Exploration

Retracing a historic fur trade route across Quebec with Bruno Forest

Episode 128

For 97 days, this team of six paddled 1,200 kilometres in hand-built canoes from Tadoussac to Waskaganish, Que. while tracing a historic fur trade route

  • Jun 02, 2026
Departure from Tadoussac on May 31, 2025. (Photo: Margault Demasles)
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“There’s a humility in this kind of travel. You don’t pretend to adapt the world to you. You adapt to the world.” — Bruno Forest

In the summer of 2025, Bruno Forest and his team of five others pushed their canoes into the waters of the Saguenay Fjord, setting out on an extraordinary 1,200-kilometre journey, paddling from Tadoussac on the St. Lawrence River to Waskaganish on James Bay.

The RCGS Expedition team at their arrival in Waskaganish on James Bay, Que., Sept. 4, 2025. (Left to right) Francis Kurtness-Bossum, Margault Demasles, Victor Bérubé-Girouard, Madeleine Huard, Bruno Forest, Stéphanie Vadnais. (Photo: Meloé Trottier)
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But this wasn’t simply a wilderness expedition.

Travelling in hand-built cedar canvas canoes by Forest and veteran artisans, he and his crew retraced a route that stretches deep into North American history — following waterways used by Indigenous traders for centuries before becoming part of the European fur trade networks.

The journey demanded weeks of hauling canoes upstream through powerful rivers, reopening forgotten portages swallowed by the forest, and crossing some of Quebec’s most remote landscapes. Along the way, the expedition connected with Innu and Cree communities whose histories remain deeply intertwined with these waterways.

In this episode, Forest shares stories of building the expedition’s canoes alongside some of Quebec’s last traditional canoe builders, encountering woodland caribou and wolves in the north, and discovering what happens when travel slows to the pace of a paddle.

More than an adventure story, this is a conversation about memory, place, and why the canoe remains one of Canada’s most powerful symbols.

Bruno Forest at Lake Ashuapmushuan in the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec. (Photo: Margault Demasles)
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Canoes in the fjord of Saguenay. (Photo: Margault Demasles)
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In this episode

  • A 1,200-kilometre canoe journey from Tadoussac to James Bay
  • Building traditional cedar canvas canoes for the expedition
  • Following ancient Indigenous trade routes and fur trade corridors
  • Reopening long-forgotten portages in Quebec’s interior
  • Encounters with Cree and Innu communities along the route
  • Wildlife, wilderness, and life on the water
  • The philosophy of canoe travel and adapting to the land
Veteran Tremblay canoe builder, Rodrigue Pelchat (front), with Bruno Forest, building the cedar-canvas expedition canoes in a workshop in Saint-Félicien, Lac-Saint-Jean, Que. (Photo: Bruno Forest)
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About Bruno Forest

Bruno Forest is a Quebec-based canoe and kayak guide, filmmaker, author, and expedition leader. In 2025, he led the Royal Canadian Geographical Society’s Expedition of the Year, retracing a historic route across Quebec from the St. Lawrence River to James Bay in traditional cedar canvas canoes. Based in Tadoussac, he is also documenting the expedition in an upcoming feature-length film. For updates on the documentary, follow Bruno on Facebook @alamerdunord.2025

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