Secret trail, secret site..... Mississagi, you keep wonderful secrets!
We started asking her about the beach site that we had just came from and she told us that the site was Site #1. Apparently, when they printed the maps, that site was over looked and did not make it onto the map. I was a little dismayed by this. It meant that we could have slept at the beautiful beach site last night instead of dealing with a hornets nest. However, it also meant that on the very first night we had slept at site number 3 and should have been at site number 2 which was the hornets nest site. Well, at least we didn't run into other campers that we had to argue with about who's site we were on. We would have been in the wrong and not even known it.
We told her that we were confused by the "no camping" sign that was posted there. She explained that the sign was intended for the portage and not for the campsite. That makes sense, but I think the sign should probably be posted further away from the campsite and a little further down the portage in order to make it less confusing.
We told her about the bear poop in the area of the Upper Bush Lake campsite. (She also didn't know that the Upper and Lower Bush Lakes were reversed on their maps). That is when she told us the sad story of why Bear Mountain is called Bear Mountain and why there are warnings posted about bears all over the park. It's a story that I won't soon forget. Apparently, a couple years ago, some people brought their dog with them up on Bear Mountain but they didn't have it on a leash. The dog chased after and attacked a bear and then the bear chased the dog back to where the people were. The owners ended up tying the dog to a tree and leaving it there. When the rangers went up the mountain, they found the dog dead with it's entrails everywhere and they had to shoot the bear.
At first I was appalled by the story and wondered what kind of person would tie their dog to a tree and leave it there to be killed by a bear. But then I thought about it some more and realized that I couldn't really judge because I wasn't there. After all, if you are up on a mountain about 8 to 12 km from the main park with no gun and no one to help you, are you going to carry a bleeding and injured dog down the mountain with you when you know that a bear is right behind you and is following you in attack mode? Chances are the dog may not have made it to medical help on time and would have died anyways. And if you left the dog untied it would follow you and bring the bear right to you again and put you in danger. It's heart breaking, but they may not have had much choice at that point really. However, they did have a choice to keep the dog on leash so that it wouldn't have agitated and attacked the bear in the first place. Or better yet, don't bring the dog with you at all. Hopefully, by spreading this story it will make others think first and prevent anything like this from happening again in the future.
We probably could have talked with her all day, but other campers were coming in and needing her attention, and we needed to get set up at our next site. So, we finished registering for Walk-in site # 2 and then we drove over to the site. When we got there we found that someone else was parked in our spot for the campsite. I noticed that their car permit said "back country" on it, so we figured that they had probably stayed at Walk-in Site #2 last night and then, since there was no parking at the trail head, they just left their car here. But that was ok because the parking lot was really rather large and we just parked in a spot next to them instead.
We made it in up to about our knees before we decided that we just couldn't do it. It was way too cold!
The cold air temperature from this morning was still not warm enough to say that it was hot out. And it definitely wasn't hot enough to warm up the lake. But we still had to get cleaned up.
We jumped in the car and drove over to the other beach. It was worth a try.
We drove into town and found a place called "Sarah's Food Truck" and placed our order.
We went to bed around 9:15 and could hear the call of the loon off in the distance.
Then we heard the loud yelling and carrying on of a bunch of drunk guys partying it up at the other end of the park. No one went and told them to quiet down. Well, I guess that only goes to show that we were back in "civilization" again. I already missed the peace and quiet of the back country.