French River Kayak Trip

by Fred Somerville

Recently some fellow kayakers and myself decided to do a trip on the French River. This was always a destination trip for us so we finally decided to make the plunge. We had already done various other Georgian Bay locations such as the Minks and McCoy’s, the Key River to the Bustards, Sandy/Bateau Island, etc., so we had some experience in that general vicinity.

Our adventure started out rather poorly because our decision to drive north out of Toronto on a Friday evening in August. This proved to be a big mistake. The traffic was horrendous and we ended up pitching our tents just off the highway near Parry Sound very late into the night. Some folks just decided to sleep in the cars. We all know how much fun that is!

Our fortunes turned for the better the next day with warm sunny weather as we arrived at Hartley Bay. After all the paperwork was completed we departed without further incident.

The French River at Hartley Bay is quite wide without much current. We decided to venture down what was considered an old Voyageur Route to the West. Anyone who does this route needs a good chart and lots of “horse sense” to follow it. We travelled through some very narrow sections indeed, with a few small carryovers. The scenery was absolutely outstanding!

For paddlers who have travelled the Georgian Bay area before, as we had, the country was similar yet strangely unique. Much of the landscape has been formed into intricate canyons with many very narrow channels. Signature windswept White Pines and rock hugging junipers abound. Strangely I saw no poison ivy.

As we neared the Bay one could feel the change in the air as we emerged out of the delta into the weather worn “Finger Board” island archipelago. The unique starkness of this island group was in sharp contrast to the forested canyon lands we had experienced the day previous.

We camped out on the Finger Boards and experienced the beauty of hot balmy temperatures, dead calm waters, and a brilliant full moon. For me, this is what it is all about. From our campsite not one cottage light could be seen that entire evening. The following day we proceeded north east and travelled up a different more easterly route to our put-in location at Hartley Bay. We encountered a bear, mink, herons, turtles and an assortment of ducks.

Our trip was a marvellous success enjoyed by all. The only thing that really surprised us was the cost of parking two cars for three nights, launch fees for four kayaks and campsite fees. Seemed rather steep! Go figure…

June 13 – 15 Key & Lower French River Tour

 

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