Thelon River 2004
Nestor Lewyckyj, Montreal, Canada
The picture above was taken on August 6th as we are ready to board the de Havilland Beaver behind us. The four of us, novice and intermediate canoeists at best, set out on a 2 week, 220 kilometre, canoe trip on one of Canada's most famous northern rivers, through a game sanctuary that passes you gently from a treed northern oasis, to a barren wind-blown tundra. We took many pictures, had many experiences, and all in all, had a great time. Oh, did I tell you, the fishing was great?? None of us were unchanged by the experience.
The Trip
The trip took a little over a year to plan, which isn't so bad. I received a Canadian canoeing book which listed the Thelon as one of the ten best rivers to canoe in Canada. I was immediately intrigued. It was easy enough to find the Thelon Game Sanctuary on the map. A quick web search provided us with the all of the information we needed.
At right is an image of the Sanctuary, showing the river. The two red dots indicate the starting and stopping points of our trip. The exact coordinates are shown further down on this page. The starting point was Warden's Grove, the confluence of the Hanbury and Thelon Rivers.
One of the most compelling features of this section of the Thelon River, is that for 220 river kilometres (about 160 kilometres as the crow flies) you can canoe down stream without any portages. Depending on the time of year, parts of the river might be quite quick, but no real rapids for that entire section.
The domain name www.thelon.com is owned by Great Canadian Ecoventures and that is where we organized our canoe rental and flights to and from the river. Great Canadian Ecoventures is run by (Tundra) Tom Faess and he can always be reached at tundra@thelon.com Tundra Tom is a product of the Far North and is in every way as interesting as the Barren Lands.
On a map, and/or with a GPS, the starting and ending coordinates are:
	
	
	Wardens Grove:        
	N63º 
	41.580' x W104º 26.335
'
Thelon Bluffs: N64º 31.522' X W101º 20.771'
	We all met up in 
	Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. We had pre-booked a 2-bedroom suite at 
	the
	Fraser Suites which was perfect for us. Keith arrived in Yellowknife 
	hours ahead of the rest of us and spent that time casing the town, looking 
	at the likely places to pick up last minute supplies. Nathalie and I flew 
	from Montreal to Calgary where we were to transfer to Canadian North to fly 
	through Edmonton on to Yellowknife. As luck would have it, we bumped into 
	Taras, who was flying from Toronto, and had spent 5 hours in the terminal 
	already, dying of boredom. We all clambered into the Maple Leaf lounge and 
	prepared ourselves for the long flight north. We arrived late in the evening 
	and reached the hotel nea
r 
	dark. Tundra 
	Tom had one of his guys pick us up, and he took us for a quick 
	tour of the town, 
	on the way to the hotel. We were all so knackered, that we really didn't do any 
	exploring that night. We had a bottle of 
	wine, chatted, and that was it. Next morning was different. We could taste 
	the excitement in the air. We and our gear were picked 
	up in the morning and brought to Ecoventures where we met Tom, got a good 
	briefing, signed off a ton of forms. Close by were several stores for 
	souvenirs, supplies (fuel) and the like. We met Brad (the pilot) at this point and we 
	packed our gear into the van and headed off to the bay where the Beaver (a 
	small plane) was. 
	Brad mentioned something about the weight of our baggage, but fortunately it 
	all fit into the back of the plane, which is really not that large. We all 
	clambered on board, Brad fired up the engine and away we went.
