Three days in the Five Ponds
Journal of a canoeist lost in a wilderness
idyll
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Photo by Gary Randorf |
The Oswegatchie River |
By Brian Mann
Since coming to the Adirondacks, I’ve
been hearing about the classic canoe route that begins on the Bog
River Flow and winds through the Five Ponds Wilderness toward Cranberry
Lake. This section of the Park contains some of the most remote
forests and rivers in the East. Some conservation groups, including
the Sierra Club and the Adirondack Council, say it should form the
heart of a massive Great Oswegatchie Wilderness. One spring weekend,
I checked it out myself on a three-day trip with David Sommerstein,
a colleague at North Country Public Radio.
DAY ONE
Driving down the gravel road past Horseshoe Lake, the morning seems
handmade. It’s just warm enough that we can rest our elbows
out the open windows of the truck, but cool enough that there’s
not a black fly or a mosquito in sight. My partner is new to the
North Country, new to paddling in the Adirondacks. For two weeks
we’ve been swapping excited e-mails and phone calls, working
out the details of our escape. Now it’s Friday morning, and
ahead of us lies a long weekend, a pristine lake, and a pair of
winding rivers.
We’re heading for the Bog River, which
will take us west through Lows Lake. Then we’ll face the
long carry to the headwaters of the Oswegatchie River. After that
we’ll follow the river, curving north toward Cranberry Lake.
In all, we’ll canoe and hike through 50 miles of wilderness,
country that Paul Jamieson, the canoe guidebook author, called
“a picture gallery of the North Woods.”
The put-in is a strip of muddy beach at
Lower Lows Dam. The confinement was first built by millionaire
August Low in the late 1800s to generate electricity for his camp
and his various industries. The dam also created one of the finest
stretches of flat water in the Adirondacks, famous for loons and
pristine views. After loading the canoe, we’re off, sliding
upstream against the soft current. Almost at once we are surrounded
by compositions of fern and rock and dark water. I stroke easily
in the stern, listening to the rich variety of bird calls. My
eye catches on the steepling white pines and the vivid, mottled
mosses.
Here’s a little secret, something
David doesn’t know. I’m a lousy outdoorsman. Well,
not lousy, maybe, but definitely forgetful. I see a view or a
plant and I get so ab-sorbed that I forget everything else. First
thing you know I’ve lost the tent poles or the map or the
trail. This morning, I pause to write happily in my journal about
loon cries and the white-blossoming shad along the shore. What
I’m forgetting is wind. Lows Lake, 11 miles long, is famous
for sudden zephyrs that tip canoes and swamp guideboats. I’ve
read the warnings and should be paying attention, but at midday
we’re only halfway up the lake and there’s already
a stiff headwind. Nasty curls of white sweep around the boat as
our bow lifts and drops with a frightening thud. We dig and fight
to keep our direction, as the water turns slate gray and the clouds
scud past.
Fortunately, I’ve done a bit of research
and know to keep to the north shore, where it’s possible
to hide behind a pair of T-shaped juts of land. Paddling in the
lee of these peninsulas, we work our way slowly to the west end
of the lake. “I was a little nervous when the waves looked
like they were about to start coming in the boat,” David
confides later. “We slogged through it, though, out on that
wide, open water.”
All my life I’ve wanted to be the
sort of woodsman who doesn’t slog, who doesn’t trip
over his own two feet, but I love being out there so much that I
often get distracted. Maybe that’s why Verplanck Colvin, who
first explored this country in the 1800s, once wrote that a good
map sometimes gives a better sense of a place than a firsthand look.
A map, he said, is a collection of ideas.
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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That night––after the first short
carry––we camp at Big Deer Pond. Finally, I start to
slow down. I stop writing in my journal. I stop rubbernecking. David
and I just sit for a while, listening to the chirruping frogs and
the wind.
DAY TWO
Here’s the thing about maps. On a piece of paper, the crossing
from Lows Lake to the Oswegatchie River looks harmless. It’s
a few inches of delicate blue lines. On some level, I understand
that it’s really a matter of miles. I understand that the
boat and all our gear have to be lifted on our backs and carried
through a tangle of witchhobble and alder. This area—known
as the Five Ponds Wilderness—was hit in 1995 by a huge windstorm.
Swaths of mighty pine and hemlock were tossed around like Lincoln
Logs. Helicopters were used to evacuate fishermen and campers. As
we struggle along, the forest is a gray snarl of snapped timber.
