Lower Caribou - Miminiska Lake via Colehouse, Misehkow, Albany

CanadaOntarioWabakimi
Submitter & Author Information
Route submitted by: 
Brent Sinclair
Trip Date : 
June 21 - July 8 2021
Additional Route Information
Distance: 
300 km
Duration: 
18 days
Loop Trip: 
No
Portage Information
No. of portages: 
34
Total Portage Distance: 
0 m
Longest Portage: 
800 m
Difficulty Ratings
River Travel: 
Intermediate
Lake Travel: 
Intermediate
Portaging: 
Moderate
Remoteness: 
Advanced
Background Trip Info
Water Levels: 
Low
Route Description
Access to Put-In Information: 

We used Mattice Lake Outfitters, who dropped us at the put-in at the Little Caribou Bridge just outside Armstrong, ON, and picked us up by floatplane on Miminiska Lake.

Trip Journal/Log/Report/Diary: 

People: Brent Sinclair, Mhairi McFarlane – London, ON

Boat: H2O Voyageur17

Water levels: low for the season, according to Parks. Water 6-8” below spring pollen band on the rocks.

Weather/Bugs: Cold (6 °C, North wind and raining) when we set out – no bugs! Strong winds during first week made large lake travel challenging (e.g. camped on Beaver Island because couldn’t cross Caribou on first day). This gave way to a 1-in-1000 year heatwave and temps >30 °C before cooling off for the last few days. Only one thunderstorm that affected us once we reached our first campsite on the Albany. Once it warmed up we had moderate blackflies and mosquitoes and some deerflies. One or two stable flies towards the end of the trip. We were there before the 2021 wildfires really got going, but we smelled smoke for a few days when we were on the Palisade, and one day was quite hazy.

Route: Little Caribou – Caribou (camp Beaver Island) – Caribou River (camp) – Smoothrock (camp) – Lower Wabakimi (camp in narrows to Wabakimi L) – Wabakimi – River Bay – Ogoki River – Kenoji (camp on island nr mouth of Ogoki river) – Palisade River (Camp at ‘big bend’) – Webster Creek – Redman (camp on point nr where Webster creek continues) – Webster Creek – Webster Lake (camp on Island at S end), Webster Creek – Early – Colehouse (camp, site 500m E of where marked on paddle planner) – Rockcliff (camp 51.01293, -89.87995, site 20’ above water) – Misehkow (camp at site marked at 139 m portage) – Misehkow – Iron Falls (camp) – Blow – Misehkow (camp 51.27711, -89.26564) – Misehkow – Albany (camp 51.44625, -89.18860) – Albany (camp 51.45340, -88.99899) – Albany – Snake Falls (camp) – Miminiska (camp at point S of Albany mouth 51.54992, -88.72339) – Fly out (Single Otter, Mattice Lake Outfitters)

Portage conditions: Apart from a couple on the Palisade, we seemed to be the first people across most of the portages this year and (especially on Webster Creek through to Rockcliff) perhaps several years for some. We were carrying a folding saw and a hatchet, and cleared all the portages to the best of our abilities (only two of ~34 had no trees down) – on average, we think we removed a piece of blowdown every 50 m of portage. The three portages from Webster – Early – Rockcliff took ~10 hours of our time to clear. There had been some sort of recent microburst or maybe even tornado event around Colehouse – most of the S shore of the lake was lined with recently upended root masses of trees all blown down by a wind from the North, and the summit of the portage to Rockcliff had a huge (3+ m high and deep, 50 m long) multistem blowdown which was impassable without a chainsaw (we carved a rough detour, but it requires some canoewrangling to negotiate). We ran/lined as many portages as we could on the Misehkow, but still did a bit of work on them as required. We were running out of portage maintenance enthusiasm by the time we hit the Albany, so although we did some work on the portages around the falls, they could probably do with a little more TLC.

Some notes on our route:

  • Dragging up swifts on stretch between Smoothrock and Lower Wabakimi was fairly straightforward.
  • Upper end of Webster Creek (approaching Early) widens in places. At these water levels what looked like gentle lily-filled pools in the creek were actually bottomless mudfests with 1-2” of overlying water. These were (literally and figuratively) a drag.
  • Portage from Webster – Early is hard work: up-and-down and twisty-turny.
  • Entry to portage from Colehouse – unnamed small lake before Rockcliff is a long way up the creek.
  • Portage from unnamed lake after Colehouse – Rockcliff has a HUGE blowdown as it reaches the clifftop and turns right. We hacked a path around it, but it needs work with a chainsaw. Blowdowns along rest of trail make for uneasy footing, and path down to (cliff above) Rockcliff lake is quite twisty-turny with a boat. Lowering to the lake itself at the end of the portage is reasonably straightforward.
  • There is a 2m waterfall marked just after the first 68/70 m portage on the Misehkow on most sketch maps (51.02389, -89.83383) – The rapid marked on (some) Canada topo maps is the true location of these falls, and is what the portage is avoiding.
  • 139 m portage on the Misehkow at 51.05098, -89.77088 not necessary – at these water levels was just a liftover at a ledge to R of island around the corner from the campsite
  • 573m portage after that (51.04728, -89.75975) in terrible/non-existent shape. We ran/lined/dragged the bony rapid, and lifted over a small ledge. It sucked, but not as much as the portage.
  • Most sketch maps show a 50 m portage River Left around 51.34692, -89.17230. This portage is pretty mandatory because it bypasses a 3m waterfall that doesn’t appear to be marked on the topo!
  • We couldn’t find Ramblin’ Boy’s ‘mooseview’ campsite
  • Good CI rapids (marked as swifts on FoW guide, but a swirly rapid symbol on the Canada Topo maps) as Albany heads due S towards Patte Lake bend
  • Snake Falls looks potentially runnable (straight CII+, but unforgiving canyon walls, bring a helmet!)

Wildlife: Caribou + calf swimming to island on Caribou Lake; Three caribou swimming to island on Smoothrock. Many moose – mainly cows + calves on the Palisade and Webster and bulls on the Misehkow and Albany (including one fine animal about 10 m from our first campsite on the Albany). Surprisingly few beavers (although plenty of lodges, especially on the Misehkow). Five otter sightings including several on stretch of Albany from Patte Lake to Miminiska. About half a dozen bears… two nice sightings where we were downwind and across the river on the Misehkow and we could watch the bear go about his/her business (rather than the usual view of a bear butt disappearing into the bushes). Great time of year for dragonflies and moths (we found many luna moths). Mhairi was doing Ontario Breeding Bird Atlas surveys, including deploying automated monitors overnight. We don’t have the data from those yet, but some birdy highlights include: small common tern colony on Wabakimi, many boreal chickadees, many goldeneye with ducklings, trumpeter swans, black-billed cuckoo on the Albany near Miminiska, pelicans on Miminiska. Mhairi was also making regular eBird checklists and iNaturalist observations, almost doubling the number of iNat observations for the park.

General thoughts: The winds and hot weather coupled with a lot of time spent clearing portages made this trip pretty demanding for 18 days. We had two short (~5 h) days and our longest was ~13h, and we had no days off – a couple of rest days (or not losing time to portage clearing and wind) would have been nice! Now would be a great time to follow our footsteps, because there’s a lot less work to do, and the days would be a *lot* shorter. Water levels were on the low side throughout. The CII rapids on the Ogoki were in great shape, but the swifts before and after didn’t have enough water. We probably grounded out on about half the swifts on the Misehkow, and the mud on Webster was… something!

Maps Required
Other Maps: 
We used the online Canada topos, with additional info from Wabakimimaps.com and the Friends of Wabakimi sketch map books.