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Dustin Byfuglien’s photo gets leaked and fans are stunned by his look!

Since Dustin Byfuglien walked away from a contract worth around $14 million with the Winnipeg Jets in 2019, the defenseman has barely made any public appearances or done a whole lot of interviews. In April 2020, it was made official, and Byfuglien stepped away from hockey.

He has however been seen during ice fishing competitions and on Tuesday night a fan posted a picture of Byfuglien after one of the tournaments on social media.

Big Buff is holding a beer and stands next to two fishermen holding a trophy.


Could you imagine the damage he’d do on the ice with this size?! 

Back in his playing days in the NHL, Byfuglien was a nightmare to play against thanks to his size and speed, but also his hockey IQ. While he hasn’t played in the big league since April 6, 2019, he still has his intimidating shape.

Fans are delighted to get this Big Buff sighting and the photo quickly made the rounds on social media, with fans absolutely loving it.

In his last season in the NHL, Byfuglien only played 42 games, but he still recorded 31 points.

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Cottage Life

10 gifts for the outdoorsy cottager in your life

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This gift guide is for the cottager who likes to spend as much time outdoors as possible. Be it day or night, this person in your life wants to breathe in all the fresh air cottage country has to offer and soak up every moment of being exactly where they are. We rounded up 10 products that any outdoorsy cottager would love—and actually use.

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Cottage Life

Amazon Prime Early Access Sale 2022 deals for the outdoor enthusiast

If you choose to purchase any of these products through the links provided, we may earn a small commission. Read more about our Editorial Policy here.

Fall is here, but there’s still plenty of time to get out there and enjoy all the outdoors has to offer. We’ve rounded up the best deals for the outdoor enthusiast from the Amazon Prime Early Access Sale.

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Cottage Life

Fish for free in Ontario this week

Didn’t purchase a fishing licence this year? From now until July 10, you can fish in Ontario for free without a licence. 

While licences aren’t required, regular fishing rules still apply. The province says fishers must:

  • follow conservation licence catch limits
  • obey size limits and sanctuaries
  • follow the fishing regulations
  • carry a permit or identification card issued by the provincial or federal government, showing your name and date of birth

More information on Ontario Fishing Regulations can be found here

If you’re short on fishing equipment, TackleShare is a program that loans out free rods and reels across the province. Anglers can sign out equipment (like a book at a library) at locations throughout the province, including provincial parks, conservation authorities, and libraries.

For those who can’t make it out to the cottage before July 10, you can take a crack at urban fishing. Cities have designated fishing sites and all fishing rules still apply within city limits.

This is the last of four dates the province designated as free fishing periods in 2022. 

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Cottage Life

Let’s talk livewells: what should you do with them?

Many aluminum fishing boats have livewells (for holding live bait or caught fish) that get water from the lake via pumps and hoses and through-hull fittings. It’s important to inspect this rigging because through-hull fittings exit the boat beneath the water line; a hose failure or a cracked pump housing will pour water straight into the bilge for that sinking feeling.

If your boat is getting long in the tooth, you should strongly consider replacing these hoses.

What should I do if I don’t use my livewell?

Another option, for cottagers who don’t use their livewells, is to detach the connections entirely. An easy fix, one that doesn’t involve epoxy or aluminum welding, is to remove the old hose from the through-hull connection, which will reveal a barbed plastic fitting inside the boat. Slip a short length of new hose over the barbed fitting, and secure it with two stainless steel hose clamps. Then seal off the other end with a plastic plumbing plug and two more clamps.

If you have two same-sized through-hull fittings, connect them with one piece of hose, double clamped at each end. Water will flow in and out of the hose, but not into your boat. Bonus: these fixes are easily reversible if you sell the boat or decide you need functioning livewells again.

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

Check out how it feels to go fishing at dawn. 

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Cottage Life

Cottage Q&A: Feeding seagulls scraps

We have a bald rock island a little ways from our cottage where we  take our fish guts. The seagulls eat it up as soon as we leave it. However, our neighbours have started leaving their fruits, vegetables, and eggshells on the island too. Do birds eat this?—Diane Robinson, French River, Ont.

Herring gulls or ring-billed gulls, a.k.a. seagulls, “will eat just about anything,” says Doug Tozer of Birds Canada. Fish guts, vegetables, french fries, energy bars, garbage, dead mice…bring it on. “But it’s best that they not come to rely on human food sources,” says Tozer. (Not even your discarded fish innards. Sorry.) 

