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From the Fish Quill Poetry Boat:
A group of Montreal and Toronto poets sets out on the Grand River for a reading tour by canoe. From August 5th-13th, eight performers in four canoes will paddle from Elora to Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, stopping to give readings at cafés, arts venues, and local heritage sites along the way.
A group of poets is setting out on a ten-day reading tour by canoe down the Grand River in southwestern Ontario. The poets, calling themselves Fish Quill Poetry Boat, will be paddling from Elora to the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory and reading their work in cafés, arts centres, and heritage sites along the way. Fish Quill Poetry Boat is comprised of accomplished and emerging Canadian poets, including two past winners of the CBC Literary Awards and a Griffin Poetry Prize finalist. Participating poets are: Linda Besner, Asa Boxer, Jeramy Dodds, Gabe Foreman, Helen Guri, Leigh Kotsilidis, and Daniel Kincade Renton. Toronto musician Abigail Lapell will also be performing. Fish Quill Poetry Boat will kick off the tour with a performance in Toronto on August 4th at 7pm at The Boat.
Scheduled stops for Fish Quill Poetry Boat are Elora’s Bissell Park Pavilion on August 5th, West Montrose Kissing Bridge on August 6th, Waterloo Region Museum on August 7th, Cambridge’s O’Keefe Cottage Cafe & Ice Cream Parlour on August 9th, Paris’ Brown Dog Coffee Roastery on August 10th, Brantford Arts Block on August 11th, and Six Nation’s Chiefswood National Historic Site on August 13th. All performances are at 7pm and free of charge. The tour also includes Paddle with the Poets Day, a special family activity taking place on August 8th. The public is invited to rent a canoe or bring along their own and join Fish Quill Poetry Boat at 10am at Kitchener’s Bingemans Camping. The day of paddling features a break for lunch and a free poetry reading at Canoeing the Grand’s picnic area, after which canoeists will continue to Cambridge’s Riverbluffs Park.
One notable stop on the tour is Chiefswood National Historic Site on August 13th. Chiefswood is the only surviving pre-Confederation Native mansion in Ontario, and is the birthplace and childhood home of celebrated writer and performer Tekahionwake, E. Pauline Johnson. Johnson is best known for her iconic canoeing poem, “The Song My Paddle Sings.” Chiefswood symbolizes the long historic relationship between First Nations and European cultures, and emphasizes the contribution of native culture to Canadian life. Curator Karen Dearlove says, “We believe that the Fish Quill Poetry Tour is a great way to feature contemporary poetry and creativity at a site known historically for fostering literary creative dreams.” The year 2011 marks the 150th anniversary of Pauline Johnson’s birth. Fish Quill Poetry Boat will be sharing the stage at Chiefswood with local Six Nations writers and performers.
Leigh Kotsilidis, one of the tour’s organizers, says “Many of these towns and villages are not included on standard Canadian reading tours. But before roads, rivers were the communication systems, and the towns that line Canada’s rivers are rich in history. We hope to give riverside residents a greater sense of ownership of and connectedness to contemporary literary culture.”
Fish Quill Poetry Boat is in its second year, and canoes are once again being lent free of charge by Brantford-based outdoor adventure company Treks in the Wild. “A very cool idea,” says Andy Tonkin, canoeing guide and co-owner of Treks in the Wild, who will be coming along for the ride.
Last year’s tour was featured in local newspapers including The Waterloo Record and The Brant News, and an interview with several of the poets aired nationally on CBC Radio’s The Next Chapter.
From the Fish Quill Poetry Boat:
A group of poets is setting out on a ten-day reading tour by canoe down the Grand River from Elora to Six Nations of the Grand River Territory. The group, calling itself Fish Quill Poetry Boat, will be reading their work in cafes, arts centres, and heritage sites along the way.
Fish Quill Poetry Boat is comprised of accomplished and emerging Canadian poets: Linda Besner, Asa Boxer, Jeramy Dodds, Gabe Foreman, Helen Guri, Leigh Kotsilidis, and Daniel Kincade Renton. Toronto musician Abigail Lapell will also be performing on the tour.
