On the following pages, we speak to folks who live and work around our lake to hear their stories and their sentiments about this water that defines us. From different shores and varied experiences, their feelings are similar about our Great Lake. These are full versions of their stories that appear in the August/September issue of Lake Superior Magazine. You can submit your own version of the “Lake Effect” story. by completing our survey. We will post as many submissions as we can.
Ontario
We speak to folks who live and work around our lake to hear their stories and their sentiments about this water that defines us.
Charles Wilkins, Author, Thunder Bay
How long have you lived by Lake Superior?
In a literal sense since 1991. But I suspect that a tiny inner part of me camped out here for good in the days when I used to hitchhike through on the Trans-Canada during the early 1970s.
Is there a reason that you choose to live here rather than elsewhere?
I’ve stayed here because in the years following my move to Thunder Bay, the surroundings, with their wildness and openness and primitive spirit, gave me not just new things to write about but a new model for my imagination - a new way of looking at the world, free of the old restrictions and expectations.
How did your occupation depend on the Lake?
The lake was a big part of the sense of freedom I felt when I arrived here. I’ve written about Superior in a thousand ways… always something new to say.
Can you remember an experience that defines your interaction with the Lake and why you feel as you do about it (something particularly inspiring, breathtaking or even a wee bit scary)?
When I was out on the MV Paterson on Lake Superior in perhaps 1999, I’d sit up in the wheelhouse in the middle of the night and listen to the second mate tell stories about the hundreds of ships that had gone down over the decades and were just a few fathoms below us in the shipping lanes, some with their crews still aboard. Night after night, I was reminded not just of how perilous and unpredictable the lake can be but of the fragility of life generally and how closely and intimately we’re connected to spirits that we assume are far away and long past.
How would you answer this simple question: Why do you Love Lake Superior?
T.S. Eliot called the Missouri River “a strong brown god.” Lake Superior is a wild blue god.
David Wells , Owner-operator of Naturally Superior Adventures Paddling Center and Rock Island Lodge Bed & Breakfast, Wawa
How long have you lived by Lake Superior?
16 years.
Is there a reason that you choose to live here rather than elsewhere?
From Toronto originally, could not believe such a big freshwater sea existed in Ontario. Now I am inspired by the lake and Canadian Shield bedrock.
How did your occupation depend on the Lake?
Yes, as owner/operator of Naturally Superior Adventures Paddling Centre and Rock Island Lodge Bed and Breakfast (www.naturallysuperior.com; www.rockislandlodge.ca; webcam at www.wawawebcam.ca). We have a regular staff of about 12 plus all sorts of additional guiding staff. We were acknowledged by National Geographic Magazine as among the top 200 operations in the world, and also by Sea Kayaker Magazine as readers’ choice for sea kayak tours and instruction in Canada.
Can you remember an experience that defines your interaction with the Lake and why you feel as you do about it (something particularly inspiring, breathtaking or even a wee bit scary)?
It was my first sea kayak trip ever paddling from Hattie Cove in Pukaskwa Park to Michipicoten Bay in Wawa. I was sitting along a very remote shore realizing that I could have been the first person in the history of the world to have sat at that place.
How would you answer this simple question: Why do you Love Lake Superior?



Latest Comments
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan
Posted by Gustave Line November 12, 2011 18:20:40
Lake Superior region
Posted by Gus O. Linja September 01, 2011 19:48:27