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temagami canoe company: Canoeing Cecil Kuhne, 1998 Paddling Basics: canoeing presents a guided tour to the fundamental equipment and techniques necessary to start out in this timeless sport. |
temagami canoe company: Temagami Canoe Routes Hap Wilson, 1999-03-01 Temagami, located in northern Ontario (five hours north of Toronto by car) is a world-renowned canoe tripping destination featuring over 4,000 square miles of canoe country. The waterways of the Temagami region are particularly attractive since many of the routes form convenient trip loops. Hap Wilson compiles more than 25 canoe route descriptions, including hiking trails that cater to wilderness paddlers from beginner to expert. Climb Maple Mountain, camp at Centre Falls, listen to the wolves howl, or fish its fabled deep waters -- Temagami has it all. |
temagami canoe company: Temagami Lakes Association Pamela Sinclair, 2011-06 The Temagami region of northern Ontario has been a magnet for recreational canoeists since the 1890s, when city dwellers began embarking on long, gruelling trips to reach its unfettered wilderness. The land is steeped in the history of its tribal inhabitants, the Teme-Augama Anishnabai (TAA), whose roots are 6,000 years deep. At the turn of the 20th century, the TAA still hunted on their traditional family territories, trading pelts at the Hudson's Bay Company post on Bear Island. The railway arrived in 1904, easing travel from all over North America. Steamships conveyed passengers to all five arms of the lake where rustic resorts and youth camps were popping up. Soon, the village of Temagami became a tourism hub. Logging and mining would later diversify the economy. The province of Ontario began leasing the lake's more than 1,200 islands in 1906. In 1931 cottagers united against logging near the mainland shoreline under the Timagami Association banner, now the Temagami Lakes Association. Temagami is the only Ontario lake where mainland shoreline development is banned Temagami Lakes Association: The Life and Times of a Cottage Community recounts Temagami's history to 2011, and examines the Association's often convoluted, occasionally controversial, relationships with the TAA, various levels of government, villagers and within its own ranks. The narrative is lightened by cottagers' tales of mice invasions, flesh-embedded fish hooks, encounters with big screen stars, cabin construction gone awry and the like. More than 150 photos enliven the text. |
temagami canoe company: Paddling Partners Bruce W. Hodgins, Carol Hodgins, 2008-02-08 Carol and Bruce Hodgins began leading canoe trips in 1957 for Camp Wanapitei on Lake Temagami in Northern Ontario, initially to the great rivers of that region and on into Quebec. Their first venture north of 60 found them on the South Nahanni, soon to be followed by the Coppermine River, and by the 1990s their annual tripping took them to the Soper River on Baffin Island. included with their richly descriptive accounts of wilderness travel with groups of people, are kayak adventures in Baja California, Mexico, and the Queen Charlottes, paddling in and near the Everglades and explorations on Heritage rivers in the Maritimes and along the coast of Newfoundland. Few have personally experienced the breadth of wilderness travel in Canada as have the Hodgins husband-and-wife team. Their fifty years as paddling partners, a legendary achievement, is a story of shared joys, challenges, triumphs and mishaps, delightfully told and augmented by excerpts from daily logs, historical insights and the tidbits of experience gleaned over the years. |
temagami canoe company: The Temagami Experience Bruce W. Hodgins, Jamie Benidickson, 1989 Gives a historical account of the cultural, economic and political developments of the Temagami Forest Reserve in northern Ontario. Discusses federal-provincial efforts to reconcile conflicts between government land use policy and those of the Temagami Objiway Indians and the conservationists. |
temagami canoe company: The Long View Donna Sinclair, 2011-09 Daily meditations that nourish elder wisdom and inspire hope. This book is all about finding and offering hope. It's about I claiming the full meaning of eldership and knowing that elder-women have much to offer. This collection of 365 daily reflections offers elderwomen (and younger women who wish to listen in) an opportunity to nourish the wisdom and deep knowing that comes from life experience. It also holds out the potential for growth, the op-portunity to waken to different perspectives that can lead to rich possibilities and courageous actions. This is territory Donna Sinclair knows well. Retired from a 35-year career as a respected journalist, Sinclair has found plenty of life and purpose to carry her forward. In particular, she has come to realise the important roles elderwomen play in our society -- remembering the past, speaking out against injustice, seeking to restore the balance of creation. Sinclair also knows that in order to accomplish these difficult yet essential tasks, elderwomen need to nourish their inner life. The challenges women face today are so enormous and threat-ening, that it is easy to fall into despair. For this reason especially, elderwomen need to seek hope and share it generously as Sinclair does here. |
