After her husband died in 1927, leaving her with five small children, everyone expected the struggles of single motherhood on a remote island to overcome M. Wylie Blanchet. Instead, this
courageous woman became one of the pioneers of family travel,” acting as both mother and captain of the twenty-five-foot boat that became her family’s home during the long Northwest summers.
Blanchet’s lyrically written account reads like fantastic fiction, but her adventures are all very real. There are dangersrough water, bad weather, wild animalsbut there are also the quiet
respect and deep peace of a woman teaching her children the wonder and awesome depth of the natural world. Filled with observations on natural history and the wonders of the wild,
(Blanchet's) prose, like the waterfall she describes, sings.”Kliatt