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Mississagua Lake

Canada lake stubsLakes of Peterborough CountyOntario geography stubsVague or ambiguous time from February 2014

Mississagua Lake is a lake in the Kawartha Highlands in Ontario, Canada. It borders the western section of the Kawartha Highlands Signature Site Park. The area contains several privately owned cottages and over the last 5–10 years it has become a popular destination for several successful business owners/executives, as well as several professional ice hockey players in the NHL.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mississagua Lake (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Mississagua Lake
Trent Lakes

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Wikipedia: Mississagua LakeContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 44.7056 ° E -78.3208 °
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Trent Lakes


K0L 1J0 Trent Lakes
Ontario, Canada
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trentlakes.ca

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Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park
Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park

Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park (officially Kawartha Highlands Signature Site) is a 375-square-kilometre (145 sq mi) area of preserved wilderness and recreational areas in south-central Ontario, Canada. It is located to the north and east of the main belt of the Kawartha Lakes, primarily in the township of North Kawartha. It is the largest single area of preserved land in the southern part of the province (excluding Algonquin Park, parts of which are in northern and southern Ontario).The park was expanded from its original size of 18.6 square kilometres (7.2 sq mi) to its current size in June 2003. It was previously a mostly wilderness tract enclosing Bottle Lake and Sucker Lake, and accessible primarily by canoe, many by portage routes only. It now encloses many more small lakes as well as all of Anstruther Lake, and has many cottages and access roads. The park officially became operational in May 2011 and ministry permits for camping and parking are now required. Campsites are designated and provided with picnic tables, fire rings and thunder boxes. Official Ontario Parks maps indicate the park boundaries and exclude small tracts of land which contain pre-existing cottages. Additionally, some cottages on Serpentine and Copper Lakes remain without owning land and continue to use motor boats.Municipally, the park is completely within Peterborough County: about two-thirds of its area is in the township of North Kawartha, and the remaining western portion is in the township of Trent Lakes. The park office is located offsite in Bancroft, Ontario, and co-located with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources.

Young's Point, Ontario

Young's Point is a small village in Ontario, Canada, established in 1825. It is about 25 kilometres (16 mi) north of Peterborough. Young's Point gets its name from the founders of the village. The Young family, nine children plus widower Francis Young (1781-1859) of Newport, Tipperary, Ireland, whose wife Elizabeth Blackall had predeceased him in Ireland, settled the area in 1825. Young was a civil engineer and built a dam and grist mill here. References are recorded in Susanna Moodie's Book "Roughing it in the Bush." Later generations ran a store and built and operated the steamboat service for both cargo and passenger service to nearby Stony (or Stoney) Lake. The Stoney Lake Navigation Company office was near the original Young family homestead where a cairn now stands at Lock 27. The Lockside Trading Company is home to one of the later generation buildings. Young's Point is the home of Lock 27 of the Trent-Severn Waterway network. The lock has a lift of seven feet and was built in the early 1870s. To the south you can travel through Katchewanooka Lake towards Lakefield and on to Peterborough, and to the north you can travel through Clear Lake and on to Stony Lake, Buckhorn Lake, Pigeon Lake, and beyond. In 1887 the Old Bridge Inn was built; originally run as a general store (the Kearney Store), it's now a bed and breakfast. The old Lakefield Bridge Warren truss which carried Old Highway 28 was replaced by the current twin span Warren pony truss and beam bridges which carries Ontario Highway 28 over the top of Ontanbee River to South Beach.In addition, Young's Point is host to several recreational facilities, including, but not limited to; a golf course, several bed & breakfast hotels, marinas and restaurants. With a low population density and significant amounts of privately owned wooded land, Young's Point is also a favorite spot for residents of nearby Peterborough and Lakefield to hunt, fish, partake in off-road activities (both motorized and not), and play paintball. Young's Point is also home to Mink Island and the "Legend of the Wailing Woman," a local legend about a previous resident (named Abbirah) of the island. A documented fact of the Ojibwe in the area is the story of Polly Lee, a young woman who was to marry a resident of the neighboring Algonquin clan. As the daughter of the chieftain known as "Handsome Jack," this was a marriage of prestige and the Youngs were invited as the local white heads of the clan. Unfortunately, she died from influenza and is buried on a tiny island south of the hamlet. Although long gone now, a silver cup had been placed on her grave by Jack to ensure she could get to Katchewanooka for water. Jack's Lake, north of Burleigh Falls, Ontario, was named after “Handsome Jack.” Lovesick Lake in Burleigh Falls, Ontario was named after Polly and her doomed love affair, as is Lee Island, south of the point where she is buried.Another persistent rumour is that somewhere in Clear Lake a steamboat filled with weapons and gold sunk somewhere in the lake during a storm. To give credit to this story, some of the weapons have floated to shore over the years. Scuba divers and sailors hunt the lake. Just northwest at the bottom of Clear Lake was the South Beach Hotel, a well known locale that existed for 100 years and was destroyed by fire twice. Indigenous and white immigrants "mostly" congregated well here and it was the home for ice race drivers and sailing. The South Beach Yacht Club (SBYC) began as a group of old salty sailors who raced their sailboats on Sundays. It was also the home of the Canadian Windsurfing Championships in 1977 and 1987. Two kilometres north of the hamlet, The Canadian Shield begins. It is said to be the limit of where the Windigo can travel.