on her assignment. I’ve been told that the ranges that get postings like this are on the bottom of the list, a few more years here and other rough and isolated places and then it’s on to places like the Nahanni National Park. (Regardless where you work - You have to put your time in!) anyhow she was telling us that she has no satellite TV, no radio, no internet and only a sat-phone (very expensive to use) and that she has watched every movie she has a least twice and has cleaned her trailer to within an inch of its outside walls….she has nothing to do! She also has not spoken to another human in 3 days. So after we got her life story we promised to bring out some DVDs the next time we were by. I had brought some to watch on my computer should the weather turn bad. Ha!
The ranger station.
One of the hunters we met with his prize caribou.

Nothing new on the work front, drill a hole, put in a well, move to a new location and repeat..
Dinner was great, Dall sheep and caribou tenderloin done on the BBQ.
Tonight there is a large grizzly bear on the Canol trail about 15 minutes’ walk from camp. Megan spotted it on her flight in from one of the hunting camps. Megan and her sister Baily are the daughters of Stan and Deb Simpson the owners of Ram Head Outfitters and our home away from home. They are both accomplished hunters, guides and chopper pilots. More information can be found here. http://www.ctomfoss.com/2011/11/bailey-simpson.html , http://live2hunt.com/  and http://www.chicksincamo.com/
August 25
We are all getting tired now, the light that comes on in our cabin when the generator kicks-in at 0500h does not affect us anymore, and the call to breakfast knock on the door does little except elicit a roll over and growl of “it’s not 6 yet!”.
Two more sites down and 2 more site to go… it takes 3 chopper lifts just to move the crew to and from the sites, as the senior technician I’m usually on the first bird in and as the “other wildlife monitor” I’m always on the last flight out. So what this means is there are times when I and one other member of our crew will be left sitting on site for up to 2 hours if everything goes well and longer if the chopper needs to go for fuel. This is generally the best time for a quick nap.
What is it I do here? Good question. From what I’ve been told I am the senior technician on this project and my primary duties are: responsible for the drilling program in the field, surveyor, lift master (responsible for securing the load for the chopper), wildlife monitor, primary first aid responder and second-in-command for the field program, camp therapist sent to deal with any issues that arise within our crew and instructor of survival skills both in camp and field.
When we returned home from site today, we heard that dinner will be a little last as they almost burned the kitchen down. There were 3 foot flames leaping from the top of the chimney and anyone that was in camp was conscripted into fighting the fire with whatever equipment they could get their hands on including extra spray bottles we use for washing our field equipment. In the end it was only a small chimney fire and was out in a few minutes.
Mile 222.2
Our work area is a small site at the end of the esker.
A view across the land.
August 26
1 ½ sites completed today, mile 224.6 and mile 225.2.

