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Cottage Life

7 unusual and amazing places in Ontario for a vacation rental

If you’re looking to give your family the ultimate “together” experience this year, you could rent a cottage or vacation home in one of Ontario’s most popular waterfront communities—or you could take the road less traveled and experience one of these truly unforgettable destinations in the province.

Here are seven unique Ontario locales and sights to add to your Fall/Winter Trip Board, all bookable on Vrbo Canada.

Thousand Islands

 

Fun fact: There are actually 1,864 islands in this scenic St. Lawrence River archipelago, which sits between Ontario and New York State. In the region, you can go on scenic boat tours, spot lighthouses and castles, visit a number of National Historic Sites, and explore Thousand Islands National Park. Book a stay on a boat or on your own private island, and really get away from it all! 


Butter Tart Tour

 

There are a number of delicious food trails in Ontario, but one of the most popular might just be the one formally known as the Kawarthas Northumberland Butter Tart Tour, introduced in 2011. Today, the year-round attraction—which can be experienced by car, motorcycle, bike, and even (in part) by boat— includes more than 50 sweet stops in the Kawarthas Northumberland region. And if that’s not enough tarts for your sweet tooth, you can always extend the journey by completing the Butter Tart Trail in nearby Wellington County, too.


Rideau Canal Skateway

 

For a few months each year, typically from January to March, Ottawa’s iconic Rideau Canal becomes the Rideau Canal Skateway, a 7.8 kilometre naturally frozen ice rink that’s popular with tourists and locals alike. If you can, visit during the first three weekends of February, and you’ll also get to experience the Winterlude annual festival while skating on a UNESCO World Heritage Site


The Bruce Peninsula 

 

Avoid the summer crowds and schedule your next trip to the stunning Bruce Peninsula in the fall instead. It won’t be as difficult to schedule a visit to top attractions like Flowerpot Island in Fathom Five National Marine Park and the Grotto cave in Bruce Peninsula National Park, and you’ll be able to capture the fall colours on the peninsula’s many hiking trails.  


Cheltenham Badlands

 

Located less than an hour from Toronto, Caledon’s Cheltenham Badlands are provincially designated as an Area of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI) and an Environmentally Significant Area (ESA). Available to visit by reservation, this otherworldly site includes an accessible boardwalk and two short trails. The best time to visit the Cheltenham Badlands is in the fall with the beautiful foliage, nearby apple orchards, and a number of conservation areas. 


Lake Superior Ice Caves

For a truly one-of-a-kind winter adventure, book a vacation home near Sault Ste. Marie in February or March, and plan your trip around the ice caves of Lake Superior. You should consider booking an expert-led tour—these snow-and-ice formations aren’t always accessible or safe to visit—but it’s sure to be an awe-inspiring experience if you get lucky with your timing. 

Torrance Barrens Dark-Sky Preserve

 

Designated in 1999 as the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada’s first-ever Dark Sky Preserve, this unique conservation area in Ontario’s cottage country offers 360-degree views for stargazing and 5,000 acres of trails for hiking and mountain biking. Bonus: Rent a vacation home or cabin near Torrance Barrens, and you’ll also be a very short drive from the amenities and attractions of Gravenhurst. 

 

 

 

Want to embrace the ultimate “together” experience this season? Learn more about renting a cottage with the help of Vrbo.

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Cottage Life

Flood watch issued for sections of Lake Erie

Flooding is normally a spring occurrence. But this fall, as the weather cools, Lake Erie residents may have to get the sandbags out.

Since the start of September, three separate conservation authorities have issued shoreline conditions statements for Lake Erie. A shoreline conditions statement is an early notice sent out by conservation authorities indicating that weather and lake conditions could lead to potential flooding.

The three conservation authorities concerned include the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority, which covers the Chatham-Kent area; Long Point Region Conservation Authority, which covers Norfolk County; and Grand River Conservation Authority, which covers Haldimand County.

According to the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority, average daily water levels on Lake Erie are sitting around 174.52 metres. This is actually down compared to the last several years—September water levels peaked in 2019 at 174.87 metres. But Lake Erie’s water levels are still 33 centimetres above the average water level for September.

While there’s been no significant flooding reported, the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources, and Forestry (MNRF) warns that elevated water levels can result in shoreline flooding, beach submersion, crawl space and septic system inundation, and wave-driven erosion along Lake Erie’s shoreline.

Without snow melt, the biggest factor in fall flooding is the weather, particularly precipitation and strong winds. Excess rain can cause the water levels to continue rising, and strong winds generate waves that batter the shoreline, eroding unprotected areas.

“The bluff areas all along the Lake Erie shoreline are…at a greater risk of erosion due to the high lake levels, especially when there are onshore winds and waves,” says the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority in a statement. “The erosion can cause the bluffs to fail, and there have been times over the last few years when many metres of land have fallen into the lake all at one time.”

Under current conditions, severe flooding and erosion would only happen if there were gale force winds, says the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority. It is, however, warning residents to be cautious around Erie Shore Drive as sustained winds of 35 km/h travelling from a southwest to southeast direction could flood the area.

If a flooding event occurs on your property and you’re stuck indoors, the MNRF says the first thing you should do is ensure all important personal items, such as medication and passports, are secured. Then disconnect all electrical appliances, and ensure your phone is charged.

If you’re caught outdoors during a flooding event, move to higher ground, don’t drive through moving water or on roads that travel near the body of water, such as bridges or embankments, and keep children and pets away from floodwaters.

Finally, contact your local municipality to let them know about the flooding.

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Cottage Life

Tackle rain and mud in these rubber boots picked by the Cottage Life team

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The selection of rubber boots on the market these days has expanded far and beyond the simple wellies you wore as a child. Our team dug into their closets to bring you their favourite rubber boots—a combination of tall and ankle-height pairs that they turn to in times of inclement Canadian weather. A chic, Chelsea-style boot that can easily make the transition from the city to the cottage is popular with many of our editors, while others opt for lace-up rubber boots to keep their foot from coming out when they get stuck in the muck. What they all have in common though are practicality and durability, which is a must for cottage use.

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Cottage Life

The plaid pieces you need this fall

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It’s time for a wardrobe revamp because fall is officially here, so it’s time to get decked out in plaid. From shackets to boots to everyday accessories, we’re rounding up the top plaid must-haves you, a family member, or a furry friend can sport at the cottage this season and beyond. These functional yet fashionable pieces are perfect for taking cottage-core closet essentials to the next level.

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Cottage Life

Are these the cottage building materials of the future?

Cottages are often nods to the past—built by great-grandparents and renovated by generations since. But with increasing recognition that building materials do much more than shift an aesthetic—they boost energy-efficiency and overall comfort—it’s time to look ahead. Whether you’re starting from scratch, or addressing issues in an existing cottage, consider future-forward tech:

Reach for the top

Options range from simple (and affordable) reflective roof paints to more expensive solar shingles—or even a living roof of organic matter. What we put on top can have a big impact on how we keep our cottages cool. Learn more about it.

A rising tide floats all cottages

Could your cottage survive a flood? It might, if you adopt an old technology that’s finding new purpose. The Buoyancy Foundation Project, out of the University of Waterloo, has been studying amphibious construction. It works, says one researcher, the same way a rubber duckie works in your bathtub, but with a “vertical guidance system” so your cottage doesn’t simply float away. Learn more about it.

The butterfly (paint) effect

Keen to produce a beautiful paint without toxic dyes and pigments, researchers in Berkeley, California, found inspiration in the blue morpho butterfly’s incredible colour. The blue of the butterfly, they say, is produced by tiny overlapping microscopic scales arranged across the surface of the wing that reflect light. By achieving this structural colour in paint, researchers say, they can create a far safer (and more spectacular) coating. Learn more about it.

Bacteria-built brick

Concrete’s carbon footprint is the size of Sasquatch so alternatives are highly sought after. But a brick made of cyanobacteria, the same stuff that turns our beloved lakes green with algae? Yes, please, say the University of Colorado researchers, who insist there are no dangerous health effects from their bacteria, sand, and gelatin creations. What’s more, these bio bricks sequester carbon, effectively erasing concrete’s behemoth footprint. Learn more about it.

Whale-food windows

Nature is often way ahead of us in its problem solving. Consider krill, the tiny sea creatures that release a pigment in bright sunlight to protect themselves from ultraviolet rays. Windows in a University of Toronto lab got the krill treatment when researchers discovered they could similarly create a way to shut out the sun’s rays. Learn more about it.

A whole earth approach

If you’re starting from scratch, consider the earth-friendly techniques of the aptly named Earthship, rammed earth construction, or straw-bale. All beautiful, all sustainable, and all will be the talk of your cottage community. Learn more about it.

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Cottage Life

Campfire cooking: Jackson’s Falls Dessert Bannock

This simple bannock recipe is adapted from the Public School House restaurant at Jackson’s Falls Country Inn in Prince Edward County, Ont., where First Nations owner Lee Arden Lewis features Native-inspired cuisine. The bannock gets baked over prepared hot coals in about 20–30 minutes.

Jackson’s Falls Dessert Bannock

This simple bannock recipe is adapted from the Public School House restaurant at Jackson’s Falls Country Inn in Prince Edward County, Ont., where First Nations owner Lee Arden Lewis features Native-inspired cuisine. The bannock gets baked over prepared hot coals in about 20–30 minutes. Serves 6–8.

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Course Dessert
Cuisine classic, Cottage, Indigenous, Traditional

Servings 6 servings

Ingredients

  

  • 5 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 21 ⁄2 tbsp baking powder
  • cup sugar
  • 2 tsp salt 1 tbsp ground dried sumac optional (See TIP below)
  • 1 ⁄2 cup vegetable oil
  • 21 ⁄2–3 cups water
  • 1 ⁄4 cup butter melted Nutella, whipped cream, chopped strawberries or cinnamon sugar, to taste

Instructions

 

  • Choose clean, green sticks about as thick as your thumb; peel the bark off their ends (about 8″).
  • In a medium bowl, mix flour, baking powder, sugar, salt, and sumac (if using). Add oil and just enough water, a little at a time, to form soft dough that’s not too sticky. Knead lightly in bowl, adding a little flour as needed, with well-oiled hands for a few minutes, until dough is elastic; divide into 6–8 pieces.
  • Roll each piece into long, 1″-thick ropes with your hands. Heat peeled ends of sticks over coals; wrap dough coils firmly around warmed ends.
  • Hold bannock over hot coals, turning sticks occasionally and being careful not to burn, cooking for about 20–30 minutes or until puffed, evenly browned, and cooked in centre. Remove bannock from sticks; brush with melted butter and dust with cinnamon sugar or fill generously with Nutella, whipped cream, and chopped strawberries.

Notes

TIP Staghorn sumac is a wild-growing plant known for its tight, bunched clusters of fuzzy red berries with seeds inside. You can buy it in Middle Eastern stores or online from suppliers such as Forbes Wild Foods. It adds a lemony flavour and can be used dried and ground.

Keyword Bannock, Jackson’s Falls Country Inn, Lee Arden Lewis
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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Cottage Life

What to do (and not to do) if your dog goes missing in cottage country

One of the joys of going to the cottage is sharing the experience with your family and friends, and that includes furry family members. So when Greg McLeod set out for his cottage in French River, Ont., this past Canada Day weekend, he and his wife, Julianne, brought Bear, their nine-month-old golden retriever with them. Bear was no stranger to the cottage. He had been around fireworks before, but out of an abundance of caution, Greg and Julianne had Bear leashed and on a harness during the festivities. But when the first boom went off, Bear bolted, and Julianne lost her grip on his leash. What followed was a chaotic 61-hour search for Bear featuring sleepless nights, countless search parties, beef broth, and a little luck. The ending was a happy one, with Bear appearing less than a kilometre from where he disappeared, but if Greg were to do it all over again, there are some things he would have done differently after speaking with pet recovery experts. 

What to do in the first few hours your dog goes missing

Getting the word out to the community is the first step you should take after your dog goes missing, says Denise Coulombe, a trained animal search and rescue technician in Fredericton, N.B. and the co-founder of the Maritime Animal Response Team. She recommends starting with local veterinarians, animal shelters, and SPCAs so they are aware in case someone brings in a lost dog. 

Spread the word on social media, but beware of scammers

Social media platforms, specifically Facebook, are great because you can join cottage and town-specific groups in your area and share posts to notify people in the community to be on the look out for a missing dog. The community can notify you of animal sightings, which can help inform search efforts, says Coulombe. “In many communities, there are Facebook pages and groups called lost and found pets in various towns and cities.” Once you start putting your information out there, beware of scammers. Greg received several text messages and calls from people claiming to have either seen or to have caught Bear. “After two days of no leads, I’m standing on my neighbour’s dock, and I get a text message: ‘I’ve found Bear.’ You’re desperate and you’re emotionally fragile, so you have to be careful,” says Greg.

If people do contact you about a possible sighting, Coulombe suggests that owners ask for:

  • The exact location the dog was spotted
  • The direction it was headed
  • A description of the dog (to avoid mistaken identity)

What to include on a sign for a missing pet

Coulombe has a specific strategy that she uses when posting signs to ensure they are seen in high-traffic areas. “I recommend using big corrugated bristol board in a neon colour that follows the 55/55 rule: five words that can be read in five seconds at 55 kilometres an hour and include a picture of the dog and use specific words such as ‘Lost dog, if spotted, call immediately.’ Put them at intersections, along the road where the dog ran off, and at coffee shops and gas stations. Even if the nearest gas station is a 40-minute drive from your cottage, if it’s the only one around, it’s likely heavily trafficked. Not to mention, Coulombe says dogs can travel up to 30 kilometres a day, depending on their size, so you want to cast a wide net.

  • Spread the word on social media
  • Notify nearby vets, animal shelters, and the SPCA
  • Create scent trails leading out from the last place your dog was seen or at your cottage (see scent tips) 

What not to do when your dog goes missing

“Our natural reaction when you see a running dog is to call out to them or try and catch them,” says Coulombe “That’s a big no-no because when a dog escapes, generally it will go into flight mode. It’s a physiological response that occurs when an animal feels threatened,” says Coulombe. With that in mind, you want to avoid doing the following:

  • Don’t chase the dog
  • Don’t call out to the dog
  • Don’t approach the dog

What should you do if you find a lost dog

  • Check it for tags with contact information
  • Take it to a vet or shelter (they can scan a microchip if the dog has one) 
  • Post in local community groups on Facebook

What you should do if you are the owner and you see the dog

  • Get on the dog’s level, lay on the ground
  • Call out softly
  • Prepare a food bowl
  • Always carry pungent treats with you

Scent tips

  • Beef broth
  • Bacon grease
  • Barbecue sauce
  • Dirty clothes with your scent (anything with a strong scent)

Tips for loss prevention and recovery of a dog

  • Microchip 
  • Up-to-date tags
  • GPS tracker
  • Don’t offer a monetary reward, this attracts scammers

Helpful resources

Note: Some are paid help, and some are free. It’s expensive to conduct recovery efforts and organizations like MART depend on donations.

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Cottage Life

This hiking trail has a 1,200-year-old shelter and ‘is like Tolkien’s Middle-Earth’

At Charleston Lake Provincial Park, those exploring the Sandstone Island Trail will enjoy a beautiful trek, a chance to appreciate a 1,200-year-old shelter, and some of the province’s most unusual geology. Having hiked this loop myself, I can attest to what an incredible experience it is. Here’s what to know before you get ready for the trail.

How to visit

Charleston Lake Provincial Park is only 90 minutes south of downtown Ottawa. Backcountry, car, cabin, and yurt campsites are available, as are day permits (which cost about $10). In addition to hiking, this pretty park has excellent swimming, fishing, and canoeing.

Hikers have ample options

Charleston Lake Provincial Park is home to seven hikes which range from short, easy loops to difficult routes exceeding ten kilometres. The Sandstone Island Trail clocks in at 2.6 kilometres and is rated as moderately difficult. Trekkers can expect some steep inclines and narrow sections.

Is the Sandstone Island Trail actually an island?

You’re forgiven if you imagine that the Sandstone Island Trail is located on an island. Park staff told me that the “Sandstone Island Trail refers to a geologic feature. The “island” is an isolated block of sandstone, surrounded by, and standing above, older Precambrian rocks. This trail will take you along the bottom of the island, under the overhang, along the shoreline, and across the top of the Sandstone Island.”

What to expect on the trail

Geology fans, you’re in for a wild ride—and a fantastic hike. Claudette Weststrate, one of the directors of the Friends of Charleston Lake, says: “If you want to imagine the awe of entering Tolkien’s Middle-earth, hike the Sandstone Trail. It can truly be a transformative experience if you use your senses and take the time to absorb this ancient place”.

The gorgeous rock formations you see are exceptionally rare. As the Charleston Lake staff say: “Two geological eras come together on the trail where the conglomerate rock and sandstone (about 480 million years old), meet the Precambrian rock (about one billion years old). Such a contact area is called an ‘unconformity,’ and this contact accounts for a difference of more than a half-a-billion years between the layers. It is rare for an unconformity to be visible at the surface.”

Connecting with incredible history on the Sandstone Island Trail

As remarkable as Sandstone Island’s geology is, there’s something even more noteworthy about this trail: an amazing rock shelter. Evidence of a fire pit, bone tools, and pieces of pottery discovered at the shelter date it to 1,200 years. More modern finds, including a musket ball, gunflint, and metal buckle, have been assessed as 300 years old. Reflecting about the people who have called this shelter home during two different time periods is a moving experience, one that makes the Sandstone Island Trail a must-visit spot at Charleston Lake.

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Cottage Life

Canoeing into the winter gives a new view on the familiar

It is late September and the day is achingly beautiful. The sun is rising, the mist lifting. The wind is down and in my canoe I slide north along the shore. I have no destination except eternity. 

At this hour and this time I am the only boat on the lake, but not the only life. A kingfisher rattles out of the back channel behind the island on which I live. I know the young loon is out there fishing and, through the mist, I can hear the flocks of geese heading south: some to migration, others to termination in the marshes where the hunters wait. Like me, the hunters are up early.

The geese are not the only high flyers. Already jet trails are drawn in the sky and by the end of today they, or others more recent, will still be hanging, ragged but motionless. 

I glide across the mouth of a small bay and head east down a long finger of the lake. There are cottages along the north shore and though most are shut, smoke rises slowly from one chimney. I feather my paddle and go softly. My real hope is to sneak up on a deer at the water’s edge, but I am always happy to slip by some cottagers’ dock and startle them with a “good morning” in this seemingly empty scene. I have no luck today, but once in Haliburton I floated silently up to an early morning fisherman with his back turned and nearly good-morninged him right out of his boat. The joys of canoeing.

Is the canoe the ultimate, ahem, pleasure craft?

There is no fisherperson in this bay—it is far too shallow. The canoe glides over rocks and logs and beer cans and old tires and Styrofoam cups. I know people, concerned and committed, who would fetch up the smaller pieces of garbage and pack them out. For a moment I feel badly that I am not one. 

I paddle almost to the end of the bay in six inches of water and then turn around. The only animals I see are a red squirrel swimming across the bay and mink flowing over a rocky shoreline. As I head out of the bay I take off my gloves. They were necessary an hour ago; the temperature was 40°F . Now the mist is burned off and the sun has real warmth. On the way back I talk to a cottager on the south shore who has watched me approach. Ordinary, meaningless conversation but it fills me with importance, for he is standing on the deck of his cottage drinking coffee and I am kneeling in a cedar-canvas canoe, leaning forward on my paddle across the middle thwart. The joys of canoeing.

This cottager is only up for a long weekend or perhaps, although I don’t ask, for a bit of hunting. He is younger than the cottagers I might see midweek, for most of them are retired—snowbirds who spend six months at the cottage and six months in Florida. As September folds into October I will see fewer and fewer lights along the shore. Indeed, there aren’t many after Thanksgiving.

When I was young, Labour Day marked the end of the cottage year, but Thanksgiving is now the time for pulling out water lines and having that last big cottage meal. Thanksgiving is such a popular time in the Kennisis lakes that in the early 90s, before Hydro beefed up its service, you could count on the power to fail on the weekend when every cottagers put the turkey in the oven at about the same time. 

Not that the weather changes much with the arrival of Thanksgiving. Yes, it gets slightly cooler and there is a risk of frost, but the oaks and maples are still glorious and the sky only a slightly harder blue—precursor of the ice blue of winter. The loon still fishes and the great blue heron stalks slowly along the shore. Small flocks of mergansers run over the water and the birds of winter—chickadees, juncos, nuthatches, woodpeckers—are more noticeable. Red squirrels are manic, darting up the white pines and zooming down with cones clamped like fat cigars in their mouths. But those zoomers of summer, the hummingbirds, have long gone. They left shortly after Labour Day.

The confusing fall warblers have already been through on their migration. They popped in and out of the trees on the island for a couple of days, and I sought them with my binoculars but without much success. Flashes of yellow, flashes of black and white. Easier to see are the butterflies, fluttering through for almost a week, orange and black, and smaller than monarchs. I decide they must be painted ladies. I could be wrong. 

The other sign of the changing season is the wind. It comes from the west and the north, sometimes from both at the same time. It pours down, creating a vicious cross-chop on the lake; not weather for canoeing and a time for caution in any boat. It drives through every crack in my cottage and sometimes ravens through the night. Mindful of the tornadoes of summer, I have arisen several times in the autumn night and sat reading with a candle at the ready, waiting for a tree to fall and the power to fail. Looking out on the black lake, seeing no lights, feeling alone. Indeed, being alone. 

Oh, I know there are several permanent residents three miles to the north and at least one tucked around a corner about half a mile to the east. But that’s half a mile by water and about five miles by road. If I had a road. 

Instead, I have a trail. Because of the wind on the lake, I am no longer heading west to the marina across two miles of open water. Instead, I cross the narrow back channel to the east. I pull my canoe into the bush and follow the trail my daughters and I carved in the forest. This takes me to a spur road, which leads to the main cottage road that runs up the eastern side of this chain of lakes. I don’t look forward to road travel when winter comes. Too many hills, too many corners. Too slippery. 

And by the end of October winter has shown that this year it plans to come early and stay late. The overnight temperature has been around freezing and the days are cooling off. In mid-October I could sit outside in the early afternoon sun. Not so as the month ended. There have been tentative snowfalls, usually gentle. So gentle that I have canoed into them, sliding along the now mostly barren shore. The water is black, the sky is grey, the trees are dark green, and the snow white. Words do not paint a picture. This scene too is beautiful, stark, like a burial under black umbrellas. Necessary and right and sad. 

Now I canoe along the shore and there is no-one to talk to. No cottagers having coffee, no workers fixing decks or docks. No-one fishing, no boats. I hug the shore, for even though the wind is still and the canoe secure, I know the water is cold. I concentrate on what I am doing and I keep my considerable centre of gravity low.

