Outpost Travel Magazine Issue 51 Preview

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Outpost51 contents MAY/JUNE 2006

Tripping 9 Dr. Wilderness 10 Local Knowledge Build it yourself in Casablanca

14 Canada Made Me ST. JOHN’S CROWS NEST CLUB; PROTECTING A MARITIME MARSH; VANCOUVER’S “DMZ”

18 Going Hard TOKYO DISASTER CENTRES

20 Field Notes SHRUNKEN HEADS AND SHAMAN’S COATS: One collector’s vision quest

24 Welcome to My Country Mr. Solo in Ukraine

26 Liberia’s Refugee Radio Lo-tech, high impact in West Africa

28 Gourmet du Monde Real Thai cooking

30 Healthpost Avoiding altitude sickness

32 MEC’s The Traveller’s Edge 62 Open Box Lomo Cameras: More Lo-tech for your buck

66 Backpackers Buzz News from Hostelling International

72 Big Fat Word Reviews: The Caliph’s House, wild meals, Nortech CDs

Features 34 Coloured Rivers & Monster Dogs Story and photos: Jeff Fuchs Living with Khampa nomads in the Himalayas, the solo explorer finds the pure life at 5,000 metres.

43 Québec, North Shore Story: Chris Frey A summer road trip to the end of Route 138 delivers whales, vistas, Habitant food, and laughter.

50 When the Stone Rooster Crows Story: Larry Frolick / Photos: Don Weber Isan, Thailand’s remote northeast province, is the perfect tropical hideaway to disappear from “Civilization”–before it also disappears.

79 Wright of Way

COVER PHOTO: JEFF FUCHS PHOTO, TOP: JEFF FUCHS; BOTTOM: DON WEBER


Outpos

Photo: enrique preza

mail stop

Outpost travel for real

no.51

Publisher

Matt Robinson matt@outpostmagazine.com Editor

LARRY FROLICK larry@outpostmagazine.com Editors-at-Large

christopher frey chris@outpostmagazine.com kevin vallely kevin@outpostmagazine.com Senior Editor, Travel Health DEBORAH SANBORN deborah@outpostmagazine.com Senior Editor kevin black black@outpostmagazine.com Photographers-at-Large

Lorne bridgman, donald weber Art Director

christine ager-smyth production@outpostmagazine.com Map Design

Steve wilson Comix

Jason Loo

I got my Outpost t-shirt last year...and wear it everywhere I travel to…I brought it to Chile with the intention of taking a picture of me wearing it in the Atacama Desert. Unfortunately, I didn’t reach the desert...(but) the Chilean Andes was the perfect spot. I’ll keep wearing it when I travel and send you updates. Enrique Preza Toronto, Ontario

Designers

alexandra ishigaki, Jeff Guscott Photographer

Andrea Sogge Food Editor

Don Douloff Contributing Editors

Magazine Left at the Border

michael buckley, Paul Carlucci, chris chopik, David field, adnan khan, Patti Gower, Tyler Stiem, Chad Ulansky

Earlier this year my husband and I did a two month overland trip along eastern Africa. Just south of Kande Beach in Malawi, we were stopped at a checkpoint. The officer wanted to board our tourist truck. All he wanted were magazines. There was only one on the truck. My Outpost, in full view and I didn’t want to give it up. It was the November issue, with articles on the Bushmen art of South Africa. I had not read them yet. The officer walked down, then up, then down the truck again. “No magazines?” he asked. The moment was tense. My husband looked at my magazine, I glared at him. Then he grabbed it, held it up, and said,” You can have this one?” “Thank you,” said the officer. And off he went. And everyone exhaled. Outpost saved our Canadian bacon that day. Thanks. Kelly James Toronto Your article on IAMAT was a must-read for all. I have used them for years. One example only. I was in a remote village in Peru when overnight my mosquito protection broke down and in the morning I was covered with hundreds of bites. I was not a happy fellow. However, I called the IAMAT number in Lima, the doctor there straight away found me an English-speaking doctor in a town close by who immediately came in despite it having been his day off. He examined me and dispensed the necessary medication, which fixed me up in a day. Total cost: $20.00. Everyone should subscribe and always carry the IAMAT Medical Resources Guide wherever they travel. Walter Seaton, Toronto

was recently in New Zealand covering an action-packed month of hiking, heli-biking, and scuba diving, when he and fellow photojournalist Ryan Carter dropped by the Cow Restaurant in Queenstown for a local Pinot Noir and pizza. An elderly customer collapsed: Rob raced to his aid and performed CPR. The gentleman was resuscitated and taken to the hospital, where he was reportedly fine. Congratulations, Mr. Brodey! Check out his website at www.cloudgazer.com.

