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Cottage Life

Is the raven the most Canadian animal?

This essay about the raven was originally published as part of “The Great Canadian Creature Feature” in the June/July issue of Cottage Life.

Ravens have lived in the North for millennia. That’s far longer than our paltry 150-odd years of nationhood. They were there to welcome the first humans across the Bering Land Bridge 15,000 years ago, and we’ve been interacting with them ever since. Archaeologists have found 10,000-year-old raven skeletons, buried with human artifacts and thought to be the oldest evidence of human ritualistic behaviour in Canada. 

“Raven” is an important figure in Indigenous myths and legends, often appearing as a creator or trickster. For instance, Bill Reid’s iconic sculpture, The Raven and the First Men, depicts a Haida story of human creation where Raven coaxes the first men from a clam shell.

Yet somehow, the clever corvid has had a bit of a PR problem over the last couple of thousand years. In some other parts of the world, ravens are considered dark omens (possibly due to their tendency to hover over cadavers). Unfortunately, it’s led to all kinds of problematic labelling. For instance, the group nouns for the species include an “unkindness of ravens” and a “conspiracy of ravens.” In an effort to correct this, I propose we refer to them, in the most Canadian of terms, as a “politeness of ravens,” going forward.

This ebony avian embodies many Canadian values, chief among them, equity and fairness. In one study, a group of ravens were trained to trade bread for a more delectable morsel of cheese. After several transactions, one of the researchers “cheated” by trading with the raven and then gobbling up the cheese himself. Deeply offended, all but one raven refused to do business with the shady researcher even a month later.

Meet the common raven

A family-oriented bird, ravens mate for life and raise their young together. They’re also good community members, exemplifying the Canadian ideals of empathy and inclusivity. When a raven comes out on the losing side of an altercation, bystander ravens have been observed consoling their pal with beak-to-body touching and preening.

Canada is the most educated country in the world, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, so naturally, our national animal should be equally erudite. Ravens are one of the world’s most intelligent birds along with crows, magpies, parrots, macaws, and cockatoos (you’ll notice that the bald eagle is not on this list). Ravens can plan tasks, problem-solve, use tools, remember faces (such as the dodgy researcher), and have been known to outsmart apes and young children.

Ravens also enjoy Canadian pastimes, including socializing. They have a vast range of vocalizations that convey emotions such as happiness, anger, tenderness, and surprise. They give a sharp “trill” when they’re looking for a fight and make a “haa” sound when confronted with food challenges, not unlike our own sigh of dismay when reaching a hand into an empty box of Timbits. 

Are ravens’ emotions contagious?

Unlike the loon, who takes off to Florida or Mexico as soon as the temperature dips, ravens are resourceful, hardy, and stay put for winter. They like winter sports and can be seen sliding down snow-covered roofs and hillsides. They’ve been known to make toys out of sticks and pinecones and are probably not too far from figuring out shinny. 

I believe that Canadians are finally ready to pin their national identity on the wings of this spirited and ingenious creature. Let’s all agree that when Robert Stanley Weir penned the lyrics “With glowing hearts we see thee rise, The True North strong and free,” he was talking about our majestic raven.

Facts and figures

ID alert: They are larger and twice as heavy as crows. They have a wedge-shaped tail; a crow’s tail is more fan-shaped.

Puttin’ on the Ritz: They are acrobatic flyers. They swoop, soar, free-fall, and roll through the air.

Yes, they eat that:  They will sustain themselves on everything from insects and small rodents to carrion and garbage.

Read more essays from “The Great Canadian Creature Feature” to read more of our favourite writers making the case for their pick for the most Canadian animal in the June/July 2021 issue of Cottage Life.

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Cottage Life

The perfect gifts for dad’s who love the cottage

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If dad is hard to buy for, but the cottage is his happy place, this is the gift guide for you. Whether your dad enjoys getting outdoors, bird-watching, fishing, or just hanging out at home, we’ve got a selection of presents that will be sure to impress him this holiday season.

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Cottage Life

The perfect gifts for dad’s who love the cottage

Our editorial team independently selects these products. If you choose to buy any, we may earn a commission that helps fund our content. Learn more.

If dad is hard to buy for, but the cottage is his happy place, this is the gift guide for you. Whether your dad enjoys getting outdoors, bird-watching, fishing, or just hanging out at home, we’ve got a selection of presents that will be sure to impress him this holiday season.

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Cottage Life

Cottage gift ideas for mom

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Finding the perfect present for mom is always hard because what do you get the woman who has everything? We’ve rounded up our favourite gifts to give her if she loves to go to the cottage.

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Cottage Life

Our teens still love the cottage, and this is why

As a family who loves to travel, we’ve always enjoyed the experience of planning family trips with our kids, and that remains true now that they are teens. As they have grown, certain aspects of our trips have changed, but their love of family travel and the memories we create has remained. 

In a typical year, we rent a cottage on Prince Edward Island for our summer family vacation. This trip is filled with traditions that we have all come to love and repeat year after year. 

These traditions begin during the road trip itself. After about six hours of driving from our home in Orleans, Ont., we stop for lunch at the tourism centre in La Pocatiere, Que. It’s located right off Autoroute 20 on the shores of the St. Lawrence River. While there are fast food places nearby, we always pack a lunch and eat outside for this stop. We stretch, walk around, take pictures to mark the year, and enjoy the smell of the salt water in the air. While it’s a milestone that represents the halfway point for the first day’s drive, it’s also when it feels like the trip has really begun.

two teens sitting on a porch swing looking at the water at the rest stop at La Pocatiere, Quebec
La Pocatiere, Que. Photo by Rebecca Stanisic

Another cottage road trip tradition is when we finally arrive at the Confederation Bridge and leave New Brunswick to begin the crossing into P.E.I. Everyone is excited at this joyous moment; it signifies the end of our travel days and the beginning of our relaxing vacation. We look out over the glistening water (it seems like the weather is always beautiful when we cross), we sing a silly song that we made up when the kids were younger, and we celebrate the end of our journey with a famous Cows ice cream cone when we reach the other side. 

During our stay at the cottage, we have plenty of traditions that I know my teens want to continue. For example, the annual family soccer tournament, two vs. two, is a must-do event. Our makeshift soccer field always includes baseball gloves for goal posts, and we all enjoy a panoramic view of the water while we play for bragging rights. 

a teen looking out on the water from the family soccer field
The soccer field. Photo by Rebecca Stanisic

We also always look forward to having campfire dinners during our stay. We move the beach chairs to the fire pit, roast hot dogs and marshmallows, play music, share stories, and tell jokes. There’s something about the taste of that hot dog that beats all others.

The list of our family’s cottage traditions could go on and on. Even as our teens grow older, we continue to turn to many of them as a way to reconnect with each other and renew cherished memories that have become such an important part of our family travel adventures. These traditions are a way to track moments in time that feel familiar and like home, even when we’re away.

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Cottage Life

Cottage real estate region: Lac la Ronge

A satellite map of 1,413 sq. km Lac la Ronge reveals an exceptional feature of this north-central Saskatchewan lake, which borders the Canadian Shield. Some 1,300 ice age–carved granite islands fill the lake’s northern half. Sand is rare along the granite islands, but there’s a beach nearly 40 kilometres long on the lake’s sparsely populated south shore. Lac La Ronge Provincial Park encompasses much of the lake, and most people lease land for their water-access cabins from the Saskatchewan government.

Because the area is so remote, cottagers usually visit for at least a week; many stay for the whole summer. Also, it can be difficult to get contractors out to these remote cabins. The government stipulates that cabin lots must be at least 800 metres apart or on separate islands, so quiet and solitude are the main attraction. There are about 20 title properties and 250 lease sites, most on islands. This far north, at 55 degrees latitude, summers are warm, short, and occasionally very windy.

The small town of La Ronge is the nearest centre and has groceries, a hardware store, a medical centre, and most services. Cottagers typically boat into Eagle Point Marina and drive the 5 km into town.

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Cottage Life

Cottage real estate region: Bamfield

On the west coast of Vancouver Island, tiny, remote Bamfield sits on a protected inlet on Barkley Sound’s south shore. Bamfield Inlet divides the village, with a local water taxi linking the two sides. In West Bamfield, there’s the post office, a general store (with a premium selection of single malts, thanks to the local Scotch Club), and a pedestrian boardwalk cantilevered over the inlet. East Bamfield has a school, a café and market, a pub, and a building centre. Cottage properties overlook the sheltered inlet and exposed outer coast. In all weather, hikers explore the open beaches and lush rainforest trails, dodging fat yellow banana slugs. The West Coast Trail ends at Bamfield’s doorstep, traversing 77 km of coastline northward from Port Renfrew. The nearest centre is the city of Port Alberni, 76 km by road.

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Cottage Life

Cottage rentals in Muskoka with a hot tub

Location: Lake of Bays

Price: Averages $615 per night

Sleeps: 8

Bedrooms: 5

Notes: 

  • 15 minutes from Algonquin Park
  • ATV and snowmobile rentals offered nearby
  • Pets allowed
  • Two and a half hours from Toronto

Click here to book

Location: Rebecca Lake

Price: Averages $710 per night

Sleeps: 8

Bedrooms: 4

Notes:

  • Central air and central heating
  • Laundry on site
  • Canoe, kayak, and three paddle boards available for use
  • Two and a half hours from Toronto

Click here to book

Location: Muskoka River

Price: Averages $675 per night

Sleeps: 10

Bedrooms: 5

Notes:

  • Central air conditioning
  • Laundry on site
  • One hour and 45 minutes from Toronto

Click here to book

Location: Lake Vernon

Price: Averages $617 per night

Sleeps: 10

Bedrooms: 5

Notes:

  • Canoe and kayak available for use
  • Cedar plank sauna
  • Laundry on site
  • Includes dishwasher
  • Two hours from Toronto

Click here to book

Location: Clear Lake

Price: Averages $714 per night

Sleeps: 16

Bedrooms: 6

Notes:

  • Laundry on site
  • Dishwasher included
  • No pets allowed
  • Less than three hours from Toronto

Click here to book

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Cottage Life

Wild Profile: Meet the pika

The pint-sized pika is the coolest mammal that you’ve never heard of. The rodent-like creature is actually a “lagomorph” and has more in common with hares and rabbits than it does with mice or rats. But if you’re familiar with Pokemon—and you are, because you live on this planet—you might be interested to learn that the species is the inspiration for the fictional character Pikachu. Who knew?

Like Pikachu, Canada’s two native pika species are squat-bodied. But unlike the cartoon, the real-life critter has short, round ears and practically no tail. There’s a reason for the round shape: a compact build allows the pika to survive in alpine terrain. In Canada, that’s the Rocky Mountains in Alberta and B.C., and further north throughout the Yukon.

Pikas cache food and sing like birds! 

Pikas thrive in barren, rocky landscapes (they’re nicknamed “rock rabbits”). They don’t hibernate. To sustain themselves through winter, they cache food like squirrels and non-migrating birds. Before winter, a pika will gather bits of plants—wildflowers or grass—cure them to preserve them by letting them sit in the sun, and then hide them amid rocks. (This isn’t the species’ only bird-like behaviour; the mammals “sing” to defend territory and to attract mates in the spring.)

Winter is a pika’s preferred time of year. (Because their coat is thick year-round, too much time in the heat isn’t good for them; similar to the polar bear, the pika has been impacted by climate change and overall warming temperatures.) Even though they’re active all winter, they do spend more time in their rocky dens. Pikas live in colonies. This type of group living is a survival strategy. One pika can alert others to potential predators—hawks, weasels, and coyotes—by giving out a warning call.

