Exploration

Nature meant us all to be wildflowers

A journey of friendship, loss and healing in the footsteps of early 20th-century mountain explorer Mary Schäffer Warren

Jane Marshall, Meghan J. Ward and Eva Anandi Brownstein (back to front) hike along Poligne Creek in Jasper National Park.
Expand Image
Advertisement
Advertisement

I can hear the river now, a white noise dulling the morning bird song. It’s a sign that my companions and I are approaching the crux of our through-hike: the fording of the Maligne River. The wooden bridge that once aided safe passage has washed up on the riverbank; we already know this as we approach the crossing. Parks Canada decommissioned this trail in Jasper National Park to protect grizzly and woodland caribou habitat but still issues one camping permit each night in the official campgrounds in the area. The lack of maintenance is apparent in the overgrown vegetation and crumbling infrastructure. So far, nearly every bridge along this trail has cracked down the middle or been swept away. We secured the permits and timed our trek for late August to ensure the water level would be low enough for us to cross the river safely.

Meghan J. Ward approaches Maligne Pass.
Expand Image

Willow shrubs scrape our shoulders as we approach the river. Behind me is cinematographer Eva Anandi Brownstein — Anandi to our group — while hiking ahead are fellow cast members Jane Marshall and Natalie Gillis, who is also our expedition photographer. We are in the Maligne River valley to retrace Mary Schäffer Warren’s 1908 journey to Maligne Lake for a documentary film about the trailblazing mountain explorer. I can’t see Jane and Natalie, but I hear a thwack each time they pass through the stubborn, woody greenery. I keep my eyes on the narrow track of trampled earth, wide enough for one boot. Soon, the sea of willows gives way to a broad valley, now bathed in sunlight. I can see the Maligne. We gather by the river’s edge, grateful for the rising air temperature as we gaze upon the frigid, glacier-fed water. It’s about six metres to the other side.

A lot hinges on this crossing. We must make it across to complete our journey to the turquoise treasure downstream.

Through her writing, photographs and cartography, Mary became inextricably linked to the history and lore of this place. I can’t meet her, so I want to connect with her by visiting the birthplace of her legacy and watch the scenery unfold as she’d encountered it.

There is only so much I can read about or research; here is the opportunity to lift Mary’s words off the page and live them.

A moment of peace on Maligne Lake.
Expand Image

When Mary Schäffer Warren travelled through the Maligne River valley, 115 years before our crew, she was looking for an elusive lake she’d heard referred to in Îethka (Stoney) Nakoda as Chaba Imne (Beaver Lake). She’d searched unsuccessfully for it the previous summer, but at the end of that season, a chance meeting with one Sampson Beaver, of the Goodstoney First Nation, provided a breakthrough. Upon learning that Sampson had visited Chaba Imne in his youth, Mary asked him to draw her a map to what is now called Maligne. (Unfortunately, despite her appreciation for Indigenous culture, it seems she could not surmount her colonial bias and declined to compensate him for the map, citing the gifts she had already brought to his family.)

Mary was from an upper-middle-class American family. Born to Quaker parents in West Chester, Pennsylvania, in 1861, she had been raised with a belief in the equality of all people. Her father, a well-known amateur geologist and archeologist, encouraged her, like many in the Victorian-era privileged class, to pursue the study of natural history. 

“They like to say ‘explorer’ of me. No, only a hunter of peace.”

Mary first fell in love with the Canadian Rockies on trips with her husband Charles Schäffer, a physician and amateur botanist. Each summer, they travelled to the Rockies, where Charles studied botanical specimens, and Mary captured them in photographs and watercolours. Though her early camping experiences had brought her misery, upon hearing the stories of explorers like Walter Wilcox and Samuel Allen, she warmed to the idea of roughing it for the sake of adventure. 

