Travel

Superior Views: Capturing Canada's greatest lake

A fall photo tour reveals the stunning spirit of Lake Superior

  • Apr 26, 2021
  • 1,471 words
  • 6 minutes
Superior’s northeastern shore boasts impressive vistas, including those near Rossport, Ont. Photo: Ethan Meleg.
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Before dawn on a cold November morning, a dozen photography enthusiasts scurry around the frosty shoreline of northern Ontario’s Michipicoten river, hunching over tripods, making long  exposures and patiently awaiting the day’s first light. Beyond the clicking of shutters and the  metallic ting of tripod legs on rock, Lake Superior sets a moody backdrop, sighing rhythmically in a long swell that stretches west to a watery horizon. I imagine the sun rising like a fiery spotlight over the mop-topped shoreline spruces, bathing golden beaches and teal-coloured rocks in light, and transforming the restless lake into a big sea of shining water — the stuff of Group of Seven artist Lawren Harris.

I tiptoe around in the darkness, manipulating my camera with increasingly numb fingers,  noticing how the cold saps its battery power. I’m both disappointed and relieved when the inky sky finally transitions through an underwhelming sequence of pewter and gunmetal to lackluster grey, dashing our collective hopes of capturing a spectacular sunrise. The consolation, of course, is that it’s finally time to head indoors for breakfast.

Rock island Lodge. Photo: Ethan Meleg.
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We’ve gathered at Rock Island Lodge, a four-bedroom bed and breakfast and small conference facility perched atop the glacier-scoured rocks of Michipicoten Bay, just south of the town of Wawa, to practise the art of landscape photography. Our instructor is professional photographer Rob Stimpson; our prime subject is Lake Superior; and our shot lists range from shorelines and sweeping skies to intimate studies of ancient rocks and, we hope, intense images of surf and tumultuous waters. after all, the three-day workshop is called the Gales of November, a play on Gordon Lightfoot’s ballad The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald and a nod to the big lake’s fickle late-autumn temperament.

Map by Chris Brackley/Can Geo.
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Stimpson fell in love with Lake Superior’s northeastern shore while canoeing south along a 170-kilometre coastline of bold headlands and paradisiacal sand beaches from Pukaskwa National Park, near the town of Marathon, to Michipicoten. captivated by the area, he struck up a partnership with rock Island Lodge owner david wells in 2002 to show that Lake Superior can supply the same sort of surly, dramatic weather that attracts droves of shutterbugs to coastal towns such as Tofino, B.C., or Peggys cove, N.S. over the 12 years Stimpson has taught this course, he’s seen plenty of ferocious storms, as well as mirror-calm waters, spectacular sunsets and early-season snow — including a 2005 blizzard that closed the local section of the Trans-Canada Highway and left participants marooned at the lodge for an extra day. “I can’t get enough of this place,” he says when we gather on the first day to discuss course expectations. “This is real Canada. It’s Ontario’s best-kept secret. The scenery here is right up there with the Cabot Trail or the Rockies.”

Lake Superior Provincial Park. Photo: Ethan Meleg.
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Rock Island Lodge hosts photography workshops each fall for avid shutterbugs. Photo: Rob Stimpson.
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Stimpson’s passion for Lake Superior is obvious. It’s telling that he makes annual pilgrimages to Rock Island between guiding eco-tours in Antarctica, living in Muskoka and delivering landscape and Wildlife photography courses all across Ontario’s wilderness fringes, from moose-viewing trips in Algonquin Provincial Park to fall-colour shoots in Killarney. The same attitude pervades Stimpson’s dedicated entourage of apprentices. London, Ont.-based photographer Brian Barker, for instance, has participated in the Wawa workshop five times. This year, he had booked to vacation in San Diego over the same dates. Then he showed his Lake Superior collection to his partner, Andrea Paturel, whose jaw-drop response incited a quick change in plans. “She saw the pictures and said, ‘I want to go there instead,’ ” laughs Barker.

Similarly, David Bates and Marta Vargas, a retired couple from Thunder Bay, have been part of two Gales workshops, and Toronto-based environmental consultant Peter Burtch has participated in three. 

“Lake Superior is a free spirit,” says Burtch, who helped shape the Ontario government’s efforts to establish semi-protected “heritage coast” status for the lake’s entire north shore in the late 1990s. “It’s wild and unpredictable, and provides a photographer with tremendous creative opportunities.”

