Read Alone Against the North Online
Authors: Adam Shoalts
Elson had spent his youth honing his knowledge and skills when, in 1903, he was recruited by a couple of American explorersâLeonidas Hubbard and Dillon Wallaceâfor an expedition into the heart of uncharted Labrador. Elson was asked to meet his new companions in New York City. Despite never having seen a city before, Elson travelled over sixteen hundred kilometres to reach New York City alone, and arrived unfazed in what was, to the James Bay Cree, unexplored territory. Like his European counterparts, he too would return to his own community with new knowledge of strange places and peoples. With Hubbard and Wallace, Elson set out for the interior of Labradorâa place equally mysterious and unknown to all three men. In the mountainous interior of Labrador,
Elson emerged as the real leader of the expedition. Wallace wrote of him: “I do not believe that in all the north country we could have found a better woodsman. But he was something more than a woodsmanâhe was a hero.” Conditions in Labrador proved to be so difficult that even with Elson's superb skills, the trio faced a grim death from starvation as the winter closed in on them. Hubbard eventually succumbed, while Wallace grew too weak to move. With almost superhuman strength and against great odds, Elson managed to stagger back through snowdrifts to reach Grand Lake in central Labrador. Ever resourceful, he built a raft to traverse the lake and reach the nearest trapper's cabin, finding help for the ailing Wallace. As if this adventure hadn't been remarkable enough, two years later, Elson returned to Labrador with Hubbard's iron-willed widow, Mina, who insisted on finishing the expedition her husband had died attempting. Together, they triumphantly finished what Leonidas had started. Afterwards, Elson returned to James Bay, married a Cree woman, and lived out his days as a hero of exploration.
The Sutton River was as beautiful a stream in the Hudson Bay Lowlands as I had ever seenâmuch prettier than the swampy waterways I had been navigating the past number of years. Its shallow waters were clear as crystal. The upper stretch had high sandbanks, which looked like dunes one would expect on a beach rather than a subarctic river. Waterfowl was everywhere: ducklings and goslings swam in procession after their parents, while terns, gulls, and plovers hopped along the muddy, pebbly shorelines. Perched in the spruces and tamaracks growing along the grassy banks were enormous bald eagles, which
feasted on the river's abundant brook trout. At first glance, it appeared to be a pristine wilderness untouched by humans. But upon closer inspection, signs of human use were evident. There were past campsites on favourable river bends, even a few old cabins built by Cree trappers, and the attendant litter from these sites. This was something I had learned years agoâthat generally speaking, a river, no matter how far-flung, if used by humans, will retain signs of their presence. I could only wonder if on the nameless river we were seeking we would find any evidence that people had been there previously. Of course, whether someone had or had not been there before was only of consequence to me personally; it had no bearing on our objective for the Geographical Society, which was to record the river through photographs, film, mapping, and a detailed written description.
The Sutton River, for most of its course, was about eighty metres wide. Small rapids, little more than undulating swifts of rushing water around boulders, appeared in the river with increasing frequency as we journeyed onward. Just as we neared the first sizable rapid, a caribou dashed through the shallows near the far shore. For a moment, as we drifted into the whitewater, it looked as if this rather pugnacious caribou had a mind to charge us.
“Do caribou charge people?” asked Brent, staring suspiciously at the animal's impressive antlers.
“Not to my knowledge,” I replied, while steering the canoe around an oncoming boulder.
“This one looks like it might want to,” Brent said anxiously. The big caribou was directly facing us, no more than thirty metres away, standing in ankle-deep water.
Suddenly the canoe banged into an unseen boulder beneath the surface, jarring us sideways in the current. “Oh! There's a rock!” exclaimed Brent, turning from the staring caribou.
“I noticed.”
“My bad,” replied Brent. As the bowman, it was his job to keep an eye out for rocks, while I piloted us around them from the stern.
The caribou remained watching us as we drifted closer to the shallows near the river bend it occupied. I cautiously paddled us forward. Then, just as the caribou appeared ready to charge through the shallow water at our canoe, it pivoted sideways and struck a pose. It stood statue-like in the water, looking rather vainglorious.