Charles was 23 years older than Mary. He died in 1903, when she was 42 — the same year her parents died. Charles and Mary had no children; she was untethered and held the rare gift of independence, even if high society might shun her for what came next. She met the tragedy with the resolve to broaden the scope of her husband’s Rockies-based botanical work, which required her to venture into the backcountry. To help her master horseback riding and wilderness travel, she hired William “Billy” Warren, a Banff-based guide who had recently arrived from England after fighting in the Boer War. (This decision proved to be pivotal; though he was 20 years younger than her, the two married in 1915.)

Meghan J. Ward reads a passage from Old Indian Trails as she and Jane Marshall stand at Maligne Pass.
Expand Image

Completing her first husband’s survey of alpine plants provided a practical, if still outlandish, reason for a well-to-do woman to defy the norms of the day and ride into the wild. But, in truth, it was her wounded heart that drew her there. In her 1911 book, Old Indian [sic] Trails of the Canadian Rockies, she alludes to nature having “healers for every ill.” But in a 1928 letter to an acquaintance, Raymond Zillmer, she reveals something far more personal: “No one may know I went among those hills with a broken heart and only on the high places could I learn that I and mine were very close together. … They like to say ‘explorer’ of me. No, only a hunter of peace.” 

With Billy Warren as her guide, Mary continued to make the long journey from West Chester to Banff every summer to explore new parts of the Rockies and mend her heart. She eventually published a book with a botanist, Stewardson Brown, called Alpine Flora of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Though the botanical work was complete, her appetite for adventure had grown. She could not sit idly by watching men explore the places she longed to see.

Chaba Imne teased her sense of adventure. The lake provided her with a destination for her ambitious, multi-month expeditions of 1907 and 1908 and stifled the criticism of those who couldn’t understand why a woman might delve into a wilderness known only to Indigenous people.

She met the challenges of the trail with apparently cheerful resolve, writing in Old Indian Trails, “We have passed weeks of showery or snowy days in the hills, never knew ourselves to catch cold, and on taking everything into account could only conclude that nature meant us all to be wildflowers instead of house plants.”

Ward and Marshall pause among the willows in the Maligne River valley.
Expand Image

I first encountered Mary in 2005 when I left the hills and hardwood forests of Ottawa for a job at a mountain lodge in Banff. I was 21 years old and feeling invigorated by my first experiences in the alpine when I picked up a book in the lodge’s gift shop called No Ordinary Woman: The Story of Mary Schäffer Warren, by Janice Sanford Beck. It was spellbinding. 

Over the next 17 years, I built a career as an outdoor writer and put down roots in Banff. Time and again, I found myself drawn to Mary’s story, frequently weaving it into my work. I found inspiration in how much she surmounted to accomplish what she did in unfriendly terrain — both in the roughness of the backcountry and in a society that spurned a woman who dared to explore it. I’d left suburbia for the mountain life, plunged head-first into a freelance career and married an adventure photographer. Thanks to her trailblazing, women like me weren’t looked down on for pursuing the unconventional. 

Members of the 1908 expedition, Mollie Adams, Mary Schäffer Warren, Billy Warren and Joe Barker, in camp. (Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Moore Family Fonds. V439/PS-1)
Expand Image
Mary with a horse. (Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Mary Schaffer Fonds. V527/PS 1-151)
Expand Image
Mary’s photo of MacCalla’s primula. (Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Mary Schaffer Fonds. V527/PS 1-196)
Expand Image
Mary and Billy navigating the trail. (Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Moore Family Fonds. V439/PS-6)
Expand Image
A group of riders on the trail. (Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Mary Schaffer Fonds. V527/PS 1-196)
Expand Image
A view of Mount Murchison.(Image: Archives and Library. Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. Moore Family Fonds. V439/PS-12)
Expand Image

Then, 10 years ago, I moved into a house across the street from Tarry-a-while — the Banff home Billy Warren built for his wife — where I lived for three years. During Doors Open Banff, when historic homes were opened to the public, I walked across Grizzly Street to take a peek inside. Her living room fireplace still looked exactly as it did in archival images. As it turned out, Mary’s desk faced my own writing nook across the street.

