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I backpacked the Mantario Trail this past weekend with my sisters.
For those who aren't familiar, it's a 66km trail traversing the Canadian Shield, majoritarily in Manitoba, but dipping into Ontario slightly (thus the name).
It was definitely a fun experience, and also a learning one.
We did the trail in two 33km days and it was death.
By the end, our feet were pulsing with every step and our legs would cramp up if we stopped moving.
We didn't so much concentrate on our surroundings as we did keeping a constant pace.
We're not super experienced backpackers; we hiked from the south trail-head to Caribou Lake twice beforehand as practice, but that's about it.
We saw people running the length of the trail in a single day, so perhaps with more kilometers under our belts, doing it in 2 days is more reasonable.
That said, most people online recommend doing it in 3 or more days and I definitely see where they're coming from now.
Most people recommend hiking Mantario Trail south to north and I agree; the south section of the trail is more strenous than the north, with lots of ups and downs and walking on the shield for hours at a time.
The northmost 5km is a pleasant stroll through a forest, with a nice soft dirt path to follow and very little change in elevation.
The southmost 5km, on the other hand, has some of the steepest and longest climbs and descents, and leaves you incredibly exposed to baking hot summer temperatures while stomping over hard rock.
That said, while going south to north will get you through the hardest sections on fresh legs and the easiest section on your last legs, the middle doesn't slack either; it's really only the last 5km that are easy.
Every km between 1 and 61 will still be full of boulder climbing and boggy marshes.
Canada would be a pretty okay country, if not for the insects.
We were absolutely eaten alive by mosquitoes throughout the trip and, if not for wearing pants instead of shorts, I would have ended up with a dozen tick bites instead of 2.
Make sure to check all your gear for ticks when you get home.
I found a tick crawling up my leg the next day, I assume from the yoga mat I was sitting on, which we had used as a sleeping mat while hiking.
Mantario has some boggy sections which are hard to traverse without getting your shoes getting a little damp.
None of us had water-resistant hikers, so any tumble soaked our shoes a bit.
By late afternoon the second day, we peeled our damp socks off and realized our skin was pruning and starting to split (possibly the very first steps of Trench Foot?).
I'm glad we caught it when we did and changed our socks.
I figured I'd compile some shinanigans/highlights from our adventures for posterity.
I've forgotten a lot of them already, so I'll update this list as they come back to me.
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22 June 2021.
Living and Studying in Switzerland - 4 Month Retrospective
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