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Local business of the week: The Occurrence

Here at Cottage Life, we realize how hard the COVID-19 pandemic has hit local businesses. To do our part, we’ll be highlighting the stories of different businesses in cottage country. This week, we spoke with Michael Bainbridge and Brigitte Gall, who run The Occurrence, a puzzle manufacturing company in Haliburton, Ont.

What is The Occurrence?

The Occurrence is an artisanal jigsaw puzzle manufacturer and retailer. We have a puzzle machine press that cuts the puzzles, but essentially everything is done by hand and they’re all our own unique designs.

The Occurrence
Photo courtesy of Brigitte Gall and Michael Bainbridge

How did the business get started?

My background is a gem and mineral photographer who specializes in gems and minerals for museums and private collectors. The discussion for the last several years between Brigitte and I has been what to do with the library of pictures I’ve built up over the years.

We got the idea for making them into puzzles on New Year’s Eve, 2018. We had a bunch of friends over that night, but the temperature was negative 46 degrees Celius. It was colder in Haliburton than the daytime high of Mars. None of our friends’ cars would start. And even if they could leave, it wouldn’t have been wise. So, we ended up hosting eight people for three days, and we started running out of things to do. We pulled out some jigsaw puzzles, and at one point, we had eight people circling the kitchen island working on this Starry Night jigsaw puzzle.

That’s when the light bulb went off. We started making puzzles out of my pictures. Originally, we were outsourcing, but the intent was always to start a small manufacturing business in Haliburton. In October 2019, we took possession of the space we’re in now and we’re gearing up for a launch just after Christmas. But then we stopped hearing from our suppliers in China—right as the pandemic was getting started. It wasn’t until June 2020 that we were finally able to open our doors at full capacity. Now we have our manufacturing in the back and a little retail shop in the front.

What inspired the name?

The occurrence is a geological term. It’s a concentrated mineral deposit. With my background in minerals and gemstones, I’ve always used that name for my website. Then when we started talking about the puzzle factory and what to call it. We liked the different meanings of the word “occurrence.” It’s a happening, an event, something that’s exciting and interesting. But it also has a sort of cult feel to it, like a ye old book shop. Our branding is all based on the idea of an occult book store.

The Occurrence
Photo courtesy of Brigitte Gall and Michael Bainbridge

How do you make the puzzles?

We start by printing out the design we want on photo printers, the same thing you’d use in a high-end photo lab. We use pigment inks and museum-grade paper. The photographic print is glued onto cardboard. Then we have a roller die press for cutting the puzzle. It’s like two giant rolling pins turning in sync with each other, and we’ve got a steel rule die that’s like a cookie-cutter. You run the puzzle through the two rollers and it pushes the cardboard into the blades and cuts it.

We have different dies for different sizes or shapes of puzzles. Every one of our 500 piece puzzles has exactly the same cut, but we have different dies for the 77-piece, 192, 504, and 1,008. So, each one of those dies is different based on size. After the puzzle’s cut, we have the highly technical process of scrambling, which involves taking the puzzle apart so that you can put it back together again.

We’ve done our best to source all of the materials from Canada, and always recycled materials. It’s a fine balance between getting the very best materials and the most local. We do import our cardboard from the Netherlands. It’s 100 per cent recycled. But our boxes are made in Markham, from recycled Canadian cardboard.

How do you choose the designs?

It started with designs based on my photographs. Originally, I had a ready market with the gem and mineral shows I’d go to, like the Gemboree in Bancroft. We started selling the puzzles there.
Then the next design we added was the Haliburton County road trip. We drove around the county for two days taking pictures of actual road signs and then designing them into a fun collage that represents a tour of the county.

We wanted to do it for other places as well, like Muskoka and Lanark. We thought it would be a simple matter of swapping out some names for different places, but when we went, we discovered that there was a really unique culture of place that was evident in the road signs. It wasn’t transferable. So, we did the whole thing over again for Lanark and Muskoka.

We also have artists’ puzzles. We wanted to feature Canadian artists and not ones that were typical or expected. Artists like Kurt Swinghammer, Wendy Wood, and our most recent one, Mary Anne Barkhouse, an Indigenous artist who lives in Haliburton—also a friend of ours. She’s really well known as a sculptor, so we wanted to get one of her works done. We actually launched it for orange shirt day.

Brigitte’s really keen on the nostalgia pieces. The old Canadian ephemera, so we’ve started a series of old covers from the Eaton company’s catalogues and we have the cover of Canada’s first sci-fi pulp fiction magazine.

We also do custom puzzles. It’s one of the side benefits of having brought production in-house. If you want a puzzle of your sister’s wedding or a picture of your dog, you just have to email us the picture and within a week or so, you’ve got a puzzle. All of the other designs come from Brigitte and I. We choose based on what kind of puzzles we’d want to do.

The Occurrence
Photo courtesy of Brigitte Gall and Michael Bainbridge

How often do you make a new puzzle?

In two years, we’ve gone from five designs to 27. There hasn’t really been any regularity to that, but by bringing production in-house, we can do whatever we want. There are no minimum orders or turnaround times. What we’re learning, though, is that there are seasons to the puzzle industry, similar to the way tourism in the area is. We always try to get new designs out for the spring, when cottagers start coming up again.

There’s also the Christmas puzzle peak. For that, we try and get new stuff out in September, October. Then there’s the February blahs. Nobody’s going outside and there’s nothing to do but puzzle. We have a long list of design ideas that we’re keen to do. It’s just a matter of how much time and resources we’re able to dedicate to the process.

How has the pandemic affected your business?

Anybody who’s picked up a newspaper or a magazine in the last year has heard of the puzzle trend as a result of COVID. Canada is actually a puzzle capital of the world. We have two of the world’s top five puzzle manufacturers with Eurographics and Cobble Hill, but they both manufacture in the States. As far as we know, we’re the only Canadian puzzle manufacturer that actually makes everything in-house in Canada—aside from some very small, custom businesses. But this has been a real boon for us during the pandemic. People like that we’re Canadian. We’ve no doubt gotten a sales bump as a result of the pandemic, but it’s hard to compare since we opened in 2020.

We did encounter problems around the beginning of January 2020 when, all of a sudden, our manufacturer in China stopped returning our phone calls. We planned to order our roller die press from China, but this forced us to do some more searching. We found a machine company in Montreal that was able to build a custom machine based on what we knew we needed from the Chinese machine. So, even the machine we use was made in Canada.