Flying in a Beaver
	Now, you have to understand, that flying in a de 
	Havilland Beaver is not quite the same as flying Air Canada. T
he 
	plane fits 5 people bar
ely 
	(this includes the pilot) and only a modest amount of baggage. Production on 
	the Beaver ended in 1967. I do not know how many were made but if you are at 
	all interested, you can start looking
	here. The plane is all metal (aluminium) and its claim to fame is that 
	it is as tough as nails. Apparently a Beaver in good condition can fetch 
	$500,000 CDN, which floored me. Apparently, they are money machines for bush 
	pilots and charter air lines. Tundra Tom couldn't do what he does with 
	fishermen, photographers, and canoeists without one. The floats allow Brad 
	to land on any straight section of a deep enough river or any any lake large 
	enough to take off. He doesn't need more than a few 
	hundred metres of flat, deep water. The Beaver was built as a workhorse, and 
	not to coddle its passengers. The plane is small (our model), loud, cold, 
	and rattled a lot. Given the fact that it was a 3 hour flight (through 
	Whitefish Lake) to our
 starting point at Warden's Grove, it feels longer 
	than that in the Beaver. Having said that, the Beaver is a phenomenal way to 
	view the North. It typically flies low, and
	
	
if 
	there is any cloud cover at all, it will fly under it. I don't think Brad 
	ever flew over 3,500 feet and was often at 2,000 feet. On the return flight, 
	we started off at about 1,000 feet. You get to see a lot of detail at that 
	height, including wildlife. We spotted things like pairs of swans, geese and 
	other water fowl. Unfortunately, the caribou were not in that part of the 
	Thelon, so we saw no mega fauna. After the take off in Yellowknife and the 
	landing in Whitefish Lake, it was clear to us that Brad was an excellent 
	pilot. I think we felt much more at ease at that point. It is hard to 
	describe the 
	
feeling I had when we first spotted the Thelon from the air and 
	Brad pointed out where we were going to land. It was then that I realized 
	how wonderful a small float plane can be. Brad landed on the river as if he 
	was landing at an airport. No fuss, no bother. Three minutes later he had 
	run one of the floats onto the sandy beach and we were getting out of the 
	plane, and stepping onto the Barrens, in the Thelon Sanctuary. We had 
	arrived! The air was cool but sweet, and the excitement was palpable in the 
	air. We were about to start our adventure.
Warden's Grove
	We spent the first night at Warden's grove, 
	having arrived there in the late afternoon. Our canoes were not
	
	
there 
	yet and Brad was to return the next morning with them. We set up our tents, 
	and having nothing better to do, we decided to try fishing, from shore. It 
	was then that we realized what kind of fishing we were up 
	
	
for. 
	Here is a shot of me with my first pike. We set up our tents on the bluff 
	above the river, across from the old water surveyors cabin, trying to get a 
	sense of the place. It seemed so foreign, so different, so isolated. I 
	remembered having some doubts in my mind as to whether what we had planned 
	was in fact a good idea. The good weather made easing into the Thelon 
	easier, I suppose, as did the initial successes with the fish.
The Fishing
	The four of us came with 3 fishing rods (the men) 
	thinking of maybe catching fish, maybe not. We had read that although the 
	fishing can
 
	be good, you cannot rely on catching fish for food. We took that as meaning 
	that the fishing was not tha
t 
	great. That turned out to be completely 
	not true. Had we wanted to, we could have lived off of fish the whole two 
	weeks. We caught three types of fish: Northern Pike, Lake Trout, Grayling. 
	The pike was the most plentiful and they were certainly fun to catch. 
	Anywhere there was water grasses, or any place where a river or stream fed 
	into the Thelon was sure to have pike lurking, waiting to feed on the 
	smaller fish coming in from the streams. These pike were huge, and I was 
	amazed at the size of their mouths and their teeth. Unhooking one of these 
	monsters was quite the ope
ration 
	requiring two people, one to hold the mouth open with pliers or a rock, the 
	other to unhook it. I haven't had much practice with pike lately and two of 
	them got a piece of my thumbs. I bled freely. One of those gashes got 
	infected several days afterwards, and I had to do some first aid work on it. 