ITINERARY:
Thursday, August 4th: Toronto Launch: 7pm @The Boat
Evening hosted by the Bromos
Friday, August 5th: Elora: 7pm @Bissell Park Pavilion
Saturday, August 6ht: West Montrose: 7pm @West Montrose’s Kissing Bridge
Sunday, August 7th: Kitchener: 7pm @Waterloo Region Museum in the Christie
Theatre w/ The Good Hearted Women Singers
Monday, August 8th: Kitchener: Paddle with the Poets Day!: Meet at Bingemans
Camping at 10am: Reading 12:30pm @Canoeing the Grand picnic area: Ending the day at Riverbluffs Park, Cambridge
*Canoe rentals are available through Treks in the Wild (www.treksinthewild.com) or Canoeing the Grand (www.canoeingthegrand.com)
Tuesday August 9th: Cambridge: 7pm @O'Keefe Cottage Cafe & Ice Cream Parlour
Wednesday, August 10th: Paris: 7pm @Brown Dog Cafe
Thursday, August 11th: Brantford: 7pm @Brantford Arts Block w/ John B. Lee, Poet Laureate of Brantford and Norfolk County
Friday, August 12th: Campfire Reading!: Brant Conservation Area Pavilion
Saturday, August 13th: Six Nations of the Grand River Territory: 7pm @Chiefswood National Historic Site
Thank you to our sponsors and collaborators: Treks in the Wild, Open Book:
Ontario, Coach House Books, Vehicule Press, West Montrose BridgeKeepers Association, the Grand River Conservation Authority and Chiefswood National
Historic Site.
For further details about the tour, please refer to our Facebook
page: https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=180289855366301
From the Fish Quill Poetry Boat:
Linda Besner is originally from Wakefield, Quebec. Her poetry and reviews have appeared in The Walrus, The Malahat Review, Grain, Maisonneuve and Canadian Notes and Queries, among others. She works as a freelance radio producer, and has contributed to CBC’s Definitely Not the Opera, Outfront, and The Next Chapter. Her first collection of poetry, The Id Kid, was published by Signal Editions in April 2011.
Asa Boxer’s debut book, The Mechanical Bird (2007), won the Canadian Authors Association Prize for Poetry, and his cycle of poems entitled “The Workshop” won first prize in the 2004 CBC Literary Awards. His work has been anthologised in various collections, including The Best Canadian Poetry in English, 2009. His writing has appeared in various magazines in Canada, the UK, Australia and Belgium. Skullduggery (2011), his second collection of poems, has just been published by Signal Editions.
Jeramy Dodds grew up in Orono, Ontario, Canada. His poems have been translated in Finnish, French, Latvian, Hungarian, Swedish, German and Icelandic. He is the winner of the 2006 Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award and the 2007 CBC Literary Award for poetry. His first collection of poems, Crabwise to the Hounds (Coach House Books, 2008), was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize, the Gerald Lampert Award and won the Trillium Book Award for poetry. He currently divides his time between Reykjavik, Iceland and Berlin, Germany.
Gabe Foreman was born in Thunder Bay. He’s a co-founder of littlefishcartpress, and his writing has appeared in a number of literary journals, including Grain, The Fiddlehead and Event. His first book, A Complete Encyclopedia of Different Types of People, was published in 2011 by Coach House Books. Currently he lives in Montreal.
Helen Guri graduated from the University of Toronto’s creative writing program and has taught writing at Humber College. Her poetry has appeared in Riddle Fence, Event, Descant, Grain and many other journals. Her collection of poems, Match, was published by Coach House Books in 2011.
Leigh Kotsilidis’s poems have appeared in several literary journals including The Fiddlehead, Prism international and Prairie Fire; and have been anthologized in publications I.V. Lounge Nights, This Grace and The Hoodoo You Do So Well. In 2009 and 2010, she was selected as a finalist for the CBC Literary Awards. She is also a co-founder of littlefishcartpress. Her first full-length collection, Hypotheticals, is forthcoming this Fall with Coach House Books. She currently lives in Montreal where she works as a freelance graphic designer while completing her mfa in Studio Arts.
Daniel Kincade Renton has been published in Prism international, CV2 and Sifted: A Collection of Work by Participants at the Banff Centre Writers’ Studio, 2011. He is a PhD candidate at York University and a former poetry editor of Qwerty Magazine, a literary journal. This is Daniel’s second year participating in the Fish Quill Poetry Tour.
ALSO JOINING US IS SINGER-SONGWRITER ABIGAIL LAPELL!!!!
Abigail Lapell is a singer-songwriter from Toronto. Drawing from folk, indie and traditional influences, she’s won over audiences across the country with her evocative lyricism, infectious melodies and a distinctive, arresting voice. Her powerful songwriting and fiery vocals, set against sparse plucked guitar, have draw comparisons to Sandy Denny, early Cat Power or a stormier Natalie Merchant.
