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Cottage Life

Here’s how much maple syrup you can expect this year

Maple syrup farmers are facing yet another battle against Canadian weather. While some of us pray for mild winters, the farmers do the opposite—production of the sweet stuff depends on it. 

While some producers like Jamie Fortune of Fortune Farms and Temple’s Sugar Bush are adapting their strategies to meet regular production levels, other farmers cannot produce as much syrup because of warmer temperatures.

“In the last couple of years, there hasn’t been the biggest production because of warm weather,” says Frank Haveman, owner of Bata Maple Sugarbush. “The quality of syrup has been excellent, but the yield isn’t as high.”

The warmer weather didn’t change the production schedule for Fortune Farms.

“Once you tap a tree, the operation starts,” says Fortune. “Starting early can risk the end of the yield.” Taping too early can either risk sap holes healing or bacteria being introduced into the system. This is why some farmers stick to a set schedule.

On the other hand, John Williams, Executive Director of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producer’s Association and owner of William’s Farm in Midland, Ont., started the season two weeks earlier than usual. When it comes to producing syrup, there is never one right way. 

For the 2023 season, warmer temperatures have been the culprit of lower sugar content. “We need cold temperatures to convert starch—produced in the warmer seasons—into sugar,” says Fortune. Without temperatures consistently hitting below freezing, Fortune Farms will have to work harder to extract more sap to produce healthy levels of sugar. 

And with so many regional differences in weather, William says maple syrup farmers across the province must adjust because “sugar content varies even between bushes.” 

Here’s where resilience comes into play: Fortune Farms is using vacuums to help regulate production and draw out more sap from trees.

For cottagers and small-scale producers, who hang buckets on trees each year, Fortune recommends following traditional tapping schedules. “Sap holes exposed to oxygen will seal up, shortening the season,” he says. 

Temperature is just one challenge—many farmers are still recovering from the derecho storm in May 2022. Among the wreckage was a loss of maple trees. “We lost 200 big trees, from 100 to 300 years old. They all fell on the pipeline system. So we had to reestablish the woodlot,” says Jamie.

“The closer you were to the derecho path, the greater the loss in the sugar bush,” Williams says. “Many farms lost a third of their trees and around 30 members of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producer’s Association were severely affected.”

In spite of recovery efforts, it will still take four to eight years for a tree to reach a tappable diameter of at least 10 inches, yielding one litre of syrup.

“Weather will always be a big concern. It’s difficult because you don’t know when the storms are coming,” says Jamie.

Being an outdoor operation, Fortune Farms is always on the lookout to prevent further damage. “We planted a maple forest to increase our base production and encourage growth when big trees go down,” he says. “The key is having a forest management strategy.” 

Relying on production and weather trends will only solve one part of the puzzle. As Fortune puts it, “this year won’t dictate future years.” The maple syrup industry constantly evolves and innovates to overcome hurdles and deliver the liquid gold Canadians can’t get enough of. 

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Cottage Life

Listing of the week: This custom-built Lake Muskoka cottage is in an unbeatable location

1176 Parkers Point Road, Gravenhurst, Ont.

Lake: Lake Muskoka, Ont.

Bedrooms: 5

Bathrooms: 4

Lot size: 0.4 acres

Frontage: 104 feet

Asking price: $3,999,999

Previous asking price: $3,495,000

Taxes: $11,456.05

Date listed: March 1, 2023

Listing agent: Curry Clifford, RE/MAX Professionals North Brokerage

About the property

Enjoy modern lakeside living in the grand Muskoka tradition in this three-year-old, custom-built five bedroom, four bathroom home that easily accommodates 12 people over three full floors with space for everyone to spread out. All in an unbeatable location on Lake Muskoka less than two hours from the 401/400 interchange and just five minutes by car—or boat—to the Gravenhurst Wharf. Many are awe-struck walking into the south-facing great room featuring cathedral ceilings, a wall of windows overlooking the water, and a Muskoka granite gas fireplace. The main floor primary bedroom is an absolute sanctuary with a walk-out to a wrap-around deck, an ensuite with a soaker tub, and a large stand-up shower. Spacious bedrooms on each level with the most scenic of office spaces overlook the great room and the mesmerizing trees and water. Other features include a beautifully appointed chef’s kitchen, a bright and large inviting lower level walk-out living space, and an outdoor space fit for entertaining. Gather on the docks, by the fire pit, on the patio, or on the wrap-around deck, each with captivating wide open views of Lake Muskoka, and enjoy the sweeping granite staircase, terraced gardens, and oversized new Jacuzzi hot tub. An incredible package for a family (or families) to enjoy as their primary home or easily rent out when not in use at a very attractive income. This is a rare gem. Furnishings package available.

