Darin Fagerman, a former Minnesota state trooper and retired conservation officer, built a solar-powered cabin eight-tenths of a mile into Canada on Saganaga Lake. Far from any roads, it is a remote wilderness paradise.
Fagerman can reach his cabin in less than two hours from his home outside of Grand Marais, Minn., by crossing the international border with Ontario on his boat with a Remote Area Border Crossing Permit from the Canadian government.
But now Canada has put an indefinite “pause” on that option. That means Fagerman instead must drive four hours to the Pigeon River port of entry near Grand Portage and then backtrack to Saganaga Lake on the Canadian side by vehicle and either two boat rides or a 25-mile snowmobile trek.
Fagerman is one of many Minnesotans upset as Canada Border Services Agency officials say their program to renew such permits or process new ones is under review. The officials have not said how long the process will take.
Besides affecting cabin owners, the indefinite pause on the permit applications and renewals could complicate the work of fishing guides this summer. It’s already prompted some canoeists to cancel wilderness trips to Quetico Provincial Park, across the border from the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.
The situation also worries Minnesotans who own resorts and other businesses in remote areas of Canada near the U.S. border.
The pause affects remote crossing permits along the border in Michigan and Minnesota, too. Of the five eligible areas, three are in Minnesota: One applies to the Canadian shore of Lake Superior, and the others apply to the Northwest Angle and a stretch of backcountry more than 250 miles long from the Pigeon River, west to the Boundary Waters and Lake of the Woods.
Fagerman had a remote crossing permit that was good for 365 days; it expired a few weeks ago.