We talk to participant Helen Guri, author of Match (Coach House Books)
http://www.openbookontario.com/news/fish_quill_poetry_boat_interview_series_helen_guri
Our interview with Gabe Foreman, author of A Complete Encyclopedia of Different Types of People (Coach House Books).
We speak with Asa Boxer, author of Skullduggery (Signal Editions).
http://www.openbookontario.com/news/fish_quill_poetry_boat_interview_series_asa_boxer
Earlier this month, seven poets and one musician paddled from Elora to Six Nations of the Grand River Territory and stopped along the way to read at cafés, arts venues and local heritage sites. During their travels, the Fish Quill Poetry Boat Tour participants read to welcoming audiences; sang songs around the campfire; coped with rain, rain and rain; got to know the juke box at the Nutty Parrot (see days four and five); admired "prehistoric-looking blue herons"; and dined on camping cuisine, including plenty of salami and cheese sandwhiches. The campers kept a diary along the way, which they generously shared with Open Book.
Day One: Elora (Leon Lukashevsky)
Daniel, Leigh, Gabe, Asa and I shared a car to Elora, our starting point on the Grand River, two hours east of Toronto. For the most part we were making each other’s acquaintance; there was some sparring over an offhand criticism of the US, as to whether it was reasonable or crass, then we carped about our prime minister, a tacit reconciliation; religion came up, Asa praised ritual and lamented ideology; I watched Leigh label a stack of jewel cases, when a poem of hers, that I had been reading that morning, landed for me (the narrator is trying to ask the big question, but — absurdly — can only put it in terms of the big bang); Gabe napped and ate a hot dog when we stopped for gas; Daniel brought the car to a sudden stop three times, and every time a sleeping bag fell on my head. I don't remember looking out the window once for the duration of the trip, except when someone pointed to a pair of steel balls hanging off the hitch of a truck ahead of us. We had a good laugh at that.
At the camp ground Daniel weaved the car up and down the paths that cut through the large Ontario trees, looking for our site. The Grand appeared suddenly, on either side of the car; I hadn’t noticed the bridge until we were crossing it. On the upstream side, towards the Elora gorge, tubers, at trip’s end, were drifting to shore, the bridge being too low for them to pass under. Our canoe trip was launching from the opposite side. Flowing off into the distance, alone, the river suggested only more distance and glimpsing it I was thwarted by the thought of a long haul ahead, of passing through innumerable moments, and having to carry the ghostly weight of the present over each. I forced myself to sit up straight. We parked and began setting up our tents. Linda, Nick, Abigail and Helen arrived in a separate car shortly after.
Bissell Park, the venue for that evening’s reading, is a wide open rectangle, gently sloping from a road down to a canal between its broad sides. I’d agreed to emcee the reading and, at the last minute, to cook us all dinner in the meanwhile, because there was no time to do it beforehand, as had been planned. On the menu: spaghetti in a Bolognese sauce, spinach salad on the side. We packed what we needed and were off. We found the park more or less empty; there was a pagoda crowded with picnic tables, a concrete basketball court, and a family flying a kite nearer the canal. We chose to read under one of the few trees, roughly in the centre of the rectangle. A handful of people turned up to listen; middle-aged folks, who had settled in Elora looking to escape the nature of bigger cities. We brought over picnic tables from the pagoda for them to have somewhere to sit, and one table to be used for cooking, which we placed squarely in the background of their view. I started the show. I wanted to acknowledge that poetry could be disorienting, to claim it for a virtue, to say we are all in this together. I’d had some fantasy about what an emcee at a poetry reading could do back in Toronto, which I promptly collapsed right there in front of our small audience.
The poets read. Abigail sang. She performed one song a cappella, in her rich, precise voice, while standing on a picnic table for something to stomp on. For the most part I couldn’t make out the readers’ poems from the cooking table, so I had to keep an eye on the stage not to miss my cues. As for making dinner, that turned out to be a fiasco. There wasn’t any water for boiling, or for washing vegetables for a start. I tried peeling carrots, but the going was ridiculously slow between turns making introductions. I took to handing out carrots to the poets who had already performed, for them to peel. It was a bit of clown act, and fun to put on, but by the end of the reading we were just eight peeled carrots closer to dinner.
Back at our camp site, dinner ended up taking a concerted group effort to prepare. By then it was dark, and we were cooking by flashlight. It was a gratifying meal for all the work that went into it, and how hungry we were by the time we ate. We lingered by the fire, digesting and amused that I’d even tried to get through the whole rigmarole myself while emceeing.