Due to an error, Derek Hatfield, Skipper of The Spirit of Canada, was misidentified in a piece that appeared in OUTPOST #50 (“The Spirit of Canada Gets Ready for her Maiden Voyage”). OUTPOST apologizes for the error, and wishes Mr. Hatfield all continued success in 2006. Outpost MAY/JUne 2006  www.outpostmagazine.com

Online Manager LIONEL MANN lionel@outpostmagazine.com Reviewer

Pat Kennedy Outpost [ISSN: 1203-7125] is published six times a year by: Outpost Incorporated, 425 Queen St. W., Suite 201 Toronto, ON M5V 2A5 Editorial and Business Tel: [416] 972-6635 Advertising Tel: [416] 972-6527 Fax: [416] 972-6645 E-mail: info@outpostmagazine.com Web site: www.outpostmagazine.com

Robert Brody outpost Journalist... Athlete...Hero

Correction: This Hatfield is the Real McCoy

JOSEPH FREY

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Publications Mail Agreement #0040017920 Postmaster send address changes & undeliverable copies to above address. PAP Registration No. 10626 We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada, through the Canada Magazine Fund and the Publications Assistance Program (PAP), toward our editorial and mailing costs. Copyright 2006 Outpost Incorporated. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is prohibited. Printed in Canada. Outpost is a member of Magazines Canada.


Coloured Riv Mon

IN THE REMOTE VALLEYS OF THE KHAMPA NOMADS, YOUR NEAREST NEIGHBOUR IS THE HIMALAYAN SKY STORY AND PHOTOS: JEFF FUCHS

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Rivers onster Dogs

The author’s mountain home for a season, Lashi’s tent sits under an ominous sky. www.outpostmagazine.com MAY/JUNE 2006 Outpost

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PHOTO: © TOURISME QUÉBEC/SYLVAIN MAJEAU

“The grand boreal watersheds, emptying into the St. Lawrence.”

WATER, WHALES AND WONDER:

QUÉBEC, NORTH SHORE STORY BY CHRISTOPHER FREY

THERE’S A DRIVER’S LOOKOUT JUST OUTSIDE OF BAIE comeau, where a massive pinnacle of Canadian Shield makes its last stand before yawning into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Inland, a bowl of boreal forest cradles a sun-dappled lake. Ripples of exposed bedrock undulate, occasionally showing through the forest. A cordon of hydro pylons marches onward, giant exoskeletons playing hopscotch, carrying electricity from the megaproject dams of the area to the rest of the province. The horizon is lost in a blessed blue where the ocean meets the sky. We’re halfway along Route 138, Eastern Canada’s betterpaved answer to the Dempster Highway. The 138 runs 1,100 kilometres beyond Montréal, hugging the north shore of the St. Lawrence where the river broadens into a gulf, connecting the province’s most cosmopolitan city with many of its remote towns and villages. My companion is counting the hydro pylons as she swats a veil of mosquitoes away from her face. I’m examining a map of Québec. Facing the reality of this landscape, a topography only suggested by the map comes to life. I focus on the profusion of blue lines running from north to south, from the grand www.outpostmagazine.com MAY/JUNE 2006 Outpost

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here's the existential end of the road... an improvised highway into the boreal frontier

watersheds, emptying into the St. Lawrence. The veins of this province are cold and clean. Motorcyclists—solitary outriders, doubling Honda Goldstream couples, small groups—stand out in the light traffic. Unlike the Dempster, the only danger comes from playing cat-and-mouse amidst the walls of hard rock with tail-gating truckers. The road is well-groomed and provisions are sufficient—at least until Sept-Îles. The 138 may be North America’s least-heralded but most rewarding road trip: it deserves a good long run.

