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Hoping everything goes well in the cold

Years ago, I was invited to a late-season waterfowl hunt. It was a cold December day, with crust ice around the bay in southcentral Ontario.

A few years ago, I was invited to go on a late-season waterfowl hunt with one of our writers and a friend. It was a cold December day, with crust ice around the edge of the bay as we set out in a 14-foot aluminum tiller to a blind in a marsh in southcentral Ontario. We had life jackets over several layers of camo, warm boots, guns, ammo, burlap tarps, and more decoys than we needed. After several hours, we were getting cold. The wind was picking up, and so were the waves for the trip back to the makeshift launch. Massive snowflakes, like the CGI ones you see in over-the-top Hallmark Christmas movies (I have a softer side), were falling, making everything wet and heavy, and visibility challenging.

It was one of those times that I think everyone who enjoys the outdoors, especially during the shoulder seasons, says to themselves, “I hope this goes well.”

We took our time, zigzagging into the waves so we’d meet them head-on.

Cold but safe

We made it back, a little chilled and wet, but safe. All that ride I was thinking: what’s my game plan if we capsize? Kick off my boots and jacket and try to swim to shore as best as I could, or maybe grab a bag of decoys and try to float. Stay, go?

It’s like the classic, “What do you do if you cross an ornery bear in the woods and all you have is a fishing rod on your way to your favourite brook trout stream… yell or play dead?” It’s the stuff that keeps hunt-camp philosophers up long into the night.

To be honest, I didn’t really know what my best option was if I found myself marsh bobbing in December.

Canadian Safe Boating Council

So, when we were contacted by the Canadian Safe Boating Council to attend a cold-water awareness workshop last year, Assistant Editor Steve Galea and I took part in the two-evening online course. It was instructed by Dr. Gordon Giesbrecht, a leading authority on hypothermia, to learn everything we needed to know to survive an accidental cold-water immersion and to help others who may have become hypothermic.

Find out more about what we learned and how to take part in an in online or in-person class near you, by clicking here.

It was well worth the time to learn skills I hope I never have to use.


Originally published in the Jan.-Feb. 2024 issue of Ontario OUT of DOORS

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