	We didn't eat any of the pike as none of us were that fond 
	
	
of 
	pike meat. Fortunately, we didn't have to. The Lake Trout proved 
	to be almost equally abundant and they were great 
	fighters. The problem with the lake Trout was catching one that wasn't too 
	large to eat. Many that we caught we simply could not have eaten in one 
	sitting, and we didn't want to have leftover fish around with the prospect 
	of barren land grizzlies around. So we relea
sed 
	many good sized Lake Trout back into the Thelon. The trout we ate were about 
	5 pounds each and would make a great meal 
	for the 4 of us. We were disadvantaged in several ways while fishing that 
	made the landing of these large fish difficult. First, we were fishing from 
	shore. While this makes for a very stable platform, it is tough to drag such 
	large fish right to shore if its shallow and we had n
o 
	waders. In such a shallow environment, nets are ineffective. You essentially 
	are left with no alternative but to drag 
	the fish as close as possible to you and then lunge at it with your bare 
	hands. Fortunately, with three of you fishing, the one with a fish one would 
	scream, which would bring the other two scrambling for help. I must admit 
	that it worked rather well. The second difficulty is that we had weenie 
	little trout fishing rods. I am used to fishing for 1 and 2 pound trout, not 
	25 pounds beasts. I had an 8 lb test line (Fireline) on my Shimano rod. 
	Although I never lost a fish due to a broken line, several broke as I was 
	struggling with the fish with my bare hands. The light line and small rod 
	simply extended the time it took to land the fish, as you had to be very 
	careful with the drag settings, in particular if you were working against 
	the current. The large trout that I am holding above took at least 20 
	minutes to bring in. So the recommendation is, bring a solid fishing rod 
	made for fish in the 20 lb range and bring 20 lb test line. If you have the 
	room, bring both a larger rod and a smaller one for fishing the streams for 
	grayling. That would be the ideal set up.
Foraging and Meals
	In a land known as The Barrens, it felt odd and 
	certainly unexpected to be pulling so much tasty protein form the river. We 
	were also 
	able to supplement our diet with some foraging on land. There were two 
	things in abundance in mid August that we took full advantage of. One was 
	the blueberries. There were literally to
ns 
	of them in huge berry fields. If we had 
	
	
wanted to, we could have literally 
	eaten pounds of them each day. Nathalie was usually the one who would spend 
	the time we fished picking blueberries, 
	which we ate just like that, or we would save them for Keith's famous 
	blueberry cobbler. The second item we found was real surprise. On the third 
	day, someone brought a mushroom to me, inquiring whether it was edible or 
	not. My father is the big mushroom picker and I know some of the main types 
	that are good. This mushroom was of the Boletes variety, a "pidberiznyk" in 
	Ukrainian. This mushroom is called the
	Common Scaber Stalk. "This is impossible", I said. This type of mushroom 
	grows primarily under birch trees (the 
	Ukrainian name literally means this) and we were hundreds of kilometres, 
	maybe thousands, from any deciduous forest. Keith quietly pointed out that 
	he thought that the small shrubs that 
	covered the hill we were standing on were dwarf birches (Keith would know 
	something like this). Voila! mystery solved. We went nuts picking all of the 
	mushroom we could find. Just our luck that they were exactly in season when 
	we were passing through. Although th
e 
	rest of the group expressed some 
	apprehension towards eating them (some doubt about my knowledge of 
	mushrooms), when no one got sick after our first meal, we just kept on 
	picking. They were delicious, in fact, and supplemented a number 
	of our meals. Nathalie, Taras and Keith became, quite literally, barren 
	lands chefs, discussing and debating the menu of each meal. I was amazed at 
	the attention to detail, the zeal and excitement with which each meal was 
	created from the food we brought, the fish we caught, and the mushrooms and 
	berries we found. We were rather well organized for our trip but we had 
	decided that everyone would be responsible for their own food. Given the 
	fact that we were coming from 3 different 
	cities, we felt that coordinating food as a group would be tough. This meant 
	that once on the Thelon, we started to discover who brought what, and we 
	ended up sharing a lot. I brought a lot of freeze dried food, a habit I 
	picked up from hiking, where weight is critical. Taras was on the other 
	extreme, bring all kinds of breads, pork fat "salo", cured meats, etc. This 
	variety fed the barren lands chefs' imagination and produced stunning 
	results at meal time every day. I must admit that I was truly impressed with 
	what and how we ate for the 2 weeks. I never expected it and it was one of 
	the highlights of the trip.