Our interweaving stories culminated in 2020 when a friend, Trixie Pacis, an emerging filmmaker from Kimberley, B.C., who was also intrigued by Mary’s story, shared with me her idea to make a documentary. I agreed that a film could bring her story to a wider audience. The seed of the idea grew, and in time my role in the film snowballed from researcher to producer to on-camera protagonist.

Can Geo Talks Presents

Meghan J Ward's Wildflowers: In the Footsteps of a Trailblazer

Join Canadian Geographic at 50 Sussex Drive in Ottawa on Wednesday, March 19th, at 7 p.m. for an exclusive presentation of author and historian Meghan J. Ward’s documentary film Wildflowers.

The film we envisioned would combine two of my greatest loves: archival research and backcountry adventure. The connective tissue would be a series of repeat photographs taken during a retracing of the final leg of Mary’s journey to Maligne Lake. This 45-kilometre hike would take us from Poboktan Creek to the mouth of the Maligne River, where we would swap boots for paddles and continue our journey by canoe.

From its inception, we called the film Wildflowers. It was a nod to Mary’s quote, but soon enough, the beauty and resilience of wildflowers would take on new meaning through the women in the film.

An early morning at Mary Vaux Campground in the Maligne River valley.
Expand Image

In the summer of 1908, with Sampson Beaver’s map in hand, Mary set off once more to find Chaba Imne. Her crew included Billy Warren, cook and wrangler Sidney Unwin, Stewardson Brown and his guide Reggie Holmes. Rounding out the group was an American friend, Mary “Mollie” Adams.

 

Map: Chris Brackley/Can Geo. Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) 30m data: United States Geological Survey. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) 30m Data. Landsat 8 image: NASA; 2024; Language Labels: First Peoples’ Map of B.C.; Parks Canada
Expand Image

In addition to sharing Mary’s interest in botany and photography, Mollie was willing to go the distance, no matter the discomforts. Born in 1868 in Ridgefield, Connecticut, Mollie was a passionate geologist, experienced outdoorswoman and world traveller. She was unmarried, financially independent and had little interest in the activities and trappings of urban high society.

It’s difficult to understand the exact nature of the friendship between the two women. Old Indian Trails is a travel book meant for entertainment in which it’s possible Mary embellished and fictionalized some aspects, including the ease of her relationship with Mollie. Mollie’s expedition diaries and letters paint a different picture, suggesting that, like any friendship, the pair had their squabbles and personality clashes. Nonetheless, it’s clear they had a rare compatibility and could withstand weeks of rigorous travel together.

For the eight-week expedition of 1908, they had 22 horses hauling all manner of supplies, including a stove for baking bread, photographic plates, geological equipment and air mattresses. The luxury of four-legged porters wouldn’t ease every difficulty, however. In Old Indian Trails, Mary describes swarms of mosquitoes, treacherous river crossings, cold nights and long days on the trail — made longer when her chronic nerve pain flared up. 

Mary and Mollie became the first recorded non-Indigenous women to visit Maligne Lake and many areas of present-day Banff and Jasper national parks. The 1908 expedition would be Mollie’s last great mountain adventure. On January 23, 1909, at 41, she died of pneumonia while travelling in Japan with Mary. She is buried in Kobe.

Mary’s 1911 book is thus dedicated to her friend: “Who with me followed the ‘Old Indian Trails,’ but who has now gone on the long trail alone.”

Ward takes a moment to reflect on the journey.
Expand Image

Our 2023 journey may have differed in style from Mary’s, but not in spirit. In addition to Anandi, our expedition cinematographer, Trixie and I had effectively recruited two Mollies: Jane, a fellow writer, outdoorswoman and a grounding presence on the trail, and Natalie, a former wilderness guide turned commercial pilot, as well as a published poet and photographer. It wasn’t hard to sell the opportunity; both Jane and Natalie had a thirst for adventure and appreciated what we were aspiring to do with Mary’s story.

