Category: Lake superior Provincial Park

Noisy Bay Hike

August 21, 2025 

It was a beautiful sunny morning. Still sore from previous hikes, it was just too nice a day to sit around. We opted for Noisy Bay, not too far from us. It is a 3-mile out-and-back hike rated moderate that takes from 1.5-3 hours. There is a 500’ elevation change. 

Like our other hikes, you need to watch every step. Look up and you are likely to trip, and one stretch goes over a boulder field. The forest is pretty, and soon the trail met up with a rushing stream. After the boulder field, we came out on Noisy Bay. It is a round-rock beach with the rushing river emptying into the bay, thus the name. 

Like all of our views of Lake Superior, the water was crystal clear. It is a beautiful spot with no boats in sight. We sat for a bit before heading back. For us, it was an hour in and an hour back out. I was soaked in sweat when we got to the car. It was about 75 degrees with a lot of humidity. 

Back at camp we had to move sites for the second time here, but we were pretty efficient with it, and we like our new site. We had lunch and Martha took the kayak out for a spin. I was going after her, but we had started a wash, so I went up to move them to the dryer. We had talked to nice fellow when we loaded the wash. On my way back up, I passed him, and he said he had moved ours to the dryer since  there was a little time left on the dryer. Nice!

I set up the Cobb Cooker and started the charcoal while Martha fixed a cube steak with cut up potatoes and peas wrapped in foil. It was very good and made for easy cleanup. 

In keeping with signs on the trails, our chipmunk left footprints and droppings on our picnic table..

Kayak Rabbit Blanket Lake

August 20, 2025 

A couple of campsites up, I talked to a nice gentleman with a cool bike. Some people think I am crazy to camp and travel with an Airstream. Maybe, but it’s a whole different level when one travels on a motorcycle, carrying a tent, sleeping bag, rain gear, food and more. Wearing a Dalhousie University shirt, he said he used to ride dirt bikes, and this bike is in between a dirt bike and a road bike. 

It has five different modes; tour, urban, gravel, off-road, user-1, user-2. It has cruise control and even CarPlay. He had a bracket for his phone, but there is also a computer screen showing his route. He said bikes like this are developed for a race in Europe. Very cool indeed!

We got the kayak down and I went fishing on Rabbit Blanket Lake for a couple of hours. No luck after trying 5 trout spinning lures and a beetle spin. It is a shallow lake with cool water, but it has a lot of grass in it. In Virginia I consider grass as a sign of too much fertilizer in a stream, but that is not likely here. Martha had bought a rod holder for me, which fit into a slot on either side of the boat. I even tried trolling with the rod in the holder.

I turned it over to Martha, who took it for a spin around the lake, After all this walking, it felt good to do something different, and it is a pretty lake in a province that has 250,000 lakes, accounting for 20% of the world’s fresh water supply!

Nokomis Trail

August 17, 2025

August 17, 2025 

47 degree low; high 66

I went outside at 4am to see the stars and took 4 iPhone pictures while lying on the picnic table. I have no idea what this is.

We were sore and tired from hiking, but it was going to be a sunny day in the 60’s – perfect for a hike. Martha made a hearty breakfast scramble with eggs, bacon, onions, peppers and left over french fries and toast. 

I glanced up and saw a beautiful red fox trotting past the trailer, up a little bank and stopped to poop. I quickly grabbed my phone, but he was gone. What’s with the pooping on our site?

We set off to the Nakomis Trail at Old Woman Bay. Some of you with great memories may recall that Nakomis was Hiawatha’s grandmother, who raised him. 

From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokomis

Nokomis is the name of Nanabozho‘s grandmother in the Ojibwe traditional stories and was the name of Hiawatha‘s grandmother in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow‘s poem, The Song of Hiawatha, which is a re-telling of the Nanabozho stories. Nokomis is an important character in the poem, mentioned in the familiar lines:

By the shores of Gitche Gumee,

By the shining Big-Seawater

Stood the wigwam of Nokomis

Daughter of the moon Nokomis.

Dark behind it rose the forest

Rose the black and gloomy pine-trees

Rose the firs with cones upon them

Bright before it beat the water

Beat the clear and sunny water

Beat the shining Big-Sea-Water.

According to the poem, From the full moon fell Nokomis/Fell the beautiful Nokomis. She bears a daughter, Wenonah. Despite Nokomis’ warnings, Wenonah allows herself to be seduced by the West-Wind, Mudjekeewis, Till she bore a son in sorrow/Bore a son of love and sorrow/Thus was born my Hiawatha.

Abandoned by the heartless Mudjekeewis, Wenonah dies in childbirth, leaving Hiawatha to be raised by Nokomis. The wrinkled old Nokomis/Nursed the little Hiawatha and educates him.