Before turning in, we strolled out to the bridge, to look at the stars. The river’s layered clatter was hard to pin down. I resisted putting words in its mouth. We stood like that for a few moments. I couldn’t begin to guess what was on anyone else’s mind: nothing, a prayer, plans. I imagined we looked solemn, standing silently like that on the bridge. Someone said, “I’m going to bed.” We all headed back. There were our tents again.
Day Two: West Montrose (Linda Besner)
“If you can’t get behind our troops, I’ll gladly put you in front of them.”
—sticker on a trailer, West Montrose Family Campground
I’m hanging around the washrooms at the campground like a pervert; I’ve been here half an hour charging our phones at the godsent electrical outlet over the sink, between the vases of fake gladiola. As Fish Quill’s Den Mothers, Leigh and I can’t quite let ourselves drift off the map.
Despite our best intentions, it was 11 by the time we got out on the water this first morning — Andy and Val Tonkin, our wonderful canoe fairy godparents from Treks in the Wild, drove the canoes over to us in Elora and gave us some tips on the correct way to sport a lifejacket (if you can pull it up over your ears, it’s too loose). We drew numbers from Leigh’s straw cowboy hat to pick canoeing partners, and I got paired with Asa. Much waving and picture-taking as we set out, each canoe loaded down with dry bags, coolers, food bags, pots and pans and poets.
I was in the bow and discovered pretty quickly that the Grand River is a completely different animal from the Gatineau, which is the river I grew up on. Where the Gatineau is wide and deep, the Grand is narrow and shallow, especially in the stretch from Elora to West Montrose. I hadn’t realized before today that the person in the front of the canoe acts as the navigator, calling out directions to the person in the back. Asa and I certainly hit some fine rocks before we figured out how to communicate and work out strategies together. We learned how to avoid the shallow patches and read the river for fast-moving currents close to shore that would swing us around the bends in style.
Lunch was a feast of bread and sausage and cheese on a rocky spit, and also the perfect occasion for everyone to break out their favourite jokes. “Why did Snoop Dogg bring his raincoat?” Gabe asked, and answered himself: “Fo’ drizzle.” Gabe and I also heroically ate last night’s pasta sauce for lunch with bread — we had made far too much and had slopped the leftovers back into the aluminum cans, secured some plastic overtop with rubber bands and put them in the cooler. They looked like dog food, but we were starving, and they tasted like strawberries and whipped cream.
Snoop Dogg had the right idea. We got to our campsite in West Montrose early, set up camp and went for a gorgeous swim, but before long the sky clouded over and it started to rain in earnest. Our reading was meant to be on the lawn beside the covered bridge, which was in view of our campsite, and when we turned up to meet our host, Tony Dowling of the BridgeKeepers Association, he had set up lawn chairs in a hopeful semi-circle. Asa was the first reader, and he got up to read in full combat gear: raincoat, floppy rain hat, splash pants and water booties. Halfway through his first poem the sky opened up and the Fish Quillers, along with our small but intrepid audience, got chased into a small pavilion, where we finished the performance. The acoustics of the small space turned the poems and Abigail’s music into something new.
Back at the campsite getting ready for bed, I take a walk around the trailer park (my first ever) and take a census of the plastic animals decking out people’s doorsteps: deer, skunks, a sheepdog with a purple ribbon, raccoons, bluebirds, jumbo dragonflies, terriers, white horses. Three waist-high girls in flannel pajamas are choreographing a dance routine in their yard to “Shake Your Groove Thang”; at the campsite, we make a fire and have the first sing-along of the trip. Many more to come, I hope.
Day Three: Kitchener (Nick Thran)
Sunday, August 7th —West Montrose to Kitchener
Surely by day four I’ll have figured out how to cover all of the relevant surface areas of my body with sunscreen. There are sections of my arms and knees that look upholstered.
Morning at the West Montrose campground is rain. There are no trees at our section of the campground, just cut grass and gull feathers. And rain. And rain. And rain. I’ve managed, in spite of my track record back in the city, to be one of the early risers. So I’m up in time to put on my raincoat and have a cup of instant coffee around the picnic table with Asa and Gabe just as it hits the hardest. The day can only get better. It does.
The sun is out all late morning and into the afternoon. We’re on a six-hour paddle, the longest so far. This section of the river is teeming with prehistoric-looking blue herons. There are also some gull feathers on the surface of the water. Any feather floating stem-up is a perfect little boat.