As we prepared our gear at the Poboktan Creek trailhead, the skies wept with rain, and I found myself overcome with emotion. The historian and outdoor enthusiast in me — the one who had tracked Mary’s story for nearly two decades — cherished the opportunity to retrace her footsteps.

Within moments of leaving the trailhead, I feel the world fall away. Two years of logistics and planning materialize with our first steps, and my mind relaxes despite the unknowns that lie ahead. Conversations with my hiking mates ebb and flow, at times constricted by the narrowness of the trail. We slide easily into banter or an exchange of questions between takes for the film, and the group gradually gets to know one another. Peak wildflower season is well over, so when we come upon a magenta-hued paintbrush, we stop to marvel at it, noting its happy, solitary presence in the wet forest. Natalie lingers to photograph it. 

I have a copy of Old Indian Trails on my phone and read passages aloud as locations align with Mary’s record. It is a way to bring her along for the journey.

At Maligne Pass: “Reaching the eastern slope, I think I never saw a fairer valley. From our very feet it swept away into an unbroken green carpet as far as the eye could see.” That green carpet is the one we follow through dense forest and shrubby meadows to the banks of the Maligne River.

The team hikes along the southeast end of Maligne Pass.
Expand Image

The river is silty and powder blue with glacial run-off as it curves through the valley bottom. I trade reassuring glances with my hiking mates as we prepare to cross. “The water levels look fine,” I say, relieved.

Our concern about the water levels is twofold. We must cross if we are going to connect with our canoes stowed some 11 kilometres downriver and complete our journey. But it’s also here that, for a few hours, we plan to split our group in two.

As the expedition photographer, Natalie has been tasked with recreating six images from Mary’s collection. She had taken images of the Crowfoot and Bow glaciers from the side of the road. The other four require detective work during the expedition, combining my historical knowledge and passages from Old Indian Trails with Natalie’s keen eye and creativity. We’ve printed reproductions of the archival images, just small enough to fit inside Natalie’s camera filter case, so she has a physical reference copy. These small prints spark for her the idea of including the historical photo in the modern-day landscape, merging past and present in a single frame. 

What I don’t know, as we haul our canoes out of the lake, is just how sweet our memories of Maligne will be.

The fifth image had originally been taken by Sidney Unwin from a high point on what is now called Mount Unwin, where he first spotted Maligne Lake. We were determined to have Natalie recreate the original photograph — if we could do it safely. Using reference photographs, Google Earth and GPS, I had pinpointed the location where Sidney captured the image. His route had been a meandering one, with unnecessary altitude gained and lost to get there. But in my research, I had found a more direct route — one that departed just before the Maligne River crossing and climbed a forested shoulder of Mount Unwin to the treeless ridge.

I drop my pack on the riverbank and join the others in gazing up at the ridge to assess the route. It looks steep, but we can see a weakness where one might gain it. This confirms an approach we had discussed the night before: the best way to obtain the image is to send Natalie and Anandi with only the essentials so they can move swiftly and safely. Trixie has paddled in and is waiting for us at the next campground, so Jane and I load the food and toiletries into our packs and continue onward to meet her. 

Natalie Gillis’ 2023 repeat image of Maligne Lake, with Mary Schäffer Warren’s original 1908 image in frame.
Expand Image
A repeat image of Maligne Valley.
Expand Image
Ward and Marshall paddle on Maligne Lake.
Expand Image

Pants rolled up to my knees, I set my sights on the opposing riverbank and sling my hiking boots around my shoulders. Then, facing upstream, I wade into the ice-cold water. I keep my pace slow, gingerly sliding my sandalled feet over rounded rocks on the river bottom until I find a good purchase for each step. Jane follows behind.

Safe on the other side, we bid Natalie and Anandi farewell, sending air hugs across the shimmering river. I watch as they move through the willows, Natalie’s long black ponytail swinging as she steps off the trail and into the forest beyond. Soon, they are out of sight.

