Submitted by: Rachelle Brunelle-McColl; MNO Employment Developer.
Adapted from an article in: http://www.mountainlifemag.ca/2015/03/crossing-georgian-bay-on-sup-in-winter/

Métis adventurer walks across Georgian Bay
Scott Parent makes his way across Georgian Bay.
©Scott Parent Photo

Scott Parent, son of Métis Nation of Ontario (MNO) staff member and citizen Jo-Anne Parent who works in the MNO office in Midland, embarked on a unique adventure this past month:

For the last few years, stand up paddleboard (SUP) adventurer and Fathom Paddle Guiding owner Scott Parent’s dream has been focused on crossing Georgian Bay on SUP in winter. Often considered the sixth Great Lake, Georgian Bay is a huge expanse of water. The weather didn’t co-operate in the winter of 2014, but in 2015, with record low temperatures, the ice was set. Together with Zane Davies of Explorer’s Tread, they set off on March 11, 2015 to do something that had never been done before.

While Parent is no stranger to the Bay (he SUP’d across it in 2011), or paddling in the icy waters of winter, this excursion tested all of his and Zane’s skills. With ice-climbing tools, modified paddleboards, dry suits, ski poles and more, their motley collection of gear from a variety of different sports all proved invaluable.

Leaving from Cape Croker, they first needed to traverse a one kilometre stretch of open water. A section they’d spent the previous week perfecting their systems (and destroying a paddleboard) on. They spent the first night camped on the ice where they drifted nearly two kilometres throughout the night. And they woke beside a river of water that hadn’t existed the night before.

From Cape Croker it was a 55 kilometre paddle-and-hike before reaching the lighthouse on Double Top Island in the Western Islands. It was another 27 kilometres to get off the Bay.

With temperatures above zero during the three days they were on the ice, they finally arrived at 12 Mile Bay on March 13, 2015.