Wednesday, 05 October 2011 04:01

Yours to Discover!

Written by  Bronwyn van Vugt
Rate this item
(0 votes)

We're from BC. We're ocean kayakers, rainforest hikers, mountain trekkers, and we know how to camp in the rain.

We moved to Ontario last February, and were horrified to see the summer nearly escape without a family wilderness adventure. Afraid of having our "outdoorsy" status revoked and of being demoted to "frauds with a basement full of gear," we scrambled to plan a trip for the last weekend in September. Feeling proudly "Ontarionian," we booked a backcountry campsite in Muskoka, borrowed a canoe, and rented a Jeep. All day Friday, I packed to the sound of torrential downpours. "We're from BC; we're used to the rain," my own words taunted me. "Very funny," I scowled at the sky. But cancel, we could not. Cancel, we would not. We know how to camp in the rain, after all ...

It was a wet Friday night, but having already left the house, we were determined to have a good time. We had rubber boots, rain pants, rain coats, tarps, dry-sacks, firewood, hot chocolate, an excellent all-weather tent, and a fuzzy foot warmer (e-hem, dog). I was actually looking forward to the challenge of "making shelter." On Saturday morning, however, we popped our heads out, held out our palms, and tentatively declared, "It's not raining!" By noon the clouds had broken. The rest of the weekend was spent swimming and paddling under crystal clear skies (and asking mom why she had forgotten to pack the sun hats).

Though we've enjoyed the outdoors for years, the adventure was full of family firsts: first time on an overnight canoe trip; first time seeing the flicker of auburns, reds, and browns glistening off the lake; first time seeing the fury of chipmunks and wood mice scurrying about with all manner of treasures held firmly in their jaws; first time thinking the sound of falling leaves must be rain (despite there not being a cloud in the sky); first time watching the stroke of my canoe paddle swoosh past floating maple leaves en route to photograph a loon. It was an oh-so-Canadian experience.

I still think we would have had a blast, even if it had been raining. I was pleasantly surprised, however, to experience one more "new" thing in Ontario that you just don't find in BC: though streets may be flooding on a Friday--and regardless of what the forecast says--Ontario weather is quick to change and is very unpredictable. (Luckily for us.)

So, wherever your home is, and whatever the weather may be, take a chance! Get out in the wilderness and discover what new things are around you. Nature is full of beauty and adventure everywhere you go. As we were quick to learn, it's "yours to discover!"

Last modified on Wednesday, 05 October 2011 04:03
Bronwyn van Vugt

Bronwyn van Vugt

My husband, three-year-old daughter, and I recently moved here from Victoria, BC. We settled in the Upper Beaches, along with our dog, "Coda," and have had a ton of fun exploring the area in all kinds of weather! We are--currently--enamoured with the snow and all things related: tobogganing, snowballs, snow angels ... shovelling--no joke; we love it! When it's not quite so icy, we love to ride our bikes, go hiking, camping, swimming, and ocean kayaking (though we're willing to give freshwater canoeing a chance). I'm currently "Mama" by day, and university student by night/weekend. My husband is an engineer working for a sustainable-energy company, which was the reason for our move. We love good food, music, books, and friends ... the last of which we are hoping to find soon! :)

Website: peterandbronny.com

1 Comment

  • Comment Link Kari Wednesday, 05 October 2011 13:34 posted by Kari

    Wow, Bronwyn I'm so happy you guys had a wonderful time and that the sun did came out. I have to admit we were joking a little bit about you, my partner said he was happy I did not want to go go on a canoe and camping trip in the rain.

    Thanks so much for sharing wilderness Ontario, we often forget about wilderness Ontarion living in the city.

    Our family so need to book wilderness camping trip soon.

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter the (*) required information where indicated.
Basic HTML code is allowed.