Science
Autistic people are more likely to experience suicidal crisis. 988 is changing to serve them better
Free, largely confidential and available 24 hours a day via call, text or online chat, the 988 Lifeline — formerly the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline — is among the most accessible and effective suicide prevention tools in the U.S.
People have contacted the service roughly 25 million times since July 2022, when the previous 10-digit telephone number officially converted to the shorter and more memorable 988. An overwhelming majority of system users in a study commissioned by the agency that oversees the lifeline said they found it helpful and potentially lifesaving.
Yet for one particularly vulnerable population, the decision to reach out can be especially complicated.
Many autistic people require additional time to process verbal information, particularly in stressful or overwhelming situations. If a question is long or laden with metaphoric speech — “feeling blue,” “get it off your chest” — the time required only expands. Some have reported being hung up on when a 988 counselor misinterpreted their silence to mean they’d walked away.
Others have struggled to make their needs understood, or found that the encounter unfolded in a way that unintentionally caused further harm.
Some years ago, before the launch of the national lifeline’s text service, Rae Waters Haight contacted a text crisis line during a challenging period. The counselor asked a routine question to assess his safety: Was there anything in his house right now that he could use to hurt himself?
Like many autistic people, Haight’s mind interprets language in its most literal sense. Mentally he scanned the rooms of his Carlsbad home, envisioning various objects and the ways they might cause harm. He had no intention of using any of these items, but that wasn’t the question he had been asked.
Yes, he replied.
Haight ended the conversation and headed to bed, telling himself he’d feel better after a night’s sleep. To his alarm, police lights soon flashed through his bedroom window. They were officers dispatched by a concerned counselor who misinterpreted his factually accurate answer as a statement of intent.
Haight is now part of a growing network of researchers and advocates working to ensure that crisis counselors have the tools they need to help autistic callers, and that autistic people and those who care for them understand what to expect from 988 and similar crisis intervention services before they need to dial.
“Misunderstandings happen frequently between autistic and non-autistic individuals, and this can be difficult at the best of times,” he said. “But during a crisis, the stakes are high.”
Autism spectrum disorder is a neurodevelopmental condition that manifests differently in nearly every person who has it. While the spectrum encompasses a wildly diverse range of behaviors, skills and communication styles, its core traits center on differences in social communication and sensory processing.
For a variety of reasons, autistic people of all ages are significantly more likely than neurotypical peers to experience suicidal thoughts and attempt suicide. In the compressed world of a 988 call, in which both counselor and caller are strangers with little information to go on besides the words they exchange, the potential for miscommunication is high.
“The crisis counselors try to help, but end up kind of just landing wrong.”
“Autistic people are misunderstood and have difficulty conveying what they’re going through in a way that’s productive,” said Lisa Morgan, founder and co-chair of the Autism and Suicide Prevention Workgroup, a research collective dedicated to the issue. “The crisis counselors try to help, but end up kind of just landing wrong.”
An autistic person’s tone of voice or emotional affect may sound to a non-autistic person as if it doesn’t match the situation’s gravity. Some are mentally soothed by repeating specific words or phrases, a phenomenon known as echolalia, which can be misinterpreted by someone unfamiliar with the trait as mocking or uncooperative.
Many autistic people also have alexithymia, a trait that makes it exceptionally difficult to identify and describe emotions, and have been stymied by questions intended to assess their internal state.
Such misunderstandings can leave the caller feeling frustrated and alone. They can also inadvertently escalate a situation.
According to 988’s confidentiality policy, counselors may share a caller’s information with people outside of the lifeline system if they believe the caller or someone else is at immediate risk of harm, and discussing an alternative safety plan directly with the caller isn’t possible.
Emergency services are contacted in fewer than 2% of calls, according to Vibrant Emotional Health, the nonprofit organization that administers 988, and most of these dispatches are made with the caller’s consent.
For many autistic people, even a slim prospect of an unwanted encounter with law enforcement or an emergency room is frightening.
“I’ve called 988, I’ve texted 988 before, and my experience was I don’t want to do it anymore.”
“I’ve called 988, I’ve texted 988 before, and my experience was I don’t want to do it anymore. You know why? Because the police will come. And they’ll take me to the hospital,” said Kayla Rodriguez, 29, an autistic woman who lives in the Greater Atlanta area.
