Categories
Cottage Life

8 reasons why you should go to the Fall Cottage Life Show this weekend

The Fall Cottage Life Show is back and bigger than before. Hundreds of exhibitors will be demonstrating the latest and greatest cottage toys, technology, and trinkets. It’s all going down this weekend, Nov. 11–13 at the International Centre in Mississauga, Ont. For more information about the show such as times, stage presentations, etc. click here.

  1. Enter to win a paddleboard at the Cottage Life booth. All you need to do is fill out a ballot and sign up for Dockside, Cottage Life’s weekly newsletter.
  2. The show is the best time to renew or subscribe to the magazine because there is a special show discount. You also will get a bonus gift. Hint: It will keep you organized.
  3. Score up to a 22 per cent discount on Cottage Life’s Province of Canada merchandise including the popular vintage half-zip throwback sweater by buying them at the show.
  4. Parking is free! That being said, arrive early to help guarantee you a spot closer to the door.
  5. Get a sneak peek at Loons: A Cry From the Mist, a new documentary special airing on Cottage Life Television on Nov. 18 at 8 p.m.  Show attendees can watch sneak peeks at the Cottage Life booth.
  6. Show attendees will get a first look at the winning photographs from the 2022 Cottage Life Photo Contest. Check them out at the Cottage Life booth.
  7. For the price of one admission, you get into both the Cottage Life Show and Seasons Christmas Show. Buy your tickets here.
  8. Meet the Editor of Cottage Life, Michelle Kelly, when she sits down to discuss short-term rentals on the Main Stage. Find presentation times here.
Categories
Cottage Life

35th anniversary celebration: The periodic table of Cottage Life

We’ll sit for hours in the car for it, we’ll deal with annoying family members to be able to afford it, we’ll work tirelessly to keep a building that desperately wants to fall apart standing. Cottaging. It’s not just magic, it’s science!

Click on the elements below to see more.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Cottage Life

35th anniversary celebration: A timeline of the Cottage Life multiverse

The world has changed a bit since Cottage Life was founded in 1987. Click through the timeline to take a trip down memory lane with us in honour of our 35th anniversary!

Categories
Cottage Life

35th anniversary celebration: 35 things we’ve learned and some of our favourite covers

We asked readers, Cottage Life staffers, and our social media followers: what’s the best thing that you’ve learned from Cottage Life?

1. Embrace it all
I’ve learned great maintenance tips for each season, and I like the puttering projects that everyone can try. The recipes are good for quick, hearty meals, and I appreciate the local dining and bakery recommendations. Above all, it makes me appreciate that we are all blessed with the beauty that surrounds us.—Andy Lamovsek

2. It’s a family affair
Family cottaging can be a real pain in the butt.—Gianni Cirilli

3. Some jobs are sneaky
I have to get my chimney cleaned!—Kathy Thomsen

4. Repurpose what you have
I loved the tip on how to fill a bucket with water by using a broom pan.—Chris Fox

5. Let it be
We always wanted to change the shoreline at our cottage, as we worried about erosion. We read in CL it is best to leave it alone!—Vicki Archambault

6. Rack ’em up
I learned how to build a kayak stand.—Rhonda Lennox

7. Chips are important
While researching potato chip history, I discovered that the inventor of the Pringles can was buried in one. Not all of him, obviously, just a portion of his cremains.—Jackie Davis, Senior Editor

8. Have a sense of humour
I don’t know if it is something I learned, but my favourite story was a family who had ungrateful guests complaining about things they had no control over. The hosts got the dog to lick the plates clean and put them in the cupboard. When the guests suddenly left sooner than planned, they laughed and got the dishes out and washed them.—Beth Hayhoe

9. Industry secrets
I’ve learned where to find the best butter tarts!—Martie Whitaker

10. Sage advice
Don’t let your subscription run out.—Gayle Wouters

11. Be prepared for anything
I had to ask a source for “Game of Thrones” (Mar/Apr ’21) whether he stood or sat to pee on his alternative toilet. I learned more than I wanted to that day.
—Marie Waine, Assistant Editor