For the benefit of a handful of workshop newbies — a couple from Detroit, a woman from Wawa and me — Stimpson delivers an opening lecture to cover the basics: the exposure pyramid (the three-way interaction of film speed or sensor sensitivity, known as ISO, shutter speed and lens aperture); using the rule of thirds for composition and resisting the urge to centre the subject; a discussion of the nature of colour; and how to use digital-specific technology, such as white balance and histograms (a graphical rendition of an image’s range of shadows, mid-tones and highlights), to optimize photographs. after establishing these fundamentals, Stimpson promises the rest of the course will be largely hands-on and in the field. we’ll carpool to scenic beaches in Michipicoten Bay and visit deserted hiking trails in nearby Lake Superior Provincial Park, besides capturing the dynamic interaction of river and lake on the lodge’s grounds.

After our first morning shoot, Stimpson implores us to “get your camera out of P [automatic] mode” and make the leap to manual exposure settings. “As photographers, we want to be controlling our cameras,” he says, “not the other way around.” At Sandy Beach, a kilometre-long swath of brown-sugar sand just north of rock Island Lodge, I accept the additional challenge of sticking with one lens with the goal of, in Stimpson’s words, “getting to know how it sees.” Lake Superior offers little in the way of surf today, so I train my camera on coastal details instead, photographing gently waving beach grasses, the sensuous curves of an inflowing stream and the delicate detail of snow on balsam fir needles. I apply my new knowledge of white balance to warm the “temperature” of my digital images, making the most of the day’s flat light.

Whitecaps come rolling in on a blustery yet beautiful day near Wawa, Ont. Photo: Rob Stimpson.
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Toting his heavy tripod and camera, Stimpson drifts among the group, taking his own shots and providing guidance and feedback. Later on, he offers another short lecture on how to correct and manipulate photos using Photoshop, perhaps the biggest upshot to digital imagery. I experiment with software that enables spectacular definition in challenging light conditions by blending multiple exposures of the same scene to create a single, “high-dynamic range” image file. Despite the power of the program, “your first goal is to get it right in the camera,” Stimpson says. “It’s not about taking 1,000 images and hoping for a good one.”

Between sessions photographing the towering 200-metre cliffs of Old Woman Bay and the cascades of the Sand river, Rock Island is our base camp. The lodge’s rooms and meals
are more quaint and homestyle than posh and gourmet, a perfect mix for its primary clientele of adventurous sea kayakers and canoeists and outdoorsy families. Open spring, summer and fall, rock Island has emerged as a favourite stop for road-trippers making the 1,600-kilometre Lake Superior circle tour of the Canadian and American shores. The communal front room where we download our shots and talk shop with Stimpson and our peers boasts sweeping, 270-degree views of Lake Superior. at mealtime, the same space becomes a hall for buffet-style dining. for Brian Barker, this collegial atmosphere is one of the Gales of November’s greatest appeals. “You get to talk and learn how other people see things,” he says. “Everyone interprets the environment in a different way.”

However comfortable and inspiring the surroundings, I get the sense that some participants are becoming frustrated with the dull, sunless skies and calm winds that persist well into our second full day of the course. at lunch, Stimpson predicts a breakthrough later in the afternoon. Sure enough, the clouds thin, and as the evening magic hour approaches, we’re all scrambling on the lakeside rocks, preparing for the sunset. a creative frenzy ensues. Clad in lumberjack plaid, Peter Burtch captures the sky’s powerful oranges, reds and purples; Barker records candid images of Burtch in silhouette, dwarfed by Superior’s quicksilver waters; and Stimpson and two other students balance their tripods on the treacherously slippery rocks next to the mouth of the Michipicoten river, where a cement-and-steel light beacon intercepts the current.

The Michipicoten river on Lake Superior’s northeastern shore is a popular spot for photographers looking for a great shot. Photo: Rob Stimpson.
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The thing about good light, as all photographers know, is that it’s fleeting. The shooting spree ends abruptly when a thick band of clouds blots out the sun at the horizon with flick-of-the-switch efficiency. But the darkness can’t curb the group’s excitement, and we’re still buzzing with energy as we retreat to the lodge to download our photos and relive the moment on our computer screens. “Another good day on the lake,” booms Burtch as we tromp inside, just in time for dinner. “But aren’t they all?”

This story was originally published in the September 2013 issue of Canadian Geographic Travel.

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