Although an emergency room can keep someone safe, many autistic people find its bright lights, incessant noise and unfamiliarity to be more distressing than helpful. A hospitalization during one suicidal period triggered for Rodriguez a yearlong episode of autistic burnout, a form of exhaustion in which the ability to function or tolerate stimuli plummets.
An encounter with police carries its own risks. Rodriguez was particularly unsettled by the March 1 death of Alex LaMorie, a 25-year-old autistic man who called 911 (not 988) during a suicidal crisis and was shot by responding officers after allegedly failing to drop a knife at their command.
“I wish there were more options to deal with suicidality than just the police and the hospital,” Rodriguez said. “But also, I just wish people would calm down … try to talk to us, try to engage with us and help de-escalate the situation, instead of making it worse.”
Autistic people who have called the crisis line say they don’t expect counselors to be mind readers. But they would like them to be open to adjusting their approach.
“Adapt to the person [calling]. Don’t make the person adapt,” said Andrea Bleifuss, 43, of Portland, Ore., who has worked in mental health care facilities and called the crisis line herself.
The counselors who made her feel truly understood “don’t even have to understand what I’m going through, but they do understand how to relate to someone, how to adapt whatever training they’ve had.”
Morgan, who is herself autistic, and her research partner Brenna Maddox, a clinical psychologist and co-chair of the workgroup, set out to help the 988 system do just that.
In 2023, they published a guide to help crisis workers assess whether the person they are talking to could be on the autism spectrum. It also offered specific conversation strategies that could improve the call: asking if the person has any special interests; asking clear, short, direct questions; allowing ample time for the person to respond; and being open to the caller’s own suggestions for what works for them. The final page of the guide is a single sheet of tips that crisis workers can print out and hang by their desk.
“An autistic individual may say that spinning quarters is a good distraction technique for them,” reads one tip. “Even if that sounds unusual to the crisis center worker, it is still a valid and acceptable answer.”
The following year, they published a detailed guide for autistic adults on what to expect when contacting 988. This includes the likelihood of a wait time (the 988 number connects to a network of more than 200 individual call centers around the U.S. and it can take a few minutes to find an available counselor) and how to sign off on a call or text chat. Earlier this year, the workgroup released a version for autistic youth and their caregivers.
Then last year, they achieved a goal long in the works: direct training for 988 counselors. Morgan and Maddox conducted three one-hour webinars for Vibrant that covered the fundamentals of autism, autism-specific suicide warning signs and support strategies for autistic people in crisis.
The sessions were voluntary, and their recordings were placed in the online library of continuing education materials available to all 988 counselors. More than 1,200 people have already viewed the training live or watched the webinars, according to Vibrant.
No single approach works for every 988 caller, autistic or not. The goal is to expand the skills and ideas a counselor can draw from when trying to form a connection.
“Across multiple trainings, we have had attendees say or put in the chat, ‘These recommendations would be helpful for anyone,’” Maddox said. “If anyone is in crisis, do they want you spewing a lot of words at them [and] having this really long, wordy conversation? Or do they want you to be concise, to the point?”
Haight is now pursuing a doctorate in autism studies at Towson University in Maryland, and hosts meetings for autistic peer support groups. His long-term goal is to create a crisis hotline specifically for people on the spectrum, staffed by counselors who are either autistic themselves or have been trained by autistic people.
Right now, 988 offers callers direct access to counselors with specialized training in supporting veterans, another population with higher suicide rates than the national average. (A dedicated option for LGBTQ+ youth disappeared last year after the Trump administration terminated its funding.) Haight believes autistic people should have something similar.
“I was convinced that a unique crisis support for autistic people must exist, given our high rate of suicidality and unique needs, so I searched for one, but I found none. What I did find was a wealth of evidence that a dedicated support should exist,” he said. “Autistic people have unique communication needs, yet crisis supports were not created with autistic needs in mind.”
Science
How to Build a Better Kind of Nuclear Power? This Side Hustle Might Help.
Atomic fusion has long been seen as the ultimate source of clean energy because of all its advantages over fission, the process that has powered nuclear power plants for nearly eight decades.
It’s safer — no chain reactions, no meltdowns. It would leave no long-lasting radioactive waste. And it would use fuels that are cheaper and more abundant, providing an attractive source of round-the-clock, emissions-free energy that could help stop climate change.
Now, one leading fusion start-up has decided the best way to beat fission might be to embrace it.
