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Peterborough Campbellford Trent River Kingston Otonabee River Bay of Quinte Frankford Route 81 Rice Lake
From an idea on a rented houseboat in 1981, Lloyd and Helen Ackert and their family created Ontario Waterway Cruises Inc. Success has flourished due largely to the personal interest and enthusiasm of a family operated business. In 1993, Lloyd and Helen retired. Two of their sons, Marc and John alternate as captain aboard ship. Marc/Robin and John/Joy share the various responsibilities of managing the business. Robin manages the hospitality functions and Joy manages reservations. The history of this successful cruise operation for older adults can be found in the ship’s library. Passengers enjoy browsing the albums which trace its development from the time that this former farm family from Bruce County first “put to sea”! Helen’s ten year legacy of ship’s menu and recipes has been printed in her cookbook, and is available to passengers on board ship. 2 3 OTTAWA RIVER OTTAWA LONG ISLAND RIDEAU RIVER BURRITTS RAPIDS RIDEAU MERRICKVILLE CANAL POONAMALIE BIG CHUTE SMITHS FALLS SEVERN RIVER PORT RIDEAU STANTON GEORGIAN LAKES BAY TRENT-SEVERN WATERWAY WESTPORT KAWARTHA LAKES ORILLIA ROSEDALE BOBCAYGEON BUCKHORN KIRKFIELD ST. LAWRENCE RIVER LAKE SIMCOE TALBOT RIVER JONES FALLS LAKEFIELD GANANOQUE HEALEY FALLS HASTINGS PETERBOROUGH CAMPBELLFORD TRENT RIVER KINGSTON OTONABEE RIVER BAY OF QUINTE FRANKFORD ROUTE 81 RICE LAKE WATERTOWN, NY LAKE ONTARIO PICTON Canal Cruising Ontario is blessed with 435 miles of spectacular inland waterways: the Trent- Severn Waterway from Georgian Bay to Trenton; the Bay of Quinte and Long Reach from Trenton to Kingston; and the Rideau Canal from Kingston to Ottawa. Ontario Waterway Cruises provide canal cruising on the Kawartha Voyageur covering these waters in three 5 day segments: Big Chute to Peterborough 240 km (150 miles) and 22 locks; Peterborough to Kingston 370 km (231 miles) and 19 locks; Kingston to Ottawa 199 km (124 miles) and 35 locks. -
Moodie-Strickland-Vickers Family Fonds 2Nd Acc. 1992-13 10 Cm
Moodie-Strickland-Vickers family fonds 2nd acc. 1992-13 10 cm. Finding aid Prepared by Linda Hoad August 1992 Box 1 Correspondence 1. Bartlett, Dr. [John S.] Susanna Moodie 1835 Jan. 29 2. Bartlett, Dr. [John S.] J.W.D. Moodie 1835 April 6 3. Bartlett, Dr. [John S.] Susanna Moodie 1847 Nov. 25 4. Bird, James, 1788-1839 J.W.D. Moodie 1832 June 14 5. Bird, James, 1788-1839 J.W.D. Moodie 1834 Feb. 25 [incomplete] 6. Bird, James, 1788-1839 J.W.D. Moodie 1835 May 17 [incomplete] 7. Goldschm[idt], D.L. Mrs. Mason 1885 Dec. 19 re: her daughter Sarah, his servant 8. McColl, Evan J.W.D. Moodie 1869 15 April 9. McLachlan, Alexander, Susanna Moodie 1861 Aug. 26 1818-1896 10. McLachlan, Alexander, J.W.D. Moodie 1866 9 Dec. 1818-1896 11. Moodie, Donald J.W.D. Moodie 1830 July 10 12. Moodie, J.W.D. Susanna Moodie 1839 5th July 12a. Moodie, Susanna Ethel Vickers 1882 4 March [removed from the back of watercolour of moths to which the letter refers] 13. Pringle, Thomas, S. Strickland 1829 Jan. 17 1789-1834 14. Pringle, Thomas, S. Strickland 1829 March 6 1789-1834 Manuscripts Moodie, J.W.D. Lectures by J.W. D. Moodie: "Water and its distribution over the surface of the Earth," n.d., 14 leaves "The Norsemen and their conquests and adventures," n.d., 11 leaves Box 2 Moodie, J.W.D. Music album. [ca 1840?] Some tunes copied, some original compositions. Several tunes dated: 1840, 1842. Box 3 Moodie, J.W.D. -
2018-Ward-Boundary-Map.Pdf
