About this ebook
Up close and personal, the Powell River region has special meaning to those who explore it in their off-road vehicles. In the spirit of remote living and recreation off the beaten track, we journey to places only accessible by machines fit for rough terrain. For the author, all journeys begin and end on Powell Lake, where his floating cabin serves as home base for ventures to places we go for reasons even we ourselves find difficult to understand. Still, we go, returning again and again to the sublime beauty of places where the mountains drop into the sea.
On the other side of 'Up the Main' and after' Farther Up the Main,' the author of 12 books in the series entitled 'Coastal British Columbia Stories' takes you to places that include a mix of new destinations and old favourites – Goat Island, Theodosia Valley, Elk Lake, Chippewa Bay, and the head of Powell Lake. Keep on riding, farther and beyond!
Wayne J Lutz
From 1980 to 2005, Wayne Lutz was Chairman of the Aeronautics Department at Mount San Antonio College in Los Angeles. He led the college’s Flying Team to championships as Top Community College in the United States seven times. He has also served 20 years as a U.S. Air Force C-130 aircraft maintenance officer. His educational background includes a B.S. degree in physics from the University of Buffalo and an M.S. in systems management from the University of Southern California.The author is a flight instructor with 7000 hours of flying experience. For the past three decades, he has spent summers in Canada, exploring remote regions in his Piper Arrow, camping next to his airplane. The author resides during all seasons in a floating cabin on Canada’s Powell Lake and occasionally in a city-folk condo in Bellingham, Washington. His writing genres include regional Canadian publications and science fiction
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Beyond the Main - Wayne J Lutz
Preface
Two Quads – Multiple Scenarios
When the first edition of Up the Main was published in 2005, the chapters were developed from my experiences riding off-road with my friend, John. He introduced me to ATVs, and soon Margy and I were departing regularly on rides from the Powell River Airport hangar, where our quad trailer was stored.
In 2012, we moved our bikes to Hole in the Wall on Powell Lake, a spot we thought would be temporary for the summer. But keeping our quads at the Hole year-round solved a problem we faced in all seasons. When we’re at home in our cabin, we’re hesitant to leave. When it’s good weather for riding quads, it’s also good weather on the lake, so leaving Hole in the Wall to trek to the airport and then the backcountry was difficult. Plus, the hangar storage location incorporated plenty of obstacles to slow us down – breakfast in town, confront the Internet, talk to Wally and Bob at the airport, to say nothing of the basic process of accessing our equipment. Quite often, especially during off-season months with shorter days, travel up and down the lake forced us to stay overnight in town for the sake of an off-road ride. Both a day and a night on the lake had to be sacrificed for a quad ride, a rather unacceptable situation.
But keeping our quads at the Hole introduced new limitations. There’s only one road out, leading to Chippewa Bay. From there we could explore Museum Main or climb the mountain trail to Heather Main. But the ride to connect with other logging roads and trails is a long one, including the roads leading to Theodosia Valley or Olsen’s Landing. Although getting to our quads from our cabin was quick, the riding days could still be long, and we had limited destinations. Meanwhile, most of our friends ride in the Goat Main region to the east of Powell Lake, and almost no one we know rides in the Chippewa Bay area, so we missed their companionship. The Powell River ATV Club bases their operations to the east of Powell Lake, and we had no connection to this region via Chippewa’s logging roads.
Then an eye-opening event unlocked some new possibilities. Travelling to the head of Powell Lake with John, slowly pushing a cedar log raft loaded with our quads and camping gear, I discovered a region wide open for exploration. Besides this memorable trip to the Head, there are plenty of interesting logging company docks and barge ramps elsewhere on the lake, although the raft was a rather inefficient mode of transportation. Instead, imagine hopping aboard a pre-loaded landing craft moored at my cabin, and heading out for a quick day-trip or an overnight camping adventure. This would even give us access to the Goat Main system of roads and trails where the ATV Club rides, using barge ramps at nearby Fiddlehead Farm and further east on Goat Lake.
So in 2014, we began looking for a landing craft to solve our one-trail-out dilemma in Hole in the Wall. If we owned a landing craft, based at our cabin, we could keep our quads on the vessel, allowing a quick departure for barge ramps anywhere on Powell or Goat Lake.
