
Super Good Camping Podcast
Hi there! We are a blended family of four who are passionate about camping, nature, the great outdoors, physical activity, health, & being all-around good Canadians! We would love to inspire others to get outside & explore all that our beautiful country has to offer. Camping fosters an appreciation of nature, physical fitness, & emotional well-being. Despite being high-tech kids, our kids love camping! We asked them to help inspire your kids. Their creations are in our Kids section. For the adults, we would love to share our enthusiasm for camping, review some of our favourite camping gear, share recipes & menus, tips & how-to's, & anything else you may want to know about camping. Got a question about camping? Email us so we can help you & anyone else who may be wondering the same thing. We are real people, with a brutally honest bent. We don't get paid by anyone to provide a review of their product. We'll be totally frank about what we like or don't like.
Super Good Camping Podcast
Riley Outside Drops By For A Chat. Literally!
Our pal Riley talks about learning whitewater, becoming a guide, organizing amazing weekend get-togethers, their killer garden out back, winter camping, joining the board of directors for Paddler Co-op, how the whole point of living in Toronto is so that you HAVE to drive 4 hours to get to a tripping destination, and so much more.
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00:00 - 00:04
Hello, and good day, eh? Welcome to the Super Good Camping podcast. My name is Pamela.
00:04 - 00:04
I'm Tim.
00:04 - 00:05
And we are from supergoodcamping.com.
00:06 - 00:10
We are here because we're on a mission to inspire other families to enjoy camping adventures
00:10 - 00:11
such as we have with our kids.
00:12 - 00:14
Today's guest is a pal that lives in our neighborhood.
00:14 - 00:18
Tim has managed to pop out with Riley for local beers on a couple of occasions.
00:18 - 00:23
They are a fan of all things outdoors but especially anything canoe related including white water.
00:23 - 00:26
Please welcome Riley Murray also known as Riley O'Sied.
00:26 - 00:31
I've heard such amazing things about that spiel before and how you have nothing in front of
00:31 - 00:32
you, you just do it.
00:32 - 00:34
That's just I've done it so many times.
00:35 - 00:36
It's just automatic now.
00:36 - 00:39
Can't be with the Kohl's, Ben and Cheryl.
00:39 - 00:41
They're like, oh no, we totally thought that was prerecorded.
00:41 - 00:44
Yeah. Yep. I've heard this song from a few people.
00:46 - 00:46
Welcome.
00:46 - 00:47
Thank you.
00:47 - 00:50
Welcome. Well, and we should just mention how we met, Riley.
00:50 - 00:51
Okay. Or did we meet?
00:51 - 00:51
You do.
00:51 - 00:52
Can you tell me?
00:52 - 00:54
At the Outdoor Adventure Show. Oh, yeah. Yes.
00:54 - 00:56
We came up to your Piling Co op booth.
00:56 - 00:57
You were manning the booth, I think.
00:57 - 01:01
I was. I was manning the booth and then there was a little bit of an after party where we got
01:01 - 01:02
to do a little bit more chit chatting.
01:02 - 01:04
We did too, which was cool.
01:04 - 01:10
It's, I I'm game to yak with anybody. Anything camping related? Yeah.
01:10 - 01:10
Tim, can you
01:10 - 01:11
You notice that? Yeah.
01:11 - 01:12
Just go.
01:13 - 01:18
So yeah, then, it was just by coincidence, it's like, hey, you're all around the corner from us.
01:19 - 01:20
A 6 minute bike ride. Yeah.
01:20 - 01:23
And I don't I honestly, I don't remember how that sort of came up.
01:23 - 01:27
It must have been in just one of our conversations back and forth. It's like, what?
01:27 - 01:28
You live in Toronto? What?
01:28 - 01:30
Why do you live in Toronto, Riley?
01:30 - 01:36
It's it's stunning how many how many of the community actually live here in Toronto.
01:36 - 01:36
Yeah.
01:36 - 01:39
I'm I'm forever surprised about it. Like, what? Yeah.
01:40 - 01:44
And and well, you're you're the closest I so far as I know.
01:44 - 01:51
But there we've got ones in in Toronto, like, in in the core here, in Scarborough, Richmond Hill.
01:52 - 01:54
Well, somebody else was in Fawn that I talked to.
01:55 - 01:58
Somebody's out in the beaches. Like, wow, wowsers, man.
01:58 - 02:02
Like, it's we'd like to be outside and outdoors and
02:02 - 02:08
get to the point. The secret there, Tim, is that we like the 4 hour commute where we get to decompress, little internal meditation.
02:10 - 02:11
You guys drive way too much room.
