Posts Tagged ‘lost in the Boundary Waters’

Day Three: The Stupids or Stupid is as Stupid Does.

September 1, 2010 - 11:36 pm 19 Comments

I’m an idiot.

My excuse? I wasn’t thinking clearly.

The lesson? Never be polite when death is on the line.

“You gotta get angry! You gotta get mean!” (Dodgeball, Patches O’Houlihan - Rip Torn)

Day three. Sleep comes in fits and starts. I toss and turn, my head throbbing, knowing that at any minute, this migraine could become a whopper.

Dawn. No wind. No food. Hubby manages to snag two portions of instant oatmeal for himself before Mrs. Bob manages to pack everything away and padlock the food bag.

“I have a migraine,” I announce, emerging from the tent. “I’m staying here today. You all do what you want.”

Mr. Bob, “Oh no…we’re going paddling today.”

Me, “No, I’m not.”

Mr. Bob, “Yes, it will be a beautiful paddle and we can stop for lunch on one of these islands.”

“What? Stop for an almond?” Hubby kicks me. “No. If I go out on the water, my headache will get worse. I’ll stay here. I’ll be fine. If Hubby wants to stay with me, he and I can paddle around this area. Or he can go with you. I don’t care. I’m staying here.”

Thus begins the discussion/argument of the decade. Hubby really isn’t paying attention. He’s too weak and distracted by our predicament. Finally, stupid is as stupid does. I agree to a one hour paddle. One Hour. Mr. Bob gets all excited. “I know the perfect one hour paddle,” he says.

Two hours into the paddle, hubby realizes that he has made a terrible mistake. He wasn’t paying attention when I needed him to pay attention. And he understands, deep in his soul, that Mr. and Mrs. Bob are fucking insane. This is a shock, as he has known these people for a very, very long time. Mr. Bob was his mentor and father-figure during his college years. Hubby and I prepare to turn around and paddle back to camp, but we realize we’ve reached the half-way point so there is no going back. We hear Mr. Bob call out, because you know he and Mrs. Bob and Butter are way the fuck ahead of us - “Let’s go over to that beach!” What he doesn’t say is - that beach clear across that stretch of open water into the wind way the fuck over there.

Hubby, “Ignore him. Keep paddling.”

Determined now, we keep paddling around the tip of Sioux Pine Island, directly into a stiff head wind, leaving them behind. We point Old Iron Sides back to camp. After some unknown period of time, Mr. and Mrs. Bob realize we’ve left them. I see them struggling to paddle in the wind and the waves along the far shore.

“Keep to the main channel,” I say, paddling my ass off. “Head directly into the wind.”

“Right,” says hubby, working that great body of his - a body that is getting way too skinny on this trip.

“You may have thought I wasn’t paying attention when you taught me how to sail, but I heard every single word you said. We have to treat this canoe like a sailboat. We’re going to have to pass our destination and then tack or we won’t make it around that headland.” I point.

Hubby, “I don’t know a single other woman who could do this on no food, no sleep and with a migraine headache. I love you.”

Ah, at last he sees the real me! “I love you too. Thank you for understanding this situation. I know you won’t let me die in this god-forsaken wilderness.”

Hubby, “I swear I won’t let you die here. You have a better angle on the headland. Tell me when to turn.”

“Right.”

We look to port, at Mr. and Mrs. struggling in the surf line. Ha! Ha! They approach the headland and are washed into a blind bay, no outlet except to fight their way through the breaking surf and currents crashing around the headland. We sail right past. I wait until the perfect moment…”Fifty yards…forty yards…thirty yards…ten…turn it!”

We surf the waves down the narrow channel and glide up on the beach right in front of our tents. Fist bump! In your face! In your face! In your face! In your face!

Hubby and I pull the canoe up the beach and secure it. I crawl into the tent with a bottle of water and smash my throbbing head against the sleeping pad, hoping against hope that pressure will dull the pain. I fall asleep for an hour or two and then I wake and stare at the shadows on the tent wall. I don’t waste my time fantasizing about all the many ways I could kill Mr. and Mrs. Bob. They no longer exist to me. I care only that my husband and I survive.