From https://www.flickriver.com/photos/snuffy/253269079/

The Nokomis Trail is a 3 mile loop rated moderate taking 1.5 – 3 hours. We figured we could walk 3 miles. The clue was the 3 hours. It is a loop trail taking you up a mountain to beautiful views of Old Woman Bay. We walked it counter-clockwise, which proved to be a good guess. Starting the hike was a round-rock trail through a pretty forest, but you had to stop to look around. There was a lot of reindeer lichen, which woodland caribou love to eat. Unfortunately, they are no longer here, as the wolves and humans have taken their toll. 

The path changed to dirt for a steady climb, then to rocks until we climbed to the top for an outlook on a huge boulder. We could see Old Woman Bay, the river and the Trans-Canada highway. On the way down there were two more overlooks and places that looked like filming of “The Last of the Mohicans.”  The trail turned very steep going down, so we had to turn around like climbing down a ladder. We were coming down a long, steep stretch and I took a fall. I guess it is part of getting older, but all along I thought about all those hard, sharp rocks and the damage they could do if you slipped or fell. I was coming down, almost to the bottom when Martha reversed her direction. Trying not to run into her, I took a bad step and tumbled to land on my back. Very fortunately, there was no damage. My backpack saved me as there was a sharp rock underneath it. Whew!

I must say I admire the Canadian way of “swim at your own risk.” Hike at your own risk, look over a waterfall at your own risk, or just no sign at all, but you go at your own risk. I like that.

We took 2.5 hours to do the hike, including stops at all the overlook and 10 minutes for Martha to retrieve my hat after I fell. Martha rated the hike a 3.5/5.0 because of all the rocks, but all the young people just frolicked up and down the mountain, and the views are spectacular. A couple of young guys greeted us at the first overlook and Martha said, “I’ll trade you my legs for yours,” and one replied, “I’ll trade for your wisdom.” That brought a smile to her face. We saw our first snake on the trail, but it was going too fast to identify it.

I could have fished the lake in Rabbit Blanket, but the wind was blowing pretty good and I had no legs to hike down the river. Maybe tomorrow.

South Old Woman River Trail

August 16, 2025 at 4:47 PM

Opting for an easy hike this morning, we chose the South Old Woman River Trail, rated 4.4 and easy. My hip was sore from the last few days hiking, so easy for an hour and a half sounded good. The hike starts across 17 from the campground, so we walked from the campsite. 

Reproducing Kelly’s picture of the Trans-Canada Highway

The South Old Woman River flows out of Rabbit Blanket Lake, under 17, the Trans-Canada Highway. I was anxious to see it. Darkness took over as we entered the forest. Trees sent roots everywhere, across the path, over rocks and into pools of water. Frogs and chipmunks greeted us at every turn. When we didn’t see them, we saw where Squirrels or chipmunks had eaten, leaving shells from seeds covering the path or tree stumps. 

There were holes all over the place, leading to where I don’t know, but I was cautious stepping between roots where my foot might go through to God knows where. Who lived in all those holes? Chipmunks? Squirrels? Some were big, and stepping around them made a hollow sound. Were there underground tunnels? Several were huge, where bears might sleep. I decided this was a forest where gnomes might live. 

The river is gorgeous, whether you are a fisherman or not. It is tea-stained so I couldn’t see any fish, but it is cold water, and I know they are there, because the sign said this was great brook trout fishing. It was so hard to step between all these roots and still get a look at the stream. Make a bad step into a gnome’s hole and you might sink to your hip. 

We crossed the stream several times, but one was rather threatening. Huge boulders with flat tops led across the rushing river, but first we had to sit on our buts and slide our foot to a sharp-angled rock and then climb up the the first flat boulder. A mistake there and it’s trouble, especially for people in their late 70’s. 

The trail makes a lollipop loop at the top so we can see a beautiful waterfall plunging into a big pool below. I was picking my spots to fish….if I could get to them. It was tough conditions to fish, but that might mean there were lots of wily Brook Trout.

At the end of the lollipop loop, we stepped cautiously back toward our origin. I took pictures of plants and flowers on “PictureThis” app, to determine what they were, but I had no cell service – another reason to think there were gnomes here. I love the app, because it identifies the plant and tells you if it is edible or medicinal or just pretty, or you want to plant in your yard. Some were poisonous to people and pets, but then I have never seen a Labrador retriever eat red berries or mushrooms.

I was soaked in sweat when we got back from this easy hike rated 4.4, but right off the bat, I would rate it a 5.0, moderate. It is so unique and travels next to a gorgeous trout stream that is difficult or impossible to fish, which just piques the imagination. And then there are the gnomes living in those holes, a rushing stream underground that you can’t see, but only hear, and trees growing right on top of giant boulders.

