Camping
- Duluth Pack - Large backpack often with hip straps for support so that you can carry more things at once and stay organized while on portages, packing the canoe and in camp.
- Tumpline
- Strap on a duluth pack that is designed to be placed across your forehead to relieve the pressure off of your shoulders and back while portaging. It redistributes the weight to utilize your neck muscles as well.
- Latrine
- Wilderness bathroom facility that is generally found at the end of a short path leading away from all BWCA campsites. There are no latrines in the Quetico.
- Chest Pack
- Often on portages, people will choose to carry one duluth pack on their back, and one on their front, or chest. This evens the weight on your front and back, but it is also considered dangerous because it blocks your view from spotting your footing as you negotiate the rocky terrain on your way to the next lake.
- Frame Pack
- A pack that is used more for hiking than boundary waters camping. This pack is really a metal fram with shoulder straps and a waistbelt. All of your gear is then strapped to the metal frame for easier carrying. These packs are not canoe friendly because they are often too tall and can actually puncture holes in the Kevlar canoes.
- Groundcloth
- Tarp that is put either on the ground before your tent, or put on the floor inside your tent to protect you from getting wet when it rains.
- Dining Fly
- A nylon tarp that is used to shelter your camp kitchen area. Usually strung between trees at an angle to allow rain water to wash away.
- Thermarest
- A lightweight and compact air sleeping pad that is self-inflatable for easy setup. Provides the 4-star quality to your tenting experience.
![[IMAGE: Mother Loon feeding baby loon in the BWCA]](seapix/2005/loon_feed.jpg)
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Trees of Northern Minnesota
- Birch
- A deciduous tree that grows in "groves". You'll be able to spot them by their white bark. The wood is very hard and heavy and makes for great firewood.
- White Cedar
- A conifer that has a very hard wood. It grows right next to the water and you'll see that they grow with a curved trunk. Almost always, they will curve toward the water, and often found growing in the swamps. The tree does not have needles, but instead, fan-like leaves.
- Spruce
- Evergreen tree that is conical in shape. There are two kinds of spruce, white and black. The white grows almost three times as tall as the black spruce, which only reaches about 35 feet. Needles are short and grow straight off of the twig in all directions. Spruce wood is good for fires, but beware of the sparks that the wood throws out.
- Balsam Fir
- Can be confused with a spruce, but you'll tell the difference by looking at the needles. The needles grow flatter off of the twig, and also have two white stripes on the under side of each needle. The wood is soft and worthless for fires. Cones grow upward off of the upper branches.
- White Pine
- Very tall evergreen tree. Needles grow in clusters of 5 and are longer than the spruce and balsams. The wood makes a very hot fire and also used commonly for lumber.
- Red Rine
- Looks a lot like the white pine, but has reddish bark. The foolproof way to determine the difference between the red and white pine is by the needles. The red pine needles grow in clusters of only 2. Doesn't burn as well as the white pine.
- Jack Pine
- Tall thin trunk that has scaly bark. The needles are shorter than other pines and grow in clusters of 2. This pine only reproduces during forest fires. The cones don't open to allow the seeds out unless the temperature reaches a certain degree that only a fire can produce.
- Aspens
- Three types: large-toothed, trembling and balsam poplar. Deciduous tree that grows very fast and often found in burned over and logged areas. The wood is very soft and preferred by beavers. The wood burns fast and hot. The bark is whiteish-green.
- Maple
- Not as common in the canoe country because it requires a decent soil that is dryer. The rocky terrain isn't the best for the maple, but will be found growing in groups. The maple leaf is commonly known because it is the leaf featured on the Canadian flag. The leaves grow red in the fall providing a beautiful contrast.
- Tamarack
- Evergreen tree that grows only in bogs and wet areas. The only evergreen tree in the canoe country to lose its needles every fall. They turn yellow in the fall and fall off just like decidous trees. The wood is very durable.
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