temagami canoe company: Forest and Stream , 1921 |
temagami canoe company: Recreational Land Use Geoffrey Wall, John S. Marsh, 1982-01-01 |
temagami canoe company: Temagami Hap Wilson, 2011 Distributed in the United States by Firefly Books (U.S.) Inc.--T.p. verso. |
temagami canoe company: Nastawgan Bruce W. Hodgins, Margaret Hobbs, 1987-06-30 A rich history of Canadian wilderness travel, an utterly compelling collection, said The Globe and Mail, and a gem -- it absolutely sparkles, according to Canadian Geographic. Declared by the Canadian Historical Association to be the best book published of its year on the regional history of Canada's North. With essays by William C. James, C.E.S. Franks, George Luste, Margaret Hobbs, John Jennings, Shelagh Grant, Gwyneth Hoyle, Bruce W. Hodgins, Jamie Bendickson, Craig Macdonald, Jean Murray Cole, John Marsh and John Wadland. |
temagami canoe company: Painting Place David P. Silcox, David Milne, 1996-01-01 A biography of one of Canada's greatest artists, lavishly illustrated and based on years of research by a leading historian. David Milne (1882-1952) is recognized as one of the most innovative and original artists of his generation. |
temagami canoe company: Temagami's Tangled Wild Jocelyn Thorpe, 2012-02-03 Canadian wilderness seems a self-evident entity, yet, as this volume shows in vivid historical detail, wilderness is not what it seems. In Temagami’s Tangled Wild, Jocelyn Thorpe traces how struggles over meaning, racialized and gendered identities, and land have made the Temagami area in Ontario into a site emblematic of wild Canadian nature, even though the Teme-Augama Anishnabai have long understood the region as their homeland rather than as a wilderness. Eloquent and accessible, this engaging history challenges readers to acknowledge the embeddedness of colonial relations in our notions of wilderness, and to reconsider our understanding of the wilderness ideal. |
temagami canoe company: Nastawgan Bruce W. Hodgins, Margaret Hobbs, 1987-06-30 A rich history of Canadian wilderness travel, an utterly compelling collection, said The Globe and Mail, and a gem – it absolutely sparkles, according to Canadian Geographic. Declared by the Canadian Historical Association to be the best book published of its year on the regional history of Canada’s North. With essays by William C. James, C.E.S. Franks, George Luste, Margaret Hobbs, John Jennings, Shelagh Grant, Gwyneth Hoyle, Bruce W. Hodgins, Jamie Bendickson, Craig Macdonald, Jean Murray Cole, John Marsh and John Wadland. |
temagami canoe company: Northern Light Roy MacGregor, 2011-09-06 NATIONAL BESTSELLER FINALIST FOR THE OTTAWA BOOK AWARD FOR NON-FICTION Roy MacGregor's lifelong fascination with Tom Thomson first led him to write Canoe Lake, a novel inspired by a distant relative's affair with one of Canada's greatest painters. Now, MacGregor breaks new ground, re-examining the mysteries of Thomson's life, loves and violent death in the definitive non-fiction account. Why does a man who died almost a century ago and painted relatively little still have such a grip on our imagination? The eccentric spinster Winnie Trainor was a fixture of Roy MacGregor's childhood in Huntsville, Ontario. She was considered too odd to be a truly romantic figure in the eyes of the town, but the locals knew that Canada's most famous painter had once been in love with her, and that she had never gotten over his untimely death. She kept some paintings he gave her in a six-quart basket she'd leave with the neighbours on her rare trips out of town, and in the summers she'd make the trip from her family cottage, where Thomson used to stay, on foot to the graveyard up the hill, where fans of the artist occasionally left bouquets. There she would clear away the flowers. After all, as far as anyone knew, he wasn't there: she had arranged at his family's request for him to be exhumed and moved to a cemetery near Owen Sound. As Roy MacGregor's richly detailed Northern Light reveals, not much is as it seems when it comes to Tom Thomson, the most iconic of Canadian painters. Philandering deadbeat or visionary artist and gentleman, victim of accidental drowning or deliberate murder, the man's myth has grown to obscure the real view—and the answers to the mysteries are finally revealed in these pages. |
temagami canoe company: Idleness, Water, and a Canoe Jamie Benidickson, 1997-01-01 This book describes the cultural significance of two centuries of recreational paddling in Canada, illustrating through contemporary interviews and published sources what the experience of canoeing has meant to the sport's participants. |