We finally land in a rather “seasoned” area of what, over nine days, will prove to be an otherwise clear and scentless stretch of river. It’s a sprint to set up camp and make dinner in time to shuttle ourselves to the Waterloo Region Museum for tonight’s reading. I hate boiled eggs. I hate tuna fish. Our boiled egg and tuna salad dinner tastes like the best damn thing in the world.
The museum is gorgeous. The Good Hearted Women Singers, who open the evening’s festivities, sing a morning song, a friendship song and a wildflower song. Local poet and theatre actor Roy Lewis graces the evening’s performance with his deep baritone and batman love poems. Like every evening on tour, listening to Linda, Leigh, Gabe, Helen, Abigail, Asa and (later) Daniel read and perform their work is a deep pleasure. There isn’t a dud in the bunch.
After the reading a few of us find an all-hour grocery store, then cab back to the grounds. Because the campground next to us is tuned to a decent radio station (“Take a load off Fannie…”) the guitar stays in the case. Adjourned to the fire, Gabe spends the evening making paper puppets — a rabbit, a cowboy, a devil, a wolf, a crescent moon hung up in a twig — and propping them up between the bricks around the fire. By the time the rabbit’s paw catches a flame and the devil shrugs into the ash, most of us are ready to sleep.
Day Four: Cambridge (Helen Guri)
A Case of the Mondays
Sun is visible through the curves of the giant blue waterslide at Bingeman's (pronounced "Bing-i-mans" by the cursorily familiar, but "Binge Man's" by those in the know) campground in Kitchener, making this the driest day so far on Fish Quill record. Our four-day plan to dry the towels is halfway complete. We celebrate with cold cereal — our favourite. Leigh breaks the news that a raccoon ate all the cookies from inside the vestibule of her tent during the night. Indeed, some of us heard feral shrieks as a package was ripped to shreds in the early hours of the morning. Indeed, we have heard of raccoons. Some of us believe in them. At ten, it is time to slide our bags and canoes back onto the fish highway for "paddle with the poets" day. This means we will be paddling with each other. Good thing we like poetry. The destination is Cambridge, a city with internet in it, among other fruits of civilization, but on the way we stop at a riverside (and train-trackside and highwayside) gazebo to lunch and read for Andy and Val, our illustrious canoe patrons, and their smart-cookie boys Zack and Mason. Unfortunately, none of us has written an ode yet. This is a bit of an oversight. But we make do. Asa reads a poem about genitals in the cold. Gabe shares some cooking tips involving liquid peppermint, frozen ducks, hazelnuts, brie and oysters, among other ingredients.
Cambridge campsites have strict rules. These include "no camp fires" and "no using the bathroom after 8:30 p.m." It's a pity, because we've bought all these smokies and we all definitely need to pee. It's exactly 8:25. Hot dog soup! (No, not that kind, sickos.) Gabe throws in some lentils and I garnish it with veggies. It's decent after all. Although it's nearly bed time, Nick, Linda, Abigail, Leigh and I can't help investigating the city a little. Leon wants to come too, but unfortunately his legs have atrophied to the point where he can't walk. It's one of the hazards of being a voyageur. We discover a fine establishment called the Nutty Parrot. Although no gang wear is permitted in this bar, we manage to sneak our matching socks-in-sandals past the bouncer. Leigh is a mean hand at darts, which lends us the authority to dominate the juke box. Lou Reed invites all patrons to walk on the wild side as Abigail inadvertently tips the table with our drinks on it. It's the best tip the bartenders will see all night.
Day Five: Cambridge (Abigail Lapell)
Titular Tuesday
Today begins and ends in Churchill Park, Cambridge, in the rain. It’s our first and only day off from paddling. By the time I get up, there’s hot porridge on the camp stove, and coffee and bits have been hunted/gathered from a nearby Tim Horton’s. Under a picnic gazebo adjoining our campsite, we preview more of the day’s indulgences: laundry, internet, walking around town. More coffee. Not paddling.
Tonight, our travelling poetry rivershow will descend on O’Keefe’s Cottage and Ice Cream Parlour — a venue revered for its home-style cooking (by Asa), and reputed to have been “super nice” last year. Tonight is also “Titty Tuesday” at the Nutty Parrot — a colourful local pub we stumbled upon last night, where each day is celebrated, consonance-style, on a weekly chalkboard schedule. I worry that Travelling Poetry Tuesday may be facing some stiff competition.
