- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
Johnn, here are my Ojibwa shoes. About identical to your picture of them. They sure were the tried and proven pattern, all over northern Canada. In north-central BC, every forest sevice worker I ever heard of, the men who used snowshoes constantly, all winter, used nothing but that pattern. So did the game department men in the bush, as well as many trappers. The only variation was size. These are 11 x 54.
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We have a pair of those in the basement, and my wife like them a lot. I grew up with traditional snowshoes, and after having them break or fall to pieces in very wet snow conditions I gave up and embraced the synthetic ones. I tried the military magnesium frame style with the wire mesh, and the only thing that kept me from sinking deeper in the snow was the ground. They had a frame style similar to that of MSR, but if you got on a hard drift they were pretty slippery. They were tough and light, but if they don't keep you on top of the snow they might as well stay at home.
Last June we walked into our cabin a couple of times until we could drive in. Sometimes you luck out and can just follow a set of tire tracks.
In the spring there's enough daylight that the snow drops lots over a few days
But the big drifts last well into July
The crampons on the synthetic snow shoes make it easier to get moving when you a pulling heavy loads
Snow machines are nice, but they can break down, and then you're walking, so good snowshoes can make the difference between living and dying.





























, but that is on my agenda for the New Year. I have a couple of photo's of interest I'll e-mail you.






















