Planning
an adventure can be as much fun as the adventure itself. Now by planning an
adventure I don’t mean traveling to some lodge and hiring a guide to take you
fishing, hunting, hiking, or whatever. Planning an adventure is when you are
doing it on your own, preferably into country that you have never trekked
before, using maps and maybe books to figure out where you are heading.
Logging roads show up well in Google Earth images. |
Everybody’s
definition of adventure is probably different and may be different now from
what it was years ago or will be tomorrow. Today I like my adventures to end
with a hot shower and ice cubes in my scotch. So starting early in the morning and
returning to Camp Grouse late in the day works. Forty or fifty years ago the
hard ground felt fine and cleaning up in an icy stream was regarded as
refreshing.
Right
now I’m planning an adventure into a fishing spot that is more than a mile from
where a vehicle can drive to and that spot is many miles into the woods on
logging roads. The plan is to start early and make a day of it.
We
did the same thing last summer, in some of the hottest weather of the year,
trying to find a remote stream’s headwaters where trout might seek cooler
temperatures. Mostly we cooled off in the water and listened to nearby coyotes
serenading us. No trout were found, but we will go back there someday.
It
used to be topographical maps were where dreams of adventures started. Now I
think Google Earth is a better choice, then use a topo map to get an idea of
topography. Books may help, but most are too generalized.
If
you hunt ruffed grouse in logging country Google Earth will show you where the
cuts are. Grouse love a young forest and a regenerating clearcut can be a
goldmine. It is possible to find some that aren’t noticeable from roads and you
may find a hotspot that is virtually untouched. Deer hunting can be done the
same way. A few years ago I discovered a huge hidden cutting more than a dozen
miles from the asphalt and every trip into that place is an adventure.
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