“If they do, then large numbers of gulls might start to frequent a particular area when they otherwise wouldn’t,” he says. The birds could become nuisance wildlife. That’s annoying for the cottagers on the lake and ultimately not great for the gulls either. Plus, unlike seed-eating birds at bird feeders, “we don’t have good data on the health and survivorship of individual gulls that frequently feed on human leftovers
compared to their normal, natural food,” says Tozer.

You can’t control what your neighbours do, but as for your fish guts, you’re better off dropping them overboard in deep water, well away from shore, says Tozer. “This is often considered best practice for disposal.”

This article was originally published in the March/April 2022 issue of Cottage Life magazine.

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Cottage Life

Where’s walleye? These cottagers know

“I’ve seen the decline with my own eyes,” says Margie Manthey, a cottager near Westport, Ont., and the fishing director for the Wolfe Lake Association. She’s talking about the walleye population in the lake, one of many in the province to have collapsed because of habitat loss, warming waters due to climate change, and overfishing.

To help the fish stocks recover, the government imposed a walleye slot size restriction (anglers can only keep fish between 40 and 50 cm in length). “We wanted to add on to that,” Margie says. So she conferred with Don Goodfellow of the Westport Area Outdoors Association and came up with a plan to rehabilitate Scanlan Creek, which feeds into the lake. The problem? Spring runoff through two culverts in a roadway that crosses the creek  was creating too much turbulence in the water for the walleye to reach their natural spawning grounds upstream. The solution? Create a new place downstream for the walleye to spawn.

What do we need to consider before fixing our shoreline?

Jennifer Lamoureux, a biologist with the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority, helped with obtaining grants and government permits; then, late last summer, about two dozen volunteers spent two days spreading tonnes of smooth river rocks of various sizes in the creek to make a suitable environment for walleye egg-laying. “We had youngsters, middle-agers, and seniors. There was something for everyone to do,” Margie says. 

Time will tell if the walleyes take to their new spawning grounds. “But we’re hopeful they will, now that we’ve made it sexy for them.”

This story was originally published as part of the collection “Better Together” in the June/July 2020 issue of Cottage Life magazine.

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Bill offers more protection to fish habitats

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Cottage Life

Cottage real estate region: Lake of the Woods and Rainy Lake

Two big lakes dominate cottage country in Northwestern Ontario: Lake of the Woods (LOTW) and Rainy Lake. Both areas include much Crown land, so cottages aren’t easy to come by. The LOTW is speckled with more than 14,000 islands, innumerable sandy beaches along its south shore, and countless coves throughout, making it a boater’s playground. Most LOTW cottagers hail from Winnipeg, a two-hour drive, or the U.S.—no surprise, considering parts of the lake are in Manitoba and Minnesota. The 4,000-member-strong Lake of the Woods District Property Owners Association’s current concerns include preventing blue-green algae blooms.

Rainy River links LOTW with the western end of Rainy Lake, which also straddles the Minnesota border. Rainy Lake is considerably smaller than its neighbour to the northwest, but it still boasts more than 1,300 km of shoreline on the Ontario side. Fishing is great—you’ll find walleye, pike, trout, and crappie—and every July the lake is home to the Fort Frances Canadian Bass Championship. As at Lake of the Woods, wildlife includes moose, deer, eagles, and, for lucky spotters, lynx and martens.

Want a virgin island of your own? Good luck. All vacant islands owned by the Crown were designated as conservation reserves in 2002, which means that no new development can take place.

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Cottage Life

Wild Profile: Meet the white sturgeon

Those who have a cottage or cabin in Western Canada surely know of the white sturgeon. But everyone, everywhere should—it’s huge! The white sturgeon is a record-setter, and claims the title of North America’s Largest Freshwater Fish (more than six metres long), and Longest-Living Fish (100 years). As with other sturgeon species, this one has whisker-like barbels, bony projections on its back, and a fin similar to a shark’s—it’s called a “heterocercal tail.”

Only you can prevent sturgeon poaching, say Great Lakes conservation groups

The white sturgeon—and others in its family—is evolutionary old; some of the earliest sturgeon fossils date back to the Late Cretaecous epoch. So, they’re dinosaur old. And strangely, sturgeon features haven’t really changed since that time. This is why white sturgeon are considered “primitive fish.” (Another species found in Western Canada, the paddlefish, also falls into this category.)

Here in Canada, you’ll only find the white sturgeon in a few B.C. rivers. Some fish—mostly older fish as opposed to juveniles—tend to spawn in deep, fast, turbulent water with rocky bottoms. But late in the fall, almost everyone heads for overwintering spots where the water is calmer, and the river bottom, softer and finer. Hey, we get that. Who wants to settle in for winter on top of rocks?