02:11 - 02:15
Yeah. You appreciate that doors that much more when you live in the city.
02:15 - 02:16
That's true.
02:16 - 02:23
I suppose so, yeah. Although, honestly here where where we live, there's so much grain around here.
02:23 - 02:28
Like there's Cedar Bay Park, There's all the things, you know.
02:28 - 02:36
I I very often looking out through the window behind your head in the day watch hawks circling around.
02:36 - 02:38
It's like how cool is that, right?
02:38 - 02:42
I went down to the beaches the other day and I forgot how close to the water we really live.
02:42 - 02:45
Like you could throw a stone and we are at Lake Ontario.
02:45 - 02:45
And there
02:45 - 02:49
was a whole bunch of people doing a cold plunge there, which I greatly admire.
02:49 - 02:52
I almost wanted to join them, but that takes a lot of cuts.
02:53 - 02:54
Yeah. I don't know. I don't know.
02:54 - 02:57
It's cold enough for me, like, in the summertime to go in Lake Ontario.
02:58 - 02:59
Yeah. Lake Ontario is brutal.
02:59 - 03:06
The the boys, the Driftwood Paddle Boys, we're gonna go up and do a a 3 day with them in February
03:06 - 03:07
just before the outdoor adventure show.
03:07 - 03:08
Mhmm.
03:08 - 03:13
And they're like, hey. So if we chainsaw a hole in the ice, would you jump in?
03:14 - 03:16
Tim, it's probably good for your back, Tim.
03:16 - 03:16
You gotta
03:16 - 03:17
do it.
03:17 - 03:17
For likes and clicks.
03:17 - 03:19
Yeah. Everything tightens up.
03:19 - 03:21
And then releases. They they need to sauna.
03:22 - 03:22
Do it for the legs and hips.
03:22 - 03:24
Oh, they're talking about doing both. Good.
03:24 - 03:26
That's that's potential for both. Cool.
03:27 - 03:27
Yeah. Hot and cool.
03:27 - 03:29
There's room for 2 more. Just saying.
03:29 - 03:31
So give us a bit of your background.
03:31 - 03:34
Like, I know you do you do paddler co op.
03:34 - 03:37
You do guiding as well? Yes? Ish?
03:38 - 03:40
Yeah. Tim, I got into the outdoors really late in life.
03:40 - 03:45
I didn't start adventuring until I was in my late twenties, and it was more by fluke. 1 of my
03:45 - 03:51
friends had arranged for a fly in trip in Tomogamy, and this was a fly in trip that it rained
03:51 - 03:54
solidly for 10 days straight. It was gruesome weather.
03:55 - 04:00
It was just above freezing temperatures, which is super rare for August in tomogamy, and everybody
04:00 - 04:03
got near hypothermia on that entire trip.
04:03 - 04:08
And I think I was the only person on that trip who was so enthusiastic about doing it again.
04:08 - 04:09
I did not want to go home.
04:09 - 04:12
I loved every second of that experience on that trip.
04:12 - 04:16
So at the end of that experience when everyone was craving their beds, I was looking for the next adventure.
04:17 - 04:22
And we had done a little bit of whitewater on that trip, more by accident, in some Kevlar canoes,
04:22 - 04:26
which you should never do without extreme skills.
04:26 - 04:31
And we made the mistake of telling the outfitter up there that we had taken these Kevlar canoes
04:31 - 04:32
down a couple of rapids.
04:33 - 04:38
And so that outfitter said, hey, if you wanna do some rapids, like, I'll show you some rapids.
04:38 - 04:40
And he said, come back next year.
04:40 - 04:43
We'll do the Sturgeon River, and you'll have a great time.
04:43 - 04:47
And that's where I was like, oh, there's more to this, like, outdoor thing?
04:47 - 04:49
You can get white water canoeing in the middle of the backcountry.
04:49 - 04:52
So the next year, I took a course with the Paddler Coop, which is how I got involved with them.
04:52 - 04:56
And then when we went on this backcountry canoe trip, we hired these with them.
04:56 - 05:01
And then when we went on this backcountry canoe trip, we hired these guides from Tomogamy Outfitting.
05:01 - 05:08
And we had so much fun on this trip, and we were already pretty well versed in our skill set,
05:08 - 05:12
but this was only like maybe my 4th or 5th trip total.
05:12 - 05:16
And Eric from Tomagami Outfitting said, you didn't really need to hire us as guides, you know?
05:16 - 05:20
Like, you could have done this on your own, but we wanted them for, like, the whitewater safety
05:20 - 05:23
of it, of having a guide along who really knew what the heck they were doing.