12. Foodie faves
I collected many keepers from the recipe contest. Please bring it back!—Katie Maloney-Buchanan

13. Stay hydrated
I like the water filtration and winterizing tips.—Evelyn Chisamore

14. Maintain your stuff
Deck maintenance is so important. I have always cleaned between the cracks with a fine tool, such as a steak knife, as seeds sprout and compromise the wood’s integrity. My decks are 35 years old and only a few boards have been replaced.—Norma McNaughton

15. Nature is wild
I loved learning that when grouse make their motorcycle-starting sounds, they do it by moving their wings back and forth so fast that they form a vacuum, which creates mini sonic booms. It’s actually breaking the sound barrier. Whaaat?—Liann Bobechko, Deputy Editor

16. Off-grid options
The article on alternative toilets was very informative. (“Game of Thrones,” Mar/Apr ’21)—Shelley Fire

17. Keep records
Have guests sign a book. Ours is full of memories!—Jola Ruta

18. Bacon makes it better
Wrap pork tenderloin in bacon.—Tom Mara

19. Try new things
I’ve appreciated all the info about renting.—Robert Mann

20. Nature finds a way
There’s so much hormonal pee involved in animal mating strategies, which I learned while fact checking “Nature Swipes Right,” (Early Summer ’18). There’s only so long you can remain professional asking experts about “copulating” while your co-workers are giggling at the next desk over.—Alysha Vandertogt, Senior Associate Editor

21. Sharing is caring
I liked reading about how to share the cottage, the tips for entertaining, and discovering why we get lost.—Louise Keevil

22. Age = experience
I’ve grown right along with you. Your first decade, you helped me dream about cottage ownership as we rented. The second decade, you taught, informed, and influenced what we did at our cottage. Now, into the third decade, your content is still delightful, but I have learned and failed so much on my own that I can say, “All hell, I could have written that!”—Karyn Klaire Koski

23. Get outside
I love the recipes about cooking in tinfoil over a campfire.—Gail H.

24. You can do it yourself
The DIY projects are my favourite!—Darlene O’Neill

25. You’ll learn stuff
There are ice worms that live many kilometres beneath the frozen tundra. I once spoke for two hours with an expert who spent his whole life studying them. He was very keen to talk, which made me think that ice worms are vastly under-covered by media. It was fascinating. Not the worms necessarily, but realizing how passionately people get into things. The most obscure things!—Michelle Kelly, Editor

26. Community is important
Cottage Life fans are everywhere, which I learned when I was at a friend’s wedding, and two women approached to ask me for a photo.—Adam Holman, Cottage Coach

27. Use vertical space
I loved the suggestion about using wall attachments to hang life jackets and deck cushions.—Linda Mara

28. Live a rustic life
We appreciated the tips on how to open and close our water system with an old pump. And how to keep mice out—use steel wool!—Lynn Band

29. Add more storage
I learned how to build a shed.—Vivian Geneski

30. Some truths are…ugly
I found out from Cottage Q&A that red squirrels are cannibals.—Megan McPhaden, Managing Editor

31. Unplug the router
Even if you have good Wi-Fi at the cottage, it doesn’t always mean you should use it. Sometimes, it’s important to be completely present and enjoying your surroundings device-free.—Roxy Kirshenbaum, Editor, Cottage Life Digital

32. Be proactive
I read, “If your cottage is surrounded by trees—look up.” We’ve taken down a few trees that could have fallen on our cottage.—Ann Mittag

33. Take it easy
You suggested using an eco-toilet grey water system. It’s handy and very low maintenance.—Violette Sarkozy

34. Start small
When my father passed, upkeep of our property fell to me. The three cottages needed repairs, and I didn’t know where to start. I picked up an issue with a cartoon of a fellow worrying about the work he needed to do on his property. The Old Man of the Lake came and asked which job was needed most. The owner said his dock. The Old Man shoved a piece of lumber into the cribbing and said, “That will hold for this year.” A light went on for me. Do the immediate, and plan for the rest. It was my sanity saver.—Kevin McKee

35. Stick to the basics
How to have fun.—Avery

Keep these memories coming! Share with us on social, or email letters@cottagelife.com.

Most likely to make you…

Throughout our history, covers have transported readers to the lake, no matter where they are. Which one is your favourite?

Categories
Cottage Life

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

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

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

Categories
Cottage Life

35th anniversary celebration: CL founder Al Zikovitz’s infamous martini recipe

No Cottage Life party is complete without a martini made by founder Al Zikovitz—it’ll get the party started, if you catch our drift. Make your own, and raise a glass to 35 years with us! (CL will not be held responsible for behaviour under the influence of Al’s martini.)

Pour
Tanqueray, straight up with a twist, very cold, very dry. No vermouth. Add to a shaker with lots of ice (then double what you added, because that’s how Al rolls).

Mix
Shake until your hands freeze. Pour into a martini glass, then squeeze the zest from a fresh lemon peel until you can see the oil floating on the gin. Rub the peel on the rim. (“When you bring the martini up to your mouth, you’ll want the enjoy the aroma too,” says Al.)

Drink
“I normally enjoy one down at the dock around sunset.

Party
“For over 20 years, we’ve hosted an annual party. The first year, I made less than 10 martinis for our guests. In 2019, I served up close to four litres.”

Categories
Cottage Life

35th anniversary celebration: An ode to the dock spider sweatshirt

Into the early 2000s, we published a series of “Classics.” The writer would argue for something that you could not live at the lake without—watermelon, beach towels, a beloved web chair. Twenty years on, we’re asking, what are the new cottage classics?

A cool, late-summer morning in the early ’80s: I was a cottage newbie, recently introduced to lake life by my soon-to-become-spouse, Steve. We had just pushed off on a leisurely paddle—I was a rank beginner at canoeing too—when after only a couple of strokes, Steve headed us straight to a neighbouring dock. “I don’t want to upset you,” he said (which alone was enough to upset me), “but I think when we got in, a dock spider got in with us.”

Right. Me, in a 14-ft. canoe with the largest spidey species in Canada, and the ones I’d seen on our dock were particularly healthy specimens. The size of salad plates—hairy salad plates, with venom. Steve, who grew up in cottage country, had assured me they weren’t aggressive, but this was no time to take a chance. I leapt onto the neighbours’ dock, peeled off my jeans, tee, and everything else, and began to shake and shimmy from the shoulders on down. Apparently, it was quite the dance routine. Luckily, the neighbours missed it. Luckily, the spider (if one really had hitched a ride with us) got away.

Fast forward to the early ’90s: I was the editor of Cottage Life, and Steve was its art director. We were in a meeting discussing CL merchandise. “How about we do a sweatshirt with the logo on it?” someone suggested.

Steve, who clearly hadn’t forgotten that delightful scene on the neighbours’ dock—he still claims it was the fastest he’s ever seen me undress—said, “Boring. Needs attitude. How about a sweatshirt with a dock spider?”

“Beside the logo,” someone else said.

“Nah,” Steve replied. “On the back. So it’s climbing up on your shoulder, like you don’t know it’s there.”

The spider wouldn’t merely be printed on the sweatshirt. Verisimilitude required that it be done in fuzzy flocking to achieve the hairy effect; and it would be life-sized, of course—all the better to horrify someone approaching from behind.

And so a classic was born. On the sidewalks of cottage-country towns and at the annual Cottage Life Shows, I’d exchange knowing smiles with other members of the Spider Sweatshirt Society. The original run eventually sold out, to be replaced by a less, uh, realistic version, with a flat, printed-on spider. But I hear that people are still showing up at the Cottage Life booth today with their classic sweatshirts on. Mine, sadly, was retired to the ragbag years ago, its dock spider bare of fuzz, worn down to a faint shadow that wouldn’t even alarm an arachnophobe.