COVID did delay our opening by about six months, but in the end, I think it worked out well because the machine that we have is undoubtedly better made, and it’s easier to get service. There have been other supply chain issues that continue to haunt us. For example, there’s a worldwide cardboard shortage. It’s been going for almost two years now. It’s caused our box supplier’s turnaround times to go from 10 days to 30 days. And we had a shipment go missing because the driver got COVID and had to park the truck for a month.

What we didn’t anticipate is that because COVID has slowed down the supply chain, we’ve become the manufacturing source for a number of small, craft puzzle brands. We manufacture puzzles for lifestyle brands in Montreal, Muskoka and Toronto. So, there’s been ups and downs.

The Occurrence
Photo courtesy of Brigitte Gall and Michael Bainbridge

What does the future look like for The Occurrence?

We’re in an 800 square foot manufacturing space, which includes the retail storefront. It’s getting pretty crowded. I mean, we’re small, but we’re outgrowing the space quickly. There are certain limitations to the manufacturing process. Over the next year, we’re going to be charting out our growth, how much space we need, and what kind of automation we can introduce. Ultimately, in a year, we’d like to be in a facility that is at least twice as big with a second production line that’s more automated.

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Is the canoe the most beloved icon of the cottage?

As it turned out, the first canoe I looked at was the one I bought. Canvas and cedar, red, double-thwarted, 16 ft.: made in Quebec, so I was informed; built from the mould of the old Chestnut Prospector—the canoe favoured by no less an authority than the author and filmmaker and master canoeist the late Bill Mason….Unquestionably, it has proven to be the best buy I ever made. Beautiful, reliable, a pleasure, always, to paddle. It was that rarest of purchases: a thing that proved to be as wonderful in actual use as it promised to be in the store. 

We paddled everywhere—in part because it was a pleasure to do so, and in part because I quickly discovered that the canoe was always more reliable than the noisy, oil-spewing outboard that came with our rented cottage. I noticed that whenever I used the outboard, I ended up with wet feet, or wet groceries, or soggy cardboard cartons of the bottles and tins we were taking in to the Archipelago township’s recycling depots. There was always, no matter how assiduously, and guiltily, I pumped the filthy bilge into the lake, a pan of oily water in the bottom of the boat that was always just as high as the holes in my running shoes. When I used the canoe—as, increasingly and, eventually, exclusively, I did—there was no bilge to pump, no oil to spew, no spark plugs to curse, and everything stayed miraculously dry, including my sneakers and socks.

Two bandaid fixes for outboard engines

…I also noticed that canoeing made us happier than the outboard ever did…But paddling a canoe did become something of a political gesture. In cottage country there is a feud that goes on, sometimes politely, sometimes angrily, between the noisy and the quiet, between the polluters and the environmentally considerate, between the self-absorbed fun-lover and the attentive observer of nature. It is a feud, so I fear, that the good guys are not going to win. Nonetheless, when you paddle a canoe, you cannot help but take a position, doomed as it may be, on these battle lines. It is impossible to start to pay attention to the subtleties of good soloing, for instance—the variations of stroke, the adjustments of the canoe’s angle, the all-important positioning of weight—without drawing the unhappy comparison to the skill-less twist of a PWC’s throttle. It is impossible to silently explore a marshland without realizing how intrusive the sound of an engine would be amid this breathless magic. It is impossible to paddle out to the open of Georgian Bay after dinner to watch the sunset without realizing that the Prospector’s slow, silent, and graceful movement is what allows us to be there, for such an extraordinary moment, without altering anything by the noise, or the discharge, or the speed of our presence. The canoe perfectly suits our reasons for doing what we do every summer. It fits in.  

This essay was originally published in the July/August 1999 issue of Cottage Life.

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8 haunted places across Canada you have to visit

Spooky season—otherwise known as October—wouldn’t be complete without a visit to a place with some haunted history. The storied spots on this list are a must for those eager to experience the paranormal. Just like trick-or-treating or seeing the fall colours, October wouldn’t be the same without a brush with the supernatural. Here are eight haunted places you have to check out:

The Hochelaga Inn in Kingston, Ont.

Steps away from the Queen’s University campus, The Hochelaga Inn was originally built in 1876 as a residence for a prominent Kingston lawyer who later became the city’s mayor. It’s the ghostly body of his wife, however, who is rumoured to haunt the halls of this Victorian-era mansion. Previous owners and guests have caught glimpses of a woman dressed in black, either standing at their bedside or stalking the halls. 

The Churchill Mansion Inn in Yarmouth in N.S.

This historic building on the shores of the Atlantic ocean was once a summer home for Aaron Flint Churchill, a sea captain and prominent businessman in the area. Being out on the water was a much more dangerous endeavour back then, with many loved ones waiting anxiously by the shore for their partners to return. It’s one of these worried women from the past whose spirit lingers at the Inn: Aaron Flint’s wife, whom locals have claimed to see pacing on the porch or sitting in a rocking chair. 

Windermere House in Muskoka, Ont.

Nestled in beautiful Muskoka, Windermere House is a sprawling haunted place that was originally purchased as farmland by local businessman Thomas Aitken, and eventually became a vacation lodge that attracted tourists from all over the country. Although much of the original building was tragically lost to a fire in the 1990s, spirits from its early days have lingered. Employees have reported furniture moving and creaking at random, and the front desk has received calls from the third floor, which was demolished years ago.

Fulford Place in Brockville, Ont.

An easy day trip from Ottawa and its surrounding cottage country, this old, opulent domain of newspaper and pharmaceutical magnate Senator George Taylor Fulford actually runs ghost tours, inspired by the property’s reported spooky encounters. Fulford’s widow is said to continue to haunt this 118-year old home, seen looking out of windows and wandering through the halls late into the night.

West Point Lighthouse in O’Leary, P.E.I.

Situated in a rugged, windswept part of P.E.I., West Point Lighthouse has a claim to fame as Canada’s first active lighthouse; it’s also the tallest on the island, unique in its shape and paint colours. But that’s not the only reason to visit — if you’re looking for its more shadowy history, you may catch sight of the rumoured ghost, former lighthouse operator nicknamed “Lighthouse Willie.” You can visit the lighthouse during the day or stay in the attached Inn, if you dare.

Peggy’s Cove, N.S.

Visitors flock to Peggy’s Cove each year to take in some of the most iconic scenery on Canada’s East Coast, but when the sun goes down, the area’s lively history is said to come to life — again. Known to be a lady dressed in blue, the so-called spirit of Peggy’s cove was an immigrant to the area, whose husband died after falling from the rocky shore. As the legend goes, she stalks the shoreline, as though she’s about to jump into the water; if you try to intervene, she disappears.