Churchill Park is within stumbling distance of town. After breakfast, Leon, our Master of Ceremonies, is whisked off in a cab — catching a bus to Toronto, his natural habitat — and Linda, Helen and Nick ride along with a wet sack of clothes, in search of dryers and bacon cheeseburgers. I, for one, have forgotten how to walk, so I stay behind with Gabe, Asa and Leigh. It rains and shines and rains. I sit woodshedding with my guitar, and the picnic tables seem to sway with phantom river currents. We forage for peanut butter and honey sandwiches, hot dogs and M&Ms. We bungee our food bag from the gazebo rafters, safe from its fearsome natural predator, the raccoon.
My determination to use the internet wanes with the day. The sun is beaming again before the second wave of paddlers finally leaves for town. Gabe weighs the risks and takes a gamble on our soggy clothesline. It’s a nice walk to the venue, along rural roads and a riverside path through Cambridge. Leigh and I are sidetracked by The Patch, a thrift mega-store I insist on visiting for “five minutes.” An hour later, we’ve scoured the racks, tried each other’s cast-offs and settled on an ensemble or two. Leigh, touchingly, offers me her own dress. I wear it to the library that doubles as an art gallery. The internet is as strange and wonderful as I’d left it, four days earlier.
Back at the venue, it’s our best turnout yet. The paddlers feast on chicken pot pie and free ice cream, the most delicious kind of ice cream. We’re joined by local poet Antonio Michael Downing, which is a treat on the order of free ice cream. Daniel, having set his academic affairs in order, joins us, too. Linda has family in attendance, including younger siblings who soon discover that reading is both “hip” and “cool.”
Daniel’s arrival brings the notable asset of a car. Team Grocery speeds off after the reading, makes it to the beer store with moments to spare, then joins the other paddlers and guest poet, plus a small coterie of admirers, at the bar — a less colourful bar than the Parrot, where Tuesday is just another day, unmarked by any salacious sobriquet. As we prepare to leave, and just as the wet t-shirts back on our clothesline have dried out completely, the sky opens. Serious rain sheets down and, as we pull into our campsite, lightning strikes a nearby hydro pole. Someone remarks that we might have a fire tonight after all.
We wait it out in the relative shelter of the gazebo. Helen asks who’s doing today’s journal entry and whether “Titty Tuesday” will be mentioned. I stop tittering and admit I’d been wrestling with this very question. Encouraged by the paddlers, emboldened by the storm, I resolve to set aside any embarrassment at the much-parroted phrase. Journalistic integrity prevails. The rain starts to clear and we pass around cans of Pabst Blue Ribbon, resuming our two days’ head start on Thirsty Thursday.
Day Six: Paris (Gabe Foreman)
Last night, lightning struck a hydro pole beside Daniel's car as a group of us drove from downtown Cambridge to the campsite. Slow blobs of light, like welding sparks, exploded from its transformer (?) as we turned from the highway into the park. Deafening. Was it an omen? Street lights went out. Heavy rain pelted everything until morning, the sky clearing as we unzipped our tents. A group of us sit at picnic tables and drink coffee, blinking, half asleep. The slightly damp shirts that I had cleverly hung out to dry the day before are now the wettest things on the planet, steaming and dripping in the blinding sun. Our whole team eats oatmeal with apples at the picnic tables under a pavilion beside our drenched campsite.
Two young women, city workers, in orange overalls, ask if they can join us. They begin by saying that they could tell, by looking at us, that we were not vagrants. Nick doesn't look convinced. Someone explains that we are a team of poets (plus a musician) travelling by canoe, visiting a chain of communities along the Grand River.
Andy and Val Tonkin kindly ferry us by van to the launch site across the road, just downstream of where we had last paddled to shore. We draw numbers to choose canoe partners, distribute gear between the boats, and head off. We take turns hitting shallow parts, getting hung up on grapefruit sized rocks, but it's mostly a smooth ride. Many herons. They look prehistoric, and a little gawky when they fly. We dine at a rustic campsite beneath a big willow tree. There's a grill under a branch, and a clear plastic sheet. Many beer cans. We try to light a lunch fire with strips of soggy cardboard and pitiful wet sticks.
We are met by supporters at the portage, Bob Greene and Veronica Ross. Excellent people. We had dinner and then a pint with them in Cambridge the night before. The portage, just upriver from Paris, is our stop for the day. After unloading the canoes and carrying the gear, and the boats, down a long wooden boardwalk, we meet up with the Tonkins. They ferry us to our new campsite in the Brant Conservation Area, not close exactly, but a great place to camp. Ours is a vast green lot by the river, beside the outfitters' launch. Very scenic. We eat dinner in a rush and race to the reading.