“I think it's interested in pursuing a modelling career with
Canadian Geographic
,” remarked Brent. We photographed the caribou for several minutes while it stood striking poses in the river. Then abruptly it dashed off along the river's edge, before disappearing into the alder bushes onshore.
We soon stopped on a treeless, grassy island in the river to gather tiny but delicious wild strawberries. The intensity of the blackflies, which only breed in running water and which the Sutton amply provided, prevented the moment from becoming too idyllic. As well, unfortunately Brent was sick with a cold he had been battling for a few days before we arrived. And I now felt I was picking up his illness: my throat was sore, my nose was stuffed up, and I was developing a headache. But my love of wildernessâmy delight at discovering what lay beyond each river bendâthe expectation of glimpsing another eagle swooping down to capture a trout or duckling in its talons or a beaver
slapping its tail on the water to warn others that intruders were approachingâkept my spirits high. Brent too, despite his cold, seemed to be enjoying himself and took readily to photographing wildlife. The journey thus far wasn't overly difficult: paddling the river was fairly easyâthough my back was still sore and my mangled thumb ached horribly. Frequently we were forced to get out of the canoe and wade through shallow stretches. This, however, was no real danger even this far north, so long as the weather remained warm and sunny. Otherwise hypothermia, which kills more people in North America's wilderness than all deaths by wild animals combined, could prove a hazard. As it was, our first few days canoeing the Sutton were as tranquil as could be expected in the Hudson Bay Lowlands.
Indeed, seldom in the history of exploration has anything proved as bleak and deadly as the inhospitable Lowlands was to early explorers. If even aboriginal people regarded the Lowlands as “sterile country,” unfit for permanent habitation, one can only imagine what the first Europeans made of the place. Mortality rates on early expeditions to the Lowlands were astoundingly high. The first European explorers had reached the Lowlands by ship. They sailed across the North Atlantic, through Hudson Strait, into the uncharted immensity of Hudson Bay, and worked their way down to what is the Bay's southwestern coastline. They had come seeking a northwest passage to Asia that wasn't to be found.
The first of these pioneering mariners was the English navigator Henry Hudson, who arrived on the body of water that now bears his name in the spring of 1611 on-board his ship, the
Discovery
. He wintered on the more hospitable eastern shore of James Bay, which unlike the Lowlands of the western coast is not
swampy and therefore has much better stands of timber, essential for surviving long winters. The following spring, however, Hudson's crew mutinied when he announced his intention to push on westward. Hudson, along with his son and seven other loyal retainers were cruelly set adrift in a tiny lifeboat on James Bay. They were never seen again and probably perished somewhere on James Bay's windswept coast. Of the thirteen mutineers, only eight made it back to England alive.
Eight years later, in 1619, the resourceful and talented Scandinavian explorer Jens Munk sailed into Hudson Bay in the service of the Danish king, with sixty-three men under his command. They wintered on the bleak coastline near the northern reaches of the Lowlands, building squalid shelters to survive in. As the unforgiving winter dragged on, men began to drop like flies from scurvy, a horrendous disease brought on by a lack of vitamin C. No aboriginal people were to be found anywhereâthough on a trek inland, Munk and his men found a pictograph drawn on a rock that depicted what they thought was the devil. Truly, it must have seemed as if they had strayed into some northern hell. By the time the ice melted in spring, only three of the original sixty-four men were left alive. Incredibly, Munk, who had survived the punishing winter along with two other weakened crew members, managed to sail his ship home to Denmark, an astonishing feat of seamanship.
For aboriginal people, the Lowlands was a place where starvation was a fact of life. English explorer Charles Bayly, who sailed into James Bay in 1674, reported starvation among “Indians” near the mouth of the Ekwan River, on the Bay's western shore. Bayly observed that the natives seldom ventured
into the Lowlands and spent the winters far in the interior, away from the swamps. Other explorers, when they chanced to encounter anyone at all, witnessed similar cases of starvation. Life in the Lowlands was, as Bayly's contemporary Thomas Hobbes would have put it, “nasty, brutish, and short.” Making conditions even more extreme during this era of exploration was the so-called Little Ice Age, a climatic anomaly that saw the northern hemisphere's average temperature drop several degrees from the fourteenth through the mid-nineteenth centuries. Even the Lowlands' brief summers brought no reliefâmany explorers found the incessant attacks of mosquitoes and blackflies worse than the torments of winter. The bloodsucking insects literally drove men mad. Suicide was common at the fur trade forts built at the mouths of the Lowlands' major rivers, namely the Severn, Albany, and Moose.