Probably someone’s dog, but they don’t allow dogs on the trails and there are no claws on the prints
Moose poop, like chocolate-covered almonds

After a shower and lunch, we drove 33 miles to Wawa, one, to see this beautiful country of one gorgeous lake after another, and beautiful, rushing rivers feeding into Lake Superior. The other was we needed propane, and to fill up with gas.

We stopped at the mouth of the Old Woman River where Kelly caught two beautiful steelhead 12 years ago. People were sitting on the beach eating lunch and enjoying the scenery. I remember walking upstream past Kelly, across a little peninsula and seeing tracks and scat that made me realize we were not in Kansas any more. I made a quick retreat back, where Kelly was trying to protect his two fish from ravens trying to steal them. 

I peered around the corner to see the rivers. It wasn’t rushing so hard, but giant trees were strewn across sandbars just to let you know how powerful this river can be.

We came to Wawa, which is more like an outpost on the edge of a frontier. Businesses had come and gone, yet the town of 2,000 pushes on. Carvings of giant Canada Geese are the trademark of the town. This is a place to stock up and fuel up before heading out into the wild to fish, hunt, photograph or explore. It is nice to know there still are such places, making me wish I was younger.

The only propane refill place in town is not open on weekends. With all these campers and cabins, I can’t believe we couldn’t find propane on a Saturday. We have another tank, so it isn’t urgent, so we’ll come back next week. We drove through town to find Silver Falls on the Michipicoten River. We continued up a wide, well-maintained gravel road to find Long Beach. We didn’t go down, but we could see people swimming and having a big time on a cool 68 degree day.

Silver Falls
Overlook of Long Beach, Lake Superior

Back at camp we opened a bottle of wine, built a fire and cooked hamburgers over it. Maybe tomorrow maybe we’ll go see the pictographs.

New trick I discovered for writing the blog. All HEIC pictures from iPhone have to be converted to JPEG before I can upload them to WordPress. A video, (https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=what+is+the+best+way+to+convert+HEIC+pictures+in+bulk+to+JPEGs&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:f315e512,vid:WQcYYPJ8NFo,st:64) told me to go to Photoshop, File, Scripts, Image processor. Then select the folder where you want the pictures, check save to same folder, choose the quality you want and the format – JPEG, push Run. The second time is much faster since the same settings come up. Just change the folder. Saves a LOT of time.

Lake Superior Provincial Park

Checkout wasn’t until 2:00, so we took an “easy” hike from the campground through a forest, then across a fen. Martha explained to me the difference between a bog and a fen. Water doesn’t move in a bog, but does in a fen. I wore my bug shirt this time, and the mosquitoes were sure trying to get in. The problem is you get hotter. It would be much more comfortable in shorts and a t-shirt, but that is not an option. 

Back at camp we fixed lunch. I watched two guys across from us pull their big all-one-unit camper out of their site and run into a tree and the post marking the site. It was hard to watch. Then they backed up and did it again! I moved my truck so they could pull across, back up and have a straight shot out. They knocked off a tool box on the side, and I’m sure scratched up the shell. The site was at a 45 degree angle the wrong direction for a one-way road, but still…! It made me very nervous to hook up and get out safely, but thankfully, we made it. 

The drive from Pancake Bay to Rabbit Blanket in Lake Superior Provincial Park is only an hour and 15 minutes, but there are beautiful views of the biggest fresh water lake in the world. We stopped at two overlooks to see such clear water, we could see all the different colored rocks on the bottom.

I talked to a man in a big, old Class A camper – the kind you drive. It looked like it had been around the block a few times. He said it was a 1991, and they were just coming back from a trip into the Yukon. When he started the big diesel, it sounded great! I gave him the thumbs up as he pulled out.

At the next overlook we met a man who was riding a bike across Canada all dressed in pink. It has taken him 10 years, but this trip will take him to Toronto, which is a bit less than 900 miles from here! He had his campsite reserved, and was ready to get to it on his new Trek bike. To do this and carry clothes for all kinds of conditions and camping gear and food and water adds up to a lot of weight. You might guess this is flat land, but it is very hilly with small mountains. 

We passed so many beautiful rivers and lakes beckoning us to come float and explore. We stopped at the Lake Superior Provincial Park Visitor’s center, taking in all the exhibits. Then on to Rabbit Blanket, a very nice campground on a very pretty lake. We walked around to explore before returning to our site, which by the way had fresh bear poop and black fur right behind where we parked the trailer. 

Gear: Candle lighter. I love this thing. It is a rechargeable candle lighter. I love sitting by candle light, writing in the early hours. I also light the stove with it so I don’t wake Martha with the loud stove clicker. Disclaimer: I make no money from this blog.

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