But, ah, the pleasure of the solitary canoe. A couple of neighbours who came up on the weekend kindly invite me to Saturday night dinner at their cottage on a mainland point. Not the best night, rain mixed with snow and the wind rising. They are surprised when I grate onto their waterfront, hauling the canoe onto a thin cushion of snow, and they are somewhat apprehensive at the thought of my return journey. So am I, but I say nothing and eat everything they offer—roast chicken, potatoes, green beans, salad, cheesecake—borrow a few books, thank them, and return into the night. Paddling through a protected channel, aiming for the light in my boathouse. Knowing I have nothing really to worry about. But the night is so dark and the water so black, a drift of snow in the boat. I am anxious to finish the short journey, but at the same time I am thinking that at nine o’clock on a Saturday night in late October, I am likely the only person travelling by canoe in all the Kawartha Highlands. Maybe in all Ontario. The joys of canoeing.

Now we are into November and winter is all but here. For much of the autumn there had been people working, renovating, clearing trees around the lake. I could hear the screech of the circular saw and the reverberation of hammers, but now it is cold. Cold and grey, not pleasant weather. No canoeing for fun. The land is empty.

The month has seven days to run when the reality of winter hits. It is eight in the morning and the temperature is 4°F. Cold. The wind, which roared all night, is down, the mist thick, the water still and black and oily. Viscous. I cross over the spine of the island towards the back channel and the boathouse and stop. Glorious. The trees are covered in spray or frost and shining as the morning sun hits them. The ground is dusted with snow. My eye catches the water in the protected channel by the boathouse; it is still and black but not oily. Frozen. From shore to shore.

How to care for your canoe in the off-season

I go down to the boathouse where the boats are frozen in the water and the knots frozen in the mooring rings. I poke at the ice with the end of a paddle—it bounces off. The ice is surprisingly thick. I step carefully into my old red canoe and rock it free of ice; then I push forward. The canoe slides up onto the ice and sits there. The ice is far too thick to walk on and far too thick to break easily. I take an axe from the boathouse and cut myself a channel, leaning out from the bow of the boat. Not easy. Ah, the joys of canoeing. 

I crouch with my axe in the bow of the red canoe alone in the back channel. The ice is picking up the sunlight, turning from slate grey to silver. Snow lies on the ground, the sky is blue, and the green pines and hemlock are tipped with silver turning to gold. 

At this time I am likely the only person in the Kawartha Highlands, perhaps in all of Ontario, cutting his way through the ice. Winter has come to cottage country and it is most truly a beautiful day.

This essay was published as “Same old lake, fresh new season” in theWinter 2020 issue of Cottage Life.

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Cottage Life

If you’re thinking about a new pair of moccasins, read this first

Since my first article came out in Cottage Life, I’ve had a lot of interactions with people who genuinely want to understand appropriation. They’ve seen something or done something that they have questioned, based on what they read. The reality is that when something is new, as the issue of appropriation versus appreciation is, it takes a while to get used to it.

Recently, somebody sent me a note asking about a piece of clothing they’d bought. Once they got it home, they weren’t sure if it was okay for them to wear. Would it show appreciation for the culture, or would it be appropriation? The first thing to ask is where the clothing originated. If, say, you bought a pair of moccasins, and there’s no indication of who made them, that’s a red flag. Remember, part of the criteria for something to be considered appropriation is profit. If somebody gains financially from taking elements from Indigenous cultures, that’s appropriation.

The person who messaged me knew they’d purchased their clothing from an Indigenous creator, so wearing it was perfectly fine. Indigenous artists don’t make clothing or books only for Indigenous people. I write books because I want everyone to read them. This creator makes clothing because they want everyone to wear it. Reading my books or wearing products from an Indigenous creator isn’t appropriation. I think it’s pretty great.

This story was originally published as “If the shoe fits” in the Mar/Apr 2022 issue of Cottage Life.