La Corriveau Forest in Saint-Joseph-de-la-Pointe-de-Lévy, Que.

An adventure for the truly brave, this entire forest is said to be haunted. The legend of what’s commonly known as la Corriveau details the hanging of a woman named Marie-Josephte Corriveau, accused of the murder of her two husbands in the 1700s. Her ghost is said to appear still in the cage and chains it was wrapped in, luring travellers from the road.

The Marr Residence in Saskatoon, Sask.

One of the oldest buildings in Saskatoon, a furious ghost allegedly inhabits this haunted place. Some believe it’s a previous resident, or perhaps a patient from the days when this home was used as a field hospital. The Residence functions as a museum and can be visited by the general public during the day.

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This magical A-frame in a rainforest is close to a hot spring

Being lulled to sleep by the light gurgle of the Chilliwack River in a custom A-frame cabin, fishing for sturgeon the size of cows in some of the west coast’s most famous rivers, and soaking your worries away in a natural hot spring—what else could you want in a vacation? British Columbia residents Emily McNally and Bryce Welti have the art of relaxation figured out. Hence the names of their two businesses: River Therapy Retreat and River Therapy Fishing.

What is River Therapy Retreat?

Emily: It actually started with River Therapy Fishing. Bryce has loved fishing all his life. He started leading fishing trips, bridging off of that, we wanted to provide accommodations. We live on the river and in a rainforest, so we built a beautiful cabin on our property. It has been booked pretty solid since we put it online in August.

The cabin is steps away from the river, so you can hear it rushing down as you’re sleeping. It’s such a beautiful environment; the mountains, river, and rain forest. We’re grateful to live where we live and we want to share that with other people.

Accommodation

Emily: It is a 100-square-foot A-frame cabin. On one side of the cabin, we have an eight-by-eight transparent door that opens up to the riverside and allows all the sounds to come inside the cabin.

There are two twin beds and everything that you’d need for a couple of nights. We have a mini-fridge, a deck with a barbecue. The cabin doesn’t have a shower, but we do have a sink, which is RV-style plumbing. There’s a pump that pulls water and it puts it into a greywater bin that needs to be emptied. We have pots and pans, cooking utensils, plates, everything you need for cooking. I do provide some snacks in case guests get hungry because we are a bit of a way out of town.

We have a composting-style outhouse that we’ve built down there. There’s also have a private fire pit area with Edison lights. Inside the cabin, I’ve provided a space heater, which heats the whole cabin in like three minutes, and heated blankets so we’re good to go right through winter. It’s pretty small, but it has a lot for being so small.

Cost to stay

Emily: We’re listed on Airbnb right now for $159 a night. There is a discount on the cabin stay if someone books a fishing trip. You can book on Airbnb or through our website.

What inspired the “River Therapy” name?

Emily: Bryce has been fishing since he was a child, and a lot of fishermen find solitude when they’re on the river. Here you’re surrounded by mountains and the rushing river, so all your senses—whether it’s the sound, the sights, the smells—are activated, and you just kind of zone in. We see it as very therapeutic, so that’s why we decided on the name.

Bryce: River Therapy Fishing started about four years ago. I used to work out of town and only worked half the year, so for my days off, I bought a jet boat because I loved fishing and exploring the river.

Guiding has always been something that I’ve wanted to do, and a driving factor was sturgeon fishing. I’ve traveled the world fishing and fishing sturgeon here is like nothing I’ve ever experienced. Anybody I’d ever taken out on the river had nothing but great things to say about it.

What to expect on a guided fishing tour

Bryce: First, we talk about what kind of fish you want to target; where you want to go, and what you want to see because the areas that we fish are so diverse.

We offer a local fishing trip, which is in the heart of Chilliwack and Abbotsford here. Really good fishing, but the scenery is not as spectacular as our canyon trip or wilderness trip. We do charge a little bit more for those trips.

We set a time—usually 8 a.m. because it’s an eight-hour day. We meet at the boat ramp.

Fishing sturgeon is like zero to 100. You’re hanging out and then all of a sudden it’s game on. Lines are flying and people are bouncing around the boat. Anything over seven feet, we’re chasing downriver.

Why can’t you bring sturgeon into the boat?

Bryce: Legally, we’re not allowed to bring a fish in the boat that’s over four feet, so we go ashore and have waders provided for everybody. Average sturgeon are four to six feet, but lately, we’ve been hooking fish all over seven feet.

How long does it take to reel them in?

Bryce: Catching the fish can take anywhere from five minutes to three and a half hours. With sturgeons, it could be a thousand-pound fish.

Once we catch it, we get the boat to shore. I hop off and go in the water and coach you on how to get that fish safely upside down. When the fish is upside down, they are usually pretty docile. This gives us an opportunity to measure the fish and get a photo. Then we roll the fish back over and let it go.

How many sturgeon do you normally catch?

Some days we catch one fish, some days we catch 20 to 30.

Do you offer any other activities?

Emily: We do a local sturgeon fishing trip and then a wilderness trip out in the Fraser Canyon, which is part of the Fraser River. The river narrows quite a bit and you’re surrounded by mountains. It’s stunning.

The Pitt River hot spring is an adventure tour. The hot spring is only accessible by boat or helicopter. So, we take you on a jet boat across the lake and partway up the river. Then we park the boat at a beachy area on the side of the river, and you’ll bike 17 kilometers. Then you take a five-minute hike through the forest rappel down a section of the mountain using ropes. The hot spring is right on the side of the river. It’s this naturally occurring, bright blue water. Getting there takes about an hour and a half to two hours.

What does the future look like for River Therapy Retreat?

Bryce: We just finished excavating the other half of our property and we’re leaning towards building another A-frame cabin with a shower and a few more luxurious amenities. Hopefully, by next summer we’ll have another cabin that’s even bigger and can sleep up to four people.

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The most beautiful day hikes across Canada

The arrival of cooler temperatures across the country means perfect hiking weather, not to mention colourful, vibrant views. With solid evidence that hiking can do wonders for your mental health, there’s more reason than ever to hit the trail this season before the snow flies. Together with input from Cottage Life readers, we’ve put together a list of some fantastic day hikes from coast to coast.

Old Fort Point in Jasper, Alta.

Jasper National Park is home to some of the most intense and technically difficult hikes in Canada, but Old Fort Point is one for all levels that still packs in stunning views. Winding through the forest and opening to a panoramic view of the Athabasca Valley, this hike is a relaxed crowd-pleaser.