Map produced by the City of Kawartha Lakes Mapping & GIS Division with data obtained under license. Reproduction without permission is CON. 12 prohibited. All distances and locations are approximate and are not of Mi ria m D r Old Vic to ria R d Sickle Lake survey quality. This map is illustrative only. Do not rely on it as being a CON. 11 precise indicator of privately or publicity owned land, routes, locations or Crotchet Browns Andrews 0 Lake features, nor as a guide to navigate. For accurate reference of the Ward CON. 1 Lake Lake CON. 9 Boundaries please refer to By-Law 2017-053 on the City of Kawartha 6 4 2 Boot 12 10 8 16 14 22 20 Lake 26 24 32 30 28 Lakes Website or contact the Clerks office. 36 34 CON. 8 Murphy Lake North CON. 7 City of Kawartha Lakes Big Trout Longford Lake Lake Thrasher Lake CON. 6 Circlet Ward Boundaries Lake South Longford CON. 5 Lake Big Duck . 4 CON Lake 10 5 0 10 CON. 3 Logan Lake L o g a n L a ke CON. 2 Isl a n d A Kilometers Lo COeN. 1 ga n Lak R d d R CON. 13 e r i v R m a Victoria 13 e CON. h n ke s CON. 12 La i a L w e Hunters k L c Lake Bl a CON. 12 Bl a 11 c k Rd CON. R iv e r Jordans Lake CON. 11 ON. 10 l C i 2 a 6 4 r 2 10 8 T 14 1 18 16 24 22 20 m 26 l CON. -
Kawartha Lakes Agricultural Action Plan
Kawartha Lakes Agricultural Action Plan Growing success 1 Steering committee Matt Pecoskie – Chair, ADAB Rep Joe Hickson – VHFA Rep Judy Coward, OMAFRA Kelly Maloney – CKL Mark Torey – VHFA Rep Paul Reeds – ADAB Rep Phil Callaghan – ADAB Rep Additional volunteers BR+E interviewers Vince Germani – CKL Laurie Bell – CKL Lance Sherk – CKL Carolyn Puterbough - OMAFRA Supported by: 2 Prepared by: PlanScape Building community through planning 104 Kimberly Avenue Bracebridge, ON, P1L 1Y5 Telephone: 705-645-1556 Fax: 705-645-4500 Email: [email protected] PlanScape website 3 Contents Steering committee ............................................................................................................. 2 Additional volunteers ........................................................................................................... 2 Supported by: ...................................................................................................................... 2 Prepared by: ....................................................................................................................... 3 Contents .............................................................................................................................. 4 Importance of agriculture in the City of Kawartha Lakes ..................................................... 6 Consultation ........................................................................................................................ 6 Agricultural Action Plan ...................................................................................................... -
2008 Conference Executive
CONGRES ANNUEL DE L'ASSOCIATION CANADIENNE o 'ARCHEOLOGIE C·A·A 2CO)C0)t81 A·C·A CANADIAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING CONFERENCE PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS T~NT @ UNIVERSITY CAA 2008 Conference Executive Chair James Conolly, Canada Research Chair, Trent University Committee Members Helen R. Haines, Trent University Archaeological Research Centre Paul F. Healy, Trent University Susan M. Jamieson, Trent University Morgan Tamplin, Trent University Archaeological Research Centre Nancy Champagne, Trent University Volunteers Lauren Archer, Kathy Axcell, Marika Atfield, Susan Beckwith, Peter Bikoulis, Heather Bird, Matt Bujaki, Chris Carleton, Shannone Carr, Jaclyn Catterall, Christa Collantes, Dr Laure Dubreuil, Jordan Downey, Jenna Green, Bill Given, Angel Hamilton, Matthew Hayes, Renee Homiak, Patrick Hoskins, Jamie Houston-Dickson1 Trudy Kirschner, Zachary Knox, Lauren Larson, Caylanne Lyall, Tiffany McLellan, Meredith McNulty, Steph Mauko nen, Beka Neri, Jen Patterson, Keri Sine, Mike Stringer, Samantha Thompson, Danielle Weaver, Matt Wiggin 1 General Information we l CQ me to Peterborough, gateway to the cottage country and heritage sites of the Kawarthas (a major recreational region of Ontario), home of Trent University and Sir Sandford Fleming College, the Trent-Severn Waterway (a Canadian historic site which includes the Peterborough Lift Lock-the world's highest hydraulic lift), architecturally significant buildings, The Peterborough Centennial Museum and Archives, The Canadian Canoe Museum, The Art Gallery of Peterborough, and a vibrant arts community. Sir Sandford Fleming, inventor of Standard Time and designer of Canada's first postage stamp and renowned Canadian author Robertson Davies have both called Peterborough home~ Downtown, there is a many and varied selection of restaurants and pubs available for dinner. -
