BLOG.
12. THE 9-PERSON RULE
By
Cliff Jacobson
www.cliff-jacobson.com
Everyone who canoes the Boundary
Waters of Minnesota knows that the maximum group size is nine people and four
watercraft. The rule further
states that “…you may not exceed either limit at any time or at any place in
the BWCA, including portages, campsites or waterways.” Prior to 1995, a crew of ten were
allowed. The new rule seems to
make sense, but it has caused some serious problems. First an observation:
If you’ve been to the Boundary
Waters lately you may have noticed that most of the paddlers have gray
hair. Young people in canoes are
rare indeed. We can blame it on smart phones, computers and video games, but frankly the nine person rule has
had some negative impact. A little history: For 19 years I taught environmental science in a Minnesota
school that offered a week-long Boundary Waters canoe experience for
tenth-graders. There were nine kids and one teacher in each group. The 1:9
ratio kept the cost down but paid the bills. Then, around 1995, the “nine person rule” was implemented.
There were now just eight paying students, not nine as before. To this add cuts
in state summer school funding.
Our program was decimated.
It squeaked on for a few years then quietly died.
Now, in the age of “everybody sues
everybody”, schools and camps are wary of lawsuits so they require two
chaperones per group, not one as before. But two adults and just seven paying
customers puts the price of guided trips too high for many to afford. The
result is that many schools which once offered Boundary Waters programs, no
longer do. Once again, the kids lose!
Why four canoes, not five? I doubt that one more canoe per group
impacts the wilderness experience for anyone. Indeed, with nine people and four canoes, someone must ride
dead weight in the middle of a boat.
No teenager I know prefers to ride when he or she can paddle. There’s
also a safety concern: 120 pounds of potatoes is a more stable load in waves
than an equivalent weight of teenager who moves around! There’s also the risk
of hypothermia. Scenario: you’re
canoeing across Gunflint Lake with a rider in the middle. It’s raining and blowing hard. Water dribbles through rain gear,
chilling bare skin. But the kids
are paddling hard which keeps them warm.
There’s a campsite 30 minutes away; you’ll stop there, build a fire and
have some snacks.
A teenage girl is riding
dead-weight in the center of an aluminum canoe. She sits on a thin foam pad, her legs crossed, head
down. She is chilled and
shivering. The leader calls out:
“How you doin’ Jeanie?” She
mumbles a polite “okay”.
Ultimately, the campsite looms into view. Everyone but Jeanie jumps out of the canoe, thrilled to be
on land. The girl can only mumble;
she can’t move her legs. Two strong boys lift her out of the canoe. A roaring
fire ensues and the girl is warmed. Luckily, she survives. A fictitious tale?
Hardly! It happened just this way
to a group I encountered in the BWCA.
Fortunately, we tagged along and built the fire that warmed her! Notice that only the rider was
hypothermic. The kids who flexed
their muscles were just fine.
Some years ago, I guided a canoe
trip on Ontario’s Kopka River, which is in Wabakimi Provincial Park. The Kopka
has a lot of tough rapids and portages.
Very few people canoe it, largely because it requires considerable
skill. Rapids, portages and
campsites are not marked—as in most of Canada, you’re on your own. Over the
years I’ve paddled the Kopka four times and have never seen a soul. When Wabakimi authorities learned that
I was going to canoe the river with a crew of nine (ten total people) they
called me and said the limit was nine.
I begged them to reconsider, stating that there was virtually no canoe
traffic on the river, and a person riding “dead weight” would be a safety
concern in the rapids. No matter:
I was told that this rule applied to all provincial parks and the Kopka
was no exception! So much for
sense and sensibility!
Cliff Jacobson
XXX
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