Minnesota couple who canoed from Boundary Waters to nation’s capital ponder next adventures – by Steve Karnowski (The Associated Press/Winnipeg Free Press – January 5, 2015)

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MINNEAPOLIS – Two experienced adventurers who paddled, portaged and sailed 2,000 miles from northern Minnesota to Washington, D.C., say they plan to keep up the fight in the new year to protect the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness from copper-nickel mining.

Amy and Dave Freeman set out Aug. 24 from Ely. They canoed 180 miles through the BWCA, then portaged to Lake Superior. They strapped their canoe to a sailboat for the next 600 miles to Lake Huron, then switched back to the canoe for the final 1,300 miles, travelling mostly by rivers and canals across parts of Canada and the eastern states. They reached the Potomac waterfront in Washington on Dec. 2 — 101 days after they set out.

The Freemans wanted to call attention to the threat they say copper-nickel mining poses to the Boundary Waters and to mark the 50th anniversary of the federal Wilderness Act, which protects pristine areas such as the BWCA. Their next plan is a bike ride across Minnesota in 2015 hauling another canoe to press their message.

But it won’t be the same signature-covered “petition canoe” they paddled to Washington. They gave that to the U.S. Forest Service, the agency that oversees the BWCA. Dave Freeman said the bike tour, which is being organized by the Ely-based group Save The Boundary Waters, will last about six weeks and a large group of people will participate for a week or two at a time.

“I think it’s going to be a lot of fun. We’re going to try and hit as many of the college campuses in Minnesota as possible,” he said.

Environmentalists are fighting copper-nickel proposals for Minnesota because the metals are in minerals that contain sulfides, which can leach sulfuric acid when exposed to air and water. The project farthest along, PolyMet near Babbitt, isn’t in a watershed that flows into the BWCA, but the proposed Twin Metals mine near Ely is. Mining supporters say the minerals can be mined safely and the area needs the jobs.

The Freemans make their living by running canoe tours and dogsled trips. National Geographic named them to its list of Adventurers of the Year for 2014 after they paddled, dogsledded and hiked nearly 12,000 miles across North America over three years while 85,000 elementary and middle-school students tracked their progress from Seattle to Key West, Florida, via their Wilderness Classroom non-profit.

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