What are the main selling features?

  • Gorgeous, spacious home in the grand Muskoka tradition
  • Three levels with five bedrooms, four bathrooms, and a full entertainment space
  • Unbeatable location on Lake Muskoka less than two hours from the 401/400 interchange, on a municipal road
  • Five minutes by car—or boat—to the Gravenhurst Wharf
  • Fully rented last summer and fall at $15,000 per week

What makes this property unique?

  • Great outdoor entertaining space with a fire pit and a hot tub
  • Finished walk-out basement
  • Fully winterized for year-round living

Have there been any recent upgrades on the property?

A custom-built property that’s only three years old, everything in the home is up to date.

Take a tour


Would you like to list your cottage on our website? Email listingoftheweek@cottagelife.com.

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Cottage Life

Polaris issues snowmobile recall due to fuel tanks catching fire

You may want to double-check your snowmobile’s fuel levels before heading out this weekend.

Off-road vehicle manufacturer, Polaris, issued a recall for several of its snowmobile models after discovering that operating the vehicle with a low fuel level after long-term storage could cause the fuel tank to explode and the snowmobile to catch fire.

“[It] could create an increased risk of an electrostatic discharge (spark) inside the fuel tank. If this happens, vapours may be ignited inside the fuel tank, and the tank could rupture,” the company said in the recall announcement.

In Canada, 60,904 snowmobile units are affected by this recall, including the 2019-2023 models of the Indy snowmobile, the 2016-2023 models of the RMK snowmobile, the 2013-2019 models of the Rush snowmobile, the 2016-2023 models of the SKS snowmobile, the 2013-2023 models of the Switchback snowmobile, the 2018-2021 models of the Titan snowmobile, and the 2018-2023 models of the Voyageur snowmobile.

The company issued a similar recall in the U.S. last November for its Matryx, Axys, and Pro-Ride snowmobiles. In that instance, there were 30 reports of fuel tank ruptures, including 16 fires and one injury.

If you own one of the affected models, Polaris said you should immediately stop using the snowmobile and not attempt any repairs yourself. Instead, contact Polaris to schedule a free repair at an authorized Polaris dealer.

If you need to start the vehicle to get it onto a trailer to transport it to a dealer, Polaris said you should ensure the fuel tank is full. If it’s not full, fill it up with fresh gasoline.

To schedule a repair, you can contact Polaris at 1-800-765-2747.

Feature Video


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Cottage Life

Do dogs really descend from wolves?

Curled up on the sofa, you watch your dog snoozing nearby. Is he dreaming of the bowl of biscuits he gobbled down? Or could he be picturing the great odyssey of his forbearers, who roamed in packs across the vast steppes during the last Ice Age in search for reindeer?

The story of the ancestral ties between the dog and the wolf is one of the most exciting evolutionary sagas in humanity’s history. Not only does it invite us to examine our relationship with nature, but it also brings us back to the question of who we are as humans.

Meet the grey wolf

Recent advances in genetics are starting to provide key details that can help us map out the interconnected history of our loyal pets and the proud canine predators that have been gradually repopulating our countries’ hinterlands.

The science investigating the wolf-dog kinship

The timeline of the prehistoric wolf’s domestication is arguably one of the most hotly debated topics in evolutionary science. Palaeontology brings some important elements into this debate, but it is still tricky to identify the osteo-morphological analyses (i.e., the study of bone size and bone morphology) that would allow us to differentiate between proto-dog species.

Ever since Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, we have known that a series of phenotypic changes (i.e., observable physical characteristics) can be seen in animals undergoing a process of domestication, with retained traits often favouring the more docile members of a species. Over the millennia, domestic canines have evolved shorter snouts and smaller teeth, as well as a smaller appendicular skeleton (referring to the bones of their front and hind legs).

However, the dog’s domestic nature cannot be proven by the isolated appearance of one trait in one specimen. Instead, either a series of significant variables must be observed in one individual, or a novel trait must be observed repeatedly in a population or under a given context. The problem is that full skeletons of Palaeolithic canines are extremely difficult to come by.