temagami canoe company: Hidden in Plain Sight Daniel J. K. Beavon, Cora Jane Voyageur, David Newhouse, 2005-01-01 The history of Aboriginal people in Canada taught in schools and depicted in the media tends to focus on Aboriginal displacement from native lands and the consequent social and cultural disruptions they have endured. Collectively, they are portrayed as passive victims of European colonization and government policy, and, even when well intentioned, these depictions are demeaning and do little to truly represent the role Aboriginal peoples have played in Canadian life. Hidden in Plain Sight adds another dimension to the story, showing the extraordinary contributions Aboriginal peoples have made and continue to make to the Canadian experience. From treaties to contemporary arts and literatures, Aboriginal peoples have helped to define Canada and have worked to secure a place of their own making in Canadian culture. For this volume, editors David R. Newhouse, Cora J. Voyageur, and Daniel J.K. Beavon have brought together leading scholars and other impassioned voices, and together, they give full treatment to the Aboriginal contribution to Canada's intellectual, political, economic, social, historic, and cultural landscapes. Included are profiles of several leading figures such as actor Chief Dan George, artist Norval Morrisseau, author Tomson Highway, activist Anna Mae Pictou Aquash, and politician Phil Fontaine, among others. Canada simply would not be what it is today without these contributions. The first of two volumes, Hidden in Plain Sight is key to understanding and appreciating Canadian society and will be essential reading for generations to come. |
temagami canoe company: Bellrock John Moss, John George Moss, 1983 |
temagami canoe company: The Drama of the Forests, Romance and Adventure Arthur Heming, 1921 |
temagami canoe company: The Lure of Faraway Places Herb Pohl, 2007-05-11 The Lure of Faraway Places is the publication canoeist Herb Pohl (1930-2006) did not live to see published. But Pohl’s words and images provide a unique portrait of Canada by one who was happiest when travelling our northern waterways alone. Austrian-born Herb Pohl died at the mouth of the Michipcoten River on July 17, 2006. He is remembered as Canada’s most remarkable solo traveller. While mourning their loss, Herb Pohl’s friends found, to their surprise and delight, a manuscript of wilderness writings on his desk in his lakeside apartment in Burlington, Ontario. He had hoped one day to publish his work as a book. With help and commentary from best-selling canoe author and editor James Raffan, Natural Heritage is proud to present that book, Herb’s book, The Lure of Faraway Places. There’s nothing like it in canoeing literature, says Raffan. It’s part journal, part memoir, part wilderness philosophy and part tips and tricks of the most pragmatic kind written about parts of the country most of us will never see by the most committed and ambitious solo canoeist in Canadian history. |
temagami canoe company: A Woman's Book of Days 2 Donna Sinclair, 2004 A moving collection of wise reflections on everyday experiences. Exploring topics such as friendship, courage, envy and family, Donna Sinclair looks beneath the surface of daily living to create a rich spirituality grounded in a woman's view of the world. |
temagami canoe company: Canoe Nation Bruce Erickson, 2013-06-15 More than an ancient means of transportation and trade, the canoe has come to be a symbol of Canada itself. In Canoe Nation, Bruce Erickson chronicles the story of the canoe in the Canadian imagination. He argues that the canoe’s sentimental power has come about through a set of narratives that attempt to legitimize a particular vision of Canada and explores how the canoe went from being an industrial-economic vehicle to a purely recreational vessel. From Alexander Mackenzie to Grey Owl to Pierre Elliott Trudeau, the canoe has been overvalued as a connection to the “nature” of Canada. Examining voyageur re-enactments, turn-of-the-century sportsman stories, and the subsequent “greening” of the canoe, this book shows how this symbol authenticates Canada’s reputation as a tolerant, environmentalist nation, even when there is abundant evidence to the contrary. Ultimately, the stories we tell about the canoe need to be understood as moments in the ever-contested field of cultural politics. |
temagami canoe company: Boatbuilding and Repair , 1958 |
temagami canoe company: Canada Lumberman and Woodworker , 1928 |
temagami canoe company: Temagami Robert Matthew Bray, Ashley Thomson, 1990 A balanced perspective on the issue of who owns the land is coupled with the views of various interest groups. |
temagami canoe company: Sessional Papers Ontario. Legislative Assembly, 1907 |
temagami canoe company: Directory of Wooden Boat Builders and Designers Wooden Boat Magazine, 1994-10 This is an indispensable resource for anyone considering the purchase of a new boat, or the maintenance and repair of an old one. It lists over 500 builders, by state and province, and alphabetically lists 200 designers. Covers the US and Canada, published in 1994. |
temagami canoe company: From Barrow to Boothia Peter Warren Dease, 2002 In 1835 the map of the Arctic coast of North America was still far from complete, with unmapped gaps of 280km from Return Reef to Point Barrow in Alaska and 550km from Point Turnagain to Boothia Peninsula in the Central Canadian Arctic. The Hudson's Bay Company developed a plan to fill the gaps and two of the Company's officers were chosen to carry it out: the veteran Chief Factor Peter Dease – efficient, competent, steady, and with an excellent rapport with Indians and the servants, mostly Métis – and Thomas Simpson, young, energetic, ambitious, arrogant, and cousin and secretary to George Simpson, the Company's governor in North America. Over a three-year period from 1837 to 1939, operating from a base-camp at Fort Confidence on Great Bear Lake, the expedition achieved its goal. Despite serious problems with sea ice, Dease and Simpson, in some of the longest small-boat voyages in the history of the Arctic, mapped the remaining gaps in a model operation of efficient, economical, and safe exploration. Thomas Simpson's narrative, the standard source on the expedition, claimed the expedition's success for himself, stating Dease is a worthy, indolent, illiterate soul, and moves just as I give the impulse. In From Barrow to Boothia William Barr shows that Dease's contribution was absolutely crucial to the expedition's success and makes Dease's sober, sensible, and modest account of the expedition available. Dease's journal, reproduced in full, is supplemented by a brief introduction to each section and detailed annotations that clarify and elaborate the text. By including relevant correspondence to and from expedition members, Barr captures the original words of the participants, offering insights into the character of both Dease and Simpson and making clear what really happened on this successful expedition. |
temagami canoe company: Canoe & Kayak , 2002 |
temagami canoe company: Directory of Canadian Made Products , 1995 |
temagami canoe company: Invisible Among the Ruins John Moss, 2000 This is an irreverent outsider's view of Ireland and its language, landscape and society. The author also reflects on Canada from his temporary exile. |
temagami canoe company: Laurentian University Review , 1977 |
temagami canoe company: Sessional Papers Ontario, 1941 |
temagami canoe company: Public Accounts of the Province of Ontario Ontario. Treasury Dept, 1928 Estimates for 1907-1909 (Oct.), 1910/1911 (separately paged and with separate t.p.) issued with 1907-1908, 1909/1910. |
temagami canoe company: Backpacker , 1995 Backpacker brings the outdoors straight to the reader's doorstep, inspiring and enabling them to go more places and enjoy nature more often. The authority on active adventure, Backpacker is the world's first GPS-enabled magazine, and the only magazine whose editors personally test the hiking trails, camping gear, and survival tips they publish. Backpacker's Editors' Choice Awards, an industry honor recognizing design, feature and product innovation, has become the gold standard against which all other outdoor-industry awards are measured. |
temagami canoe company: Hidden in Plain Sight Cora J. Voyageur, David Newhouse, Dan Beavon, 2005-08-20 The history of Aboriginal people in Canada taught in schools and depicted in the media tends to focus on Aboriginal displacement from native lands and the consequent social and cultural disruptions they have endured. Collectively, they are portrayed as passive victims of European colonization and government policy, and, even when well intentioned, these depictions are demeaning and do little to truly represent the role Aboriginal peoples have played in Canadian life. Hidden in Plain Sight adds another dimension to the story, showing the extraordinary contributions Aboriginal peoples have made - and continue to make - to the Canadian experience. From treaties to contemporary arts and literatures, Aboriginal peoples have helped to define Canada and have worked to secure a place of their own making in Canadian culture. For this volume, editors David R. Newhouse, Cora J. Voyageur, and Daniel J.K. Beavon have brought together leading scholars and other impassioned voices, and together, they give full treatment to the Aboriginal contribution to Canada's intellectual, political, economic, social, historic, and cultural landscapes. Included are profiles of several leading figures such as actor Chief Dan George, artist Norval Morrisseau, author Tomson Highway, activist Anna Mae Pictou Aquash, and politician Phil Fontaine, among others. Canada simply would not be what it is today without these contributions. The first of two volumes, Hidden in Plain Sight is key to understanding and appreciating Canadian society and will be essential reading for generations to come. |
temagami canoe company: The Promise of Canada Charlotte Gray, 2016-10-18 What does it mean to be a Canadian? What great ideas have changed our country? An award-winning writer casts her eye over our nation’s history, highlighting some of our most important stories. From the acclaimed historian Charlotte Gray comes a richly rewarding book about what it means to be Canadian. Readers already know Gray as an award-winning biographer, a writer who has brilliantly captured significant individuals and dramatic moments in our history. Now, in The Promise of Canada, she weaves together masterful portraits of nine influential Canadians, creating a unique history of our country. What do these people—from George-Étienne Cartier and Emily Carr to Tommy Douglas, Margaret Atwood, and Elijah Harper—have in common? Each, according to Charlotte Gray, has left an indelible mark on Canada. Deliberately avoiding a top-down approach to history, Gray has chosen Canadians—some well-known, others less so—whose ideas, she argues, have become part of our collective conversation about who we are as a people. She also highlights many other Canadians from all walks of life who have added to the ongoing debate, showing how our country has reinvented itself in every generation since Confederation, while at the same time holding to certain central beliefs. Beautifully illustrated with evocative black-and-white historical images and colorful artistic visions, and written in an engaging style, The Promise of Canada is a fresh, thoughtful, and inspiring view of our historical journey. Opening doors into our past, present, and future with this masterful work, Charlotte Gray makes Canada’s history come alive and challenges us to envision the country we want to live in. |
temagami canoe company: The Last Happy Year Rod Coneybeare, 1993 The Last Happy Year: A Novel by Rod Coneybeare |
temagami canoe company: The Cabin Hap Wilson, 2005-11-23 One hundred years ago, a young doctor from Cleveland by the name of Robert Newcomb, travelled north to a place called Temagami. It was as far north as one could travel by any modern means. Beautiful beyond any simple expletive, the Temagami wilderness was a land rich in timber, clear-water lakes, fast flowing rivers, mystery and adventure. Newcomb befriended the local Aboriginals — the Deep Water People — and quickly discovered the best way to explore was by canoe. Bewitched by the spirit of an interior river named after the elusive brook trout, Majamagosibi, Newcomb had a remote cabin built overlooking one of her precipitous cataracts. The cabin remained unused for decades, save for a few passing canoeists; it changed ownership twice and slowly began to show its age. The author discovered the cabin while on a canoe trip in 1970. Like Newcomb, Hap Wilson was lured to Temagami in pursuit of adventure and personal sanctuary. That search for sanctuary took the author incredible distances by canoe and snowshoe, through near death experiences and Herculean challenges. Secretly building cabins, homesteading and working as a park ranger, Wilson finally became owner of The Cabin in 2000. Artist, author and adventurer, Hap Wilson is perhaps best known for his ecotourism/travel guidebooks. He has led over 300 wilderness expeditions in Canada, and served as actor Pierce Brosnan's personal outdoor trainer for the feature film Grey Owl. This is a complex and fascinating story, beautifully told. At first, it draws us in because the author appears to be living the life we all dream of-a simpler life, close to nature, free from the stress and strain of our consumer culture. But the reality, with its myriad challenges, is what holds our attention and gives the book its substance. — Judith Ruan, Muskoka Magazine |
temagami canoe company: Grey Owl and Me Hap Wilson, 2010-06-28 Hap Wilson is back for another journey, this time on the lighter side of the adventure trail, where the bizarre melds with the sublime. Nurtured by the writings of Canadian environmentalist and wannabe-Native, Grey Owl, Wilson adopted a lifestyle similar to the 1930s conservationist but with his own twists and turns along a meandering path full of humorous misadventures. Wilson, too, learned many of his nature skills as a youth, paddling in Temagami, working as a wilderness canoe ranger and guide, and following in the footsteps of one of Canada’s most revered outdoor icons. The author recounts early days winter camping, motorcycling the Labrador coast, and teaching actor Pierce Brosnan how to throw knives and paddle a canoe for the Richard Attenborough film about Grey Owl. He also takes us to a few of his favourite places and shares intimate secrets of wilderness living. Here, Grey Owl has returned as an ever-present critic – a buckskin-clad spectre in a modern world of Gore-Tex, Kevlar canoes, and gear freaks. |
temagami canoe company: Field and Stream , 1926 |
Temagami - Wikipedia
Temagami, formerly spelled Timagami, is a municipality in northeastern Ontario, Canada, in the Nipissing District with Lake Temagami at its heart. The Temagami region is known as n'Daki …
Temagami
May 13, 2025 · Discover the beauty of northeastern Ontario’s vast forests and pristine Lake Temagami. Perfect for outdoor adventures and rich in cultural heritage, Temagami blends …
Discover Scenic Temagami in Northeastern Ontario
An icon of Canada’s northland, Temagami's smooth blue waters, white powdery snow, and bountiful fish and wildlife make it a premier destination for hiking, paddling, fishing, hunting, …
Experience a Temagami Vacation - Temagami and Area Travel …
Visitors enjoy 3,000 miles of shoreline harboring over 1,200 islands surrounded by majestic pines on Lake Temagami - only one of the many lakes in the Temagami area. Relaxation can be …
Temagami Lodges, Vacations & Cottages
The Temagami vacation region encompasses Lake Temagami, the village of Temagami, and the surrounding area and includes some of Ontario’s finest wilderness country and cottage rentals.