The crew drilling and sampling at mile 224.6
Canol pipe crossing bridge at mile 225.2
Canol truck in river at trail crossing mile 225.2
View across the land from mile 225.2
I finished my book and I’m now reading anything I can get my hands on, staying safe in bear country (good book, quick read), hunting magazines (old, some outdated by 10 years but still interesting) equipment manuals, home and garden, fit and whatever else is lying around. We still have cribbage and euchre at night.
August 27
Our chopper landing on the esker at mile 225.2
Today at noon we finished our last site, mile 225.2, however we had 2 ½ hour weight for our chopper, so the crew dove into the survival kit, power bars, boil-in-the-bag meals, tea and a can of Herford corn beef. As the wildlife monitor and I were the only ones that have ever eaten bully-beef, one of the drillers decided to try cooking it up. Too bad we had no onions and potatoes!
The crew.
Herford corn beef on the fire.
When our chopper did arrive we were informed that there was a new site added to our work plan and we were to fly in to June Lake to scout out a chopper landing area, before returning to camp. Later that afternoon we returned to June Lake to conduct our assessment of this site.
June Lake….
June Lake is the second lake in.
The site is where the beaver dam is.
Apparently this beaver likes to live in a house-boat or boat-house?
Looking down June Lake, what a beautiful place.
 Too bad that there has to be rubbish left on the shores, maybe I’ll be lucky enough to come back to do the cleanup (a.k.a. fishing).
August 28
Our last day in camp, there are mixed feelings about this day, we are all glad to be going home, but sad to be leaving this magnificent land and hoping that one day we will be returning. The weather reflected our spirits – rain, fog, heavy rain then back to fog and cool to cold all day. We spent the day cleaning and packing up our equipment and downloading photos and completing bore hole logs on the few computers that were still functioning
We weren’t the only ones leaving, some of the hunters and the horses were moving to the “moose camp” down closer to mile 222.
August 29 – My last hours in camp.
Last night we had snow in the mountains.
We were expecting to fly out of Ram Head on an early morning flight; however when we woke in the morning the fog was low in the mountains. Apparently it was clear in Norman Wells and the plane could take off but could not land here due to poor visibility. A morning spent pacing back and forth, lunch, more pacing and finally at 1430h we got word that the plane was on its way. A good feeling to know that we were going to get out, but a little worried that we were not going to make our flight from Norman Wells to Yellowknife at 1700h.
Norman Wells through the front window of the twin.
Inside the North Wright hanger. That bear is about 13 feet long.
We arrived in the Wells at 1635h and rushed from the North Wright hanger to the airport only to find that all flights from the Wells had been cancelled due to weather and one of the planes was grounded due to mechanical issues. To add to our frustration all flights on the 30th had been booked solid…so it looked like we were stranded in the wells for the time being. We did manage to secure several rooms in the Mackenzie Hotel until our flight on the 31th.
The Mackenzie Hotel.
We spent Thursday wandering around the Wells seeing the sights (the Northern Store, the other grocery store and the museum) and taking long naps (pre-dinner nap then a post dinner nap prior to going to bed).
Photos from the museum:


Recruiting poster for the Canol Project.

On Friday afternoon we flew to Yellowknife overnighted there and then on to home and family. Thus concluding my latest experience on the Canol.
Cheers from Canada’s north.













Wednesday 12 September 2012

August 23, 2012….P.C. (Post Computer)

Well it happened last night; I was kind of expecting it would...... I was out voted 9 to 2 in favor, so after dinner it off to the shower. A clean new man in the same dirty clothes!  Oh ya, my computer died. We think it has a virus, but we cannot even start it to run a scan. 5 minutes at a rolling boil should destroy various pathogens such as viruses, although I might have a tough time explaining that to the IT Department. Anyhow I’ll keep notes in a field book until I can transcribe them.
Today looks like it could be another day in camp. The fog is low in the valley and the rain is coming down in buckets. Our chopper pilot, Brian, said that he is willing to fly the water sampling crew out to collect their samples, as he can fly the river the 12 miles necessary to reach site Mile 184 (I can just picture the scene from “Apocalypse Now” where the choppers come in low just above the water with “the flight of the Valkyries” playing on the loud speakers) and stay with the crew until the work is completed of the weather changes.
Charles “Chuck” Gravelle the project field manager is still playing e-mail tag with the crew back home, they keep changing the program. 1st it’s 6 sites in 4 weeks , then if we finish the required (6) sites early, we go home early, no wait…another change we finish the required (6) sites early, they add 6 more sites and cut the time frame, no wait it’s changing again…same time frame, add the 6 new sites but make them at the far end of the trail (0-100 mile range from Norman wells while we are at the 170 mile mark, increasing out travel time to and from the sites. We have t fly the chopper there and back twice just to move crew and then again for equipment = 3 flights in, 3 flights out) all the time complaining about the amount of chopper time and fuel we are using. One of the sites is a small drum cache on June Lake, tucked back deep into the Skewi Range of the Mountains. None of us has been to this site before so we have no idea what to expect.
But for today we will sit quietly in our cabins reading or in the dinning tent drinking coffee and playing cards, some will work on their computers and others will go from cabin to cabin chatting and stoking the fires to drive the dampness out. It’s going to be a long day.
1000h and time is moving a glacial speed. We’ve chatted all morning about all the places we’ve worked and the times we’ve had in camp.
1100h, I have some work to do…plotting the locations of the sites on a Nav. Chart. It should do me until noon!
1200h – lunch – homemade chicken soup. We are starting to get a little concerned for the welfare of our field crew, we have not heard from them since they left after breakfast and the weather shows no signs of improvements. Well back to cribbage and teaching the drillers how to play so that we can have some variety in players.
1300h, the day feels like it’s dragged on into weeks…..time to put a fire in the cabin and have an much needed afternoon snooze.
Unfortunately my photos are all on Chuck’s computer so I load them as soon as I can them.
1500h we made an attempt to get into Mile 108 and Mile 111.4 to complete the work. We flew mid-mountain height into the sites to complete the required work of water sampling and surveying. On the way home we flew the river to check on the condition of a German hiker that passed through Ram’s Head a day or two earlier, he was traveling alone and with no sat-phone or GPS communicator, and as the weather was not improving and this was going to be our last trip in this direction of the trail for a week, we thought it would be a good idea to see if he was ok. Well we found his camp partially set up on the trail and him sitting in the woods taking care of business…..
 As the acid smoke from the black spruce logs that are burning in our stove, stings the inside of my nose, and the snoring from my two roommates rattles in my ears, I lie in bed trying to read by the fading light of my flashlight. My bed if you can call it that…my bed is of the Canol Trail vintage and probably came from mile 180 and has one leg shorter that the rest, regardless of which one I try to shim. The springs offer all the support of a “slinky” and regardless of where I sit I sink to within inches of the floor. I did manage to grab at 2 foot by 6 foot long piece of plywood to put length wise along the top of the springs with a second piece 2 foot long by 1 ½ foot wide across the middle of the bed. The third piece was 2 feet by 2 feet and placed to add support for my head (in theory). I have 2 foam mattresses, so thin that you can almost see through, that will not stay stacked regardless what I do. It’s like trying to get two same poll magnets to stick together. My sleeping bag, oh yes my wonderful, magnificent sleeping bag. The Woods Muskoka model (good to -35o) is likely one of the best purchases I have ever made. I slept like a baby, warm and comfortable albeit a little crooked.   
Cheers