Italian-Canadian Female Voices: Nostalgia and Split Identity
International Journal of Language and Linguistics Vol. 2, No. 5; November 2015 Italian-Canadian Female Voices: Nostalgia and Split Identity Carla Comellini Associate Professor English Literature, Director of the Canadian Centre "Alfredo Rizzardi" University of Bologna Via Cartoleria 5, Bologna Notwithstanding the linguistic and cultural differences between the English and French areas, Canadian Literature can be defined as a whole. This shared umbrella, called Canada, creates an image of mutual correspondence that can be metaphorically expressed in culinary terms if one likes to use the definition ironically adopted by J.K. Keefer: “the roast beef of old England and the champagne of la douce Franc,” (“The East is Read”, p.141) This Canadian umbrella is also made up of other linguistic and cultural varieties: from those of the First Nation People to those imported by the immigrants. It is because of the mutual correspondence that Canadian literature is imbued with the constant metaphorical interplay between ‘nature’ and the ‘story teller’, between the individual story and the collective history, between the personal memory and the collective one. Among the immigrants, there are some Italian poets and writers who had immigrated to Canada becoming naturalized Canadians. Without mentioning all the immigrants/writers, it is worth remembering Michael Ondaatje, who was born in Sri Lanka. It is not so out of place that Ondaatje uses an Italian immigrant, David Caravaggio, as a character for both novels: In the Skin of a Lion (1988) and The English Patient (1992). David Caravaggio represents the image of the split personality of any immigrant as his name brilliantly explains: Ondaatje’s Italian Canadian character is no more Davide (the Italian Christian Name) because it had been anglicized in David. -
2020 Community Involvement Program
2020 Community Involvement Program HEALTHCARE DONATIONS YOUTH DONATIONS Agape Food Bank Alzheimer's Society of Cornwall & District Brockville and District Hospital Foundation Alzheimer's Society of Peterborough & Kawartha Lakes Burk’s Falls and District Food Bank Bereaved Families of Ontario CareFor Hospice Cornwall Big Brothers Big Sisters Muskoka Boys & Girls Clubs of Kawartha Lakes Community Care Peterborough Camp Oochigeas Cornwall Community Hospital Foundation Cornerstone Family Violence Prevention Centre Hospice Lennox & Addington Family and Children’s Services of Frontenac, Lennox and Addington Hospice North Hastings Five Counties Children’s Centre Hospice Peterborough Food for Kids City of Kawartha Lakes Huntsville District Memorial Hospital Foundation Food for Kids Peterborough and County Nutrition Programs Kawartha Food Share Food for Learning c/o Hastings & Prince Edward Learning Foundation Kawartha Lakes Food Source Food Sharing Project Kinmount District Health Services Foundation Habitat for Humanity Cornwall & Counties Lennox & Addington County General Hospital Foundation Habitat for Humanity Peterborough & Kawartha Lakes Region North Hastings Fund Development Committee Kawartha-Haliburton Children’s Foundation Otonabee-South Monaghan Food Cupboard Loving Spoonful Peterborough Regional Health Centre Make-A-Wish Foundation Ross Memorial Hospital Foundation Mount Community Centre South Muskoka Hospital Foundation Northumberland Food for Thought Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation Peterborough Risk Watch Network Trish’s Wish -
80 Acres 4,330 Feet of Shoreline