Zap Energy, a nine-year-old company in Everett, Wash., said on Wednesday that it had begun developing a small fission reactor, one that would be cheaper and less complex to build than existing nuclear reactors.
Zap isn’t moving away from fusion, Benj Conway, the company’s president and co-founder, said in an interview. Fission and fusion are opposite processes; the former splits atoms while the latter melds them. Even so, there are commonalities in engineering that give Zap and its particular design for a fusion reactor a head start in fission, Mr. Conway said.
Plus, developing fission reactors will give the company experience in obtaining regulatory approvals and building to commercial safety standards, he said. That experience will be important when the company starts building fusion plants.
By pursuing fission, “we’ll be building fusion power plants much, much earlier than we would be doing otherwise,” Mr. Conway said. Zap hopes to bring its fission reactor to market in the early 2030s.
Other start-ups around the country are also aiming to build small, next-generation fission reactors. But none of them started out in fusion.
Electricity demand is surging as data centers multiply, and the Trump administration is encouraging new nuclear plants to play a big role in meeting it. The administration is supporting fusion development as well, and a few fusion start-ups say their experimental devices are close to producing more power than they consume, the key breakthrough that has eluded fusion machines for decades. Still, most experts say fusion remains decades away from supporting the grid at large scale.
America’s best-funded fusion start-up, Commonwealth Fusion Systems, plans to build its first power plant in Virginia and turn it on the early 2030s. Helion Energy (which, like Zap, is based in Everett) is constructing a facility in eastern Washington that it says will deliver power to Microsoft in 2028.
Most fusion machines use either superstrong magnets or high-power lasers to cause plasma atoms to combine and release energy. Zap is working on a simpler device, one that achieves fusion by zapping plasma with electricity. The company hopes that, with no giant magnets or lasers, its reactors will be smaller and cheaper to build.
The design of Zap’s fusion reactor also shows promise for so-called hybrid nuclear systems that braid together fission and fusion. The company’s work in fission should help it develop hybrids down the road, Mr. Conway said.
According to Fusion Energy Base, a website that tracks the industry, Zap has raised $330 million from investors including the oil giants Chevron and Shell, the Japanese bank Mizuho and Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a venture capital firm founded by Bill Gates.
Zap’s experimental devices have crossed several technical milestones in recent years. “The fusion work’s going well, and fusion’s coming,” said Zabrina Johal, Zap’s newly appointed chief executive. “But there’s massive demand and need right now” for nuclear power, and the company can help fulfill it while continuing its core mission, Ms. Johal said.
Zap isn’t the first fusion start-up with a side hustle. Some sell magnets. Others produce radioactive substances used to diagnose and treat health conditions. One start-up, Marathon Fusion, says it has developed a method for using fusion reactors to turn mercury into gold.
Such efforts aren’t necessarily a sign that the prospects for fusion energy are dimming, said Sam Wurzel, the researcher who runs Fusion Energy Base. Commercial fusion is a colossal challenge, and generating revenue helps companies secure investment to fund research and development, he said. “In some ways, I see it as just responsible stewardship of investor funds.”
Zap is first aiming to build a 10-megawatt fission reactor, enough to power several thousand homes. The company is targeting users like remote data centers, logistics warehouses and isolated military bases, with devices that could be built in a factory and delivered by truck, train or cargo plane.
Most nuclear reactors today are cooled with highly pressurized water, but Zap’s would use liquid sodium. That would allow it to operate at lower pressures and with less shielding, helping it to be cooled more efficiently.
The challenge for many first-of-a-kind reactor technologies would be cost, said Jacopo Buongiorno, a professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The energy such machines produce is likely to be very expensive, at least to start, he said.
“It is true that data centers are willing to pay more for electricity that is carbon free and stable, and nuclear provides that,” Dr. Buongiorno said. “But how much more?”
Science
How Iran Accumulated 11 Tons of Enriched Uranium
Since eight years ago when President Trump pulled out of a nuclear deal with Tehran, Iran has accumulated 22,000 pounds, or 11 tons, of enriched uranium. But the fate of Iran’s stockpile remains a mystery, two months after the United States began a war meant to prevent Iran from ever building an atomic bomb.
Uranium can light cities or destroy them. Low concentrations can power nuclear reactors. Higher concentrations, from a process called enrichment, can make nuclear bombs.
Concentrations in Iran’s stockpile
Uranium enrichment gets increasingly easy and fast as concentrations rise. It’s much harder to get to 20 percent from 0 percent than to 60 percent from 20 percent, or even to 90 percent — the preferred level for making nuclear arms.