Thursday 6 September 2012

Contwoyto Lake Photos

And here are some from Contwoyoto Lake.


Our site as seen from the window of the twin. It includes all that you can see and then more tundra off on the sight. The site is an island and is used by hunters today and I believe that there is some historic use (not necessarily ancient) as is evident by the amount of animal bones observed. The site is also frequented by bears and wolves.

The hunters cabin, this trip the twin stayed with us.


Trophies left to bleach in the arctic sun.

A few flies come for lunch! Chuck is on the menu.

A view from the point towards the weather station (way in the background), drums, drums and more drums. I’m at the point where I don’t consider it a drum cashe unless it has 100 or more drums in it.


Claire as co-pilot.


The second twin on contwoyto Lake.


The old radio tower.

The weather station.

Kelley Kettle on the shores of Contwoyto.

How clear and cold the water is.


Looking across the tundra. It's hard to keep it in perspective; there is nothing to define the boundaries.


And lastly the scariest animal in the arctic…..the cariBOO!




Photos from Copper Pass

Here are some of the photos from copper pass that I could not load when in Yellowknife.

The prospectors cabin, and our shelter in the event that the twin otter does not return.

Claire hard at work collecting a waste rock sample.


The main showing, trench # 1 (from the hill top)

Closer view of trench # 1

The Main showing trench # 2 (from the hill top)



Closer view of trench # 2
 (that's me going inside to take gamma readings and to measure the depth of the water)


This shot sort of covers the main body of the site. the camp (where the plane lands) is in the center middle on the point of land, the main showing is straight up on the right (under the edge of the engine cover), the west showing is on the far right, middle, where the two points of land meet. the "Pond Area" is near the exhaust of the engine if on the backside of the small pond. there were several small trenches in this area. And the east showing is off shot to the left of the pond area. our days started with landing at the camp and then walking up-hill through the woods and marshes to the area we were inspecting that day and then tracing our way back to the camp to await the arrival of the twin.

The west showing.


My best "Weirton Willy" impression.


General site conditions.

Blasting caps, on the left - spent, on the right - live or dud, that is the question?

Our Crew, you would be hardpressed to find a finer bunch of people to work with.