05:24 - 05:29
And, he ended up saying to me at the end of it, you know, if you ever want to come and do some
05:29 - 05:30
guiding, you can give me a call.
05:30 - 05:32
Like, we'll make that happen.
05:32 - 05:33
And so that was it.
05:33 - 05:34
That was the next step for me.
05:34 - 05:38
And by the time I was 29, 30 years old, I said, okay. Yeah.
05:38 - 05:39
I'll take you up on that offer.
05:39 - 05:43
And I I got the chance to guide a couple of trips for him, and I've since done a few trips for
05:43 - 05:47
some other companies including one of your friends, Tripshed, who I hear you're trying to get
05:47 - 05:49
on the podcast at some point.
05:49 - 05:52
Hint. Hint. Nudge. Nudge. That's cool. That's cool.
05:52 - 06:00
Especially to to to level up in such a short span that that they're like, yeah. Yeah. Come guide for us.
06:01 - 06:08
The really cool thing about getting into these experiences later in life is that you have the
06:08 - 06:11
maturity and you know where your drive is.
06:11 - 06:14
It's like what they say about adults going back to school at a later age.
06:14 - 06:18
Like, you can get a 100% in all of your courses because you're dedicated.
06:18 - 06:19
You know exactly what you want.
06:19 - 06:25
When you find a passion that you're ready to get into, you're gonna give a 100% of your time to that.
06:25 - 06:32
Cool. Well, so tell tell them tell me tell us some of your some of your cool trips that you've managed to guide.
06:32 - 06:38
Where like where other than being frozen for for 10 days in terrible weather.
06:39 - 06:42
But what else what else have what other cool ones have you gotten into?
06:43 - 06:46
So many. This past summer, I had the chance to go up the Mississinabe.
06:46 - 06:48
That was an awesome trip.
06:48 - 06:52
That was some drama getting to the actual park itself.
06:52 - 06:58
If you ever decide to go up that way, we started in Missnaibi Provincial Park, and the drive
06:58 - 07:01
was supposed to take somewhere around 9 hours for us to get to.
07:01 - 07:07
And we turned this into, like, a 16 hour drive with the car breaking down and with getting lost
07:07 - 07:11
on some logging roads, with not being able to find the Provincial Park signage.
07:12 - 07:14
And by the time we ended up at the park, it was about 2 o'clock in the morning.
07:14 - 07:21
So we'd been driving for about 20 hours total, including some mechanical stuff for the car breaking down.
07:21 - 07:25
But by the time we got on the trip, it ended up being such a magical experience.
07:25 - 07:27
And I trip with my dog.
07:27 - 07:31
So she gets to go on all of these river trips with me, including the Whitewater ones.
07:31 - 07:35
And usually we go with a large ish group of people.
07:35 - 07:37
I'm a big fan of safety in numbers.
07:37 - 07:41
I think my favorite number of people to trip with is probably 4.
07:41 - 07:46
But for safety's sake on a whitewater trip, I like the idea of having 3 canoes.
07:46 - 07:48
So 6 people total usually.
07:48 - 07:52
So that trip turned out to be a really awesome experience.
07:52 - 07:57
It was a good experience and I learned a lot about how my dog handles swimming in white water. Oh,
07:58 - 08:00
gee. How did that come about? I was
08:00 - 08:06
dunking it. Yeah. 2nd rapid of the trip, we ended up dumping, which was just a bad line going down it.
08:06 - 08:10
And it was such a casual, maybe a class 2 rapid that we tipped on that I didn't even have a
08:10 - 08:12
life jacket on my dog.
08:12 - 08:17
And I don't know to this day if that was a benefit or a flaw to have the life jacket off of
08:17 - 08:22
her Because I turned around as I'm swimming down this rapid and I go and I'm worried about my dog, right?
08:22 - 08:27
So I turn around and I see that the canoe is upside down on top of her.
08:27 - 08:32
And so I'm swimming upriver trying to get over to, like, flip the canoe upright so that she
08:32 - 08:36
can get out, and then she just dives under the gunwale of the canoe and comes out the other
08:36 - 08:41
side, which had she had a life jacket on, she would have been totally stuck under that canoe
08:41 - 08:43
and who knows where she would have ended up.
08:43 - 08:48
Interesting. I I don't know that I would have even thought of that scenario because I saw that,
08:50 - 08:53
Salus has a has a has a pet Yeah.
08:53 - 08:55
Out in the front. That's great. Yep.
08:56 - 08:58
What kind of dog is it? She,
08:59 - 09:00
I like to tell people she's a miniature Irish wolfhound because that's what she looks like but she's, just
09:04 - 09:06
labradoodle. Yeah. So water,
09:06 - 09:07
a water type dog.
