Комментарии:
i know in this documentary, and I can't find it again, were some additions on one night to the bannack... fennel and something else. Of course the trip and the video are great but, dang, I'd sure love to know what those ingredients were besides the fennel...
ОтветитьHow many hours of footage did you have to comb through to make a 6 hour long documentary? That had to be brutal! Thank you for this video!
ОтветитьI have a cabin near rivière aux poisson which flows into lake Joseph on the north east part of the lake, very nice land,great fishing and hunting
ОтветитьThe best gift on 3.rd day of Christmas watching this whole film! Good thing the weather is bad today👍
Absolutely wonderfully done you guys!🏆💖💐 What a strong and fine achievment!
Special this,seing I am 1/2 canadian~ my father trained in litle Norway to be a catalina ✈️ pilot for the 2.nd world war, and met my mother from Toronto❤ Lots of love from Elisabeth in Norway🇧🇻 kajakk enthusiast going om 70 years.
What a wonderful Adventure, Even though I am too old to complete a trip like this. It was wonderful to watch you guys and share this adventure. Thank you
ОтветитьI really thought I would get bored watching hike, portage, canoe, hike, portage, canoe BUT I loved every second of watching you guys doing something I’m unable to do. Great job Noah, Matt, Eric and Alex!
ОтветитьThat was an incredible journey...thank you for sharing!
ОтветитьNature could be a paradise without all the mosquitoes and flies, but these bloodsuckers can ruin a whole trip, they really suck 😏😅 Otherwise great video, what a trip, amazing achievement 😮 I'm a little jealous if I'm honest 😊 greetings from Germany...
ОтветитьNice work! Bog and thickets are no one’s friend. Nice perseverance!!
ОтветитьI thoroughly enjoyed watching your incredible experience. Thank you for filming it for everyone, I'm sure that sometimes it seems like an extra hassle, but you did a great job!
ОтветитьThanks for bringing this epic trip to us. Felt like I was there.
ОтветитьWeather proof your gear
ОтветитьBring water filters and water pills to sterilize your water
ОтветитьBring mosquito nets with you
ОтветитьBring a lot of insect repellent
ОтветитьIf you bring guns except a long wait and be questioned thoroughly
ОтветитьYou have to go through customs
ОтветитьThat area is French Canada
ОтветитьBetter bring a hand held translator learn French
ОтветитьI like Canada because it's so vast and beautiful untouched wilderness
ОтветитьHow come Balcombe don’t speak French 🤤
ОтветитьUnbelievable work of positive energy ,endurance, comradeship, super planning in so many ways, deserves a Canagrammy for sure , along with the order of Canada. A great video to promote the 138 east extension from La Romaine to Old Fort Bay …… you guys have provin it can be done …….. Congratulations 👏 and wow …… Bravo 🙌 😮
ОтветитьAmazing trip!!! ...and amazing footage! I am so impress that you had the energy and patience to film all those difficult situations (ex: portages). This movie will be a very strong inspiration for me. PS: How did you manage to charge all those GoPro batteries, they all die after 15 minutes!! :)
ОтветитьEnjoyed your video from Wallaceburg Ontario. I was surprised that you didn't eat the pike.
In the 70s my mother caught a pike in Manitoulin Island and the pike broke through the chain from the boat. Powerful creatures
Best 6h I've ever spent. Well done
Ответитьthe flies
ОтветитьJust found this channel and so far I am loving this video. What beautiful land you all have!
Ответитьwhat an amzing journey. i dream of doing a trip like this. i cant think of a better way for friends to spend time together. forging memories that last a lifetime. cheers
ОтветитьEpic trip and amazing production. Congrats!
ОтветитьMan that's so epic! The trip, the landscape, the video editing, everything! It,s inspiring seeing you guy doing all these adventures. 6hours has passed so fast!
Thanks for sharing this.
It's rare to see such clear thinking and vocalization. I've been scouting other routes in Canada from afar with Google Earth/Maps and this video really helps put the real terrain together with the photographic information. Probably the best adventure video I've seen in my life. Thank you!