Iran began enriching uranium on an industrial scale in 2006, describing its aims as peaceful. Reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency showed the stockpile growing over the next few years.
Chart shows the increasing stockpile of uranium enriched up to 5 percent, in light purple, from 2008 to 2010.
In 2010, Iran said it would begin enriching uranium up to 20 percent — ostensibly to make fuel for a research reactor. This level is the official dividing line between civilian and military uses.
Chart shows the increasing stockpile of uranium enriched up to 5 percent, in light purple, from 2008 to 2013, when it reaches about 20,000 pounds. A new area on the chart, in medium purple and indicating 20 percent enrichment, grows from 2010 onward.
The 20 percent level was alarming because it was about 80 percent of the way to bomb-grade fuel.
Chart zooms in into the area of uranium enriched to 20 percent.
As the stockpile kept growing, the Obama administration began talks to curb it.
In 2015, Iran and six nations led by the United States reached an accord that limited the purity of its enriched uranium to 3.67 percent and the size of its stockpile for 15 years.
Chart extends to show the increasing stockpile of uranium enriched to 5 percent, in light purple, from 2008 to 2015. The area of enriched to 20 percent is visible from 2010 to 2014.
Under the deal, Tehran shipped 25,000 pounds of enriched uranium, or 12.5 tons, and restricted the size of its stockpile to under 660 pounds.
Chart extends to show the stockpile of uranium enriched up to 2018, with the limit on its size imposed by the 2015 deal marked with a red line. The chart also shows a huge drop in the levels of enriched uranium after 2016.
Iran lacked a single bomb’s worth of uranium in 2018, when Mr. Trump withdrew the United States from the pact and reimposed a series of tough economic sanctions.
Then Iran began to enrich above the deal’s limit, first at low enrichment levels to pressure the West and then up to 20 percent in early 2021, just before Mr. Trump left office.
Chart shows the stockpile of uranium enriched from 2016 to 2022, and highlights May 2018, when Trump revoked the Iran nuclear deal.
The Biden administration tried, unsuccessfully, to restore aspects of the abandoned deal. Throughout the negotiations, Iran enriched uranium to an unprecedented level of up to 60 percent — a hairsbreadth away from the preferred grade for atom bombs.
Chart shows the stockpile of uranium enriched from 2019 to 2025, with all levels of enrichment increasing. Enrichment to 60 percent is also visible in dark colors from 2021 to 2025.
With Mr. Trump again in office in 2025, Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium grew at the fastest rate since the International Atomic Energy Agency started reporting.
Chart zooms out to see the entire extent of the timeline, from 2006 to 2025.
In June 2025, during the 12-day war, the United States bombed Iran’s enrichment plants at Natanz and Fordow, as well as its uranium storage tunnels at Isfahan. One month later, Iran suspended cooperation with the I.A.E.A., ending the monitoring of the nation’s enrichment sites.
In the absence of on-site inspections and despite satellite monitoring, the location of the 11-ton stockpile remains uncertain.
Radioactive and chemically hazardous, parts of the stockpile remain hidden or buried under wartime rubble, making them difficult targets to access or destroy. It’s even a challenge to confirm they exist.
Even if Iran were to dig out the uranium, experts said, it would take many months — perhaps more than a year — to turn it into a warhead. They added that Iran, when the war started, posed no imminent nuclear threat.
The Trump administration has argued that U.S. satellites are monitoring the deeply buried uranium and that the cache is of little or no use to Iran because of the wide destruction of its nuclear sites and know-how.
Analysts question these assertions. They say Iran last year may have set up an enrichment plant in the mountain tunnels that adjoin its Isfahan site, where Tehran is also seen as storing the bulk of its uranium stockpile. If so, they say, that raises the possibility that Iran has a covert site where it might conduct new rounds of fuel enrichment to make fuel for an atomic bomb.
Methodology
To extract enrichment figures, The New York Times reviewed reports published quarterly by the International Atomic Energy Agency from 2003 to 2025. The agency started to report enrichment figures in February 2008. In 2016, it reported that the stockpile did not exceed 300 kilograms, or 660 pounds, of 3.67 percent enriched uranium, without providing exact figures.
