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Immersive Wilderness Learning Canoe Trip: Algonquin

Trip B: August 8-11

Dates: August 8-11 (4 days)

Ages:​ 11-15 (born 2010-2014) & 16-18 (born 2007-2009), co-ed (these two age groups run as parallel but separate trips)

Group size: 4 to 12 participants, and 2 to 4 leaders

Ratio: 1:6 leaders to participants, or better

Program cost: $840 (10% discount for siblings, friends, & past participants)

Canoe tripping experience necessary: None. This trip is slow paced and suitable for all experience levels

Spots available: Yes

Trip Description​​

Not your average canoe trip, the Immersive Wilderness Learning (IWL) program is unique, offering a combination of naturalist skills, canoe tripping techniques, and fun adventure with new friends! This camp provides an intro to canoe tripping for those who have never been on a wilderness trip, while also enabling seasoned canoeists to discover a deeper, more meaningful experience than they have in the past. Focusing on naturalist learning and a wholistic approach to backcountry living, the trips create a fun, relaxed environment for teenagers to spend four days engaging with the natural world in a way they never have before. Learning all about nature, naturalist practices, and backcountry camping skills, they will leave the trip with a sense of accomplishment, having discovered more than they ever imagined and having developed a forever deepened connection to our wild world. The lasting impact are the friends made and the new found awareness of a life fully lived. While this trip is an intro to canoe tripping for those who have never been on a canoe trip before, it is equally suitable for those who have been on many but are seeking a deeper, more intentional experience. Focusing on naturalist knowledge and a wholistic approach to backcountry living, this trip opens new perspectives as much as it teaches canoe tripping skills. Too many canoe trip programs offer long and difficult routes that leave little time for anything but paddling, eating, and sleeping. The difficulty of those experiences ensures that first-timers never want to return and that the natural world is entirely overlooked as the paddlers zoom past it. We strive to be different, believing that the trip itself is the point, rather than the destination. We take an intentionally slow pace, paddling out to our campsite on day one and not changing sites for the duration of the trip. This means we only have to pack up camp on the last day, allowing us to really get to know our campsite – to discover what aquatic creatures come out at night; to venture out and explore nearby islands; and to befriend the birds nesting near our tents, learning their calls and hearing their songs. Led by expert naturalists, we learn how to cook meals over fires we made ourselves, catch and prepare our own fish for dinner, forage for edible berries, build shelters, and identify animals by their tracks and signs. With opportunities for nature journaling and fun games throughout, the Immersive Wilderness Learning trip is designed to set young people up for a lifetime of enjoying backcountry camping and caring for our natural world. A few highlights of the trip: - Learning not just how to backcountry camp and canoe trip, but how to thrive in a wilderness setting - Learning how to become at home in the landscape, rather than just passing through it - Star gazing and discovering the stories of the cosmos and their connection to humanity's shared cultural history - Learning to catch, prepare, and eat our own fish - Learning to identify plants and forage for edible berries - Learning to read and follow animal signs, tracks, and trails - Learning to excel at flat water canoeing techniques - Learning about the intertwined ecological and cultural history of Algonquin - Nature journaling and reflection - Building tarp shelters, with the option of sleeping in them on the third night - An introduction to naturalist practices for noticing the world around us, in addition to camping skills - Having a lot of fun while making lifelong friends!

Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, Headwaters Wilderness Program, Canoe Trip, Lake, Forest, Canoes, Youth

Further Details

Drop Off and Pick Up Information

Drop off: Friday August 8 between 10:00am-10:30am at the Smoke Lake Parking lot in Algonquin Provincial Park

Pick up: Monday August 11 between 4:00pm-4:30pm at the same location as the drop-off

Address: Smoke Lake Access Point (#6), Highway 60 at km, 14 1 (south, Unorganized South Nipissing District, ON P0A 1E0

Google Maps link: https://www.google.ca/maps/place/Smoke+Lake+Access+Point+(%236)/@45.5332933,-78.7044257,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x4cd5e5d4a4624bc7:0xc4eaef77520dabc3!8m2!3d45.5332896!4d-78.7018508!16s%2Fg%2F11bwk_cnql?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI1MDIxOS4xIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D

Headwaters Highlights

An experience of living in community

  • A sense of belonging and purpose toward the larger group, beyond oneself. In addition to developing both leadership and teamwork capacities, knowing what it is to live in a community who rely on you and on whom you rely is a profound experience, and a rare gift

A meaningful relationship with the natural world​​

  • Unique to Headwaters, we intentionally weave environmental philosophy, naturalist knowledge, and eco-social history into everything we do, developing a relationship with nature far more meaningful than simply "enjoying the outdoors"

Time away from cellphones

  • With no cell phones or other electronic devices permitted on our trips, it is a gloriously rare opportunity to unplug and re-connect​

Traditional travel

  • We travel by canoe and wooden paddle, we portage on foot. We cook on an open fire that we made ourselves, preparing each meal communally. Our food consists of homemade recipes long perfected for the canoe voyage, with fresh baking savoured when we please. We sleep in tents. We awake when our bodies are rested, rather than by the clock. We gather blueberries from the land and our water from the lake. We travel as according to how the weather dictates. We take rest days whenever we find a good spot. We live without haste, for the trip itself is the point.

Character Development

All of our trips intentionally develop moral character, with a special focus on the following traits:​​

  • Joy for life and its experiences​

  • Care for others and our world

  • Wonder about life's mysteries

  • A feeling of awe for both the grand vistas and the little things alike

  • Respect for the wellbeing of others and our world

We place an emphasis on developing resiliency as the groundwork of moral character

  • Resiliency allows us to keep going even when things are uncomfortable. Because of this, it is the core of moral character, enabling us to ask, "what is worth doing, even if I fail?"​

What's included

We provide:​

  • Canoe trip leaders who are as good as it gets: expert guides, master naturalists, certified teachers, and teachers of teachers, our staff are second to none. All professional educators, their work is to facilitate experiences that connect us to the wilderness and that teach confidence, compassion, teamwork, care, and joy. Most importantly, they are deeply thoughtful and caring people, masters beyond all else in embodying the values Headwaters seeks to teach

  • All food and group gear: canoes, paddles, tents, cooking supplies, and everything else the group will need to live well with the wilderness

  • We are very intentional about our gear, only using that which enhances the authentic experience of the canoe voyage, rather than impedes it

You bring:

  • Personal clothing, sleeping bag, and sleeping mat (a detailed packing list will be sent upon registration)

  • A PFD/lifejacket (we can provide a PFD upon request, but we recommend you bring your own to ensure that it is well-fitting and comfortable)

  • An eagerness to explore, have fun, and travel with the wilderness!

Spots available: Yes

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