Mega fauna
We had 
read much about the Thelon's large animals but we were only partially lucky in 
seeing them. We did not see any musk ox or wolverines but we got lucky with 
bears and wolves. Keith and Taras spotted a barren land grizzly on shore as we 
rounded and bend but he spotted us and ran off before Nathalie and I could see 
him. Couple days later we spotted this one on the opposite bank of the river. It 
was a difficult spot. It was a bend in the river where it turned into the stiff 
wind that was blowing that day. Nathalie and I were battling the winds and the 
white caps while at the same time trying to paddle closer to the opposite shore 
to get a closer look at the bear. As we got closer, I grabbed my camera with 
its 300mm lens while Nathalie steadied the canoe in front. I snapped at least 20 
shots, not knowing if any would be sharp enough due to the frenzied bobbing of 
the canoe in the waves. I remember Tundra Tom telling us that barren land 
grizzlies are different from th
eir 
western cousin in that they are leaner and lighter in colour. They don't eat as 
much protein. As Tom said, its hard to corner something in the barrens. But 
grizzlies are intelligent and curious animals. Where the first bear we spotted 
scampered off right away, this one was as curious in us as we were in him. He 
was walking upstream along the shore when we first saw him. As we approached the 
shore, he climbed up the 20-foot bank to get further away but he came down to 
shore as he got upstream from us and came right up to the waters edge, sniffing 
the air (we were now upwind from him). For a moment, I even thought it possible 
that he would enter the water to get closer to us. I was trying to remember what 
I had read about grizzlies and remembered one writer recounting how he waded 
into neck deep water to get away from an overly curious grizzly that came to 
visit his camp. But what was on my mind was that this would be a terribly 
inconvenient spot to capsize the canoe, and if we were not careful, the wind 
would ground the canoe and the grizzly would have a very close up view of US. As 
we paddled away, he tried the air a few more times, then ambled off upstream, 
following the shore. We saw bear tracks a number of times, along the middle 
section of our trip. We saw tracks close to our camp one day, probably made 
while we were at camp. We were always (almost always) very careful about where 
we ate and how we cleaned up. When we cleaned our fish, we threw all of the body 
parts far into the river, much to the delight of the local sea gulls. But given 
how sensitive their noses are, bears will find you if they are in the area.
The 
sole wolf we saw was under very different circumstances. We had made camp by a 
small (and only) clump of trees, less than 40 kilometres from our journey end 
point. We were wind bound there for 3 days and nights. We placed o
ur 
tents downwind from the trees and they provided considerable shelter. We were 
sitting by our fire at midday when this wolf just trotted by, perhaps 200 metres 
away, just avoiding our camp. For some reason, as he trotted away from us, I 
howled at him. This got his attention! He stopped, looked towards us and howled 
back. this went on for several minutes, the wolf and I howling at one another 
until Taras suggested that perhaps my toying with carnivorous mega fauna should 
come to an end. The wolf howled several more times with no response from me. His 
sense of curiosity very interesting. He laid down for a while, perhaps wondering 
why we were no longer "speaking" to him. He then retraced his steps towards the 
shore and upstream from us perhaps to get a better smell of us. he then trotted 
back to his previous spot and lat down again. The entire encounter took 
something approaching an hour, at which point he gave up, and quietly went 
inland from the river. We talked about this for a while and I wondered if such a 
similar encounter 50,000 years ago paved the way to today's modern dog. I can't 
help but think that had we persisted in our calling, the wolf would have stayed 
around much longer. And had we given him food.......
We saw 
caribou on a number of occasions, but the large Beverly herd was apparently in 
the North Eastern section of the 
sanctuary. We only saw individual animals and 
groups of threes. Apparently you have to plan to see the caribou. As we found 
out, its not
 
automatic. You do see the occasional sign if them most notably old antlers and 
the like. We did not see any carcasses or skeletons. They do not call it the 
barrens for nothing. Its, well, barren. Its not filled with large mammals like 
the African plains. There isn't enough food to support them and the climate is 
just too harsh. Aside from bears, wolves, and caribou, the only other large 
mammal we saw was multiple moose. They are rather skittish and they can see you 
coming from quite a ways off, so getting close enough for a picture is difficult 
and would take a far bit of time.