Later that day, we reunite at Trapper Campground, indulge in the fruit, chocolate and cheese that came with the canoes, and swap stories from our time spent apart. Natalie and Anandi’s quest to repeat Sidney’s image has been a success. The next day, we paddle on Maligne Lake, where Mary and her crew had floated on a raft they dubbed the HMS Chaba. From the back of my canoe, I gaze in awe at the turquoise blue stretching towards glaciated peaks. Jane and I align our canoe in front of Mount Unwin so that Natalie can create our last repeat image.

On our final morning, we bask in the first light of day and witness a quiet world coming to life. I am not ready to leave when we reach the docks that mark the end of our journey. What I don’t know, as we haul our canoes out of the lake, is just how sweet our memories of Maligne will be — that there will soon come a day when Natalie will have gone “on the long trail alone” and I’ll understand the grief Mary carried into the wild.

Left to right: Eva Anandi Brownstein, Jane Marshall, Meghan J. Ward, Trixie Pacis, and Natalie Gillis at the Whyte Museum Archives.
Expand Image

When the news came on June 17, 2024, that Natalie Gillis had died in a plane crash just outside Albany, New York, it sent a shockwave through the nation. She had recently completed the flying hours and exams required for her airline transportation pilot’s licence. She had plans to do another master’s degree and publish more poetry. When she wasn’t flying, she was bikepacking across Canada; she seemed so full of life and ambition. She was just 34 years old.

Wildflowers was in its final weeks in the editing room when I picked up the phone to break the news to Trixie. Suddenly, everything we had been working towards was steeped in new meaning.

I was no stranger to loss, but there was something different for me about Natalie’s death and the realizations that came after. Perhaps the intensity of our backcountry experiences had fostered a deep connection, as with Mary and Mollie. Even though I’d known her for many years, the Maligne expedition had been my first multi-day trip with Natalie. A few weeks later, she and I had climbed through glowing larch trees to the crest of a ridge overlooking the Bow Valley. We talked all day — about flying, writing and what it means to live a life of purpose. 

Suddenly, everything we had been working towards was steeped in new meaning

For several weeks after her passing, I felt myself flailing while, on a practical level, I did what I could to help our film reach the finish line. All that time at the computer left me longing for time outdoors, where perhaps I could find my breath again. Like Mary, I was feeling drawn to nature to still my spirit. But I also knew it was there I could connect with Natalie. On a solo hike up Saddle Peak, two months after her death, I made a point of stopping to look at the little things that would have caught her eye: red-capped mushrooms, lime-green lichen, weathered wildflowers. I understood, then, what it meant to be a hunter of peace.

Mary passed away in 1939 at the age of 77, having found her peace and blazed the trail for women who would come after her. Though her life was short, Natalie similarly broke barriers and enriched the world through her poetry, photography and indomitable spirit.

These two have taught me that someone’s impact can transcend their lifetime, flowing onward like the mighty Maligne, at once a connection to the past and future. Leading such a life takes courage.

Mary’s words are as relevant today as they were over a century ago: “No, believe me, there are some secrets you will never learn, there are some joys you will never feel, there are heart thrills you can never experience until … you leave the world, your recognized world, and plunge into the vast unknown.”

Advertisement

Help us tell Canada’s story

You can support Canadian Geographic in 3 ways:

This story is from the March/April 2025 Issue

Related Content

Travel

The spell of the Yukon 

An insider’s account of the modern-day gold rush

  • 4210 words
  • 17 minutes

People & Culture

Interview with Melissa Lem on making nature more accessible and becoming a climate activist 

The family physician advocates for outdoor time with the PaRx nature prescription program

  • 1632 words
  • 7 minutes
women on a bridge looking into a forest

Environment

My relationship with nature: It’s complicated

Experts tackle our difficult relationship with nature in panel discussions hosted by Nature Conservancy of Canada 

  • 801 words
  • 4 minutes

Exploration

Why cave exploration matters

2022 is the International Year of Caves and Karst. Here’s why you should care about the hidden worlds beneath our feet.

  • 2517 words
  • 11 minutes
Advertisement
Advertisement