80 ACRES 4,330 FEET OF SHORELINE OFFICIAL PLAN DESIGNATED BOBCAYGEON, ON PIGEON LAKE SOLDEAST ST S RANCH RD STURGEON LAKE (LITTLE BOB CHANNEL) VIEW SOUTH EAST VIEW EAST Property is ideally located within the Please see Opportunity for City of Kawartha Document THE OFFERING prime waterfront Lakes and is in Centre for PIGEON LAKE development close proximity to further technical designated as local amenities CBRE Limited is pleased to offer for sale this property documents Urban Settlement and recreational located on Sturgeon Lake within walking distance previously Area in the activities in completed and to Downtown Bobcaygeon. Having previously Kawartha Lakes Bobcaygeon, provided for the been approved for 271 Singe Family lots, the Official Plan Fenelon Falls, expired Draft Plan property is within the Bobcaygeon Settlement Area, Lindsay and designated Residential, within the Bobcaygeon Peterborough Secondary Plan. The land is being offered on behalf of msi Spergel HIGHLIGHTS inc., solely in its capacity as court-appointed Receiver of Bobcaygeon Shores Developments Ltd. EAST ST S Offers will be reviewed upon receipt. SITE DETAILS DOWNTOWN BOBCAYGEON SIZE 82.3 acres 4,330 feet of shoreline 1,002 feet along East Street FRONTAGE South (Highway 36) 747 feet along Ranch Road KAWARTHA LAKES OFFICIAL PLAN Urban Settlement Areas Residential; Parks and Open BOBCAYGEON Space; Unevaluated Wetlands; SECONDARY PLAN ESI Floodplain Hazard Area STURGEON LAKE RANCH RD Residential Type One Special (LITTLE BOB CHANNEL) ZONING (R1-22/R1-23) (AS AMENDED) General Commercial (C1-2) & Community Facility (CF) There is currently no servicing to the Site. Municipal servicing has been identified, although SERVICING distribution and internal infrastructure will be required to be built at the developer’s expense. -
Otonabee - Peterborough Source Protection Area Other Drinking Water Systems
Otonabee - Peterborough Source Protection Area Other Drinking Water Systems Cardiff North Bay Paudash Georgian Bay CC O O U U N N T T Y Y OO F F Lake HALIBURTONHALIBURTON Huron Kingston Township of Highlands East Toronto Lake Ontario Minden Gooderham Ormsby Lake ErieCoe Hill Glen Alda Kinmount Apsley Catchacoma Township of Lake Anstruther Catchacoma LakeNorth Kawartha Mississauga Jack Lake CC O O U U N N T T Y Y OO F F Lake PETERBOROUGHPETERBOROUGH VU28 Township of Township of Galway-Cavendish and Harvey Havelock-Belmont-Methuen IslandsIslands inin thethe TrentTrent WatersWaters Burleigh Falls Buckhorn Lower Cordova Mines Bobcaygeon Buckhorn Stony Lake Lake Fenelon Falls IslandsIslands inin thethe Clear Lake TrentTrent WatersWaters Young's Point Blairton Upper C u r v e L a k e Township of Buckhorn C u r v e L a k e Douro-Dummer Lake FirstFirst NationNation Township of Havelock Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield Pigeon Lake Lakefield Warsaw Norwood CC I I T T Y Y OO F F Chemong Lake KAWARTHAKAWARTHA LAKESLAKES Bridgenorth Lindsay Township of 8 Asphodel-Norwood VU7 Campbellford Hastings VU7 CC I I T T Y Y OO F F PETERBOROUGHPETERBOROUGH Township of Municipality of Otonabee-South Monaghan Trent Hills Springville Keene Township of VU115 Cavan Monaghan Islands in the Islands in the Warkworth Janetville HH i i a a w w a a t t h h a a TrentTrent WatersWaters FirstFirst NationNation Roseneath VU7a Rice Lake Millbrook Harwood Bailieboro Gores Landing Castleton Pontypool Bewdley Centreton VU35 CC O O U U N N T T Y Y OO F F NORTHUMBERLANDNORTHUMBERLAND Garden Hill Brighton Elizabethville Camborne Kendal Baltimore Colborne THIS MAP has been prepared for the purpose of meeting the Legend provincial requirements under the Clean Water Act, 2006. -
Lower Trent Source Protection Area
VU37 Tweed North Bay Marmora VU37 Georgian Bay VU28 Township of Havelock-Belmont-Methuen HASTINGS COUNTY Lake Huron Kingston Havelock Lower Trent Toronto Lake OntarioWarsaw Lakefield Source Protection Area Ivanhoe Watershed Boundaries Lake Erie Norwood Legend VU62 Township of Stirling-Rawdon Roslin " Settlements 938 938 Township of Centre Hastings Railway PETERBOROUGH COUNTY Highway Multi-lane Highway Campbellford Watercourse Hastings Stirling Lower Tier Municipality 935 Upper and Single Tier Municipality Waterbody 98 Source Protection Area 45 9 Foxboro Municipality of Trent Hills 930 Keene CITY OF QUINTE WEST 924 Frankford Rice Lake Warkworth Roseneath Belleville 929 VU401 Wooler 940 Harwood NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY Gores Landing Trenton 925 Municipality of Brighton Castleton ± Centreton 922 0 3 6 12 18 Bay of Quinte 92 Kilometres 23 9 Brighton Township of Cramahe Little Trent Conservation Coalition Lake Source Protection