Day Seven: Brantford (Asa Boxer)
A magnificent bald eagle glided by overhead in a decisively straight line from right to left. It flew low enough we could see the stark contrast between its black wings and its white head and tail. Its beak and talons, however, were details too distant to make out.
Our canoe was in the lead, so it was up to Helen and me to find a good, levelish spot where the eight of us could eat lunch. We found a promising island in a still pool just off the main current and beached our canoe there, and flagged our companions to join us. We were proud of our choice of location until I noticed that this little island was actually an anal moraine built up by the droppings of both fowl and beast. I made my observations known; and Helen admitted that she had been coming to a similar conclusion. Upon which we promptly dubbed the place Poo Island and set off in our canoes some five metres to a cleaner spot jutting from the mainland.
We ate salami, cheese, spinach and tomato with bread and mustard. Helen ate her dense, black funny-bread with the same. There were apples, oranges, kippers and sardines. We also had peanut-butter and trail-mix with M&M’s. After scarfing that uncommon combination down, I rolled what seemed like a healthy cigarette with some Drum tobacco Gabe and I had managed to find in Paris. Gabe rolled his own and we smoked a short distance from the eating area.
We were all looking forward to the barbecue awaiting us that evening at Andy Tonkin’s home in Brantford. When we arrived, we hung out on the back porch with Andy, his wife, Val, and a few of their friends. We chowed on dip and hotdogs and barbecue chicken roasted on Andy’s rotisserie. We washed it all down with Moosehead’s Cracked Canoe label — which called for more tobacco.
Just as I was ready for a snooze, our time was up and we had to prepare for our reading that night at the Arts Block, a charming space full of artisanal objects, posters and pamphlets advertising local arts activities.
John B. Lee joined us and read a couple of poems. Unforgettable was his “Finding a Used Condom on the Lynn River Trail” — a poem about his “terrier pup Sarge” who no doubt “following the serious instructions / of a gut god” tries to “dry-swallow” what he describes as “the phlegmy remains of a nearly filled rubber condom,” having “the rheumy flavour of men.” Yuck! But such wonderfully insightful yuck, I’m jealous of the poem. I know that dog and that gut god all too well.
After the reading, Andy (with Val) and Daniel drove us back in their respective vehicles to our campsite at the Brant Conservation Area. The air was damp and chilly and the grass was heavy with dew. I put on an oversized blue flannel shirt and pulled my green rain pants over my threadbare jeans, tucking the shirt in deep and wearing the pants high on my waist for full hillbilly effect. Abigail set up an impressive tepee of kindling and got a fire blazing with one match. To our delight, Andy had brought some well-seasoned logs from his personal supply. The previous night we’d tried to burn what turned out to be some clearly green wood which we’d picked up at a gas station. All it did was smoke and smoke and get in our faces — but it refused to burn. In short, we had an exceptionally great fire and Abigail led us in song. I’m not sure how bad the mosquitoes were. I may have put some Muskol on my arms and neck this particular night. But generally, Daniel’s ankles seemed to keep the mosquitoes busy and out of our hair.
Andy and Val joined our quiet revelry and we all drank beer well into the night. We continued long after Andy and Val took their leave of us. One by one, however, each made her way to sleep. Following the usual order was first Linda, then Helen, then Nick, then Daniel, then Leigh; then a final hour or two passed before Gabe, Abigail and I called it a night and secured the communal grub against raccoons.
Day Eight: Brant Conservation Area (Leigh Kotsilidis)
The paddle from Brant Conservation Area to Newport Bridge has been the longest paddle yet. It is mainly comprised of The Oxbow, a 16.5 km loop of the river which starts and ends essentially at the same place. I tried hard not to think about this fact during our six-hour paddle.
Nick and I were canoe partners again. If it hasn't been mentioned already, Nick and I are Team Awesome! We hadn't been canoe partners since the first day, and I think it's safe to say that we had both improved upon our steering skills. The first day Nick suffered an injury inflicted by an overhanging tree branch that swung into our canoe. Today we managed to avoid most obstacles, except for a giant rock that leapt out in front of our canoe. Nature can be so vicious. Luckily we didn't capsize.
The Oxbow is gorgeous. The flat waters made for leisurely paddling and the deeper waters meant we didn't have to get out and walk our canoes at all today. We saw lots of turtles and, not surprisingly, a few herons. The only real disadvantage of paddling the Oxbow is not having much of a current to propel us. Jokes were made about finding oxen to pull us. By the time it was even lunchtime, we were all exhausted.
