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Current
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| CulturalTravels.com - Home |
Volume 3, January 2001 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Since we’re so water-oriented this
month, here’s an
offbeat museum you can barge in on One of the crucial waterways in Canadian
history was the Trent-Severn Waterway in western Ontario. It wended its
way from Port Severn, near the Georgian Bay arm of Lake Huron,
southeastward through the interconnected Kawartha Lakes, to Peterborough
(at the midway point) and on finally to Kingston, which lies at the
beginning of the Thousand Islands section of the St. Lawrence River. Trent-Severn is still navigable, though these days the heaviest traffic it bears is cruise boats and barges that take visitors on lazy five-day excursions from its midpoint at Peterborough to either end of the waterway. While you’re making ready for your
waterway expedition, be sure to visit the Canadian Canoe Museum at
Peterborough. The museum, housed at Trent University, houses a
collection of 550 watercraft, including canoes and kayaks, the largest
of its kind in the world. Specimens range from a 40-foot-long, ocean-going canoe
built by the Nootka Indians of the Pacific Northwest to a Quechaun reed
boat used on Lake Titicaca in South America, and the canoe
“Orellana” used to paddle the Amazon.
The museum also features a large
collection of scale models, paddles, snowshoes, moccasins, and other
canoe-related artifacts. |
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