“It’s just all chopped right off,” David says,
pausing to catch his breath, “like someone took a huge weed-whacker
and cut everything right off.”
It’s sort of surreal, stumbling along
in the middle of a wrecked forest, no water anywhere in sight,
carrying a bright-red 16-foot Kevlar canoe. But finally, after
four hours on the trail, we come to the upper reaches of the Oswegatchie.
Last winter, I came home from skiing with a bruise so big that
my wife took a picture of it. The whole time, she looked at me
with that expression, that ‘’Why do you do it to yourself?’’
look. Standing by the amber water of the river, I think: This
is why. This, right here. The rest of that morning, we play. We
paddle the tightest oxbows in the world, ducking under white pine
logs, scrambling over beaver dams. We lift the boat a dozen times,
splashing waist-deep in the frosty stream, calling out to each
other: “Hold up just a sec!” “Can you make it
there?” “Whoo!”
This part I am good at. Heaving, pulling the
boat, balancing barefoot on logs, spooking beaver and river otters
with our gleeful shouts. It’s Huckleberry Finn stuff, not
outdoorsmanship. There’s a late lunch, eaten while sprawled
out in a meadow above the river. “The black ribbon of the
Oswegatchie,” David says, waxing poetic as he munches on a
carrot. “It just goes back and forth and back and forth. The
water’s so clear but in this sort of tea-brown way. The white
pines that stick up, sort of scraping the sky, are really nice.”
The day is cloudless and mild. It lures
us on. We paddle until midafternoon. Then, after setting up camp,
we head off on the trail that leads south into the heart of the
Five Ponds Wilderness, to Big Shallow Pond and Washbowl. We hike
along dazzling creeks, tiptoe through sucking bogs, scramble up
hills so steep that trillium and trout lilies are at eye level.
We march until fatigue makes us giddy. And then farther until
we’re still and somber, as if measuring ourselves against
the silence of the forest.
There’s no more iconic spot in the
Adirondacks than the log lean-to at Big Shallow Pond. We pause
to rest as the late afternoon sun slants across the water, not
so much lighting the grassy meadow as filling it with color. How
serene it is. How far from civilization. “There’s
just a good stretch of nothing,” David remarks.
This is what we’ve come for. A good
stretch of nothing. Bob Marshall, the legendary conservationist,
defined a wilderness as an undisturbed place large enough so that
you can walk across it for three days. Here you can feel the space.
You can feel it in the ache in your bones.
DAY THREE
In the morning, we wake up to find a thin crust of ice covering
our tent. David cooks breakfast, pancakes this time. When we’ve
eaten and cleaned up, it’s time to go swimming. High Falls
is a wonderful cascade that divides the Oswegatchie neatly in half.
The jumble of rocks is just big enough to boil up a good flume.
Right in the middle, there’s a perfect, ice-cold swimming
hole. We leap in and feel the current snatch our breath away, leaving
just enough wind for long, coyote howls.
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Photo by Brian Mann |
| David Sommerstein takes a break during
the carry to the Oswegatchie. |
A half-dozen times, we dive in and let the
water draw us over the first smooth rocks. Then we crawl out and
nap in the morning sun. Our final day seems to evaporate. The hours
dissolve as we pack up and paddle away downstream.
As we slip past Glasby Creek and Buck Brook,
the growing river does more of the work, taking over for our aching
backs. The payoff for our long carry seems more and more generous.
The headwind on Lows Lake seems a distant hardship. We pause as
a run of trout streams under the boat, wave after wave of glinting
life. Then we rattle clumsily down through Griffin Rapids, out into
a broad valley, thick with alders, busy with redwing blackbirds.
Soon we come to High Rock, the last place to get a lookout before
the trip is done. From here, after scrambling up the pine-scented
path, you can see how the river turns and twists. It looks like
a child took a finger and traced a crazy path through the russet
meadow.
“I’m amazed,” David
says. “Coming through these oxbows, the wilderness looks so
vast. It looks like this valley goes on forever. But then you get
up here and it looks sort of manageable.”
An easy couple of hours from the takeout,
it does seem manageable. It feels like we could fold it all away––the
river and the low hills and the distant ponds––and put
it in a pocket. Maybe that’s what Colvin meant with his talk
of maps. Not just a few lines or markings on a piece of paper, but
a living collection of ideas: the memories of smells and sounds,
the intimate sense of distance and rugged earth, and the perfect
joy of passing through it.
Reporter Brian Mann covers the
Adirondacks for North Country Public Radio. |