Editor's note: This is one in an occasional series of stories by readers and Star Tribune staff members about their time in the outdoors.
My thoughts this time of late summer still drift back to my solo canoe voyage two years ago. It was unlike any I've taken.
While it began 2,500 miles away from Minnesota near the capital of Canada's wild Yukon Territory in Whitehorse, the river adventure really started in grade school. I would read Jack London stories about the wild region, and a dream took hold.
Education, military obligation, family and career were priorities, but a fire that first flared in my youth refused to go out. At age 64, I fanned the flame and planned the trip, and a year later I got started.
I have been on more than 50 canoe trips in Minnesota, as far north as northern Ontario and as far west as Montana, but never for more than two weeks. Travel in the Yukon over a month had an epic feel.
I drove for nearly five days to get from my home in Wyoming, Minn., to Whitehorse. I camped every night and had a great time on the road trip. My concern about becoming bored stiff were unfounded, and I truly enjoyed the Alaska Highway, which connects the Lower 48 to Alaska. I met interesting people and saw an abundance of wildlife. And the scenery was more spectacular than I anticipated. Taking a long walk in the evenings often turned into a mini-adventure of its own.
The remote Yukon Territory is famous for the gold rush that took place in 1890. The population of Dawson City — my eventual takeout spot — swelled to 40,000 in one year. Unfortunately, most of the prospectors came up empty-handed and went home broke. Dawson City's population would decline to 800, where it stands now. As of 2017, there were about 33,000 people living in the entire Yukon spanning 186,000 square miles; 25,000 in Whitehorse. That leaves just 8,000 people scattered over an area that is about the size of our five-state region. Gold mining and prospecting remain the largest industry and are mostly done by small family operations.
Miles and miles
My adventure started on the Teslin River where it begins its trail north from Teslin Lake, crossing under the Alaska Highway. From there I would paddle my 16-foot Old Town Penobscot 125 miles north and west to the confluence with the mighty Yukon River.