Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec Man Wraps Up 3,200-kilometre Trek Down Yukon River

The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2016 01:46 PM
    On the last leg of his 3,200-kilometre voyage down the Yukon River on a riverboard, Denis Morin was moved to tears.
     
    He had stopped for a day to rest in Mountain Village, Alaska, a reservation of less than 1,000 people. He connected with the people there, he said, and when he left, a group of villagers bid him farewell on the beach.
     
    The Quebec man said traditionally, that's something they do for loved ones who are leaving by boat.
     
    "I saw a group of people coming to the beach, just to see me," he said. "I'll bring that with me for a long time."
     
    Morin, 54, wasn't leaving by boat. By that point, he'd travelled thousands of kilometres over several weeks by riverboard — something like a paddle board with raised edges.
     
    Riverboarding is a whitewater sport, Morin said. Riverboarders wear helmets and flippers, and when the river flow isn't strong enough to carry them, they swim. He was on the trek for 75 days — including 10 days of rest — from late May to early August.
     
    He'd usually be in the water six hours a day, Morin said. Although sometimes when it was stormy, he'd cut his day short and set up camp.
     
    Early on in his trip, when he got to Whitehorse Lake, it was snowing and hailing, he said.
     
     
    "In my mind, I thought, 'What kind of adventure am I getting myself into?' " he said. But he kept going.
     
    The longest he spent in the water was 11 hours, when he reached the Arctic Circle, Morin said. It was summer, so the sun shone for most of the day.
     
    "It was a wonderful day," he said.
     
    This wasn't Morin's first long-haul trip — he'd riverboarded in northern Quebec before. But this trip was different. It was his first trip after retiring from a career in information technology, and he said he figured it would be a good transition to his "new lifestyle".
     
    And his new lifestyle doesn't include much stuff — he sold everything he owned, and all he brought with him on the trip were two inflatable bags that floated behind him in the river.
     
    They contained camping materials, like a tent, some clothes, a first aid kit and three months worth of food — mostly dehydrated "astronaut" food.
     
    But he said he would sometimes stop in villages adjacent to the river to pick up "comfort food" like cookies.
     
    "I'm kind of a cookie monster," he said. "And I couldn't bring cookies for three months."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Edmonton Woman Who Purchased Lotto Ticket On A Whim Picks Up $21 Million Prize

    Edmonton Woman Who Purchased Lotto Ticket On A Whim Picks Up $21 Million Prize
    Bogumila Mroczkowski won the money in the April 30 Lotto 6/49 draw but chose to accept her winnings on Tuesday.

    Edmonton Woman Who Purchased Lotto Ticket On A Whim Picks Up $21 Million Prize

    Calgary Zoo Says Its Komodo Dragon, Loka, Dead At 30 Years Old; Came From Toronto

    Calgary Zoo Says Its Komodo Dragon, Loka, Dead At 30 Years Old; Came From Toronto
    Loka came to Calgary in 2014 from Toronto’s zoo and received veterinary care as a geriatric animal.

    Calgary Zoo Says Its Komodo Dragon, Loka, Dead At 30 Years Old; Came From Toronto

    B.C. Parrot Refuge Transfer Complete, Hundreds Of Birds Now Up For Adoption

    B.C. Parrot Refuge Transfer Complete, Hundreds Of Birds Now Up For Adoption
      Refuge supervisor Matthew Spate says between 450 to 500 parrots have left the sanctuary at Coombs, located about 150 kilometres north of Victoria.

    B.C. Parrot Refuge Transfer Complete, Hundreds Of Birds Now Up For Adoption

    Magazine Writer Charged With Violating Publication Ban In Police Officer's Death

    Magazine Writer Charged With Violating Publication Ban In Police Officer's Death
    Halifax police say a writer for a local satire and gossip magazine has been charged with breaching the publication ban in the case of a police officer's murder.

    Magazine Writer Charged With Violating Publication Ban In Police Officer's Death

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods
    Vancouver-born, Montreal-based Madeleine Thien was recognized for "Do Not Say We Have Nothing" (Knopf Canada) and Montreal-born, Hungary-based David Szalay got the nod for "All That Man Is" (McClelland & Stewart).

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash
    Police say a pleasure boat, believed to be between five and seven meters long, smashed into a docked container ship at high speed just before 10 p.m.

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash