Much of the scenery isn't spectacular, but there's so much of it! If you're willing to do the last bit of gravel, I would say it's worth it.
Gravel doesn't concern me the least, and I had indeed planned to ride right to the bay out of Chisasibi.
I thought octane booster was a thing.
It is, but it's also a very misleading thing. Warning...long and sorta OT fuel/octane story ahead LOL:
People think buying one of those little 250ml bottles at Canadian Tire and dumping it in their car turns their $50 tank of gas into a $75 tank of premium, but the reality is anything but because of deceptive marketing. If you read those bottles the wording on the front says "one bottle raises octane up to 7 points" or something along those lines - people think that means that a bottle turns their tank of 89 into 96 octane. Cool, right?
It's not until you read the fine print that you discover the definition of a "point" on almost all cheap octane boosters is 1/10th of a standard octane rating...so a full bottle might take your 89 octane to....89.7, best case assuming your fuel tank matches the "treats up to" figure on the bottle -for a pickup truck with a 100L tank for example you may only be raising your octane 0.2RON.
So, If you need 91 for example, you might actually need up to 3 bottles for even an econobox - a pickup truck, maybe 6 or 8 bottles, or more. a full single bottle of the common STP Octane Booster would be just enough to take a 15L tank of fuel from 89 to 91 for example, and nobody wants to carry .
Yes, there are products that actually work better than most of the junk at most car part stores, but they are harder to source (at least the really good ones) and they can cost about up to $35-$40CDN for a 250ML bottle that treats up to 80L, so maybe 5 fillups on a MC.
Since I don't believe 91 octane is available anywhere north of the bottom of the JBR (if I'm wrong, correct me) I figured they will need at least 2000KM worth of fuel, so at a conservative 5L/100KM per bike (times 2 for the friends in question as both their bikes need premium) that totals 200L of gas needs to be boosted, or about 6-8 tank fulls. Needless to say they don't want to have to carry 12 to 16 individual bottles of the STP stuff.
So yes, in the end, it's IS an option and a totally viable solution, but they'd need probably in the range of $100 worth of the high quality octane booster in the end. Probably not a show stopper, indeed, so perhaps I should bring it up again next season.
/off topic rant
As for remoteness, everyone has to decide that for themselves. Sure you could go off the road and no one sees it happen. No cell service for a big stretch; you'd be screwed. I don't often drive off the road into the bush. Odds are I won't here either.
Accidents are seldom planned nor expected. A blown rear tire, taking a frost heave the wrong way at speed, or an animal running out across the road could indeed put you out in the bush in a heartbeat, and I'm the poster boy for Murphy's Law, so the second I decided to ride alone on such a remote trip that's the sort of crap that'd happen to me.
I'd like to have a friend there who sees it happen and can assist, or at least go for help. Beats the possible alternatives.
Not a risk I'm willing to accept, personally.
As for camping, I'm not old enough yet to admit that I can't or won't. To each their own
I love camping, and I've moto-camped before and thoroughly enjoyed it. I just recognize it's not for everyone, so I did plan the trip around real accommodations and really don't think it's likely to be an issue, but just mention the possibility of needing to camp to some...and they're out. :/