Science
Immaculate Wilderness, Uncertain Future: Paddling the Boundary Waters
Saganaga Lake was so calm that I could see boulders 10 feet below the surface. The water reflected a mirror image of the clouds above as my partner, Brian, and I paddled between earth and sky. On the horizon, a forest of white pine, spruce and cedar delineated the northern shoreline, in Canada. The border between the two nations floated in the middle of this vast lake, one of more than 1,100 within Minnesota’s roadless, 1.1-million-acre Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.
It was warm for mid-September — high 70s. We found a campsite on a small island dwarfed by a towering white pine. We quickly hauled up the canoe and jumped into the lake. I lost my breath, embracing the numbing water and letting it strip away 48 hours of grime.
What a difference a day makes. The previous afternoon we were stormbound, sitting under a tarp hastily strung between pines, watching lightning flash around us as rivulets of rainwater slowly flooded our campsite. Every so often a red-eyed loon would break the lake’s surface carrying a minnow in her beak to feed her chick.
But a nagging concern kept pulling me from the present: The beauty of this thriving ecosystem is increasingly shrouded by the threat of a proposed copper and nickel mine within the Rainy River watershed, which encompasses most of the Boundary Waters. Environmental groups warn that sulfuric acid, a byproduct of the mining operation, could contaminate the water and endanger everything living in it.
I grew up in northern Minnesota and have been paddling these lakes since I was a young child, first with my parents and four siblings, and later guiding teenagers out of a camp based on Sea Gull Lake. Now I paddle whenever I can string together a few free days and secure a permit.
A Pristine Ecosystem
Every year more than 150,000 people use the Boundary Waters, making it the most heavily visited wilderness area in the United States. At the height of summer, campsites on popular lakes can be in high demand. But “heavily visited” is a relative term; Glacier National Park, also roughly one million acres, welcomed 3.1 million visitors in 2025.
Designated a federal wilderness in 1964, the Boundary Waters stretches 150 miles along the international border and sits within the three-million-acre Superior National Forest.
The wilderness also sits within the five-million-acre 1854 Treaty Area, lands that the Ojibwe ceded to the federal government four years before Minnesota became a state. In return the Ojibwe reserved the right to hunt, fish and gather there in perpetuity.
This still pristine ecosystem of forests, lakes and rivers supports big animals like moose, black bear and lynx — and an abundance of mosquitoes. It’s not uncommon to watch a bald eagle dive out of the sky to spear a walleye, or to be lulled to sleep by the haunting trill of a loon.
There are almost 100 entry points to the wilderness and 2,000 designated, first-come-first-served campsites. Some lakes are no bigger than a pond. Others take hours to paddle across.
Paddlers can find ancient petroglyphs, carved by the Indigenous inhabitants who used this natural superhighway to move with the seasons and trade with neighboring tribes. In the 1600s their trade partners expanded to include French voyageurs in search of beaver pelts. In the 19th century, Europeans began to settle in the region, including my great-grandfather, who left Sweden in 1883, homesteading a patch of forest 20 miles west of Ely, the western gateway to what is now the wilderness.
Wildfires, hurricane-force winds and other natural disasters have altered the landscape, but what has remained nearly constant is the purity of the water. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency recently declared water within the Rainy River drainage as “immaculate.”
Immaculate water is not a given. An eyelid-shaped deposit, known as the Duluth Complex, that arcs through the Superior National Forest and portions of the Boundary Waters, reportedly holds one of the largest undeveloped masses of copper-nickel on earth.
Iron ore and its derivative, taconite, have been mined to near depletion in northern Minnesota. In 1978, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness Act banned mining within the wilderness and established a 222,000-acre protected zone along entry corridors. More than a decade before the ban, the Bureau of Land Management issued two 20-year federal mineral leases on 4,800 acres of Forest Service land, one directly adjacent to the Boundary Waters and the other within five miles. Twin Metals Minnesota, a subsidiary of the Chilean mining giant Antofagasta, eventually acquired the leases, though efforts to mine were paused after the B.L.M. denied a third lease-renewal request in 2016, citing environmental risks.
Conservation groups, tribal entities, politicians and locals have been working together to permanently ban copper mining here for more than a decade, since the process for extracting the metal creates dangerous byproducts, namely sulfuric acid.
“The only way to permanently protect this great wilderness is through legislation that bans copper mining in its headwaters,” said Becky Rom, a retired lawyer who grew up in Ely and is the national chair of the nonprofit coalition Save the Boundary Waters, in an interview last fall.
