Welcome to RadarLake
Filed under: Create, Ideas by Jeremy on Monday, 28th March 2011 at 12:53 pm
I wrote this post over a year ago hoping to put it up when I felt RadarLake was well underway. I think I’m a little late with that considering we’ve had almost 10,000 visits. I’m posting this now because it’s also going to go onto the “About” page letting people know what this page is all about. Enjoy!
Starting from the Wescana Inn in the The Pas, Manitoba, take a right out of the parking lot. Take main street to the Macdonald’s and hook a roger. Follow that road across the bridge into the Opaskwayak Cree Nation reserve. Keep heading straight past the Tolko mill turnoff out of town. After About 75 km take a right at Fiddler’s corner, which is now closed and may be called something else. Basically, follow the signs for Thompson. Take that road, for roughly 150 km. Stop in Ponton for fuel; it’s the last place to fill up pre-logging road. Once gassed up, continue north 40 km and keep an eye out for the South Jonas road. The road is tough to see but, basically, it’s past the Jenpeg road turnoff and if you hit Sasagiu Rapids you have gone too far. Once on the South Jonas, follow it for 32 km until you get to McLaren Creek road which will be marked with a yellow diamond-shaped sign. You will know if you’re on the right road if you pass a ton of old treeplants between the ages of two to ten years. You will also cross a crazy bridge which always has a bunch of bald eagles fishing in the river below it. It’s super awesome, they all fly out from under the bridge as you drive by. Be careful on this road, its super shitty and many vehicles have blown tires and snapped axles. Take that for seven km until you reach Radar Lake road. This road will be super sketchy if it has rained.
Welcome to Radar Lake. This place is WAY off the beaten path. This is where I’ve had many of the greatest conversations of my life: Radar Lake Road.
Imagine spending eight hours a day alone. Nothing to do but plant trees–and think. And then get into a van with 13 other planters who have been doing the same. The variety of creative, deep, insightful, crazy questions, ideas and stories that spill out of people’s mouths is unlike anything I’ve ever experienced. I can remember somebody climbing into the van and the first words out of their mouth was, “what would happen if you dropped a ball into a hole drilled through the middle of the Earth?” Leaving the mind alone for that long is like putting Mentos into Diet Coke–you don’t know what you’ll get but you know it’ll be interesting.
Then take those exhausted planters, put a couple beers into them, sit them around a fire and observe. Conversations about aquatic ape theory turn into conversations about Kanye West without anyone noticing. Questions about the edge of the universe morph into interpretive dance-offs. Then, on days off, sixteen beers deep into a twelve pack of Pilsner, people who, half an hour earlier were dancing to Styx with their shirts off, will be sitting on top of boxcars in the train yard taking about photography.
The world wasn’t as cut and dry as the newspaper would have it where every story conforms to a section–world, sports, opinions, arts. Somehow, in the middle of the bush of Northern Manitoba, conversations had no borders.
And it’s not necessarily just Radar Lake. It’s also West Arm, Goose Lake, the Porcupines, Wu-Tang camp, Machine Camp, Kississing Lake Road–but Radar Lake has the coolest name. Imagine if this blog was called Wu-Tang Camp.
Radar Lake is about recreating this kind of conversation. Breaking the mold of single-issue blogs and creating a place where all kinds of ideas, colours and words can live. I know, I know, there’s a lot about science here. But I’m open to fiction, non-fiction, photos, music, poems, opinions. If you’ve got something you think other people would like and you’re interested in sharing. Send it along to radarlake[dot]blog[at]gmail[dot]com.
And feel free to “like” RadarLake on Facebook. I’m pretty sure it’ll make RadarLake posts pop up in your news feed but I’m not up on that kind of stuff. Or, if you’re more into Readers, you can subscribe by clicking here. If you don’t know what a Reader is I think I’m going to post about it sometime later this week…
Thanks for dropping by.




My heart is gooey with all this Northern MB love! Thanks Jer! My mission this summer is to get you a better picture of the Wescana when I am home in August. (side note: South Jonas has planted trees that are 20+ years old…I have trees on that road that are 11 years old, they grow up so fast:)
I like it too…and I like that picture. Reminds me of the Wescana in the 80s…when there was no McDonalds….
It was actually the only photo I could find of the Wescana online. I would love to get a better photo!!
The instructions for how to get to Radar Lake road are Outland’s official instructions so I have no idea about the age of the planted trees. All I know is that I once danced under a full moon drunk in the middle of the night on the South Jonas after I smashed some stuff in the Wabowden dump. Best time of the my life.
http://bedbugregistry.com/hotel/MB/The-Pas/Wescana-Inn