09:07 - 09:09
Oh, yeah. Yep. She loves a good swim.
09:09 - 09:14
Ours is not. So it'll go up to his, like, his legs but that's it.
09:14 - 09:17
You have a nice small travel travel size dog.
09:17 - 09:20
Farley's Farley's just a he's a princess is what he
09:20 - 09:20
is. Yes.
09:20 - 09:22
It's raining outside, I don't think so.
09:23 - 09:26
I have to pee and that's all we're doing today.
09:26 - 09:31
So, okay, so other things you do with Paddler Co op, I've because I've seen your your I'm not
09:31 - 09:37
sure that I would use the term prolific on social media, but you do post a a decent amount.
09:39 - 09:40
And it's always great content.
09:40 - 09:42
Like I re really enjoy watching your stuff.
09:42 - 09:47
You you and Evan, especially if you're both posting at the same time because you're on the same trip. Yeah.
09:47 - 09:52
It's great to just sort of bounce back and forth and see the see the content that 2 of you are are putting.
09:53 - 09:56
I'm I'm a bit of a junkie anyhow. Just saying.
09:56 - 10:03
But when you're doing so so you do it looks to me like you do instructional whitewater.
10:03 - 10:12
Like, I know there was a weekend where Jane Sherry were out there, Christina, who else was Ben was out there.
10:12 - 10:13
Yeah.
10:13 - 10:16
You you had a whack of people out there.
10:17 - 10:20
Is it Eric, EJ Greybeard? Right.
10:20 - 10:26
There so there's so many people that I I follow and and admire the the stuff that they get out and do.
10:27 - 10:32
Is that just like a a weekend, like a like a workshop type thing that to teach people how to
10:32 - 10:33
do rapids and stuff like that?
10:33 - 10:38
Yeah. Well, I started with the paddler co op when I went on that Tomogamy Sturgeon River trip
10:38 - 10:42
because I wanted some foundation of my experience so I wasn't going in completely blind to a
10:42 - 10:46
backcountry situation where I would have to know how to maneuver a canoe in white water.
10:47 - 10:52
And I got hooked with them because they needed somebody on the board of directors who had some marketing experience.
10:52 - 10:54
And my 9 to 5 is more sitting at a computer desk.
10:54 - 10:57
It's very boring stuff, but it's all revolving around digital marketing.
10:57 - 11:00
So I thought I can help fill this gap.
11:00 - 11:04
This is a really nice opportunity to get to know some people in a great outdoor setting.
11:04 - 11:06
So I got on the board with the Peddler Co op.
11:07 - 11:13
From there, I happen to like people, and so I I got a whole group of outdoor enthusiasts together
11:13 - 11:18
because I wanted to meet these rad people in this community and a lot of folks are interested
11:18 - 11:21
in getting more, experience on that whitewater side.
11:21 - 11:26
So that's how we ended up doing the Peddler co op experience and how I got involved with them.
11:26 - 11:31
But my experience in whitewater has been such a slow build.
11:32 - 11:38
I said earlier that as an adult, it's really nice getting into things because you learn quicker,
11:38 - 11:43
you're passionate about it, you know exactly what you want to get from the experience.
11:43 - 11:52
But I've had such a slow build of my learning in Whitewater that I guess living that slower
11:52 - 11:58
lifestyle has been a really nice opportunity to seek that adrenaline and slowly increase my
11:58 - 12:03
skills at a slower pace because it's nice to be able to experience it, like, every second of
12:03 - 12:12
the way instead of just rushing into something and being able to drop over like waterfalls and seek that adrenaline rush. So it's been Yeah.
12:12 - 12:14
It's been a really slow growth.
12:14 - 12:18
For those in the know, I'm I consider myself like a class 2, maybe a class 3 paddler.
12:19 - 12:24
And that's probably as far as I'll ever go, but I really wanna encourage people who wanna get
12:24 - 12:26
into whitewater to start at that level.
12:26 - 12:32
Like, don't be afraid of being at, like, the lower end of that tier because you see these giant
12:32 - 12:37
kayakers, like Dane Jackson's a popular one, going over these massive waterfalls.
12:37 - 12:39
And that's not the expectation you should have for yourself.
12:39 - 12:43
There can be a tiny ripple in the water and you're going down that in a canoe and it has the
12:43 - 12:47
same little adrenaline for you as it does for Dane going over a waterfall.
12:47 - 12:49
Tim, we're gonna get you out one day. It's gonna
12:51 - 12:55
happen. I I I will need to wear diapers, I'm pretty sure. Alright.
