"Only those who risk going too far can possibly find out how far they can go." — T.S. Eliot
Earlier this week, Will Steger was thinking about the canoe-sled he lashed to the nether reaches of a spruce tree in the Canadian Barren Lands. That was last May and the tree was part of a small oasis in a region that is otherwise a sub-arctic prairie devoid of trees, and whose tundra is permanently frozen to within a few inches of the surface.
Steger had constructed the makeshift canoe hammock in advance of the arrival of his pilot friend, Dave Olesen, a onetime Ely, Minn., resident who now resides about 250 miles from Yellowknife, in Canada's Northwest Territories.
A kindred spirit of Steger's, in addition to making extensive dog sled trips across Canada's far north, Olesen has run Alaska's famed Iditarod race eight times. Now for a living, he flies a bush plane, and last May, to help Steger, his longtime friend, he plucked him from the Barrens when Steger aborted a planned 1,000-mile solo expedition that started in northern Saskatchewan and was destined for Baker Lake in Canada's Nunavet Territory.
In his two-seater, ski-equipped plane, Olesen will return Steger to the canoe tree in March.
"A lot of large grizzlies inhabit that area," Steger said. "I'm hoping that by storing the canoe in the tree off the ground, the bears didn't get it."
Steger, 74, remains as he always has been: a dreamer whose compass points north. An All-World adventurer on a par with Robert Peary, Roald Amundsen and Amelia Earhart, among others, he successfully led a 1986 unsupported dog sled assault on the North Pole, a 1988 Greenland expedition, and a 1989 crossing of Antarctica.
But during his solo Barren Lands adventure last year — his sixth consecutive springtime journey during which he alternately skis, hikes and paddles — warmish weather came extremely late, and what was supposed to be an expedition during which many of the Barrens' multitudinous rivers would be run in his canoe, instead morphed into a 2 ½-monthlong portage.