Big Sky
They 
say that Montana is Big Sky Country. I've never been to Montana, and it may be 
true, but its hard to see how anything can be bigger sky country than the 
barrens. The land is very flat with only gentle rolling relief. Its Huge Sky 
Country, if ask me. The sky is ever present and you are constantly aware of it. 
It is such a big part of what you are seeing because of the low relief of the
land. 
The combination of low relief and the almost complete absence of any landmarks 
also gives you a 
weird 
perspective of distances. Everything seems to by much closer than it really is. 
It can take you what seems like forever to get out of visual range of the tent. 
It can easily take a kilometre or more. 
Night
As 
compared to June, August has a real night. It starts rather late (23:00) and 
finishes early (04:00) and it never gets pitch black, but its close. We never 
stayed out very late as night. There isn't much to do and it gets quiet chi
lly. 
The coming of night sometimes brought
 some interesting images. We had a fair bit 
of cloud cover so we saw the Northern Lights prominently only one night. 
There 
probably is a whole 
technique 
to photographing them because it is quite technically challenging. You are 
photographing them (naturally) in very low light, yet they move and change 
quickly. The shot on the left is the only decent shot I was able to take, 
although I did not take many. What was odd about the Northern Lights was how low 
they were on t
he horizon to the SOUTH of us. We were so far north that the 
Northern Lights were to the south of us.
The River and Canoeing
Although the land in the Thelon Sanctuary is called The Barrens, the river 
itself goes through a number of different stages visually, as the terrain slowly 
changes. In the first half of the trip there are a lot of small trees on either 
side of the river. This is what is referred to as a forest oasis and it occurs 
as a narrow band on either side of the river. The trees are small and scraggly 
and they a
re 
rather sparse, but it is technically a forest. There are also a lot of dwarf 
birches, especially on elevated ground above the river. In some sections the 
river runs quite quickly with small cliffs on either side. In other sections, it 
spreads out for many hundreds of metres and can 
be very shallow. In some spots, like the picture to the right, we actually ran 
aground in the sand. The river was only a few inches deep and had spread out 
considerably. I suspect that the sand really moves around year to year and that 
the river changes in so far as which parts are readily navigable and which are 
not. In mid-August, we had probably picked a time when the river is at its 
lowest. There were no rapids at all between Warden's Grove and Thelon Bluffs. 
There are a number of swifts where the water surface breaks a bit and these are 
a useful distraction. You can cover considerable distance in a short period of 
time. using
 
my running GPS (Garmin Forerunner 101) I clocked a top speed for us at about 17 
Km/hr. This was in a long wavering swift with us paddling as hard as we could. 
Hardly white water stuff but this is what makes the Thelon so accessible to many 
people. Who really need only basic canoeing skills. As I understand it, in early 
June, the river is quite 
a different story. The canoes that Tundra Tom provided us (and Brad and a friend 
assembled for us at Warden's Grove) were tough, plastic canoes. I don't believe 
they were ABS but some other plastic. They were quite heavy but we were not 
doing any portages so they served us very well. 
Side Trips
Although we were on the river for almost 2 weeks, we did only limited side 
trips. In general, there is not much to see, because its the Barrens. There were 
a few exceptions. The map showed a large
pingo a few 
kilometres north of the river at one point.
Given 
the fact that there is precious little high ground up there,
we 
decided it would an interesting excursion and it might give us some views. Like 
in the dessert, there are very few distance markers in the barrens so its tough 
to know how far an object is away from you. We knew the pingo was about 5 km in 
land but it still seemed like forever to get to it, even though we could see it 
the entire time. The pingo is surrounded by water most of the time (evidently) 
and we had a hard time reaching it. We found areas of dried mud and made it 
across abut a good
rain 
would have made it impassable without some serious boots. We saw a large
Snowy 
Owl on the way to the pingo. It was going through a serious of swoops and 
landings but never close enough for a good picture. I was impressed by its size 
and wingspan. It was wonderfully white. The top of the pingo was perhaps 40 feet 
above the plain. It looked like a small volcano with a crater in the middle.
