Sometimes, poor navigation skills can lead you in a direction for life.
That's what happened to Nicole Erickson after she held a map upside down on a college canoe trip, got lost and crossed paths with Michael Kelly.
Erickson and Kelly just got engaged at Horseshoe Island near Saganaga Lake in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness — the place where they met when their canoe groups converged on a college orientation trek.
Ahead of their freshman year at the College of St. Benedict and St. John's University, the two signed up for the schools' Collegebound trip, which brings incoming students on a weeklong expedition to the Boundary Waters. Kelly and Erickson were in separate men's and women's groups, camping at adjacent islands, when Kelly's group noticed Erickson's, spinning in circles on the water.
"I said to my canoe mate, 'That's the one right there, I know it,' " said Kelly, 23.
Erickson was her boat's duffer and responsible for the map, but had been too distracted socializing. The groups congregated on the water, discussed their trips and split for the night. Kelly later babbled to his group about Erickson around the campfire, and when her group visited the next day to say thanks and go cliff jumping, they introduced themselves.
The couple began dating that fall and Kelly became a leader for the annual Collegebound trips, marking Horseshoe Island with a heart on his map and pointing it out to participants. The two later traveled to eight countries on medical mission trips and graduated from their nursing and neuroscience programs last year.
Last month, the couple returned to the Boundary Waters for the first time — with Kelly secretly planning an excursion to Horseshoe Island and hiding a custom pinewood ring box.