12:55 - 12:58
So so there's guiding, there's the paddler co op.
12:58 - 13:04
What other things do you do you like to do for you or with other people?
13:04 - 13:06
Like like what else do you want?
13:06 - 13:07
Do you What you enjoy?
13:08 - 13:15
I spend the majority of my time getting out in a canoe on water, whether it's white water or flat water.
13:15 - 13:20
I'll spend days alone in the backcountry just getting the experience of learning my paddle strokes
13:20 - 13:22
and finessing them a little bit.
13:22 - 13:28
In the off season, I like to skate and ski and do a lot of cross country, and I do a lot of
13:28 - 13:32
anything that you would consider, like, homey or homesteading.
13:32 - 13:36
And somehow, I I always feel that's, like, tied into the outdoors.
13:36 - 13:40
Like, people who like getting into the backcountry and getting into these camping experiences
13:41 - 13:46
are often people who want to like grow their own food or get to know the like more nature y side of living.
13:47 - 13:50
They do pickling and canning and all that stuff?
13:50 - 13:55
You should see my Toronto apartment just full of little, like, canning jars and sourdough fermenting.
13:55 - 14:00
And, I live with 2 roommates who put up with a lot of antics that I have around the house.
14:00 - 14:04
It's all full of crafting and I don't know how I find time for it, honestly.
14:04 - 14:08
That's excellent. Well, I know I've seen seen at least a picture through your back where it
14:08 - 14:12
looks like you've got a pretty happening garden going on.
14:12 - 14:12
Oh, thanks very much.
14:12 - 14:15
Cool cool. No, well, I we don't.
14:15 - 14:21
I plant with my tenants but we do pots and tomato plants that we don't get picked before the
14:21 - 14:24
season ends because we started too late. Cool.
14:24 - 14:32
And then do you do so, like, but but you I thought about this earlier and I blanked on the number.
14:32 - 14:37
I know that there was a conversation we were having and you you a number came out of your mouth
14:37 - 14:45
about the amount of days that you've managed to get out this past year and my brain just went, no. That's not possible.
14:45 - 14:49
I think it's hours. I'm doing this thing called a 1000 hours outside.
14:49 - 14:52
It's great for families to try to get out there.
14:53 - 14:57
And what you do is you put this little piece of paper on your side of your fridge or wherever
14:57 - 15:02
you wanna store it, and you color in every time you go outside, which is amazing for kids.
15:02 - 15:06
But I got really addicted to it as an adult to try to exceed that every single year.
15:06 - 15:09
So last year, I did, I think, about 16:50.
15:09 - 15:15
The year before that was like 15:50. This year, 17:50 hours.
15:15 - 15:16
That's awesome. Yeah.
15:16 - 15:18
And that's just outside, outside, anywhere.
15:18 - 15:24
Outside, anywhere. Like walking the dog, sleeping overnight, anything that's sleeping out under the stars or
15:24 - 15:24
That's a great idea.
15:24 - 15:27
And to get a badge or a crest or a sticker or something for you.
15:27 - 15:28
They should, they should do that.
15:28 - 15:32
I would would pay to say 17:50 hours outside this year. Absolutely.
15:32 - 15:35
Here's here's your gold star. Yeah. Cool.
15:36 - 15:39
So so my brain refuses to let go.
15:39 - 15:41
I know you're outdoors a whole bunch.
15:42 - 15:51
As far as, like, sort of tripping, whether whether it's in a tent overnight or a 3 day or an 8 day or what?
15:51 - 15:56
Like, what what's what's what's a what's a season look like for you?
15:56 - 15:59
I start my season, well, it never really ends.
15:59 - 16:02
I try to go out at least once a month even through the winter months. Sweet.
16:02 - 16:07
And the season really ramps up some time toward the end of April.
16:07 - 16:10
As soon as ice out hits is when I usually get on the water.
16:10 - 16:14
And before then, I'm doing more like drive in car camping situations.
16:15 - 16:18
By the time May rolls around, I'm doing a lot of weekend trips.
16:18 - 16:23
Usually, we'll do our first 10 day toward the end of June because we really like to fight with
16:23 - 16:28
mosquitoes, but it's also the best time for those good water levels for negotiating rapids.
16:28 - 16:32
And then the rest of the summer is filled with either beautiful weekend trips.
16:32 - 16:37
I do a lot of guiding on 3 day weekends because that's usually how the beginner trips work out.
16:37 - 16:43
And then trips for my self are usually 5 to 10 days depending on what what time I can get off
16:43 - 16:47
from my day job and, how much time we get to spend out in the woods.