How animals survive Canada’s harsh winter

Like other animals that can live a long time (in Canada, the snapping turtle), the white sturgeon matures slowly. Males typically don’t reproduce until they’re at least nine, and females, until the ripe old fish-age of 13. Even though white sturgeon will eat almost anything, from snails to salmon to lampreys, they have few predators. Unless you count humans: overfishing drove them to near-extinction by the 1900s.

Man catches 800 lb. sturgeon in B.C.’s Fraser River

Happily, over the last few decades, the government has worked on recovery strategies for the white sturgeon. (The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada listed the species as “Of Special Concern” in 1990 and “Endangered” by late 2003.) Consequently, the only fishing for white sturgeon in Canada is recreational catch-and-release. So no angler is allowed to take the huge, heavy dinosaur home…but they can probably get an excellent photo for Instagram.

 

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Cottage Life

Cleaning out the cottage? Turn these items into cash instead of trash

As peak season winds down, you may be itching to declutter the cottage and get organized. While it’s important to refresh your space, while you’re cleaning out the cottage, you may want to take a closer look at some items that many are eager to put in the ‘junk’ pile. As Wally James of Apsley Auctions in Peterborough, Ontario knows well, some things carry surprising—and unexpected—value.

Fishing equipment

Tackle boxes, flies, poles and lures are staples that many cottagers have accumulated over the years. But be careful before piling up old lures and rods together in a donation box when you’re cleaning out the cottage . “Fishing tackle can have a really high value, and it just looks like junk to some people,” Wally James says. Depending on the condition and brand of a rod, for example, it could be in high demand. James once sold a 1912 Hardy fishing rod for more than a thousand dollars after advertising it to fish and game clubs in the U.S. Flies or lures can also have resale value, particularly to collectors.

Sporting gear

Having an old-school pair of snowshoes tacked up on the wall is popular cottage decor, and if you have a pair lying around that are still functional, they can be valuable that way, too. James says to look out for bear’s paw or trapper snowshoes, the classic woven wood style we see on display.

Handmade furniture

Furniture seems like an obvious item to sell rather than throw away when you’re cleaning out the cottage, and with the ever-increasing popularity of antique or vintage items, it’s worth it to see what you can get for that dented table or chair missing a leg. James says that pine furniture in particular can be very valuable, especially what he calls “primitive” pine furniture, meaning something handmade by a non-professional. “A lot of times people won’t recognize it because it looks shabby and worn,” he says. “But when you find something that was handcrafted, it will always have an important value.” 

Your guide to cleaning just about everything at the cottage

Lamps

Although this falls into the furniture category, it deserves specific attention, since antique styles like coal-oil lamps used to be—and still are—popular in cottages for their quaint nature. Though like furniture, not all coal-oil lamps have the same allure. Aladdin lamps, a style where the flame sits in a glass casing and usually has a brass base, can be valuable, as they’re sought after by collectors. Another brand to look out for are Handel lamps, where the glass shade alone can run a high price. James says he was recently at a property where an old Handel lamp was found to be worth nearly four thousand dollars, just for the shade. Antique sellers can be a good route to finding a market for these lamps.

Canoes

A feature at many cottages, canoes can hold their value well over the years, especially if they were used infrequently. They can sometimes be refurbished by sports outfitters or purchased by other cottagers looking to add to their collection. James has seen a vintage canoe from the 1960s sell for nearly seven thousand dollars; it had been hung in the rafters for most of its life and was still in mint condition. 

Old maps, magazines, and books

These are usually some of the first items to be tossed into recycling or sent for donation when people are cleaning out the cottage, but depending on the quality and condition, there is a market for collectors and decorators alike, particularly for maps. On platforms like Etsy, vintage magazines are becoming popular as gifts for people with an interest or attachment to a certain era.

Artwork

Like furniture, this may seem obvious, but James says one of the first places to look for treasures in a cottage is on the wall, noting what’s on display. Some cottage owners put up art of the surrounding area or done by local artists, meaning they may sell well locally.

Collector’s items

Stamps, coins, old bills… many take their joys and hobbies with them to the cottage and end up leaving them behind. If they’re not of sentimental value, James says it’s often most worth it to sell things like silver coins for scrap metal; a Canadian silver dollar from the ‘60s, for example, goes for about $14.

Dishes

James was once at a house where a woman had a table full of dishes to send to donation, and another stray box laying nearby. While everything on the table ended up going to Goodwill, the forgotten box of dishes ended up being worth about $700, largely due to the brand name. It’s a lesson in paying attention to the brand, design, and condition of the dishes, which can run a high price in antique or collectors’ circles.

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