Region Camborne www.trentsourceprotection.on.ca Township of Alnwick/Hadimand Baltimore THIS MAP has been prepared for the purpose of meeting the 2 Colborne9 Consecon provincial requirements under the Clean Water Act, 2006. If it is proposed to use it for another purpose, it would be advisable to first consult with the responsible Conservation Authority. Grafton PRODUCED BY Lower Trent Conservation on behalf of the Trent Conservation Coalition Source Protection Committee, March 2010, with data supplied under licence by members of the Ontario Geospatial Data Exchange. Wellington Lake Ontario Made possible through the support -
The Corporation of the Gity of Kawartha Lakes Council Report
The Corporation of the Gity of Kawartha Lakes Council Report Report Number PUR201 7-01 I Date: February 21, 2017 Time: 2:00 p.m. Place: Council Chambers Ward Community ldentifier: Subject: 2017-23-3,5 Single Source for Recreation ment Software Author/Title: Launa Lewis, Buyer Signa Co-Author: Jenn Johnson Signature: Man r of Parks, Recreation & Culture Recommendation(s): RESOLVED THAT Report PUR2017-018,2017-23-SS Single Source for Recreation Management Software, be received; THAT PerfectMind of Britísh Columbia be selected for the award of Single Source for Recreation Management Software for the price, of $108,939.00 plus HST; THAT subject to receipt of the required documents, the Mayor and Clerk be authorized to execute the agreement to award Tender 2017-23-SS; and THAT Purchasing Division be authorized to issue a purchase order Department Head: Corporate Services Director / Other: Chief Administrative Officer: Report #PUR-2017-018 20'17-23-SS Single Source for Recreation Management Sofiware Page2 ol 4 Backg rou nd: The Parks, Recreation and culture Division has used CLASS (now known as Active Network) as their Recreation Management Software system s¡nce 2003. This system is hosted in-house and supports program registration, facility booking, memberships, point of sale and business reporting. Active Network also hosts the City's online registration and availability for Parks, Recreation and Culture programs and facilitíes. Active Network hosted software has reached its end of life and wíll no longer be supported beyond November 90,2017 . over the last two years, PRo (Parks & Recreation ontario) has provided opportunities for Ontario municipalities to coordinate their efforts and seek group pricing from the vendors in this category. -
Susanna Moodie and the English Sketch
SUSANNA MOODIE AND THE ENGLISH SKETCH Carl Ballstadt S,USANNA MOODIE's Roughing It in the Bush has long been recognized as a significant and valuable account of pioneer life in Upper Canada in the mid-nineteenth century. From among a host of journals, diaries, and travelogues, it is surely safe to say, her book is the one most often quoted when the historian, literary or social, needs commentary on backwoods people, frontier living conditions, or the difficulty of adjustment experienced by such upper middle-class immigrants as Mrs. Moodie and her husband. The reasons for the pre-eminence of Roughing It in the Bush have also long been recognized. Mrs. Moodie's lively and humorous style, the vividness and dramatic quality of her characterization, the strength and good humour of her own personality as she encountered people and events have contributed to make her book a very readable one. For these reasons it enjoys a prominent position in any survey of our literary history, and, indeed, it has become a "touchstone" of our literary development. W. H. Magee, for example, uses Roughing It in the Bush as the prototype of local colour fiction against which to measure the degree of success of later Canadian local colourists.1 More recently, Carl F. Klinck ob- serves that Mrs. Moodie's book represents a significant advance in the develop- ment of our literature from "statistical accounts and running narratives" toward novels and romances of pioneer experience.2 Professor Klinck, in noting the fictive aspects of Mrs. Moodie's writing, sees it as part of an inevitable, indigenous de- velopment of Canadian writing, even though, in Mrs.