Green Gardens Trail near Rocky Harbour, N.L.

Located in the world-renowned Gros Morne National Park, the Green Gardens trail offers an expansive look at the features that make this park so unique. An out and back trail clocking in at about four kilometers, it’s an option to accommodate all hiking abilities.

Johnston Canyon in Banff, Alta.

This is one of the best-known hikes in Banff National Park, and for good reason. With a variety of options and lengths, plus a cafe and gift shop at the trailhead, it has something for every kind of adventurer. Follow the path along the river to see the diverse landscape within the canyon. A longer route will take you to the ink pots, a cluster of ponds nestled in a mountain valley with varying shades of blues and greens caused by mineral deposits.

Skyline Trail in Cape Breton, N.S.

Many are familiar with the driveable Cabot Trail, which you can see on foot from this beautiful, easy hike. Situated in Cape Breton Highlands National Park, which is home to an extensive trail network, Skyline is a great way to take in its gorgeous sights even if you just have one afternoon.

St. Mark’s Summit in Vancouver, B.C.

Though Vancouver is surrounded by some of the most incredible natural playgrounds, you don’t have to go far outside the city to partake. This moderate day hike can be accessed just outside the city limits and gives incredible views of the Howe Sound. At about 11 kilometers, it’s on the longer side but has ample stopping points throughout.

Rock Dunder near Kingston, Ont.

Located in Ontario’s beautiful Frontenac region, Rock Dunder gives a taste of the natural spoils this part of cottage country has to offer. After an ascent that should get your heart pumping, the summit opens to a breathtaking view of the lake and forest. You may need a day permit to access this trail, so be sure to check before you go.

Cathedral Grove in MacMillan Provincial Park, B.C.

This trail is just one section of the larger network that exists in the beautiful MacMillan Provincial Park on Vancouver Island. Cathedral Grove is one of its most famous areas; an accessible, easy walking trail where you can marvel at some of the country’s oldest stands of trees. 

Centennial Ridges Trail in Algonquin Park, Ont.

Situated in one of Ontario’s most popular parks, close to its most iconic cottage country, Centennial Ridges Trail is a long hike with varied terrain that shows off the best Algonquin Park. You can follow it as long as you like, with many open vistas that are ideal to stop at for a break.

Big Beehive in Lake Louise, Alta.

Get beyond the crowds taking photos at Lake Louise’s main vantage point and climb up this moderate, stunning hike that gives a bird’s eye view of this iconic lake and the surrounding mountains. About halfway up you’ll come across the Lake Agnes tea house, a charming wood cabin where you can buy hot drinks and baked goods to enjoy on the shores of a beautiful mountain lake.  

Wilson Carbide Ruins in Gatineau Park, Que.

Just a short drive from downtown Ottawa, Gatineau Park is a serene natural paradise for hikers, cyclists, campers and more. This easy trail brings you to a set of ruins in the forest near Meech Lake, the remnants of an old fertilizer plant owned by eccentric inventor Thomas Leopold Wilson. If the day is warm enough, you might find people taking a dip at the base of the small waterfalls.

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Omar Mouallem confesses his cottage sins: Envy

Pride, wrath, envy, sloth, lust, greed, gluttony—the cottage can bring out the best and the worst in us. We asked seven of Canada’s top writers to come clean about their cottage sins.

I Have a Confession to Make…

My mom always has something on her phone to show me. It’s guaranteed to be pictures of children, usually mine, caught looking adorable yet again. But last spring, she surprised me with a photo of a big RV.

Had my parents already reached the point of retirement when, having run out of things to do, you join a Boomer colony? Truly a shocking turn of events for two people who’d never slept in anything less than a three-star hotel.

But the RV wasn’t theirs. It was my older brother’s. He’d bought it used with plans to park it on his new lake lot in Shaw’s Point Resort, a campsite 30 minutes outside of our hometown near Lesser Slave Lake, Alta.

I was happy for my brother’s family and proud of him. Nobody deserved a big-ass RV and leisure property more than his family. Around the time that I moved to Edmonton, he moved the other way, back to High Prairie, in order to steer my parents’ diner back on track. He and his wife took the diner to a new level of success with a modern rebrand, but he was starting to lose patches of hair from managing it seven days a week. I was glad to hear that he was slowing down to look after himself and his family.

And yet, looking at that photo on my mom’s phone, I felt a drop of jealousy spoil my blood. It’s not that I wanted an RV myself (I’m more of a rented cabin guy). I wanted something lost and far gone: the memories that the lake lot was about to make for his family.

The only apparent travel blogger to review the rural Alberta resort where my brother was setting up likened it to a “trailer park” with golf carts in lieu of bicycles or one’s own feet. But for me, Shaw’s Point evokes Shangri-La.

Despite the short distance, I’d never seen it with my own eyes. I’d only heard about it in school hallways on Monday mornings when I was younger. A place of fishing tales and first kisses, it sounded like a parallel universe where only the town’s most comfortable rendezvous.

Not that we wouldn’t belong. My parents sweat their way into the town’s upper class. Their ambition allowed for many luxuries, often making me the only immigrants’ kid who played hockey and took long summer vacations.

Granted, the summers were in Lebanon, and sans dad, who was busy running the family business back home. But we leisured domestically too, often to West Edmonton Mall, four hours away. My family relished the expensive pleasures of tropical-themed hotels and the world’s largest indoor wave pool, but didn’t see much point in spending weekends, and rarely an afternoon, at the lake close by.

The beach in our backyard seemed a highway too far for my parents. On a handful of occasions, their better-integrated Palestinian friends dragged us out to one of the public beaches. Our families attracted onlookers with our hookah and bedazzling music. Sandy beaches and clean swims didn’t feel like a reasonable trade-off for potential teenage embarrassment, so I rarely asked to go and never lobbied for a resort lot.

I didn’t realize what we’d deprived ourselves of until my twenties. Camping trips to the Rockies with my wife and friends eased me into the wild. Now I’ll leap to any campfire invitation, even if it means driving two hours back to Edmonton the same day.

I also realized why my parents avoided the rugged outdoors. It dawned on me once while reporting about a free camping workshop for immigrants where the seminar used many of the same persuasive techniques as a time-share presentation, with only slightly better results. By the time the park ranger rolled out the sleeping bags and tent canvas, the room was half empty. Sleeping in compromised conditions, believe it or not, lacks cachet for many people displaced by war.

Camping just didn’t work with my parents’ cultural baggage. But I also realized that their baggage wasn’t ours to carry as second-generation Canadians gifted a charmed life. And so, when my brother invited me and my family to the lake, this time, I said yes.

My wife and I were able to introduce our two-month-old son to the outdoors, while our daughter ran amok inside the RV with her cousins. I felt a tinge of envy when she stuck her head out to ask why we didn’t have a “car house” of our own, but it was quickly inoculated by the joy in her voice and the realization that this lake lot would make memories for my family too.

National Magazine Award-winning writer Omar Mouallem is working on a new book, Praying to the West: How Muslims Shaped the Americas, due out this fall.

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Lending the cottage to a friend: good idea?

Q: “We rarely let anyone use our cottage without us being there, except for a certain friend. Recently, she called to ask if she, her boyfriend, and her kids could stay for the weekend, which was fine with us. But after, she texted that her boyfriend’s children also came and stayed the night. I am not okay with her inviting additional guests without our knowledge. Am I wrong? And why am I feeling like the jerk for having to come up with a way to say that wasn’t okay?” 

A: No, you are not wrong, but you are also in a bit of a tricky situation in the personal hurt feelings department. Judging by the tales of frustration told by my cottage contacts, this specific offence seems to happen all the time but with various subtle nuances, from a cousin who left non-relatives for a few solo nights at the cottage without clearing it first, to that shameful summer classic where the “kids”—having been entrusted to stay up at the lake by themselves—host a giant booze and drug-fuelled shaker that causes personal injury, property damage, and the undying enmity of cottage neighbours. 

One couple I know had arranged for friends to “cottage sit” when they were away on a long vacation. Months later, they started meeting strangers who complimented them on their cottage, particularly mentioning the wonder of the outdoor hot tub. Some even sent photos of the fun times. Turns out, the friends who were looking after the joint held a good-sized dinner party, inviting people the owners had never met, and capped the night with hot tub cocktails. Someone even reprogrammed the Apple TV so they could access different video services. There was no physical damage to the cottage, but plenty of hurt feelings. 

Cottage Q&A: How to communicate when sharing the cottage

Of course the first response by anyone who has experienced this sort of thing is total outrage, mixed with varying degrees of personal violation and then bitter disappointment in the culprits involved. And no matter where the offence falls on the sliding scale, the howling plea—with face raised to heaven—is always the same: “What could ever make them think that this would be okay?” Herein, I think, is the crux of the issue, namely some form of miscommunication between rational people that leads to very unpleasant and squirmy personal dilemmas. Because in most cases—except the ones involving rotten and untrustworthy offspring—the players are all generally respectable adults connected by family or friendship, not some skid-bomb low-lifes who defiled a cottage they rented on Airbnb.

Long-time readers of this magazine, especially those interested in figuring out how to successfully share a family cottage with siblings and relatives without bloodshed or buckets of tears, will know that the only proper solution to co-ownership is to have a well-lawyered contract drawn up, one that specifies and stipulates and provides paths of settlement for any contingency possibly imaginable. I think it’s the lack of the same that causes these hurtful cottage misuses that we are talking about here. For instance, was the cousin who let strangers stay at the cabin made specifically aware that this was not allowed by the owner? Or was it just assumed a nominally intelligent person would ask first? You know what they say about assumptions.

From your letter, it doesn’t appear that you explicitly told your friend that it was okay for her to use the place and include her children and boyfriend, but no one else. So some people might take this to indicate that since you are okay with your friend and her group using the place, you wouldn’t object to others that she has vetted joining along. The logic being that if you trust her, you must trust her judgement as well. I am generally not a forgiving person, but it doesn’t sound like your friend operated with malice or recklessness toward the stewardship of your cottage.

Cottage renting tips with Michelle Kelly

I personally suspect that your friend got sandbagged by her boyfriend when he showed up with his own kids without telling her. Is that possible? If so, it changes the narrative a bit. What was she supposed to do? Send them back down the highway? She probably should have called you right away to make sure it was okay, and I’m guessing you would have been fine with the extra kids. She could also have stayed silent and you would have been none the wiser, but instead she chose to fess up later, albeit by text. To me, this indicates some crisis of conscience on her part. Should it count in her favour?

That “why am I feeling like a jerk” feeling seems to be universal. I think it comes from one party feeling wronged, but unwilling to confront the other party with this information for fear of being seen as petty or small minded. “What’s the big deal? So we had a couple of extra guests. Lighten up.” But you are not a jerk. You’re someone with hurt feelings caused by poor communications. You want to let your friend know how you feel, but a finger poke to the chest is a bad idea. Full-out accusation—especially without knowing all the pertinent details—will surely cause you to look like a true jerk and threaten your relationship.

Lending tools to your cottage neighbours

So what’s the solution? You could choose to say nothing and decline to share the cottage with her again, which would probably make you feel bad for a long time and lose a friend. Or you could call her up and say what’s on your mind, which is the grown-up thing to do. This sounds great on paper, of course, but what you really want, deep down, is some form of an apology and an acknowledgement that she acted improperly. Which is something you might not get. Then what? I’m thinking that if you simply explain your feelings in a straightforward manner everything will work out just fine. But if the offence of two extra kids for a one-night stay is that upsetting, you either need to adjust your expectations or do some friend pruning.

It does occur to me that your uncomfortable situation could have been avoided entirely if you had chosen to rent your cottage to your friend, rather than lend it. With a rental arrangement details are spelled out: a time frame, what household items are provided, which boats and toys are available, and how many occupants are allowed on the cottage property. Standard stuff. The rental option lets you be upfront with rules and expected behaviour and your friend would not have to feel beholden or worry about breaking cottage rules. You could give her a really good deal, a fraction of what you could easily charge to ordinary renters. Call it your special rate, reserved for your nearest and dearest friends.

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Understanding the psychology behind our fear of snakes and loss

Some of our cottage fears are easy to see. Others sneak up on you.

MAY 2020

Most of the cottages on the bay are still shuttered.

The dock in front of the log cabin that we are hoping to buy is floating, disconnected from the shore to protect it from winter’s crushing ice.

Dennis, our real estate agent, pilots the barge to the dock where Karl, the cabin’s owner, is waiting to greet us. We throw him a line, but the boat drifts away and pulls Karl with it. Now he is hanging off the side of the barge, feet dangling. His rubber boots fill with water before we can hoist him up. “Never hold on, that’s the first rule of boats,” says Dennis. “It’s important to know when to let go.”

After the inspection, he hands me a stack of purchase papers. “Sign them when you are ready.”