I spend several hours listening to the birds and making mental lists of the food and beverages I would have packed for a trip like this. Man, we would have eaten like kings and queens. We would have fished and gone swimming, paddled around just for fun…because what the hell else is there to do on a canoe trip besides fish and cook and drink chilled wine and ice cold beer? Like I said, weight isn’t an issue - you could bring two coolers, drinks, fresh fruits and veggies, meats…As some of you have mentioned, Mr. and Mrs. Bob should run a starvation boot camp or consult for Survivor or maybe go back in time and become Concentration Camp guards.

As the sun gets low in the sky, I emerge from the tent and walk barefoot down to the water. I sit on a rock to watch the sunset. I know the rest of them are eating their meager rations and I hear hubby say he’s eating my portion and I smile. I also hear him say, “We’re out of here at 6 a.m. before the wind kicks up.”

Mr. Bob, “But there are other places I want to show you. You don’t have to worry, we’ll have you back to the pick up point by 3 p.m.”

Hubby, taking charge now, “No. We are out of here at 6 a.m. and we head straight back. We cannot handle another day of paddling into the wind like we’ve been doing, my wife has a migraine and she hasn’t eaten in three days. You want to paddle off somewhere, be my guest. My wife can get us back.” (Yeah, I can. I spotted my landmarks while we were out paddling around Sioux Pine Island.)

Mr. Bob pouts, but my husband has spoken. Mrs. Bob comes and sits near me. I ignore her. My eyes never leave the western sky. She tells me about the time Mr. Bob took her, her sister and her niece on a week-long back-packing trip in the Bob Marshal Wilderness in Montana. I hear how they almost died many times over - because only Mr. Bob had done any backpacking before. Because the terrain is steep and treacherous. Because he didn’t really know the way. Because they ran out of food…big surprise there. Mr. Bob would have died of hypothermia, but the women saved his life. She sees nothing wrong with the scenario she’s just described. I don’t reply, I merely listen. And the life-lesson of her words is, what? That I should buck up? That I’m a soft city-slicker? Uh…I’m not. Is this a parable? Is she telling me a wisdom story designed to lead me to some deep and profound insight? Some personal revelation that will put me in touch with Carl Jung’s cosmic consciousness? She goes on to say that she was estranged from her daughter for several years because her daughter warned her that Mr. Bob would get her killed. Mrs. Bob took umbrage at her concerns.

I remember that when hubby and Mr. Bob organized a backpacking trip into that same wilderness in 2006, hubby learned that Mr. Bob, who was in charge of food, planned to pack in only enough food for each person - eight people - to eat 1800 calories per person per day. Hubby freaked. He estimated that they would be burning at least 5000 calories a day. He and I took over the food planning and upped the caloric intake to 3800 calories per person per day. Hubby thought this was an aberration, that Mr. Bob was simply too concerned about the weight of the packs and didn’t understand the caloric output a trip like this would require.

Ah, I think, a pattern emerges, and it ain’t pretty, and I ain’t the one who needs to learn the karmic lesson. This man is very very sick and so is his wife. What is it that Einstein said? Insanity: Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

As Mrs. Bob stops speaking, Mr. Bob climbs down the bank and sits on a rock. He crosses his legs and makes himself comfortable, as if settling in for the evening, and he says, “Let me tell you about myself…”

I rise and walk past him without a word, retreating to the safety of our tent, where I remain until 5 a.m. the following morning.

Tomorrow - Get me out of this stinkin’ fresh air!

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Day Two - Having Fun Despite Everything!

August 31, 2010 - 8:21 pm 25 Comments

A lovely shot from our second campsite.

With proper planning, this would have been a great trip!

At 6 a.m. the wind dies. After a quick breakfast of nothing, because for me, eating strawberry instant oatmeal is worse than eating nothing, we pack up (I grab the food pack) and head out, paddling through an archipelago of islands to look for a site to set up base camp.