ОтветитьPowering through this 6hr video. Love it…love it. Paused and typing this after seeing and you asking for comments on the little worm looking thing. We have those here in Minnesota as well. horsehair or Gordian worm. Well, back to the video!! Great work
ОтветитьMy quess is over 100+ years for the forest to recover from forest fire. I wonder how much got burned this year. Great video guys ❤’d it all 6 hrs
ОтветитьThat was amazing. Certainly wasn't ready for it to end. Thank you for all the effort you put into this project!
ОтветитьWife and I just watched the entire video and we was sad to see it end. Would love to be able to do an adventure like this one day. Outstanding video, had us hooked the entire time. Thank you for sharing.
ОтветитьLate to the party, but i believe that is a horsetail worm. Parts of this trip were like a Death March. And those bugs would have given me the screamin' meemie's within a couple of hours. Brrrrrrrrrrrr.
ОтветитьWarm toes and friends 'n stuff. If someone ever asks me to describe a perfect moment, that might just be my answer.
ОтветитьThis should be on any streaming platforms. So amazing guys, quite an adventure
ОтветитьI’ve done 5-6 days but I’ve always wanted to do what you two do, 😊
ОтветитьI keep trying to glimpse a peek at the legend on your maps, trying to figure out where they're from. Figured the RCGS would be the place, but all I see on their website is merch.
Can you guys do a "route planning" video? Preferably with some resource references.
Big thanks for documenting your amazing trip.
Watching it in increments over a weeks worth of chemotherapy to treat my leukaemia in hospital helped transport me to the beautiful Canadian wilderness for an hour or so each day while they infused me 😊. Wish I had access to the quantity and quality of lakes and rivers here in Victoria (Oz) that you have there to explore in my canoe. You have inspired me to plan a trip myself when I'm well again 🤞🤞 up in our high country when the weather warms.
Keep living the dream boys 😁😁😁
I’ve been trying to understand the last bit in the bog that you had to portage at the end.
Sad that you missed the km long ‘trait de scie’ portage, as it is parallel to a unique geological feature.
You can view it through Google images. There is also an awesome campsite at the end. A nice way to end the trip.
Thx for this reportage (French pun unintended). You guys are awesome.
Robert.
Came upon this by chance. Awesome reportage. Great team.
But today I want to talk about the Grand Portage, this long canyon that you guys sawed your way through.
For your information I am one of a team of two that are the authors of the chain saw cut trees in the Portage.
We’ve canoed that river three or four times. Using, as you did, Guy Doré’s excellent descriptions and annotations.
As you know Guy did not have full information on the Grand Portage and unfortunately went on the wrong side. Only upon arriving at the village of Aguanish was he informed that the ancient trappers had a portage on the other side!
When we came at the head of the canyon we were faced with the same dilemma as your team: where is the Portage?
We therefore spent a fair amount of time exploring the surroundings in order to find it.
At the beginning of the Portage you will remember that there is a stream coming down from the side of the mountain.
We took this stream to a flattish, wettish area (where we set up camp) and from there explored some more, finding traces of the old Portage a bit higher up. Because the beginning of the old Portage (where you found the old canoe and a boot) was too regrown, we opened up the Old Portage from there. So it appears that you opened to the left of our Portage, closer to the canyon, eventually coming to the Old Portage only a few hundred meters from the end! How unfortunate!
Some years later we heard that a big storm had caused several Chablis (windthrows), destroying large parts of the Portage. We then went back there, this time starting from a different branch of the river. We found at least 5 large Chablis, piled 5-6 feet high. We had brought a small chain saw and we worked for several days clearing every thing. The trail was difficult to find but our small dog always found the way under the piles of threes!
We grew so fond of that historical portage that we left a plaque in the middle of it. Had you walked the Portage back you would have come upon it. I am curious as to the state of the Portage after 15-20 years. Do we have to go back to clear it?
Is our job never done?
This is what life should be, good friends and great adventures! Thank you all for sharing this with us😊
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