Dennis’s wife is waiting for us at the marina. She has been in town, stockpiling groceries for their island home. We are in the midst of the first COVID-19 lockdown, and everyone is striving to be an island now. We exchange a few words from a careful distance, wearing masks.

“Rubber boots,” she says, as they walk away. “Get your kids rubber boots. You can’t be too careful with rattlesnakes.”

Snake season: Why the snakes are out right now

JUNE 2020

I turn the key. The boat’s motor starts right away, but my heart is revving faster than the engine.

For the first time in my life, I’m in the driver’s seat of a boat. Proof of my new pleasure craft licence is printed and folded and carefully stowed in the Princecraft’s glove compartment. A recurring question on the tests concerned maximum load and carrying capacity. I am quite sure we have exceeded ours. I can barely see over the bow, which is piled with furniture and groceries and cleaning supplies.

What I remember most from that boat trip, from the day we took possession of our little log cabin on Georgian Bay, on the edge of the world’s largest freshwater archipelago: my heart banging at my ribs so hard I can barely breathe and a burning sensation in my right hand as I grip the gear shift. The bow tipped up, and the stern dragged down. My eldest daughter, Emma, next to me, trying to calm me. My husband, Anton, and our younger daughter, Rowan, paddling next to us in the yellow Kipawa canoe that my father gave me for my 21st birthday, more than two decades ago. Anton and Rowan arrive at our new dock at the same time we do, I am driving that slowly. This fear—the force of it, the sheer physicality of it—takes me by surprise.

I have spent my life in boats. Scuba diving off protected reefs and further out on the high seas where poachers gunned across international waters. Gunwale bobbing on Lake Simcoe, at my childhood cottage; canoeing northern lakes and rivers. Anton and I once wrapped a canoe around a rock in fast water, hundreds of kilometres from any human settlement in the Northwest Territories. We spent five hours and all of our energy pulling the canoe off the rock with a system of carabiners and ropes.

And yet. In all those adventures, I never took the stern. I did not know how to paddle a J-stroke, the stroke used to steer a canoe and keep it following a straight line.

This was odd because my father, Francis, with whom I was particularly close, was an expert paddler. He could bring a canoe to shore in any weather, silently and precisely. He helped map the official portage routes for Killarney Provincial Park, where he knew all the old logging trails. Canoes often turned up in the documentary films that my father and his twin brother made about Ontario and the North.

Cottage Q&A: Dog is bitten by a rattlesnake

APRIL 2020

We are only weeks into the first coronavirus lockdown. No March Break travelling, no Passover gathering, no Easter egg hunting. It is dark and cold, and there is nowhere to go. It seems strange, dangerous even, to be anywhere but home. And anyway, it is the middle of the night.

The fluorescent lights sting my eyes as I step through the unlocked door. I have been standing outside the veterinary emergency entrance for what seems like hours, watching bleary-eyed staff come and go, arriving by bicycle, taking smoke breaks, picking up lonely paper bags—Uber Eats—sitting on the pavement. I am wearing a mask; a woman asks me to put on a face shield and blue gloves too. Everyone would rather I was not here, but they understand why I have come inside.

I kneel down on the cold, hard floor next to our dog, Muddy.

The staff have wrapped him in blankets. Oxygen blows at his snout, but his breathing is laboured. He has a mysterious respiratory illness that will not respond to antibiotics. I pat the top of his head, the softest, smoothest patch of black fur. It still feels puppy-ish though he is in his middle age like me. Also puppy-ish: the way his muscles have relaxed because of the hydromorphine. As if he is slowly turning into a puddle on the floor, softening at the edges. The veterinarian primes the syringe. There will be two injections: one to block all feeling, another to stop his heart. I whisper and cluck and cradle him. All this touch, all these sounds saying one thing: I am with you, here. You are not alone.

I have birthed two children and watched them awaken to the world, but I have never held a body as awareness left it.

I walk out of the clinic and toss the gloves and face shield into a garbage can. I am glad I insisted on being there. For Muddy’s sake and my own. For nearly 50 years I’ve been holding on, afraid to let go.

Wild Profile: Meet the milk snake

JULY 2020

There are two paths up to the new cabin: the exercise path and the nature path. The first one climbs steeply across open rock. The second meanders through a forest of pine and hemlock and cedar and oak and poplar and maple and birch.

I am walking down the nature path, inhaling the heart-opening scent of pine, listening to the west wind sough through the needled branches, when my body stops. I spin around and start walking the other way before my mind can process what the rest of me already knows: there is a large snake curled in the middle of the path, shaking its keratin rattle. I nearly crash into Anton, who is walking behind me. “Rattlesnake,” I squawk. Anton looks at me in disbelief.

“Well, we did buy a cottage on the edge of Massasauga Provincial Park,” I say, my heart still drumming. “I think we’re going to have to learn how to live with them.” Massasauga means “mouth of the river” in Ojibwe; it’s also the name for Ontario’s only venomous snake. Early in his career, Anton worked in the emergency room in Parry Sound; he remembers the summer they ran out of antivenin.

There is perhaps no human fear more common or visceral than the fear of snakes. For years, scientists have debated whether or not it is innate.

In 1992, a behavioural ecologist named Lynne Isbell was running through a glade in Kenya. She stopped in front of a cobra before she could process why she had stopped. Isbell spent the next two decades trying to understand what had happened. She hypothesized that evolution has favoured primates with good vision to detect snakes; those living with poisonous snakes tend to have better vision. Lemurs in Madagascar, on the other hand, have terrible eyesight: there are no poisonous snakes on the island.

Neuroscientists in Japan and Brazil found brain-based evidence to support Isbell’s theory by studying the pulvinar, a cluster of neurons that may help us recognize potential threats and direct our attention. Macaques that had never encountered snakes responded quickly and frequently to images of snakes—more quickly, even, than when they looked at faces. They seemed hardwired to detect them.

Fear, it seems, helps us see things. Quickly, clearly.

And yet. Only two deaths by rattlesnake have been recorded in the history of Ontario. Massasaugas have far more reason to fear people: settlers killed thousands as they moved into their habitat and latticed the province with wider and busier roads.

Persecution has been widespread. Even the staff at nearby Killbear Provincial Park routinely killed the snakes when the park first opened in the 1960s; there were so many of them. The habitat is ideal. Killbear snakes can find good hibernation and gestation sites within a few hundred metres, a tenth of the distance they might have to travel elsewhere.