Of course the site Mr. and Mrs. Bob prefer is unavailable so, grumbling, they settle for a secondary site. Hubby and I think the site is great. It’s on a beautiful island, out of the wind, down a narrow channel that allows for swimming between two islands, and it’s a short paddle from a fabulous sunning rock.

Mrs. Bob’s words? “Too developed.” OMG! The only signs of civilization are a metal grate for a stove and a hidden potty area - both set up by the park service.

I help hubby secure Old Iron Sides and then I scramble up the bank, almost giddy to be out of the wind, and I lay claim to the best campsite for us - up a little rise and away from the cooking area (in case of bears) and more important, away from Mr. and Mrs. Bob. Mrs. Bob tries hard to squeeze their tent next to ours, but there isn’t enough room! Genius! I am a genius! I’ll tell you, the smallest things make me happy in these situations!

Of course, my elation is short-lived. I remember….da da dum….lunch. Mr. and Mrs. Bob have packed exactly six cups of gorp for four lunches for four people. Six. Cups. Of. Gorp. Nothing. Else. I hate gorp, well, let me qualify that, I hate their gorp. I learned years ago that because of my severe migraines, I have to avoid salty foods. I especially cannot eat any high sodium, processed foods with MSG. I suffer from incapacitating migraines and they are brought on by heat, sun glinting on the water, tight hats, dark glasses, some red wines and salty foods.

Mr. and Mrs. Bob’s gorp consists of salted peanuts, raisins, M&Ms, a few salted Brazil nuts, a smattering of salted cashews, and a handful of salted almonds. On top of no breakfast and the high sodium instant stuffing from the night before, no sleep on the cold hard ground, and paddling in the bright sun, we’re talking Pending Migraine Central here! But still…

Hubby picks me out a dozen almonds, wiping the salt off on his tee shirt. He’s so sweet! I’m all for hanging out and doing a bit of swimming, but Mr. Bob says - “No…if you want to swim, we have to go to Little Trout Lake. The sand beaches there are great.”

Me, “I think these beaches are pretty great.”

Mr. Bob, “No, Little Trout has miles and miles of sand beaches. We’re going to Little Trout.” Or as Hubby and I refer to it after wards, ExtraTrout.

Since it’s not too far off, Hubby and I shrug. Thus begins a great adventure! It was the best day of the trip!

We shove off in Old Iron Sides, following Butter canoe, threading our way through this scenic archipelago, heading toward what Mr. Bob calls a creek leading into Extra Trout. It’s not a creek. It’s a placid beaver pond filled with lily pads, grasses, water plants, driftwood…the water is clear and I can see fish everywhere. It’s basically a fish nursery. Hubby and I are way behind Mr. and Mrs. and Butter, having a blast weaving our way through the water plants. Old Iron Sides is impossible to control, but at this point, who cares? We twist and turn, pushing and pulling our way along, giggling like school children - of course calorie deprivation may have something to do with this…

The best part! The second best highlight of the entire trip! Hubby and I come around a corner. Whaddya know? A beaver dam! Mr. and Mrs. are trying to lift Butter over the beaver dam because above all, Butter must not be scratched. We watch and wait, holding our breaths, because we know exactly what’s going to happen. Bwaaaaa-haaaaa-haaaaa!

Mr. Bob holds the back end of the canoe balanced on the beaver dam, pointing the front of the canoe straight out into the water. It’s a teeter-totter. He tells the Mrs. to get in the canoe and walk down to the front. As we watch, it rocks up and down, back and forth - no stability whatsoever. Mrs. Bob flips out and does a backwards swan dive…right into the beaver pond. We double over, screaming with laughter. Can you blame us? We can’t help it and the fact is, Mr. Bob is so worried about his canoe, he doesn’t even notice our convulsions or his wife’s struggles.

