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Showing Tag: "bwca" (Show all posts)

Answering the call - 4,600 miles on the North Country Trail

Posted by Zach Johns on Wednesday, March 27, 2013, In : Hiking 

The call of the trail.  Everyone who hikes or backpacks knows the feeling, especially this time of year.  It’s looking at maps, reading guidebooks, planning trips - trails just seem to call to you.


I’ve had many trails call to me over the years.  I’ve hiked the Kekekabic and Superior Hiking Trails in their entirety.  I’ve even knocked-off each Hiking Club trail in every state park in Minnesota. Recently, the Border Route Trail through the BWCA and the Greenstone Ridge Trail on ...


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The quiet of a Quinzhee

Posted by Zach Johns on Thursday, February 14, 2013, In : Winter camping 
Halloween 1991.  Yes, the day of the snowstorm to end all snowstorms.  I was a freshman at UMD when that record snow fell, and we reveled in it as only college freshmen can.

Skiing behind the dorms.  Jumping off the dining center.  Snowball fights involving half the student body.  We loved it.   Soon after the blizzard it was time to choose our classes for winter quarter.  As I paged-through the course catalog, my snow-crazed brain lit-up:  Winter Outdoor Recreation!  Yes, my first cho...
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Forget the Boy Scouts - Channel your inner old man and be prepared

Posted by Zach Johns on Thursday, September 20, 2012, In : Hiking 
    The small of my back felt like it could give-out at any moment.  My ankles were burning, my quads barely able to keep myself upright.  And I was only seven miles into the 2012 Northshore Inline Marathon with 19.2 miles to go.  It wasn’t looking good.



    For most outdoor activities, being in good physical shape is important.  It’s tough to hike a monster pack up a mountain or portage a canoe and gear when you’re already carrying a Duluth pack-sized gut.  Landing a jump on ski...
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Football and the outdoors go hand-in-hand in the fall

Posted by Zach Johns on Wednesday, September 12, 2012, In : Football 
  

    There was a great disturbance in the Force last weekend.  Throughout the nation faces were being painted, jerseys were taken out of closets and nacho platters were being sculpted.  Men and women gathered in front of TV screens the size of billboards to drink oceans of beer and scream at the top of their lungs at giant men colliding into each other.
    The NFL season had begun.
    Since I was a kid, the only professional sport I could really get into was football.  I always loved ...
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Just because it's after Labor Day doesn't mean we can't keep swimming and northern Minnesota offers some great places to do it

Posted by Zach Johns on Wednesday, September 5, 2012, In : Swimming 
   

    I was floating on my back, suspended in the crystal clear water of McCarthy Beach State Park. The water temperature was so perfect it was hard to tell where the water ended and the air began.
    I felt completely weightless.
    Above me an eagle soared, riding the thermals above the great pines that lined the shore. Nearby, a loon swam seemingly enjoying the sunset that was turning the sky orange behind me.
    It was a moment of pure relaxation.
    Then my oldest son splashed me in th...
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From the deepest canyon to the highest mountain - or the things we will do for pizza!

Posted by Zach Johns on Wednesday, August 29, 2012, In : Hiking 
           

    Fact: Sven and Ole’s in Grand Marais makes the most delicious pizza on the planet. Period.  Without a doubt. No questions asked.
    Well…now that I think about it…perhaps it’s possible that it might not be as awesome as I think it is. The truth is, the only time I ever eat there is after a week of paddling the Boundary Waters or a 50 mile backpacking trip on the Superior Hiking Trail or some other exhausting activity...
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The View From the Summit


Zach Johns Zach Johns is an alpine skier, backpacker, paddler and all-around nature lover who lives on Minnesota‘s Iron Range. Originally from Osceola, Wis., Johns attended the University of Minnesota-Duluth so he could ski every day and be close to the trails of his beloved North Shore. There, he earned a degree in Communication and was editor of the student newspaper. However, the real education he gained at UMD was in honing his outdoor skills. He took courses in subjects such as backpacking, winter camping, rock climbing and canoe tripping. By the time he graduated, that was all he wanted to do. In January of 1997, he moved to the Range where he met a group of die-hard skiers dedicated to making turns at Giants Ridge every single day of the winter (when they weren’t out skiing the big mountains of the west.) Throughout the late nineties he built a very impressive ski resume, taking several trips to Utah, Montana, Wyoming, California, British Columbia and Alaska. During the off-season, he took to the hiking trails. In 1997, he hiked the entire Superior Hiking Trail during the single season (what had been completed until that time) and in following years, took trips to Yosemite, Glacier and the Grand Canyon. He also made two attempts to climb King’s Peak, the highest mountain in Utah, but failed to summit both times. In 1999, he attempted the infamous 43-mile Kekekabic Trail through the heart of the BWCA and limped out after only ten miles with a hernia. He did finally complete the Kek in 2005, during one of the hottest weeks on record. Besides hiking, he also continued dabbling with paddling, making several canoe trips to the BWCA and became an enthusiastic (yet very novice) whitewater kayaker. He is now a father of two sons, Nick and Jackson, who accompany their father on nearly all his adventures. Both were skiing fairly soon after they could stand and from 2006-2011, the three hiked in every state park in Minnesota, 195 miles of hiking in 65 parks. Since becoming a dad, Johns has suddenly realized that you can’t just be out there skiing, hiking, paddling, etc. without also working to protect the very things you love. With that in mind, he founded an adventure club at work to get co-workers outside who might not otherwise be inspired to go. The club has gone on hiking, paddling, winter camping and cycling trips and annually go on a trash pick-up hike to celebrate Earth Day. He believes that once you get people out into beautiful wild places, the more likely they will be to protect them. He has also done a lot of volunteer work for the Superior Hiking Trail Association including adopting a backcountry campsite which he and the boys maintain twice a year. It is of extreme importance, he believes, to introduce children to the outdoors early. Not only is it good for them, but they will be the ones protecting these places once we are gone. Future plans? There are a few local goals to check-off including hiking the Border Route Trail in the BWCA and Isle Royale. Mostly, it’s just to take the boys hiking and camping in more of our national parks, skiing the big western mountains, and more of their usual seasonal cycle: Giants Ridge in the winter, Superior’s North Shore in the spring, South Shore in the summer and back to the North Shore in the fall.
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