16:47 - 16:50
And are you in a solo canoe or a tandem or
16:50 - 16:56
I love tandoming. I love being able to spend a lot of time with one other person and because
16:56 - 17:01
I have a lot of canoeing experience now, I usually get to embrace having a beginner paddler
17:01 - 17:05
with me, which is honestly my favorite thing because they get to learn a lot through the experience.
17:05 - 17:11
And seeing a beginner paddler at the beginning of a Friday compared to how they are at paddling
17:11 - 17:14
at the end of a Sunday is so joyous.
17:14 - 17:20
Like, being able to teach and see that real skill develop over just 3 days, it's awesome.
17:20 - 17:21
So gratifying, I'm guessing.
17:21 - 17:25
Yes. Normally, if I go out on beginner trips, I love when there's an uneven number of people
17:25 - 17:30
because then I get to spend the time soloing with my dog and they get to do some circles on
17:30 - 17:33
the lake and learn how to progress in the right direction.
17:33 - 17:34
So that's one my favorites.
17:34 - 17:40
And one of the funniest things that I've experienced with a beginner on a trip is one time in
17:40 - 17:46
the Kawartha Highlands, we had a pretty novice camper come out with us who was about to do a portage.
17:46 - 17:50
And so we sent him down the portage trail and said, it's about 500 meters.
17:50 - 17:53
You know what 500 meters feels like. Right?
17:53 - 17:59
But 500 meters, he was wearing, like, a 30 pound Kevlar in his pack, and he just went for it.
17:59 - 18:03
But the portaj trail ended up connecting into an ATV trail.
18:03 - 18:09
And if you're new, you don't know what 500 meters feels like. So we lost him. Totally lost him.
18:09 - 18:13
We very much freaked out because we got to the end of the portage, he's nowhere to be seen.
18:13 - 18:16
And we ended up having to walk another couple of kilometers, kilometers.
18:17 - 18:19
And then, we didn't end up finding him.
18:19 - 18:24
We went back to the beginning of the portage and sat there until he finally realized nobody
18:24 - 18:25
was coming and came back.
18:25 - 18:31
He carried a canoe in his pack, probably a kilometer and a half to 2 kilometers before he decided,
18:31 - 18:33
okay, I guess this is the end.
18:33 - 18:34
And then had to turn around.
18:34 - 18:35
And then had to turn
18:35 - 18:37
around. That's brutal. Wow.
18:38 - 18:45
We have so many, yeah, so many beginner stories or stories of people who are, like, mildly experienced
18:45 - 18:50
and get themselves into trouble because they haven't taken the courses or done the research
18:50 - 18:55
or gone out with people who are more experienced as their first time out there?
18:55 - 19:01
Yeah. I think the only time I've ever veered off the portage was an ATV trail in Kawartha Highlands
19:01 - 19:09
because it's the only place that we run into, that we have gone camping, that we've run into ATV trails.
19:09 - 19:17
And they look I mean, to see the tire tracks over here and over there, I don't know. Yep.
19:17 - 19:18
I don't know.
19:18 - 19:22
So yeah. But, thankfully, I only went and went, oh, this is feeling just stupid.
19:22 - 19:26
Like, it doesn't this doesn't feel like a portage anymore.
19:26 - 19:30
So we got we we lucked out better than a couple of kilometers.
19:31 - 19:37
We had a similar experience in Tomogamy last year where a group of friends came out and we said
19:37 - 19:40
to them at the beginning of the trip, okay, there's no rapids on this trip.
19:40 - 19:44
We were going across the Wawyaugama River and then we were connecting to the Obabeka.
19:44 - 19:46
And Obabaka connects to the sturgeon.
19:46 - 19:51
That was a lot of big words, but people from Tomogamy will be like, oh, that's where that is. Okay.
19:51 - 19:57
And where the Obabaka connects to the sturgeon is a giant waterfall called, I think Obabaka Falls.
19:57 - 20:03
It's beautiful and there is a portage to get around it that's unmarked, like most of the portages in Tomogamy.
20:03 - 20:07
Unfortunately, I got held up with a couple of the more experienced people because one of the
20:07 - 20:13
canoes had tipped over, and the newer people in the group ended up going first down this river.
20:13 - 20:15
And they got to the area of rapids.
20:15 - 20:23
They took a look at these, and one of them had been on that Sturgeon River trip, and she thought, okay. Yeah. We've done rapids before. This makes sense. Let's just go.
20:23 - 20:28
Let's just go are not the words you wanna hear when somebody is about to navigate rapids.