How Canadian animals adapt to winter

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Cottage Life

This is where to find artists and artwork in Ontario cottage country

The landscapes of cottage country—wherever that might be for you—have been a source of inspiration for artists since Indigenous peoples created pictographs and petroglyphs millennia ago. Now, rural areas continue to spark artistic creativity—and here are some of the best places to find cottage country artists. 

Huntsville/Algonquin

The most famous artists in the Muskoka region were (and are) undoubtedly the Group of Seven—you can go on a tour of their pieces reproduced as murals in and around Huntsville and pick up souvenirs showcasing their work pretty much anywhere. But there’s more to the area’s artists than the Group of Seven and Tom Thomson. To see some work made by artists of today, check out the most recent guidebook from Muskoka Arts and Crafts or visit the Art Centre in Algonquin Park.

Bancroft 

Bancroft’s Rockhound Gemboree may be a yearly destination for gemstone enthusiasts, but its artists also draw in the crowds. From stained glass to jewellery to painting to pottery—and many media in between—Bancroft’s artistic community makes it a perfect place to visit, even if you’re not all that into rocks. If you’re there in the fall, you can get to know the area’s artists during the yearly Bancroft and Area Studio Tour.

Manitoulin Island

Manitoulin’s artists thrive in communities from one end of the island to the other. One of the highlights of Manitoulin’s art scene is the many contemporary Indigenous artists whose works are on display in various galleries, including Lillian’s Crafts, Mishibinijima Art Gallery, and the Wiikwemkoong Art Gallery and Gift Shop. For a listing of galleries and arts organizations across the island, check out Destination Manitoulin.

Dufferin County/Caledon

The rolling hills and charming towns of Dufferin County, Caledon, and the surrounding areas are home to many cottage country artists and craftspeople. You can check out much of their work at the Headwaters Art Gallery in the historic Alton MiIll Arts Centre, where you can see works by local artists. Looking for a holiday present? Until January 2, the gallery is running Artful Giving, where you can pick up locally-made art to give as gifts.

Elora/Fergus 

These two picturesque towns seem to have more than their fair share of painters, glass blowers, woodworkers, potters, and other artists—just take a look at the Elora and Fergus Studio Tour. If you missed the studio tour, check out the Elora Centre for the Arts, a community hub that offers classes, art supplies, and both a virtual and onsite gallery.

Thunder Bay 

The City of Thunder Bay is designated a Cultural Capital of Canada, and it’s not hard to see why. Along with professional music and theatre groups, the city boasts an array of eclectic art galleries, including the Definitely Superior (DefSup) Art Gallery, an artist-run centre committed to contemporary art, and the Thunder Bay Art Gallery, the largest public gallery between Sault Ste. Marie and Winnipeg. 

Haliburton Highlands 

Snuggling up against Muskoka, the Haliburton Highlands is full of cottage country artists, many of whom use the area’s beauty for inspiration in a wide range of visual arts. While there is a yearly studio tour over the first two weekends of October, there are also several studios open for holiday shopping.

Perth 

In 2005, Perth was the runner-up in a TVO competition for the most artistic communities in Ontario—and not much has changed. The area boasts two studio tours: one in the summer and one in the fall. If you’re feeling artsy yourself, check out a painting or felting class or simply do some shopping online.

Bruce Peninsula and surrounding area

There’s more to the Bruce Peninsula and the eastern shore of Lake Huron than just the Bruce Trail—although that’s undoubtedly been an inspiration to some of the artists in the area. There are galleries, classes, workshops, and online activities throughout southern Bruce and the Peninsula—but one new, COVID-friendly activity is to go on a drive to spot the community’s “barn quilts”—colourful designs painted on the sides of farm buildings.