Thus, our home haven for quad adventures has evolved over time. First came the town-based airport hangar, with its cumbersome scenario for accessing the mountains. Then the move to Hole in the Wall and a quick taste of Powell Lake via raft. Finally, the ultimate means of carrying our quads – a landing craft – an idea that took an unexpected deviation along the way with the purchase of a self-propelled barge. This book spans these changing modes of off-road exploration, which goes to prove – quads can enter your life innocently, and grow spontaneously and elaborately from there.
Wayne J. Lutz
Powell Lake, BC
March 27, 2015
◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊
Chapter 1
Quads on a Raft
Hole in the Wall, Powell Lake
At 9 am, I pull into Hole in the Wall, towing my firewood raft behind the Campion, with two fishing lines still deployed after a trolling-speed tow north from John’s Cabin Number 5 (the same site as his original Cabin Number 1). I stop outside the breakwater to retrieve my lures. The first yellow daredevil comes in fine, but the second snags when the rooster-tail hook catches the long towline leading back to the raft. I give up on the lure for now, and concentrate on shortening the towline by hand-pulling the raft towards the Campion. Once the rope is short enough, I’ll be able to easily navigate through the breakwater entrance, and I can unhook the errant lure after I’m parked.
Once inside the boom, I hop out of the Campion and onto the firewood raft, and tie it to one of the big breakwater logs. While I’m on the raft, I manage to free my trout lure from the towline.
Everything is now in place for later today, when John will arrive to work on two projects requiring the raft – installation of a new cabin cable at Cabin Number 2 (across the Hole) and replacement of a smaller boom cable at my cabin (called Number 3).
John phoned,
says Margy, as soon as I reach the deck of the cabin. He wants you to call him right away.
When did he phone?
I ask.
About 8 o’clock.
John almost never calls that early. On most mornings, he gets going slowly. This must be important.
When John answers my phone call, it’s obvious his 8 am call arrived a little too late.
I was trying to reach you before you brought the raft up to Hole in the Wall,
he says. I woke up this morning with an idea.
What’s the idea?
I ask.
Well, I thought you should leave the raft at my lower cabin. Then we could tow it to the beach at the Shinglemill and load our quads on it. Wouldn’t it be great to go up to the Head with them? We could leave the quads on the raft tonight, and head north tomorrow.
It’s a little late for that. The raft is already here. I suppose I could tow it all the way back down there after we’re done with our projects, if you really want to go to the Head.
I’ve been to the head of Powell Lake with John on small 100cc motorcycles, and it was a lot of fun. The motorbikes fit on the 24-foot Bayliner’s aft deck, and we had quite a ride. Imagine what we could do with quads.
It was just an idea,
says John. I suppose we could still do it. I’m getting kinda’ antsy to do something this summer.
It’s not like John hasn’t done anything exciting this summer, but he hasn’t had a major overnight trip, something he usually does in the Bayliner, typically a trip to a remote area on the chuck. This summer, however, the Bayliner sits in the boat yard, awaiting major engine work, and the repairs have been delayed repeatedly by other projects in the shop.
John has traveled a long way on the chuck already this summer, but it was only a one-day trip in his 16-foot Hourston. On that journey with Eldon and Terry, he covered a lot of ground, all the way to Loughborough Inlet and back. It’s the kind of trip I’d prefer to travel over the course of at least five days. Most people take weeks for such a trek, but John travels real fast.
His proposed trip to the Head with a towed raft will take 7 hours one-way, so it sounds like a three or four-day trip to me. It also sounds wonderfully appealing. I love it when I get John’s full attention on a quad ride, with no other riders joining us – talk about a learning experience.
On the phone, we discuss what might have happened if his telephone call had gone through before I left to pickup the raft and bring it north. Could’ve done this, could’ve done that.
The weather forecast looks good,
says John. Right through the weekend.
The weekend will be a busy one on the lake, a three-day August holiday for almost everyone, with BC Day on Monday.
Imagine how busy it’ll be at the Shinglemill this weekend,
I say.
The Shinglemill and Mowat Bay are the boat launch ramps on Powell Lake, both just outside of town, and they’re busy locations on holiday weekends.
It’s already Friday, so I can’t see any way to load two quads on a raft at Kinsman’s Beach near the Shinglemill for the next few days. I don’t like crowds. John hates them.
Maybe we can load the quads on Saturday or Sunday,
suggests John. The big crowds will be going up the lake tonight, then back home on Monday.
That’s true,
I reply. I pause, and then add: Let’s do it.
