FOUR GOOD DECISIONS AFTER ONE BAD ONE


“When you have played basketball for a while…[Y]ou develop a sense of where you are.”

So wrote John McPhee about Bill Bradley, Princeton ’65, senator for 18 years, a remarkable man. 

When Bradley was playing college ball, I was in high school, and my best friend played for our high school team. He and I shot baskets out in his backyard, talking about girls and other things teenage guys did. That year, I went from an awful 30% free throw shooter to a decent 65-70%, taking his advice to shoot each one the same way and not let a bad shot change my mood. He told me to use the backboard for my jump shots, because it made bad shooters fair and fair shooters good.

Thirty-one years later, Jon Krakauer saved his own life on Mt. Everest while descending in a snowstorm by recognizing parts of the route he had taken up. He had a sense of where he was, trail memory. 

Backcountry navigation is having a sense of where you are, a sense that can be developed, using aids that make a bad navigator fair, a fair navigator good, and a good navigator excellent.

***

I pushed off from Wolf Creek into Burntside Lake, heading towards Crab Lake in the Burntside Unit of the Boundary Waters, a separate area of the wilderness I hadn’t yet explored that summer. It was a pleasant September afternoon, and my plan was to go north 2-3 miles and then I would be “on the map” I had in a plastic bag by my knee.  I was lacking the actual map of my starting point, but it was so close to the edge of the maps I did have I didn’t see any problem. North was in front of me. 

About a mile out, I could still easily see where I had launched and began looking for islands I would use for markers on the maps with me. There were several, and at first I thought I had found one, but the long axis wasn’t right, so I looked at a couple more. They weren’t right, either. This was bothersome, until I found an island that looked possible, now about 2 miles away from where I had pushed off. I started to look to the west, where I planned to go, but what I saw didn’t match the map.

I then continued, paddling, making the rookie mistake by “making” another island “fit” to where it should be for me to be where I thought I was.  That wasn’t working either. As a general rule, you can’t remake the surroundings, put the Sun in a different part of the sky, or change the shape of an island.

Finally, I did the first smart thing I had done since I had pushed off.  I stopped, drifting in the calm lake.

The second smart thing I did was to speak aloud, as I have done on other occasions, countable in number, I have been in this situation. I think it better if one speaks aloud. It sounds more honest, more compelling, more urgent.

“You do not know where you are on this lake.” I said to the waves and to the foam near the canoe. “You don’t need help, but you need to go back. Now.” Aloud, the words had power. I did a couple of draw strokes behind me to pull the stern to starboard and the bow to port, then did a figure of eight motion ending in a power stroke, this time moving forward again, south, towards the distant shore where I had begun, the third smart thing I did. Even without binoculars I could see where I had started. 

And where today’s trip would end.

When I got back to shore, I put the canoe on the car and drove back into town to look carefully at the maps of the lake. I easily needed to go another mile just to get on the maps I had.  

I then bought the map, the fourth smart thing of the day. It took four smart actions to deal with one dumb one. It seems like a bad ratio, but if you survive unhurt, except for your pride, the ratio is fair enough.

The following day, I returned to Burntside from a different jumping off point and into the Unit for three nights. I had no navigation problems. I had a mile portage in and back out. One night in there was my Outdoor Triad of wilderness, total quiet, and completely dark skies.  I took a long way back around to the starting point. With a good map, it was simple. The fall colors were beginning, I saw a bunch of duck decoys on the water in one place and got out of there fast. That was smart, too.

That experience occurred well before GPS. Today, I require two of the following: map, GPS, and trail memory. Having a compass is mandatory. Not often I’ve used one, but more often than my tourniquet.

One Response to “FOUR GOOD DECISIONS AFTER ONE BAD ONE”

  1. Steve Nash's avatar Steve Nash Says:

    That belongs in a book, “Mistakes Were Made.” Those weasel words, taking responsibility without taking responsibility, fit so many outside — and the truth of the decisions YOU made become apparent to any novice in need of reminders. You write. I’ll enjoy!

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