The field of archaeology complements this approach by gathering information on the first interactions between humans and canines. Such data points to the existence of a special link between these two types of large predators that may have begun emerging in the Upper Palaeolithic, the period broadly spanning from 50,000 to 12,000 years ago. It has been noted, for instance, that canines were used to help make jewellery; they are also present in cave art. Again, the real significance of these clues remains unclear.

Are wolves the ancestors of dogs?

Thanks to major strides in genetics in recent years, many studies of ancient DNA can help palaeontologists and archaeologists track down mysterious origins of the “first dog”. Samples from both ancient and modern canines have been taken from every continent, enabling scientists to analyse the diversity of their gene pool. The method also has the advantage of merely relying on bone fragments, rather than whole and fully preserved skeletons.

While the majority of this research focuses on mitochondrial DNA (i.e., DNA inherited solely from the maternal line, but which is less prone to degradation), a handful of studies also look at the complete genome (i.e., chromosomes inherited from the maternal and paternal lines, but which are preserved much more poorly during fossilisation).

These results help sketch a blueprint for the overall phylogenetic history of canines. Unsurprisingly, such analyses reveal a highly complex demographic and phylogenetic history of the grey wolf down through the ages. In particular, they indicate lupine populations in the Palaeolithic (c. 3.3 million years to 11,700 years ago) were able to adapt to a changing geography caused by successive glacial events in Eurasia as well as human presence.

It is now estimated that the separation of the population into several distinct lines of modern Eurasian wolves occurred approximately 40,000 to 20,000 years ago. This would mean that the Palaeolithic wolf population may have become deeply fragmented during this period, which, incidentally, matches up with the Last Glacial Maximum (also known as the “peak” of the Ice Age).

This period is all the more interesting when we consider how it coincides with Homo sapiens’ period of migration from the East and colonisation of Western Europe, as well as a sharp increase in competition between large predators.

Even more intriguingly, several studies agree on a claim that all modern Eurasian wolves descend from a single small ancient population, which is thought to have become isolated in Beringia (north-eastern Siberia) during the Last Glacial Maximum some 20,000 years ago, notably in order to flee the major climatic instabilities that had been affecting the rest of Eurasia.

But the plot thickens when we consider the question of how domestic dogs appeared. Thanks to a study into the complete genome sequences of primitive dogs from Asia and Africa, combined with a collection of samples from nineteen diverse dog breeds from across the globe, researchers have managed to ascertain that dogs from East Asia are significantly more genetically diverse than others. This model may indicate that dogs first appeared in this region following a divergence between the grey wolf and the domestic dog some 33,000 years ago. However, a 2013 study asserts that Europe was a likelier site of domestication, and that the domestication process occurred somewhere between 32,000 and 19,000 years ago.

A third study reconciles these two theories, asserting that the wolf became domesticated independently both in East Asia and in Europe before primitive Asian dogs travelled to the west, found the human populations there and replaced the indigenous dog population, some 14,000 to 6,400 years ago.

Regardless of the chosen hypothesis, we can safely deduce that when the first settlements and the first methods related to agriculture began appearing around 11,000 years ago, the dog already had at least five distinct evolutionary lines. This tells us that human societies had caused profound changes to canine populations before the end of the Palaeolithic.

As well as this, far from becoming compartmentalised, co-evolution among canines has never ceased. To this day, the wolf continues to hybridise with other canines, such as the dog and the coyote (Canis latrans). It has also interbred with the latter.

In conclusion, although question marks still hover over the geographic origin of the domestic dog and the circumstances and timeline of its domestication, developments in the study of ancient DNA now allow us to disentangle the links that bind the canines of past and present.

So, in response to the question “Do dogs descend from wolves?”, we can indeed say they do, but genetics now give us the tools to clarify which ones. Modern dogs, irrespective of their variety, all stem from a now-extinct line of prehistoric wolves that are only very distantly linked to modern wolves.


Translated from the French by Enda Boorman for Fast ForWord.The Conversation

Elodie-Laure Jimenez, Chercheure en archéologie préhistorique et paléoécologie, University of Aberdeen

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

The wolf cull isn’t killing caribou

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Cottage Life

Where to go for barrier-free and accessible camping in Ontario

At least 76 of Ontario’s 110 provincial parks offer at least one accessible campsite—and many have two or more, alongside other features to make an outdoor experience barrier-free. While accessible camping may look different for everyone, Ontario Parks considers a barrier-free campsite to have level ground (to and from the site), a nearby water source and/or comfort station, a 25-cm high campfire pit, a level parking spot, and an accessible picnic table.

If you don’t have a tent or can’t use one, there are a number of accessible roofed accommodations at various parks with level ground or ramps around them. Many parks are looking to be more inclusive—such as main offices, entrance booths, and activity centres—by changing or removing existing barriers. Though there are many parks for accessible camping, these specific places have features to keep on your radar:

Finlayson Point Provincial Park near Temagami

Accessible campsite and cabin

We highlighted Finlayson in a recent piece about hidden gem parks throughout the province. In addition to being a beautiful, quieter option in Northern Ontario (it’s about two hours from Sudbury), Finlayson offers an accessible campsite and roofed accommodation with the rustic Temagami Fire Cabin.

Windy Lake Provincial Park near Sudbury 

Two accessible campsites, accessible yurt

Yurts are a unique way to have an accessible camping experience while still being sheltered from the elements, and Windy Lake offers an option in addition to its two campsites. If you’re visiting for the day, one of the accessible day-use areas also has a private rental section so that you can secure your spot.

Pinery Provincial Park near Grand Bend 

Four accessible campsites, two accessible yurts 

Pinery is an excellent all-around choice for an accessible outdoor trip, with four barrier-free campsites and two barrier-free yurts. The park’s visitor centre, outdoor theatre, equipment rental building, and canoe dock are also accessible, in addition to a few beautiful trails.

MacGregor Point Provincial Park near Port Elgin

Two accessible campsites, accessible yurt

This underrated park near the lovely community of Port Elgin has an accessible yurt and two sites in its Algonquin Campground. The comfort stations, visitor’s centre, and the popular Huron Fringe Trail are also barrier-free.

Bonnechere Provincial Park near Killaloe 

Accessible campsite

A gem in the Ottawa Valley, Bonnechere may only have one accessible campsite but almost every structure and feature—from the park office to each picnic table—is accessible and wheelchair friendly. 

Awenda Provincial Park near Midland

Six accessible campsites

Each one of the campgrounds at Awenda has a barrier-free site, leaving six great options for accessible camping. All comfort stations and stand-alone washrooms are accessible, as is the park’s amphitheatre (where they run great summer interpretive programs). 

Bronte Creek Provincial Park near Oakville

Two accessible campsites

An easy-to-get-to option in the GTA, Bronte Creek has two barrier-free sites available, and all of their washroom facilities are accessible, as is the popular Maiden’s Blush trail, which is incredibly gorgeous when the fall colours hit. 

Algonquin Provincial Park 

Five accessible campsites

As one of the province’s biggest and most popular parks, it’s always a good idea to check out Algonquin as an option for any outdoor adventure. Five of its campgrounds have accessible sites and adjacent washroom facilities. The Logging Museum and East Beach Pavillion also have accessible washrooms. 

Looking for more information on barrier-free access to the outdoors? Check out these accessible hiking trails

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Cottage Life

3 workshop uses for a cutting board

There are good reasons plastic cutting boards are the preferred choice for commercial food preparation. High-density polyethylene (HDPE) is extremely durable, impervious to liquids, and has a forgiving surface that is kind to knives. These same qualities make HDPE a useful raw material for workshop projects. Cutting boards are readily available at thrift shops and dollar stores—but you’re more likely to find the thicker, better quality ones at a thrift store. The dollar-store ones are thinner and more brittle.

There are a bunch of uses for this material, and it can be easily worked with standard tools:

1. Cut pieces of HDPE to match the footprint of picnic-table or Muskoka-chair legs and attach the plastic feet with screws. These high-density pads protect the ends of the legs from moisture and make it easier to drag the tables and chairs around.

2. HDPE makes excellent bumpers. Folding swim ladder digging into your dock? Attach an HDPE pad to the problem area to stop abrasion.

3. HDPE is also great for repairs in wet areas. I recently removed a broken gauge from the dashboard of my boat. An HDPE patch, secured with stainless steel screws, made a neat, weatherproof, and near-indestructible fix.

This article was originally published in the Winter 2022 issue of Cottage Life.