dilemmas as the rest of the country, the province’s north shore feels like a less provisional, more wired frontier. A log-constructed, A-frame trading post wouldn’t appear out of place sandwiched between a dépanneur and an electronics store. Jacques Cartier, the St. Lawrence’s original European wayfarer, could not have foreseen this. After spotting land at Ponte des Monts, just north of Baie Comeau, in 1535, Cartier continued south, favouring the rich estuaries, islands and wooded slopes down river. He could do without the North Shore, he sneered, calling it “the land God gave to Cain.”

people are supposed to be leaving these hamlets—Forestville, Godbout and Pointe aux Anglais—for the lights of Québec City, Trois Rivières, Montréal. And if there’s one Québec narrative emblematic of such migrations it’s the story told in the 1968 film Entre la mer et l’eau douce. Protaganist Claude Tremblay hops a cargo ship from his home at Pointe aux Anglais and lights out for Montréal, with dreams of becoming a famed chansonnier. A blue-collar poetry-singer. Sensitive Guy from the North Country. But visiting these towns, with the weather on our side, there’s a surprising liveliness, raw beauty and cultural pride: the graceful sandbanks studded with herons rolling into the Gulf at Ste Anne de Portneuf; the perfectly modernist Musée Louis Langlois devoted to studying the 18th and 19th-century shipwrecks off the coast of Pointe-des-Anglais; the infusion of young people who come here out of interest in its landscape each summer. Lean and muscular, 30-year-old Jean Poirier is a reverse Claude Tremblay. During his many years working in Montréal’s film industry as an assistant director of photography, Poirer spent summers around Charlevoix and the Côte Nord as a rafting and kayaking guide. This year he made the move here full-time, forsaking his film career. “I wanted to be outside, to live at a slower pace. Something more in keeping with my values,” he says. “The contact with people is different, too, the further along the Côte Nord you travel. Near Québec City people can be a bit grumpy. Too close to the city and too far away from being really far. Up here they treat everybody like their neighbour.” Québec is one province where the North might actually figure constructively in its future. If it shares the same demographic

if you can take your eyes off the sea long enough, and study the vast hinterland it embraces, an altogether different sense of this country emerges. The Innu had the right idea. The natives hunted and fished this rocky, unyielding Eden of granite shield and forbidding bogland—long before the first trading posts, whaling stations and fishing outports in the 16th and 17th centuries—and lived by a principle of surrender to the land. Read their mythologies: the Innu developed a finely-tuned sense of irony, ambiguity and the absurd long before they became useful coping mechanisms for our life in the 21st century. Their myths could be humorously crude—consider the tale of a woman who takes a penis for a lover. Or the man who is forced to live out his days in a caribou’s ass. They defy easy moralization. The stories artfully express the absurdities of life set in an impossible landscape, and minimize the value of life kept in balance—although there’s a bit of that, too. Then there’s how Wolverine created the world. It was a time of floods, when the earth was covered in water but for the few stones sitting above the waves. Wolverine leaped from stone to stone, fearing that more floods would soon submerge the stones entirely. He summoned the water animals for help but no one was of much use. Until Muskrat volunteered. “Can you swim to the bottom of the ocean and bring up some ground?” Wolverine asked. Muskrat asked that Wolverine tie a rope to his foot while he dived. But when Muskrat stayed down for some time, Wolverine, fearing the worst, pulled in the rope. Muskrat wasn’t there. But mouth crammed with muddy earth, Muskrat finally did surface. So much earth he couldn’t breathe or speak.

44 Outpost MAY/june 2006  www.outpostmagazine.com

PHOTO: Chris FREY

Perfect water, perfect skies—kayaking the 80km long Mingan Archipelago.


The Isan people of the Mekong area are a mix of cosmopolitan and traditional.