Some of us went swimming to refresh ourselves. And our usual salami and cheese sandwiches were a somewhat effective pick-me-up.
The afternoon was more or less the same — turtles, herons, willows — just with a couple more flotillas to mix it up. Despite how it sounds, I really didn't get tired of seeing a turtle sunbathing on a rock, or a heron hanging out on a bank. It's a welcome contrast to my car-spattered life in Montreal.
Back at camp, seven hours later, dinner was served — a delicious pasta primavera with real parmesan cheese and olives!
The campfire reading was the perfect ending to our Oxbow day.
Day Nine: Chiefswood (Daniel Kincade Renton)
Blossom Ave. Bridge to Chiefswood
Staggering from the tent, unusually early for my morning stupor, I journeyed to fill Corky and that other guy (the group’s two water jugs) at a spout further on down the road. At camp, every chore becomes a small adventure. When treasure-hunting for instant coffee, it is easy to strike gold. As the fortune cookie reads: Keep your desires simple and they will be fulfilled.
It seemed like everyone was moving slowly as we rushed to ready for the river. Not only was this the first day in three for packing up our tents and belongings, but our potable water spout had been knocked out by one of the park authority vehicles that backed into it the night before. Most of the gang had an early start, having downed coffees and Cheerios by the time I woke. (At lunch I discovered that someone had also boiled eggs for our riverside picnic). Only two of us were left to get coffee and cereal, Abigail and myself. I tried, mostly in vain, to stay out of Linda’s way as she kindly cleaned up the remaining dishes. Soon, we were all packing tents, untying the clothesline, and stuffing whatever else was left sitting around the campsite into its appropriate place. Andy and Val from Treks in the Wild arrived around 9:30 a.m., but had a wee wait before everyone and their belongings were loaded into his van. We drove to the country road where we’d disembarked the previous day. At the drop-in, two men were fishing on the bank. I asked and they said they hadn’t caught anything yet, and I confirmed the Polish origin of their accents by asking about the beer they were drinking, Żywiec. Yummy, but it seemed early in the morning for beer. Better, I suppose, than that ominous brown-liquorish looking substance some men had been drinking as we pulled up the day before.
As we loaded the canoes and picked paddling partners, Andy joked that we could ask one of the boats how much they’d charge for a tow. At this part of the river, the water is high and the current is slack. There isn’t much use for Andy’s skills at navigating the faster areas because there are no faster areas. You just jump in and paddle your ass off. At least, that’s my strategy. Sometimes it upsets the canoe. Or the other canoeist. Sorry Leigh. Best Fishes! I called back to the Polish men, as we pulled away, inciting someone to remark that if they didn’t know we were poets before, they would now.
Our final two paddles involved much hiding behind bends in the river to get shade or avoid a headwind, but now we encountered new obstacles: power boats, water-skiers and large yellow restaurant barges with names like River Princess, River Belle and River Queen. One skilled one-ski water-skier looped around our canoes and sat in the water for a chat while his motor boat made its way back to him. When he arrived, the driver, in all sincerity, asked if we wanted a tow. Further along, Leigh and I saw something dive in the water that looked like an alligator, which Andy later confirmed to be a large snapping. The shell must have been about the diameter of a basketball. This may have been the last animal our group named Gary.
With the bridge marking the end of our paddle in sight, we decided to stop for a special treat at a burger stand along the river. As soon as I got on the dock a Native woman reeled in a large bass, helped by her grandkids. The grandkids, at least, enjoyed my Best Fishes! salute.
After our quick bite, we were back on the water. Those were the best jalapeno poppers I’ve ever travelled by canoe to buy. Good cans of pop, too. When we pulled up to the dock at Chiefswood National Historic Site on the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, we were greeted by three very kind people who helped us unload and trucked our bags up to our campsite. We were invited to set up camp beside a mansion once owned by Pauline Johnson. It’s the only surviving pre-Confederation Native mansion, and it houses a museum in her honour. Beside our campsite was a field of prairie flowers developed with plant life indigenous to the area. After being fed generously by the Chiefswood staff, we held that night’s poetry reading in front of Pauline Johnson’s mansion to a large and receptive audience. Local native poet, Shelley Clark, joined our reading, honouring us with a few selection of her intimate verse.
In the morning, Karen Dearlove, the museum curator brought us breakfast and gave an enthralling tour of the mansion. Big thanks to everyone at Chiefswood.
Read more about the paddling poets at the Fish Quill Poetry Boat Landmark.