Twin Metals takes a different stance. Kathy Graul, the company’s director of communications, wrote in an email that Twin Metals would have to undergo years of regulatory review before it could begin mining, and “must prove through this process that we can meet the stringent environmental standards” set by the state of Minnesota.
In mid-April, after a decade of back-and-forth political battles, Congress narrowly overturned a mining ban instituted by the Biden administration. In an email, Representative Pete Stauber, Republican of Minnesota, said he was thrilled that the Senate passed his resolution, citing the development of critical minerals, helium and other natural resources. “The passage of this legislation is not an automatic green light for any proposed project,” he wrote. “Now, established federal and state permitting processes will determine the outcome.”
The resolution prevents a future Department of Interior from issuing similar protections without new congressional authorization. In response to the vote, Ingrid Lyons, the executive director of Save the Boundary Waters, said that “Congress has set a dangerous precedent for America’s public lands across the country.”
Ultimately, it is a state agency, Minnesota’s Department of Natural Resources, that will grant or deny the permit to mine, a process that may take years. In the meantime, a bill is pending in the Minnesota Legislature that prohibits copper mining in the headwaters of the Boundary Waters. Minnesotans could also pass an amendment to their Constitution to enshrine such a prohibition.
Strings of Islands and Intimidating Expanses
The beauty of the Boundary Waters is that excursions can be epic, weekslong adventures or short overnight trips to one lake. Brian and I had only a long weekend. Our plan was to paddle and portage roughly 20 miles through a chain of lakes, stopping to swim when the spirit moved us.
After a late start on the first day, under a bluebird sky with a light headwind, we met up at noon on Sea Gull Lake with Jim Wiinanen, 78, my old boss and the former director of a youth camp where I worked. Jim first set foot in the Boundary Waters in 1963 and hasn’t strayed far since, living 60 miles away in Grand Marais. Among other wilderness skills, Jim taught me how to use a compass, which feels quaint in the age of GPS, but is still invaluable when route-finding on a lake immersed in fog.
When I led canoe trips out of Sea Gull Lake in the early 1990s, we’d leave the comfort and safety of camp behind, paddling the narrow maze between the mainland and a string of islands that was lined by towering white pines and fragrant cedar. I felt exuberant and free until the 3,958-acre lake opened into an immense and intimidating expanse, at which point it would sink in that I was responsible for the health and well-being of eight other people, sometimes for up to two weeks.
Parts of Sea Gull’s shoreline are still densely forested. But a series of weather events — including powerful windstorms in 1999 and major fires in 2005, 2006 and 2007 — have drastically altered thousands of acres of forest, leaving behind a sparse, alien landscape of broken, charred trees.
Paddling Sea Gull Lake after the fires was gut-wrenching. Slowly, life has bounced back. I marveled at the clusters of young birch standing 15 feet high as we ate lunch at an island campsite near the southwestern corner of the lake.
“We are blessed with a natural system that from the beginning has absorbed catastrophic changes,” Jim said, diving into a turkey sandwich. “The ecosystem may not look the same, but it’s still there.”
We ate in silence, enjoying the warm rays of a weakening September sun. Inevitably we circled back — as most conversations in these parts do — to the omnipresent cloud of sulfide-ore copper mining.
“The scary part is the water,” Jim said. “ You probably won’t see the mercury accumulation, and you probably won’t see sulfuric acid accumulation. But how can anything live here if the lakes are poisoned?”
If you go:
How to reserve a permit: Plan your trip early. Permits are required between May 1 and Sept. 30, and quotas limit the number of visitors. Reservations on Recreation.gov open in the morning on the last Wednesday of January. The most popular put-ins go within minutes, so have a backup plan. Group size is limited to nine people and four canoes.
How to get there: The western gateway to the Boundary Waters is Ely; the eastern gateway is Grand Marais, which marks the beginning of the Gunflint Trail, a scenic byway; and there are multiple points of entry in between. Seasoned outfitters in both towns and along the Gunflint Trail offer every level of service, from canoe rentals to fully guided trips.
What to bring: Come prepared for a wide range of temperatures from May through September, from below freezing to 90 degrees. Bring layers, rain gear, tick and mosquito repellent, sturdy shoes and an extra dry pair for the campsite. Fisher or McKenzie maps, both of which are waterproof and show designated campsites and portages, are essential, as is a compass or a dedicated GPS device, which is usually more durable than a smartphone.
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