20:28 - 20:31
So they ended up going down the first set of rapids.
20:31 - 20:36
We got to the portage around the same time and thought, did they start the portage?
20:36 - 20:40
But there was no canoes there, no packs, no signs of footprints. So we kept going.
20:40 - 20:45
We got to the top of the same set of rapids and realized the only thing that they could have
20:45 - 20:47
done is gone down them.
20:47 - 20:55
So we very cautiously scout them, go down the set of rapids, and thank dog they were all sitting
20:55 - 20:57
at the bottom of the set of rapids.
20:57 - 21:01
Because the next set was a waterfall. Jesus. Yeah.
21:02 - 21:07
I heard stories later about how they almost went down that next set of rapids but decided that
21:07 - 21:10
one of them had remembered there's no rapids on this trip, we should wait.
21:10 - 21:17
And, thankfully we ended up bushwhacking into the Portage Trail that was running parallel to
21:17 - 21:19
the river and we found our campsite from there.
21:19 - 21:27
Okay. That would crap. That would be a bad thing. Oh my goodness. Social media. What
21:30 - 21:32
what do you what do you like about content creating?
21:32 - 21:34
What do you not like about content creating?
21:34 - 21:37
What are you what are you hoping to do with it?
21:37 - 21:38
That's a great question, Tim.
21:38 - 21:45
I got into doing social media more for myself at the beginning because I wanted to just have
21:45 - 21:47
somewhere to post about my outdoor experiences.
21:48 - 21:52
And when I started to gain a little bit of a following, I realized that this was my chance to
21:52 - 21:56
get people who identify differently involved in the outdoors.
21:57 - 22:01
So as a queer person, a non binary person, as a plus size person, these are representations
22:01 - 22:05
that aren't usually seen on social media, especially in the outdoor industry.
22:05 - 22:10
So being able to help be the face of that was my original motivation.
22:11 - 22:16
Fortunately and unfortunately for me, I've had some sponsors come in along the way or some brand
22:16 - 22:24
deals that have been fun to work with, but have also made social media feel more like work.
22:24 - 22:30
So I found myself this season, and it's winter at the time of this recording, and we're I I'm
22:30 - 22:35
not posting as frequently because of frequently because of a recent brand deal and suddenly
22:35 - 22:37
that switch went off where it felt like work.
22:37 - 22:42
And I'm hoping that I'll be able to re kindle my own enthusiasm for it when I start getting
22:42 - 22:45
out and doing more adventures through the winter and the spring.
22:45 - 22:47
Any plans for winter and spring?
22:47 - 22:51
I got some great New Year's plans coming up. Heck, yeah. Cool. Yeah.
22:51 - 22:58
Christina, camper Christina, along with a couple of her friends, and Evan Lefebvre and his partner,
22:58 - 22:59
Phoebe, are gonna come out.
22:59 - 23:06
We're gonna do a New Year's, at Silent Lake Provincial Park, and I'll be there until New Year's Day, I think.
23:06 - 23:13
And then through February, we're probably gonna go up to Algonquin, and do a Miu Lake experience there.
23:14 - 23:21
And then come April is probably sometime we'll be start planning for either the Cunanange or
23:21 - 23:24
the Du but we'll start planning for those trips in in April.
23:24 - 23:26
Watch the, so so at the time of this recording,
23:26 - 23:26
short
23:30 - 23:34
shortly before, before the end of December in 2023.
23:35 - 23:46
Flashback just shy of a year ago, I distinctly remember, both Sean Rowley and David Bain putting
23:46 - 23:52
posts out in I wanna say it was in early January, where they were both at New Lake winter camping,
23:53 - 23:56
and and I believe the quote was a river runs through it.
23:56 - 24:04
Because everything melted it rained on top of the snow and it caused it was just it was everybody's tents were just flooding.
24:04 - 24:04
Noted.
24:05 - 24:08
So much water. So watch out for that January thaw.
24:08 - 24:10
Alright. Go in in February then.
24:11 - 24:17
But not not the 20, is it 24th, 25th, 26th I think?
24:17 - 24:17
That's the
24:17 - 24:19
Outdoor Adventure Show just Alright, see there.
24:19 - 24:22
Because that's an important date. You bet. Oh my goodness, yes.
24:22 - 24:30
Because I'm planning like who is, oh, we're talk we we're talking to Christina and and she said,
24:30 - 24:39
yeah, I got people bugging me already about, are we gonna get have a get together? It's it's November, man. I don't know.
24:39 - 24:43
I'm I'm planning stuff for it, so I'm a bit like that.
24:43 - 24:45
Those are my people. Big planners.