This probably surprises John. It’s not because I’m opposed to doing stuff like this, but usually I cry bloody murder when anyone tries to pry me away from my floating cabin in good weather. But we’ve just experienced three straight weeks of nearly perfect conditions, so I’m willing to give in a bit for the sake of an adventure like this.
Okay!
exclaims John. We’ll figure it out. I’ll come up later today so we can get those jobs done with the raft. Then we’ll decide when we can load our quads.
* * * * *
That afternoon, John tows the raft across the bay to Number 2 with his Hourston, while I follow behind in my tin boat. We’re planning to tackle the installation of a new cable from the cabin to shore, the connection stretching 200-feet underwater, from a corner of the cabin float to the base of a large tree. The old, frayed cable is still in place, holding the cabin in place for now, but we need to replace it with several hundred feet of new, seven-eighth-inch cable that weighs several hundred pounds. How we do this is a typical innovative twist of John’s aquatic engineering abilities.
First we slide a long, thick rope under the brow log at one end of the raft, and then extend the rope over the cross-logs of our floating platform to the brow log at the other end, where it slides back underneath. Now the raft will ride freely beneath the rope. Then we stretch the ends of the long rope from the cabin corner all the way to the anchor tree on the far side of the bay. My tin boat serves as a good vehicle to get us to shore.
When the rope is secure on the tree, it’ll temporarily hold the cabin in position as we replace the cable, and the raft will be our work platform. Next, John uses his gasoline-driven grinder to cut the old frayed cable at the tree connection.
With the tin boat tied to the raft, we pull it back to the cabin, sharing hand-over-hand tugs on the rope. We load the big coil of new cable on the raft, and head back to the anchor tree – again sharing tugs – with the tin boat once more towing the raft. John wraps one end of the new cable around the tree, using a shackled loop as the connection. We slowly pull ourselves back across the bay again, dropping cable as we go. Every few feet, John uses duct tape to connect the cable to the rope. This prevents the heavy cable from snagging on the bottom of the bay, and keeps the underwater portion shorter, which saves us from hauling an even bigger weight.
If laying 200 feet of thick cable across the bay sounds physically demanding, it is! If it sounds time-consuming, that’s an understatement. But finally we install a new loop connection at the cabin’s brow log, and pull ourselves back across the bay again, cutting the tape connections between the cable and the rope as we go. The cable droops to its natural position in the water, and the job is finally done.
There’s still one more task for the raft, but it’s a simpler one. We tow the raft back to Cabin Number 3 behind the tin boat, where we replace a much shorter cable connecting my breakwater boom to shore. This job is so straightforward that we could have done it with just the tin boat, but the raft makes the job quicker and easier.
By 5 o’clock, John is on his way back to town, with a farewell thought as he departs.
Let’s plan on loading the quads Sunday morning, before people show up to swim at Kinsman’s Beach.
Sure,
I reply. Give me a call when you decide what time.
If you can tow the raft back to Hole in the Wall on Sunday, we’ll plan to leave from there the next morning.
Sounds good. Are you sure there won’t be any logging activity at the Head?
Nah, nothing going on at all. We’ll have the place to ourselves.
Okay, let’s do it!
I’m sure John is still baffled by my complete lack of resistance to the major excursion he’s planning in his ever-fertile mind.
* * * * *
An hour later, while Margy and I are soaking in our private granite-rimmed natural swimming pool, the phone rings. If you don’t get to the phone in five rings, it’ll go to voicemail, so we don’t even try.
Margy leaves the pool first, climbs up the wooden swim ladder onto the deck, and disappears into the cabin. A few minutes later, she’s back.
John left a voicemail. He says you should call him immediately.
Immediately
sounds foreboding, like an emergency. The last time John left a message like this, our truck had been broken into at the Shinglemill. I dial him up right away.
So is this immediate enough?
I ask.
John laughs, but then explains why he needed to talk to me so promptly. In his set of personal values, this really is a near-emergency.
When I got back to the Shinglemill tonight, Terry was just leaving in his tug, pushing a big barge with a whole lot of people on it. Tents, a truck with a camper, and lots of other equipment, maybe even a few quads. I was too far away to see for sure whether there were any bikes, but I bet they’re going up to the Head.
Sounds like a holiday weekend outing,
I say. But maybe they’re not going to the Head.
No, I’m sure of it. Where else would they be going with all that stuff? They’re gonna’ ruin it for us. We don’t want to be at the Head with a shitload of people.
That wouldn’t be fun. I wouldn’t like it. You’d hate it.
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