ONE EVENING
, after a week in the wilderness, preoccupied with rigging up a tarp between some stunted spruce trees to keep off the rain, I dispatched Brent to gather firewood. He took my hatchet and headed off into the shadowy forest that sprang up some twenty metres beyond the treeless, grassy riverbanks. Off in the woods, I could soon hear him chopping up a storm. “Well that's good,” I thought to myself. “Brent seems to be getting the hang of this.”
A good fifteen minutes later, Brent emerged from the woods, triumphantly dragging a sizable tamarack tree behind him. In despair, I saw that he had chopped down a live tree.
“Brent,” I said incredulously. “That's not a dead tree, it won't burn.”
“Oh, it
will
burn,” replied Brent confidently.
“No,” I said quietly, “green wood doesn't burn.” Though I said nothing more, I was mystified by how Brent, after a week in the wilderness, hadn't absorbed the simple lesson that only dry, dead wood goes into a fire. He had, after all, seen and to some extent helped me make fires and cook our meals twice a day for the past week. Sensing his frustration at having exerted himself pointlessly, I tried to soften his disappointment.
“You did do a good job chopping down that tamarack,” I said light-heartedly. “Maybe we can use it as a pole to help hoist up that side of the tarp.”
“I'm useless here,” Brent mumbled, discouraged.
“Not at all,” I said. “You've been doing well in the canoe. You have excellent balance, and you paddle as well as Wes.”
“Really?” Brent shrugged modestly. It was one of his most likeable traits that even when he had been the best player on our hockey team, he never boasted of his talents. He was invariably self-effacing.
We headed back into the swamp forest to look for some proper firewood, pushing past tamaracks and black spruce.
“It's so quiet here, it gets on my nerves,” Brent whispered as he stared at the crooked, moss-draped trees. He was experiencing what Theodore Roosevelt referred to as “the perfect silence so strange and almost oppressive to the novice” that comes with northern wilderness.
“At least, we're from the countryside,” I said as I stripped some dead branches from a spruce. “Imagine how much of a shock it'd be for someone from a city to be out here. Whenever I go to a city, I can't get over the noise.”
“You say that as if a city is the most horrible thing in the world.”
“To me it is,” I shuddered. “Nothing horrifies me more than the thought of a place without wilderness.”
“Nothing horrifies me more than wilderness,” Brent muttered.
When I looked at the forest, I saw a fascinating place full of enchantment and wonder. Brent saw only a grim, alien environment.
That night, as we lay huddled in our sleeping bags inside the tent, a growling noise arose from somewhere in the darkness. I bolted upright and reached for my knife. My heartbeat quickened. Brent was asleep next to me.
“Brent,” I whispered, nudging him. “Did you hear that?”
He mumbled inaudibly.
“Brent, I heard something growl outside.”
“What?” he hissed back, now awake.
“Yeah, itâwait, there it is again.”
Brent looked over at me. “That's my stomach.”
“What?”
“That growling is my stomach.”
“Are you kidding me?”
“No. That macaroni and cheese isn't cutting it for me anymore. Do we have any midnight snacks?”
As a rule, we never kept food inside the tent. Any food, even the wrapper of a granola bar, could attract black bears, which have a remarkably keen sense of smell. While plenty of black bears were around, we were still outside the nominal range of polar bears, which typically remain near the seacoast. I crawled
outside the tent in the darkness to fetch one of our plastic food containers, in order to find some granola bars for Brent. Against my better judgment, I allowed him to eat them in the tent, since he complained that it was too cold to get out of his sleeping bag. Thinking his borrowed sleeping bag wasn't quite as warm as mine, I gave him my extra sweater. At night, the temperature had been dipping down to about two or three degrees Celsius.