24:45 - 24:50
Half of the excitement and the experience of getting into the backcountry is doing the planning.
24:50 - 24:53
Yes. The anticipation. So many people have said the same thing.
24:53 - 24:57
Anticipation and also the planning of the food, making sure that they're getting everything
24:57 - 25:02
on point and just having exactly what they need and tweaking from last year what they did.
25:02 - 25:06
And if you're a person who gets those winter blues or winter sad, then having those experiences
25:06 - 25:10
to look forward to on the horizon, it it really gets you through those darker months.
25:11 - 25:15
Yeah. For sure. And, well, and and, like, you're you're doing the research, which at least part
25:15 - 25:21
of the the world the way it is today is watching canoeing videos on YouTube.
25:21 - 25:23
That's not a bad way to spend a summer time.
25:23 - 25:26
You're saying as you get into YouTube, Tim? Okay. We'll try it.
25:26 - 25:29
So somebody's trying to justify their Saturday afternoon.
25:30 - 25:32
They're gonna edit that part out.
25:34 - 25:39
Yeah. Normally, he will be also planning where we're gonna be camping next summer right now,
25:39 - 25:42
only because February you have to get on. Yeah. Yeah.
25:42 - 25:45
Well, you you know, Ontario Parks. Yep. 5 months, man.
25:45 - 25:48
You gotta book it, especially especially car camping.
25:48 - 25:55
But the last, well, since the beginning of the pandemic, it it became like you couldn't even
25:55 - 25:58
slough off on doing backcountry booking within within a couple of months.
25:58 - 26:03
I remember that first year was like, what the holy mackerel, I don't have to book that one.
26:03 - 26:07
I mean, I tend to book the max that I can anyhow ahead of time.
26:07 - 26:07
Yeah.
26:07 - 26:17
But I was stunned at just how much the volume of, like like, passing people on portages. What's that all about?
26:17 - 26:18
In Algonquin, I know.
26:18 - 26:19
Oh my god.
26:19 - 26:24
We did, an Algonquin trip this year that was supposed to be from the very west end of Algonquin
26:24 - 26:26
all the way into the northeast side of Algonquin.
26:27 - 26:30
And we were excited because we would get to visit the real interior.
26:31 - 26:33
And not a lot of people make it to the real interior.
26:33 - 26:35
You might pass 1 or 2 people a day.
26:35 - 26:38
It's not like the edges of Algonquin, and they're so populated.
26:39 - 26:44
Unfortunately for us, one of our members of the group ended up feeling a little twinge in his
26:44 - 26:50
back, thankfully, on day 1, which meant that we got as far as we could into our day 1 trip.
26:50 - 26:51
And this was gonna be an epic trip.
26:51 - 26:59
This is like a 130 kilometers across the park, and 36 of them were supposed to be just portages. Epic, physically brutal trip.
26:59 - 27:02
So I'm glad he felt this twinge on day 1.
27:02 - 27:05
He made the executive decision to call it on day 1.
27:05 - 27:09
We could not make it across this, which was excellent because we had an out outfitter who was
27:09 - 27:13
shuttling our vehicle from the west side all the way to the east side the next day.
27:13 - 27:15
So we got to say, okay, Outfitter.
27:15 - 27:17
Don't pick up our car. We're gonna go back.
27:18 - 27:20
It took us 4 days to get out.
27:20 - 27:23
What took us one day to go in? Oh, my.
27:23 - 27:26
Injuries on the back in the backcountry are they are a real thing.
27:26 - 27:30
Well, the so the was it wilderness first aid? Mhmm.
27:30 - 27:33
It's it's high on my I like, I'm going to try to do it.
27:33 - 27:33
Go for it. Yeah.
27:33 - 27:38
The only thing is that I am not able to find it inside the GTA.
27:38 - 27:40
Barrie was the closest I could find it.
27:40 - 27:42
There's a company in Oshawa we can talk about later Okay. Cool.
27:42 - 27:43
That does them as well.
27:43 - 27:44
Okay.
27:44 - 27:45
That's it for us for today.
27:45 - 27:50
Thank you so much to our special guest, Riley outside from Instagram and TikTok.
27:50 - 27:53
And please do check them out and please do check us out.
27:53 - 27:54
We are on all the things.
27:54 - 27:56
We are on Instagram, YouTube.
27:56 - 27:58
We are actually on TikTok, but we don't post much.
27:58 - 28:01
And we are we are on all the things.
28:01 - 28:04
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28:04 - 28:08
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28:09 - 28:10
And we will talk to you again soon. Bye.
28:11 - 28:12
Bye. Bye.