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Gateway to
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By the mid
1920s, travel into the Narrow Hills was becoming
more frequent and a well defined network of trails had developed.
First broken by the trappers travelling on foot, horseback or dog
team, the trails were widened to allow wagons to pass.
During these
years, as there was an increase of fisherman and trappers who
came to reap the rich harvest, freighting trips became necessary
to haul supplies in as well as the fish and furs out. These
trips, undertaken by men such as Zac (Jack Pine) Anderson, who
brought supplies in for the Narrows Hills Fire Tower in 1938,
required even better routes, so many improvements were made.
Wagon trips were tiring, often taking days to cover the route
from Snowden to little Bear Lake. It also required the building
of corduroy crossing at the many mud holes they encountered along
the way. Later, tractors would replace the horses at the head of
the wagon train and the trails were gradually improved to a
standard that would allow car travel. Four main routes were
developed. Two from the south into the Fishing Lakes area and two
branching north from these.
The Fishing
Lake Trail, later to be following by the southern stretch of the
Hansen Lake road, Originated north of Choiceland and ran to
Caribou Creek. From there it ran east to meet the Narrow Hills
Trail at the point near the latter side of the Narrow Hills Fire
Tower. This trail was bulldozed in the late 1940s to allow
travel capabilities for all sorts of vehicles.
Some miles
east the Narrow Hills Trail pushed north of the Village of Love,
winding its scenic way along the high "hogs back"
formed by the Narrow Hills Esker to its rendezvous with the
Fishing Lake Trail. For many years this was the most frequently
used trail and was the first to bring a car into part of the
north.
Les Lee and
Jack Forrester of Choiceland made several trips by car in the
1930s. The trip would take up to four days, per trip! On
one occasion, Lee had to walk miles to White Fox for parts for
the 1924 Chevrolet Coupe in order to get home.
Early
travelers on this trail, named hills and bends after incidents or
things they found there. This led to such names as
"Stovepipe Hill", "Bull Hill", "Hairpin
Hill", and "Potato Hill".
A third trail
known as the "Big Bear Road", ran north from the
Junction of the Fishing Lakes and Narrow Hills Trails, to Big
Sandy Lake. This trail was sometimes referred to as the
"CPR" or "Hudson Bay" Trail, since it was
cleared in the early 1900s by surveyors from the Canadian
Pacific Railroad and the Hudson Bay Company.
The two
companies were trying to establish a railroad route that would
run from Prince Albert through to Port Churchill, Manitoba. The
Hudson Bay planned to build a big trading post along the way at
Big Sandy Lake, which at that time was known as Big Bear Lake.
The plan failed, however, when engineers encountered large
muskegs at the south end of Big Sandy. They were forced to
transfer their efforts to a new route farther east, but the
clearing of the trail created access to the area for trapping and
fishing.
Old-timers
relate stories of the hardships and tragedy which befell the
surveyors when storms and dwindling supplies caused the loss of
many of their horses. Broken boards and harnesses can still be
found to this day in the bogs south of Big Sandy.
The fourth
major trail, known as the Cub Lake Trail, branched off the
Fishing Lake Trail, just to the north of Lower Fishing Lake. This
trail was located by Henry Fournier in 1930. It lead to the site
of the Cub Lake Fire Tower, which was built by Fournier in 1932.
One other
trail, the Bear Lake Trail, ran thirty-two miles north of Lower
Fishing Lake and connected to Little Bear Lake. It was
constructed in 1943 by the Nipawin Fish and Game Association to
allow more anglers access to the choice Lake Trout in Little Bear
Lake.
Many other trails, long since overgrown, can be located by following the blaze marks on the trees.
Continue the: Gateway
to the Scenic Narrow Hills
| Introduction | The
Early Days | Trails
| Fire Towers | Prospecting |
| Administration | The
Later Years | The Village of Love |
Return to Love
web site:
www.cybervillagemall.com/sk/love