Thursday, June 18, 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

    Halifax Taxi Industry In Crisis Over Sex Assault Allegations: Cabbies' Group

    The recent spate of alleged assaults has raised safety concerns in a city where there were just three alleged sexual assaults by cab drivers in all of 2015.

    Halifax Taxi Industry In Crisis Over Sex Assault Allegations: Cabbies' Group

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council
    The application form will be launched on July 22 and anyone between 16 and 24 years of age can apply until Aug. 12.

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder
    WAINFLEET, Ont. — A 40-year-old Toronto man used his kite board Monday afternoon to help rescue a New York state woman from a rip current in Lake Erie.

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know
    The federal government's new child benefit that rolls out this week is expected to lift almost 300,000 children out of poverty by 2017.

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba
    The B.C. Lottery Corp. is taking online novelty bets on the American election, and spokesman Doug Cheng says there has been rapid growth in wagers since presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's campaign began to gain momentum.

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery
    VANCOUVER — A competitive skier from Utah is crediting a new technique at Vancouver General Hospital for a swift recovery from a brain injury she suffered in Whistler, B.C.

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery