ray-way
 Order Form   Ray's Website   Ray-Way Products   Contact Us   Guestbook 
 Trail Life   Quilt Kit   Backpack Kit   Tarp Kit   Net-Tent Kit   Tarp Book Essential 
 A.T Gear Video   Insulated Hat Kit   Thread   Knife Kit   Caper Video 
 FAQs   News   Guarantee   Sewing Tips   Why Sew? 
   ORDER FORM   
 Ray's Website 
 Sewing Tips 
 why-sew? 
 Ray Way Products 
 Trail-Life 
 Tarp-Book-Essential 
 AT-Gear-Video 
 Quilt-Kit 
   Bristlecone 
   Q-Updates 
   Storage-Bag-Kit 
   Stowbag-Kit 
 Backpack-Kit 
   Bp-Colors 
   BP-Video 
   Bp-Updates 
 Tarp-Kit 
   BatWing 
   Net-Tent 
 Insulated-Hat-Kit 
 Knife-Kit 
 Sewing-Thread 
 Caper-Video 
 Siku-Kayak 
   Sk-Photos 
 Sleeping-Pad-Kit 
 FAQs 
 Cannonballs 
 Catenary 
 First-Visit 
 Integrity-Paradigm 
 Sewing-Tips 
 Treadwheel 
 1969-Huascaran 
 1976-Baja3-Linda 
 1977-Baja4-John-Al 
 1981-Baja8-Ed 
 1982-Suka 
 1987-PCT-1 
 1988-Sea-Tub 
 1989-Cardon-Coast 
 1989-JMT 
 1991-PCT-2 
 1992-CDT 
 1993-AT 
 1993-Building-Shop 
 1994-PCT-3 
 1995-Tempest 
 1996-Adirondacks 
 1996-Alaska-Arctic-Coast 
 1997-Mackenzie-Arctic-Coast 
 1999-Back-River 
 2001-Kazan-River 
 2002-Atlantic-Row 
   Updates 
 2003-IUA-Hike-Bike 
 2004-Hello-America 
 2005-Coppermine 
 2006-Greenland 
 2006-SouthPole 
   SP-Preparations 
 2007-Aconcagua 
 2007-Argentina 
 2007-Himalayas 
 2007-Vinson 
 2009-AT 
 2010-AT 
 2010-TransAm 
 2011-Moto-America 
 2011-Moto-Prudhoe 
 2012-02-Moto-Mexico 
 2012-03-Mexican-Dragon 
 2012-04-Canyonlands 
 
 Chronologies 
 Climbing 
   Climbing_log 
 Hang-Gliding 
 Kayak-Construction 
 Knife-Making 
 Light-Fantastic 
 Profile 
 Skydiving 
   You-Can-Fly 
 Snowkiting 
 News 
 Rj_guestbook 
 Magazines 

1997

Once again the year has been a happy, interesting and busy one for Jenny and me.

We began with another revision to our PCT Hiker's Handbook. With this, the book went into its 6th printing.

Then came another aerospace composite kayak building project. Our intent was to improve our design and building techniques over the previous year's efforts. Again we designed the boat using the computer program I had written. After building the mold from scratch, we built the kayak using kevlar and carbon fiber impregnated in epoxy. And to achieve the highest strength and lowest weight we vacuum-bagged all components. Altogether this project required eleven weeks of full-time effort.

Additionally, we spent several weeks making gear for the summer's Arctic journey. This gear included polypropylene fleece clothing head to toe, a Primaloft sleeping quilt and parkas, Gore-Tex rain coats, neoprene spray skirts and boots that we glued to our Gore-Tex drysuits, extensive modifications to the tent, and so forth.

Prior to the Arctic journey we traveled twice to New Jersey, once in early spring, and again in early summer. The purpose was to attend week-long wilderness survival classes taught by Tom Brown Jr.

We sent the new kayak by truck to Fort Providence, located in the Northwest Territories of Canada. Then On June 11 we flew to Yellowknife, from where we rode a bus to our starting point on the magnificent Mackenzie River, Canada's largest. After paddling the river's 975 mile length to the town of Inuvik, we hired a float plane to transport us, boat and gear to our turn-around point at Komakuk. It was here that we had ended a 1,400 mile journey the previous year. This year's coastal journey began with a portage around a huge ice floe covered with hundreds of seals. Then reaching open water we enjoyed mostly ice-free but boisterous seas to the village of Tuktoyaktuk, a few hundred miles to the east. That represented two weeks of very rough going in unremitting headwinds.

Eastward of "Tuk" the polar ice pack extended in a near solid pan, and this frozen condition looked like it would prevail through much of the remaining summer. So with utmost reluctance we switched to Plan B, which was to retreat inland and paddle another of Canada's big rivers. Flying back to Yellowknife, we then waited a week for the kayak to join us by air cargo, all the while taking advantage of the region's beautiful hiking. But everyday the airline kept putting us off, until eventually we had to admit the impracticality of transporting the kayak back to Yellowknife. So we arranged to truck the kayak home, even though most of our gear lay packed within the kayak. Imagine how we felt, walking dejectedly into the local Wal-Mart and buying a cheap Coleman canoe, paddles, life jackets, and rubber boots! This was not the recommended outfit for negotiating one of N. America's most remote rivers, but it would have to do. So after buying a month's food at a local supermarket, we hired a float plane for the three-hour ride eastward to Lynx Lake at the headwaters of the Thelon River. The infamous "Barrenlands" proved to be some of the most beautiful and spectacular country either of us had ever experienced. And during our three week, 575 mile journey down this stupendous river we experienced an almost complete lack of people, unending and beautifully verdant tundra, scores of musk ox seen at close range, and a herd of some 2,000 caribou that practically surrounded us one day. Arriving at Baker Lake, near Hudson Bay, we sold the canoe to a villager and boarded a plane for home.

Returning to Oregon August 20, we painted the house, entertained my folks visiting from Colorado for a few days, then flew back to New Jersey for nearly three months of classes. Of course the classes weren't all work, as we managed to slip away for a week's break to relax at our favorite resort in the Caribbean. At any rate, we attended these classes on a first-name-only basis with the instructors and fellow students, so many were surprised to find me posing centerfold :) in the current issue of Backpacker magazine (Feb '98). The final evening I was honored to start the ceremonial fire with a bow drill. And as my tinder burst into flame someone quipped with a gleam - "That's the Ray way."

 Home   RayJardine.com 
Copyright © 2012
7,478,574 visitors 
PLEASE DO NOT COPY these photos and pages
in full or in part, to other websites. Thank you!