In the 1970s, staff stopped killing snakes: conservation-minded scientists argued that the park should be protecting all species, not just the cutest and the fuzziest. Instead of taking a shovel to snake heads, park employees would now move rattlesnakes away from campsites. Only later did biologists realize that this strategy was nearly as fatal.

Rattlesnakes, like most snakes, have a strong fidelity to the first hibernation spot they choose. Once they’ve chosen a site and survived the first winter, they will return to the same spot for the winters following. If you move them too far, they keep looking for their old place. They will freeze to death instead of finding a new place to settle in.

✺ ✺ ✺

In the first half of my life, there were two things I feared most: losing my father and losing Romany Wood, my family’s summer property. Really they amounted to the same thing. I could not imagine who I was without my father, my family history, and the storied place I’d grown up in.

One hundred years ago, my architect grandfather designed and built three cottages on the south shore of Lake Simcoe. The cottages looked like something out of a Tudor fairy tale: half-timbered and stuccoed white with lead-paned windows. Each had its own name. The tidiest and smallest was called The Bears after the Goldilocks tale; the grandest, with a moth-eaten tapestry, moose antlers in the great hall, and a large bell at the peak of its roof, was called Pendragon after the castle built by King Arthur’s father. Outside, a massive oak tree grew up from an acorn my grandmother had planted.

When you come to really know a place, you see time moving through it in subtle changes of growth and decay. There I had watched moss and ferns colonize old tree stumps over decades and meadows grow into forest. I knew where to find the remains of the old sugar shack hidden among the maples, which trees had housed honeybees before they swarmed or died off, and which diseased apple trees still yielded sweet fruit.

My father felt this deep connection to the land as well. He said he didn’t need a flashlight to walk the winding paths through the dark woods at night. His feet knew the way.

Growing up, I imagined that we’d lived on the shores of Lake Simcoe forever. There were six generations of Chapmans planted at a neighbouring church that overlooked the lake. But the tree roots challenged my fantasies of permanence: they pushed up the oldest Chapman gravestones and made them list to one side.

My fear of losing our place on Lake Simcoe sharpened when my father was forced to sell our home in the city, where four generations of family had lived. Trying to hold onto it nearly bankrupted him. Even at 13, I knew he regarded letting go as a failure, and I internalized this feeling.

✺ ✺ ✺

My father was older and had a full life as a filmmaker before settling down to have a family at 44. There were stories of him exploring the north shore of Superior, of crash landings in the Arctic. He and his twin, Christopher, had sailed on the Bluenose II’s maiden voyage, documenting a search for lost treasure on Cocos Island off Costa Rica. In the 1950s, he’d driven from England to the Congo Basin with an anthropologist to record the lives of Ituri Forest people. He recalled walking through the dark jungle and suddenly finding a small hand in his, guiding him through the night.

The last vestige of that adventurous life—before marriage, before children—were the canoe trips he ventured on each spring and fall that he continued to take into his 70s.

The older I got, the stranger it seemed that he had never taught me to paddle, nor taken me with him on a camping trip. Something in my father must have thought it was strange too. Out of the blue, he gave me a canoe for my 21st birthday.

The J-stroke is not so difficult to master: you pull your paddle towards you and then turn the blade outward to “correct” the stroke—to prevent the nose of your boat veering to one side. I could have easily asked a friend to teach me or tried to learn it myself. But I was too embarrassed to admit that I needed instruction. I was also afraid—afraid to move forward, afraid to take the helm.

In my 20s, I invited myself on an early spring canoe trip with my father and his 60-something cronies. I came home with stories about how the wind shifted and drove the ice against our campsite’s shore. How we paddled anyway, through ice that looked uniform and thick but broke magically into hexagon candles that bobbed out of the way when we pulled our blades through them.

But I did not like to admit that this man I idolized, this expert canoeist and wildlife documentary filmmaker, had not taught me how to stern.

✺ ✺ ✺

In 2017, the Chapman family sold a third of Romany Wood. My father fell that same night. He hit the corner of a bookshelf on his way down. It punctured his lung and he developed pneumonia. He very nearly died.

“Do you know why you’re in the hospital?” a nurse asked in the loud, nasal voice people reserve for foreigners and old people deemed unable to understand them.

“I had a fight with a piece of furniture,” he replied dryly, even when he was in the midst of his most terrifying hallucinations. “And the furniture won.”

My father had developed Parkinson’s. The doctors said it was why he lost his balance. People with Parkinson’s lose their proprioception—the ability to sense the place they are in, where their body is located in space. The neurological disease progressed more quickly after he fell and kept him in the hospital for nearly three years. At first, he suffered terrible hallucinations. He imagined himself on a narrow ledge, about to fall. He was sure that the curtains at the end of the hospital bed were the floor—as if his bed had been set vertical and was about to pitch him forward.

He had lost his sense of place in the world. It did not seem coincidental that he had lost it so completely on the closing night of the sale.

✺ ✺ ✺

My father held on. Two years after his fall he was still lying in hospital, now unable to regulate his blood pressure. He would faint if he sat up or tried to stand. The rest of Romany Wood was sold. I told myself I was finally ready to let it go. There were too many memories, too much history weighing me down.

Then COVID hit. My father’s hospital was locked down. No visitors would be allowed for the foreseeable future. Now I was losing my father too.

My fears shifted and became more concrete. I was not so much afraid of my father dying now. Instead, I was afraid I would not be with him.

When he first arrived in hospital, in the days when he was constantly lost in fear and hallucination, I’d held his hands for hours. We were on the narrow ledge together, I’d say, squeezing his stiff, taloned hands. Now we are stepping down to safety. When he stared in terror at the curtains hanging at the end of his bed, imagining them to be the floor, I’d ask him to feel the cool sheets at his back and the railings on either side.

It felt good to be able to do this, to allay his fears. I began to realize I had always wanted to protect him. If not from death itself, then from the many fears that are the dress rehearsal for it.

✺ ✺ ✺

When Anton and I decided to buy the little cabin on Georgian Bay, I thought I would be ecstatic. Here was a sweet, tidy, well-kept log cabin in the landscape I loved best in the world: a landscape shaped by ice and west wind, where the pine trees grew in strange and beautiful ways in response to the harsh conditions of their environment. My father also loved the Shield. Although he had held onto Romany Wood with a quiet fierceness and tenacity that seemed out of keeping with his ungrasping nature, he often expressed a wish to have a little cabin somewhere wilder.

A cottage, he said, should only be a launching pad for exploring the world. Nothing more.

Instead of celebrating, I burst into tears: I knew how much my father would have loved the place. As closing day loomed, I found myself in an almost constant state of panic. I had a vivid feeling that I was being strangled. I began pulling at my crew neck T-shirts constantly. Eventually I switched to wearing buttoned shirts. I could not stand to have anything near my neck.

15 surprising facts about Canada’s snakes

AUGUST 2020

My father’s unit is still closed to all visitors but one: an essential caregiver, who, in this instance, is my mother. So we do video calls twice a week instead. I walk him through the forest at our little cabin, pointing out the different trees. “Are there birches?” he’d ask, thinking wistfully of spring canoe trips, before the trees leafed out, when the branches had a soft purple hue. “Yes,” I’d say, walking over to a little stand to show him. Together, we looked at the wildflowers that seemed to grow everywhere and examined a baby snake in the garden.

I told him we’d named the first rattlesnake we saw Herbert, to make it seem less scary. Since then, we’d heard snakes buzzing under our deck and found another one curled up by the bunkie. We were getting used to the idea of living with them. After all, this place had been their home first. We were the trespassers.

My father and I often talked about how everything was interconnected, a subject that fascinated him, and one that took on a more personal meaning as he moved closer to his own end. As his body got weaker, he said, he felt like he was opening to the universe. It was harder and harder to imagine the boundaries between him and the rest of the world. He felt they were dissolving, and he was being absorbed back into the system he had always been a part of.

Before the pandemic, we had a long conversation about ecology, which translates literally from the Greek as the study of home. “The problem with thinking about the environment as something separate from us,” said my father slowly, his blue eyes now half-hooded, “is in trying to determine what surrounds what. It’s a problem of where you draw the boundaries.”

This observation kept repeating in my head after COVID hit. We were all trying desperately to draw boundaries around ourselves and around others to keep each other safe. I thought of it, too, each time I encountered a rattlesnake. If you’re going to live next to nature, you’ve got to take the whole thing, a biologist once told me. Nature can be scary and dangerous, but it’s beautiful too.

“You have a responsibility to be a steward to all the creatures that live there,” says Jonathon Choquette, a biologist who leads a rattlesnake recovery program for Wildlife Preservation Canada. Building fences is useful sometimes—to protect the snakes from the dangers of crossing roads and from the people who feared them turning up in their suburban gardens—but fences can only do so much. Too many can lead to fragmentation of habitat, turning smaller and smaller snake populations into islands of genetic homogeneity. There’s something in nature, as Robert Frost remarked, “that doesn’t love a wall, that wants it down.”

In Killbear, staff had solved this problem by building ecopassages—openings in the snake-fencing—that tunnel under the road and let light and warmth in, facilitating safer snake crossings from one marooned habitat to another. ››

A few days before my father contracted pneumonia again, I went to visit Killbear. I wanted to see how a small town—4,000 visitors are typical on a summer day—manages to co-exist peacefully in perfect rattlesnake habitat with only four kilometres of fencing and four ecopassages to direct snake traffic.

On one of the walking paths, staff had set up pylons to direct foot traffic across the open rock barrens: there were gestating females and dozens of juvenile rattlers on the other side of them. Campers walked blithely past. A few stopped and asked if we’d seen any snakes. Kenton Otterbein, the chief park naturalist, answered vaguely.

Rattlesnakes are the “ginseng” of the snake world.

You never knew who might be a poacher. I knelt down to look at a baby rattler, curled up next to a stick. Its siblings had all moved on.

“It’s fully loaded,” said Otterbein, warning me not to get too close, “but 25 per cent of the time it’s a dry bite anyway.”

I picked my way even more slowly and carefully through the landscape after that, seeing things I would not otherwise see—the various textures in the sphagnum moss, the occasional tiny green leaf turned bright red by a virus of its own. Crevices in the tabled rock where a snake might hide.

✺ ✺ ✺

During our next call, I tell my father about the trip to Killbear and about the two little pines down by our property’s shore. The two pines stand side by side, close enough to interlock their branches, but far enough apart to keep pace with each other and grow out. The way the branches intertwined reminded me of the black and white pictures I’d seen of my father and his twin as children. In so many of them, one of them has his arm around the other in an easy embrace. As adults, the two brothers were less demonstrative, but they always mirrored each other in their body language. When my father and uncle were standing down by the water, it was impossible for me to tell them apart.

I’d also discovered an island called “Francis” and another called “Georgina”—our old township on Lake Simcoe. I wanted him to know that I was not going to let go of him or our family’s past.

SEPTEMBER 2020

My father can barely breathe. This time, he chooses comfort over treatment. I am finally allowed to visit. This time the hallucinations are no longer shot through with fear. But this time his speech is garbled; the Parkinson’s makes him difficult to understand.

At first his inability to communicate is frustrating. Then it is irrelevant. It is only important to be there, and to feel each other’s presence.

I talk and sing and read him poetry.

I squeeze and rub his stiff hands and listen for the gaps between his breaths. The palliative care doctor says he might not last the night.

But he does. The gaps grow longer with each passing night. Now he stops breathing when I stop singing. He starts breathing again when I resume singing. I hold his hand tightly but tell him it is the season for letting go. The trees will soon lose their leaves. I remind him of the two pines down by the water. I tell him I have nicknamed them “The Twins.” He squeezes my hand. Shortly after, he stops breathing altogether.

✺ ✺ ✺

To survive the winter, a Massasauga must choose its hibernation site carefully. Enough snow must fall to insulate the hibernacula and keep the groundwater from freezing. There must be an air pocket so the snake can breathe.

Rattlesnakes used to survive best by returning to the same place each winter, but overwintering is becoming harder. Snowfalls and the cycle of freezing and thawing are less predictable, more extreme. A site that ensures survival one year may no longer guarantee survival the next.

As a documentary filmmaker and writer, it was my father’s job to collect stories and build an archive. To preserve. He was a rescuer—of broken things and people, of stories that would otherwise disappear. But you can’t hold onto everything. What was in him, what drove him to hold onto Romany Wood when it was no longer a reasonable option?

In spring, I scatter some of my father’s ashes, and his brother’s too, and wait for the snakes to emerge from their winter homes. The more time I spend with the Massasaugas, the less afraid I am. They rattle their keratin tails politely if I come too close and remind me to pay closer attention to my surroundings. They remind me there are no walls between us. This is what makes us so vulnerable, but also more connected—to each other and to the place we choose to land.

Sasha Chapman is a Toronto writer and avid paddler.

This essay was originally published as “A snake in the grass” in the Aug/Sept 2021 issue of Cottage Life.

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