Mrs. Bob rises up, shrieking from the shock of the cold water. She’s soaked through three layers of clothing…soaked to the skin. But do we go back to our campsite? Oh hell no. Like good little troopers, we press on. Of course Hubby and I navigate the beaver dam without incident. We both stand on the dam, lift the canoe over, bring it around so that it’s against the dam, then we both step right into it and paddle off. Dry as toast. Easy as pie.

We make our way out the other side of the beaver pond where we are greeted by…surprise! Gale force headwinds! Extra Trout looks exactly like Original Trout only smaller and colder. Mr. and Mrs. Bob and Butter are a good three-quarters of a mile ahead of us. We paddle halfheartedly for half a mile or so, and then I look back. Hubby nods and without a word, we decide to blow this popsicle stand and head back to the campsite. Even if we were inclined to shout to Mr. and Mrs., they’re too far ahead of us to hear anything. Suddenly, Mr. and Mrs. and Butter turn and head our way like bats out of hell. They pass us, yelling, “Mrs. Bob has hypothermia!”

Hubby, “Thank God!”

We head back into the beaver pond and linger, twisting and turning, spinning Old Iron Sides around, laughing our asses off.

When we get back to camp, we do the right thing and warm Mrs. Bob up with hot water (no hot chocolate…remember?). We wrap her in a blanket, sit her in the sun in the door of her tent, and hang her clothes to dry. You see, they packed so light that she didn’t bring extra clothes. Now me? I have plenty of warm clothes! No sweat!

Hubby and I take our new best friend, Old Iron Sides, and paddle off to the sunning rock to skinny dip, bathe and shampoo our hair. Oh, what a fun time we had! I’m standing, naked, in water up to my waist while Hubby shampoos my hair and OMG here comes a fishing boat! The guys smile and wave while I shriek and duck under the water. No sooner do they pass by, just as I’m shampooing Hubby’s hair, water only up to my naked waist, two canoes paddle by - one two-man, one four-man. They smile and wave and I duck under the water again. Hey…at least I know now that if we need rescue, someone will probably come by. All clean, Hubby and I swim to a nearby island, and on a tiny patch of grass, we make love. Yeah…sweet, I know. What else are you gonna do when the Mr. and Mrs. neglect to bring food, drink or fishing poles? We who are about to die, salute you! Oh, BTW…I took her towel…I took her towel…nah nah nah nah nah!

We return to camp in time for supper. Kraft macaroni and cheese with two - count ‘em - two cans of tuna. Again I make her use the tuna water. But I know what’s coming. I’ve had a total of about 600 calories in two days, mostly consisting of salt. I feel a migraine creeping up on me. Sure ‘nuf, it strikes at midnight. I have migraine pills with me, but I must ration. They have to last for the duration.

I lay in the tent, head pounding, listening to the beavers play on the shore - they really are funny, noisy creatures - a moose walks up to our tent and snorts right by my head. A bobcat, a mere shadow on the tent wall, passes through the campsite. I contemplate our situation and I know what I have to do. There isn’t enough food to sustain us all. Hubby may have to paddle me out because I may be too sick to help myself. He’s running on empty and he needs my portion. If I eat any of the food Mr. and Mrs. Bob brought with us, my migraine will worsen, ensuring that Hubby will have to paddle me out. We have no way to call for help and our water shuttle back to the cabin isn’t due to meet us for two more days.

I make a decision. I will fast, throwing my body into ketosis, i.e., fat-burning. This will sustain me and allow me to function for two more days, even providing a little euphoria before I slip into a coma. Hubby can eat my portion. He might be able to paddle me out, but there is no way in hell I can single-handedly paddle him out.

You might think this is an odd thing to do. After attempting to reason with Mr. and Mrs. Bob, I’ve come to realize that I am stuck here for the duration. This is my solution. I have enough fat reserves to survive for at least two days. Hubby does not. Mr. and Mrs. Bob are not going to go get help and I won’t risk Hubby’s life by sending him off on his own. He has no idea where to go, and with his rotten sense of direction, he won’t know how to guide anyone back to me.

So, I will drink as much as I can to keep myself hydrated. Hubby will double his calories and we will survive.

Tomorrow - The Stupids.

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