50 Outpost MAY/JUNE 2006

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WHEN THE STONE ROOSTER CROWS Time runs slowly in Thailand’s Isan region, a land of spirit houses, tree-ghosts and Khmer temples. It’s the perfect place to disappear from sight until Time runs out

PHOTOS: XXXXXXXXXXX

STORY BY LARRY FROLICK PHOTOGRAPHS BY DONALD WEBER

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Illustrations: Ian Wright

Haiti, 2005: Schoolgirls in Port-au-Prince

qaanaaq itseqqortoormiit paamiut bankscambridge isle tasiilaq hammerfest baffin isle arkhangel’snoril’sk tromso tamperemurmansk barrowinuvik bay malmo goteburg oulo provideniya oslo nome yekaterinburg gavle iqaluit nuuk vilyuytiksicherskiy bethel alberta copenhagen st. petersburg helsinki ob' bergen yukon petropavlovskturku tallinn whitehorse repulse bay omsk siberia moscow anadyr riga valdez dempster smolensk british columbia magadan glasgow amsterdam kamchatskiy minsk kazan saskatchewan ufaperm yenisey hrodna kodiak victoria ivujivik kelowna kaliningrad prince george manchester edmonton dublin bremen cologne voronezh stuttgart lake baikal essen berne lodz brest fredricton hay river churchill yakitsk london london bruggevienna rivne samara krasnoyarsk thunderschefferville bay warsaw toulouse prague calgary omsk irkutsk montreal krakaw vacouver quebec city st. johns marseille kyiv walla wallasaskatoon richmond hamilton cornwall chelyabinsk novosibirsk paris sydney volgograd vladivostok nantes bratislava portland regina bordeaux lyon ottawa halifax ukraine ulaanbaatar monaco winnipeg montreal armenia harbin bishkek milan seattle minneapolis bilbao rostov sapporo porto zaragoza oshawa astana denver sevilla rome istanbul tibilsi ashgabat cleveland tirana changchunyokohoma barcelona milwaukee madrid baotou manchester toronto valencia bursa tokyo lisbon athens baku tashkent malaga palermo yerevan shenyang columbus sacramento urumqi izmer dalian nagoya gibraltar chicago dushhambe detroit new york san francisco aleppo pyongyang oklahoma city beijing phoenix el paso norfolk kansas city taklan makan jinan seoulosaka new jersey damascus kabul los angeles boston lhasa beirut lanzhou jerusalem st louis kashi charleston rabat fokuoka albaquerque thimphu esfahan memphis shanghai jacksonville gary khandahar tunis vegas baghdad sanlasdiego atlanta algeria tripoli wuhanpusan tehran new orleans islamabad kathmandu kuwait san antonio fort myers al jawf cairo amman new delhi pensacola guiyang baja chongqing shiraz tijuana laayoune manama quetta lahore aswan mt. everest mexihouston cali naples orlando miami muscat agadez kanpur hong kong kolkata port sudanmedian casablanca chiapas abu dhabi mumbai naning banjul Tombouctou nagpurkunming mexico city riyadh mecca pune khartoum zinder hyderabad kano luzon cuba hanoi manila guanajuato mandalay bamako haiti asmara sanaa niamey banglore ouagadougou zacatecas vientiane moundou cochin bissau hophnom chi bacolod costa rica jamaica cebu jaffna rangoon porto novo abuja djibouti davao freetown juba panama accrabangui colombo bangkok min city dakar ilbadan hargeysa penh lagos addis ababa kuala guyana monrovia kisangani abidjan bogota brunei mogadishu cayenne yaounde doula singapore lampore nairobi boa vista quitomanaus malaysia brazzaville terem librevillekampala pontianak manaus sumatra sorong macapa borneo goma nairobi kigali palembang huanoco kinshasa medan makassar jayapura lima san velo luis bujambura madang goma porto amazon salvador lao mombassa bandung dodoma bakavu semarang macapa brazil maceio port moresby la paz cuiba brasilia dar es salaam luanda canpo grande lilongew sucrepotosi vitoria lusaka moroni curitiba lubango harare darwin santos valparaiso port hedland namibe cairns beira antananarivo asuncion la plata kitwe toamasina gladstone belo horizonte windhoek alice springs mbabane mount isabrisbane argentina gaborone concepion kalgoorlie resistancia durban pretoria johannesburg maseru perth canerra bahia blanca lesotho sun city florianopolis bunbury adelaide puerto montt cape town sydney mar del melbourne auckland cordoba Río santa fe hastings buenos aires wellington plata dunedin Gallegos rosario punta arenas san carlos ushuaia

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