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Cottage Life

Use this DIY trick to reduce drafts in the cottage

Cottagers are all too familiar with drafts that freeze toes on cold weekends. Windows, even double-glazed, are to blame for a lot of heat loss in cottages. Closing the curtains helps keep warmth in, but a curtain alone is less than ideal. That’s because heat transfers from the pocket of air behind the curtain out through the glass. Once cooled, the air drops to the floor and spreads out into the room. Warm air near the ceiling is pulled down into that just-vacated space, so more warmth is lost and the draft continues.

7 easy ways to stop drafts in your cottage

 Luckily, there’s a DIY solution that reduces drafts and your energy costs. Pelmets are boxes that cover the tops of your window coverings. Often thought of as purely decorative ways to hide drapery hardware, pelmets can also reduce heat loss by closing in the tops of your (ideally floor-length) curtains or blinds and cutting off that drafty airflow. In the summer, they also help prevent the warm air that heats up inside curtains from moving into your cooler room.

8 tips to save energy (and money!) in the winter

 It’s easy to build custom pelmets for your windows: just measure across each of your window openings and build a box (with a front, top, and two ends) to size. Remember to add length and depth so your curtains can move freely and open fully. Attach the pelmet to the wall using brackets and cover it with fabric, wallpaper, or paint—or leave the wood bare. You can even use the top surface as a handy shelf. Comfort for the eyes, pocketbook, and toes.

This article was originally published in the Winter 2022 issue of Cottage Life.

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Cottage Life

Township of Muskoka Lakes introduces mandatory pre-consultation on certain planning applications

The Township of Muskoka Lakes has made some changes to its planning process.

As of January 17, those looking to build in the area may have to undergo a pre-consultation with town staff before submitting their application. The change is intended to streamline the planning application process.

“A lot of applications were landing on my desk without any pre-consultations,” says Bryce Sharpe, the township’s manager of planning. “When that occurs, there may be missing information. And then you have to backtrack and start from square one, trying to get a hold of people and explain, ‘Well, we’ve reviewed your application and X, Y, and Z are required.’”

Pre-consultations are mandatory for zoning by-law amendments, official plan amendments, site plans, and condominium or plan of subdivision applications. There’s no fee for the pre-consultation, and it can be booked through the planning department’s email.

Previously, Sharpe says the township didn’t see a need for pre-consultations. Applicants would drop into the office if they had questions. But when COVID hit, the planning office closed to the public, cutting off that resource. “We were still doing pre-consultations via Zoom,” he says. “But it seemed like there were a lot of incomplete applications being submitted.”

During the pre-consultation, staff will go over an applicant’s proposal with them, pointing out any requirements, such as a necessary study or elevation drawings. For the pre-consultation, staff ask that the applicant provide them with the property’s tax assessment roll number, a brief description of the proposal, a site plan, and any preliminary drawings.

Due to restrictions under Ontario’s Planning Act, a pre-consultation isn’t mandatory for minor variance or consent applications, but Sharpe strongly recommends booking one anyways. He also adds that staff can waive the need for a pre-consultation under certain circumstances.

“Say there’s been a recent application made on a property and it’s been determined that a further exemption to the bylaw is required after the fact. We may say, at that point, we’re very familiar with the property. Given what’s proposed, I don’t think we need to pre-consult, just go ahead and submit your application,” Sharpe says.

“The intent is really just to make the whole process more streamlined and to identify requirements up front versus after the fact.”

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Cottage Life

Cottage Q&A: Pros and cons of running a furnace fan

What are the pros and cons of running a furnace fan when away from the cottage? I am looking to save on hydro but I worry about moisture buildup.—Ruta Valaitis, via email

Well, there’s really just the one major pro and the one major con. And you already know what they are. “Air circulation is almost always a good idea, but a furnace fan can be expensive,” says Don Fugler, an Ottawa building scientist. “Depending on the fan motor and its setting, a circulation fan can use from 300 to 1,500 watts continuously.” (That said, it might be possible for you to make some adjustments to the unit, for example, replacing the fan motor with one that’s more efficient.) 

10 wood-burning stoves that will make you want to ditch your furnace

But, “here is one interesting fact,” says Fugler. “If you heat your cottage with electricity during the winter to keep it above freezing, the furnace fan electricity use will not add greatly to that cost. Those 300 to 1,500 watts of fan electricity will simply offset 300 to 1,500 watts of electric heating.” (This is assuming that your furnace runs on electricity, not natural gas, oil, or propane.)

So, if you regularly visit your cottage in the winter, it might be beneficial to leave the heat on low when you’re away—Fugler suggests at least 5°C—along with running the fan. Bonus: this’ll probably make the cottage visit more pleasant, certainly when you first arrive. “If you let the cottage go down to -10°C, or whatever ambient temperature is in the vicinity, it will take all weekend for the surfaces and bedding to get up to comfortable temperatures,” says Fugler.

Have you had moisture problems before? “Existing conditions are the best indication of the need for more ventilation,” says Fugler. “When people ask if they should add more attic vents, I ask if they have had to replace roof boards or sheathing due to rot.”

4 winter catastrophes and how to prevent them

Air circulation will help to minimize localized moisture problems, says Fugler—for example, window condensation that drips down onto the windowsill. But no fan in the universe will prevent moisture buildup if water is getting into the cottage from, say, leaks or a high water table. You’d want to resolve those problems before trying any ventilation solutions.

This article was originally published in the Winter 2022 issue of Cottage Life.

Got a question for Cottage Q&A? Send it to answers@cottagelife.com.

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Cottage Life

Will new housing legislation actually make cottages more affordable?

With major change brought on by the pandemic, mortgage rate hikes, and increased urban-rural migration, experts say that the cottage market is slowly returning to its usual high demand, low supply format—even with recent housing legislation meant to ease those factors.

A new StatsCan report on residential real estate investors—using data from pre-pandemic 2020—shows the percentage of investor-owners across five provinces: Ontario, Nova Scotia, British Columbia, Manitoba, and New Brunswick, with the number hovering between 20-31 per cent across the board. 

While the data doesn’t reflect what’s transpired over the past two years, reporting on investors—the first time the Canadian Housing Statistics Program has done so—signifies their increasing role in the market, which could be a bellwether for what’s to come.

Frank Clayton, a professor at Toronto Metropolitan University and a housing market expert, says the report captures a pre-pandemic trend: more investors getting into the market and driving up prices, including cottages. The pandemic only accelerated this, along with another trend—millennials moving to rural areas for space and affordability. Now, “People who bought properties out there might say, ‘This lifestyle isn’t for me’, and they’ll sell,” Clayton says. “But as the population ages and more millennials age, they’ll still be looking for more space and more recreational pursuits.”

Given recent rate hikes and a drop in housing prices and sales, Clayton says it’s a wake-up call both for prospective buyers and those who overspent. There’s also new legislation, such as the federal Underused Housing Tax, Ontario’s updated Non-Resident Speculation Tax, and Bill 23, all of which aim to broaden housing availability and cool the investor trend.

With all this in mind, it may seem that the market is giving way to hopeful cottage buyers, but Clayton says it’s unlikely the floodgates will suddenly open, given that limited supply continues to be a factor. The legislation primarily impacts urban centres, and most new developments are condos, which tend to be more difficult to pass in cottage country. Further, he says, taxes for foreign buyers likely won’t deter those in the cottage market, since many of those buyers tend to have significant wealth, or are in partnership with a Canadian and can share costs. 

Still, Clayton says increased urban-rural migration, coupled with the preference for condos could lead to a push for more of those developments in cottage regions. He points to Friday Harbour resort in Innisfil, Ont., and the recent purchase and redevelopment plans for Deerhurst Resort as examples of “millennials moving into the markets in a big way.”

So, what can this report ultimately tell us about the future of the cottage market? If anything, it illuminated the need for clearer data. For example, cottage owners were put under the umbrella of ‘investors’ even though many don’t use their property strictly for investment. “There are as many definitions of investors as there are people,” says Joanie Fontaine, one of the authors of the report. 

She says cottages are tricky for a few reasons, namely, many owners may rent their cottage for just a few days a year (not enough to qualify as an investment), and some may list their main residence in a city, but spend far more time at their cottage, making it hard to clarify primary vs. secondary residence data. She also points out that despite condos being the preferred investment property, when investors did own in a rural area, 99 per cent of the time it was a freestanding home. 

Though prices may be creeping down, for the time being, demand in the cottage market remains high. “Demand is going to be very strong, just because of basic demographic and economic forces,” says Clayton. “You can’t create more lakes and mountains.”