It 
seemed to be ,made of hard mud. A number of rodents (marmots?) inhabited the 
pingo and had a series of burrows in it. They were very curious in us but were 
too shy to come close. The pingo did give us a good 360° view, but as you can 
see, there is not much to see except more tundra. We did see a moose of in the 
distance. He must have heard us because by the time we spotted him, he was 
crashing through the bushes away from us. Its hard to sneak up on something in 
the barrens. It was reasonably warm that day but there was a nice breeze in our 
face as we walked to the pingo. Flies were non-existent and we shed our bug 
nets, as the pictures attest. The walk back to the river (and our canoes) was 
quite different. The wind was at our back now. The relative difference in our 
speed with the wind made all the difference for the black flies. They were now 
all around us. We quickly donned our head gear and continued on. But it was an 
example of the fact that the black flies are always present but certain weather 
conditions keep them down in the grass while other conditions unleash them. 
Which brings us to the next obvious section.
Bugs
The 
one thing that is true of tundra is that there are a lot of bugs. That is 
inescapable. Especially in this band of tundra. You go further north where its 
REALLY barren like Baffin Island or Ellesmere Island, and the bugs are less of a 
problem, especially because it tends to be windy there. We had read a fair bit 
before setting out that black flies could be terrible depending where you were 
and the time of year. In mid-August its apparently better than in late June. We 
were prepared with bug shirts as well as some smaller head nets. Its black flies 
during the day and mosquitoes at dawn and dusk. 
The bugs are always there. But whether they bother you completely depends on 
temperature and wind. If its warm and no wind, the black flies can be brutal 
during the day. If the wind picks up to even 10 or 15 kph, the black flies 
literally disappear into the tundra, into the grass. If its cooler, the black 
flies tend to be less aggressive as well. On our walk to see the pingo above, we 
were walking west, and the westward wind increased our relative wind velocity. 
The end result was that the flies were not bothering us. On our way back. the 
wind was at our backs, and the black flies all of a sudden started harassing us, 
so we had to put the nets on. You don't need a big shift in conditions to bring 
on or turn off the black flies.
Given how cold the winters are out here, its amazing so many bugs (or larvae) survive year to year.
Out on 
the river, the bugs rarely bothered us except if the wind was completely dead, 
which was rare.
The 
mosquitoes are just as sensitive to the wind, if not more so. However, they are 
really active only at dawn and dusk so they tend to be less of a problem as we 
were typically either in our tents, or in the bug tent. The worst thing about 
the black flies was going to the bathroom, when you had to squat. Because they 
hide in the tundra, squatting down simply invites an assault on your most 
intimate body parts. You learn to do this very quickly. We did not have a 
separate small tent for this, and next time I go, I am bringing one. In 
general, the following points need to be observed:
1) I strongly recommend the use of the Bug Shirt, available at many stores catering to the outdoorsman
2) A separate small head net can be handy when you don't want to put the whole shirt on
3) Good quantities of Muskol (full strength) are a must, for your hands, ears, etc.
4) A dining tent is a must. Sitting outside to eat will simply be very unpleasant. A mesh tent is perfect for this. The only problem we had with it is that it does not tolerate wind very well. I will have to search on the internet to see if there are any other models available that are more resistant to wind. Typically they tend to be tall so that you can stand in them which hurts their wind tolerance.
5) A small tent to act as a latrine would be a great asset. I plan to have one next time I go.
In general, the bugs are not bad enough to keep me from coming back. But if you are not prepared for them, you will suffer terribly
Epilogue
It is 4 years later that I write this. I often think about our trip on the Thelon, and I plot my return. I would go tomorrow if I had a crew ready to go. A 2-person team is ok for those that are adventuresome, but I think that groups of 4 are best. You have a spare canoe, 2 tents in case of trouble and the group is not too large to manage. Once you get to 6 and 8 persons, the logistics become more involved. If anyone out there reading this is interested in going and does not have anyone to go with, drop me a line nestor@lewyckyj.com
All Photos © Nestor Lewyckyj 2007