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In 1934 international entrepreneur and filmmaker Charles Bedeaux hired a team of Canadian men to trail blaze from Edmonton, Alberta, to Telegraph Creek, BC. What started out as adventure for Carl Davidson and Bob Beattie soon became a treacherous and heartbreaking journey. While Bedeaux hob-nobbed with Europe's elite in Paris, Beattie and Davidson suffered impossible challenges and near starvation in BC's harshest country. After five years of misadventure and virtually no communication from Bedeaux, Beattie and Davidson were informed that the mission had been called off, just before Bedeaux was arrrested for espionage. The ill-fated trip is just one of many stories gleaned from the memories of pioneers who settled the interior of British Columbia during the first half of the twentieth century. Hardships and misfortune were the norm, but as Boudreau discovers, many possessed an intangible mettle and a sense of humour that saw them through rough times. In "Trappers and Trailblazers" Boudreau has preserved stories in danger of disappearing, and his extraordinary research has also uncovered a collection of intriguing and previously unpublished photographs.
In 1967, in celebration of Canada's 100th birthday, Les Voyageurs
left Rocky Mountain House, Alberta, in ten 26-foot canoes. These
one hundred gallant men, representing eight provinces and two
territories, travelled 5,286 kilometres to Expo '67 in Montreal.
The trip took them across such major lakes as Winnipeg, Lake of the
Woods, Superior, Nipissing, Huron and Georgian Bay and through 68
grueling portages. After 104 days of travel, the team from Manitoba
paddled into the Expo site as the winners and claimed first prize.
Forbidding canyons, raging rapids and menacing rocks--this was the
daily challenge that faced whitewater men who worked the wild
rivers and creeks to bring freight and supplies to northern BC in
the years before the Grand Trunk Railway. In particular, the Grand
Canyon of British Columbia's Fraser River was infamous for
swallowing at least 200 luckless occupants of rafts and small craft
between the years 1862-1921. "Sternwheelers and Canyon Cats:
Whitewater Freighting on the Upper Fraser" is the story of the
"Canyon Cats" who made their living running the Grand Canyon and
other equally dangerous waterways; men such as George Williams,
affectionately known to his peers as "The Wizard of the River," and
Frank Freeman, a powder expert who tamed the wildest water by
blowing out many of the worst boulders and logjams thereby allowing
safer passage for the scows, sternwheelers, rafts and boats that
travelled the murky river.
There are some truths that are inescapable, and one such truth is the necessity for harmony and disharmony in our natural world: predator and prey, humans and wildlife, nature and the forces of nature. In Jack Boudreaus ninth book, KING OF THE MOUNTAIN, he takes a deep look at the delicate balance of co-existence. He introduces us to the hunters, landowners and conservationists that have witnessed the changing world of BCs great north. True to Jacks style, these stories are personal, humorous and sometimes tragic for both human and animal.
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