Temagami Lodge - Get Hooked
A large, inland lake secluded in Ontario's Near North, Temagami is world renowned for its rugged beauty, serenity and, above all, prize lake trout. Whether for a family get-a-way or a fishing …
Temagami & District Chamber of Commerce — Ontario, Canada
Where the trees tower like giants, old growth forests with majestic pines whispering in the wind. Welcome to Temagami! In Ojibway, Temagami (te maw ga mee) means "deep water by the …
Lake Temagami - Wikipedia
Lake Temagami, formerly spelled as Lake Timagami, is a lake in Nipissing District in northeastern Ontario, Canada, situated approximately 80 km north of North Bay. The lake's name comes …
Experience: Municipality of Temagami
From ancient pine forests and crystal-clear lakes to rich Indigenous heritage and small-town charm, Temagami offers unforgettable adventures in every season. Paddle the iconic canoe …
Temagami, Ontario Canada - Come Explore Canada
Temagami, Ontario, is a treasure trove of natural beauty and outdoor activities. Tourists are drawn to the old-growth red and white pine, Lake Temagami, Caribou Mountain, and over 4,000 km …
Temagami - Wikipedia
Temagami, formerly spelled Timagami, is a municipality in northeastern Ontario, Canada, in the Nipissing District with Lake Temagami at its heart. The Temagami region is known as n'Daki …
Temagami
May 13, 2025 · Discover the beauty of northeastern Ontario’s vast forests and pristine Lake Temagami. Perfect for outdoor adventures and rich in cultural heritage, Temagami blends …
Discover Scenic Temagami in Northeastern Ontario
An icon of Canada’s northland, Temagami's smooth blue waters, white powdery snow, and bountiful fish and wildlife make it a premier destination for hiking, paddling, fishing, hunting, snowmobiling, …
Experience a Temagami Vacation - Temagami and Area Travel …
Visitors enjoy 3,000 miles of shoreline harboring over 1,200 islands surrounded by majestic pines on Lake Temagami - only one of the many lakes in the Temagami area. Relaxation can be found for …
Temagami Lodges, Vacations & Cottages
The Temagami vacation region encompasses Lake Temagami, the village of Temagami, and the surrounding area and includes some of Ontario’s finest wilderness country and cottage rentals.
Temagami Lodge - Get Hooked
A large, inland lake secluded in Ontario's Near North, Temagami is world renowned for its rugged beauty, serenity and, above all, prize lake trout. Whether for a family get-a-way or a fishing …
Temagami & District Chamber of Commerce — Ontario, Canada
Where the trees tower like giants, old growth forests with majestic pines whispering in the wind. Welcome to Temagami! In Ojibway, Temagami (te maw ga mee) means "deep water by the …
Lake Temagami - Wikipedia
Lake Temagami, formerly spelled as Lake Timagami, is a lake in Nipissing District in northeastern Ontario, Canada, situated approximately 80 km north of North Bay. The lake's name comes from …
Experience: Municipality of Temagami
From ancient pine forests and crystal-clear lakes to rich Indigenous heritage and small-town charm, Temagami offers unforgettable adventures in every season. Paddle the iconic canoe routes once …
Temagami, Ontario Canada - Come Explore Canada
Temagami, Ontario, is a treasure trove of natural beauty and outdoor activities. Tourists are drawn to the old-growth red and white pine, Lake Temagami, Caribou Mountain, and over 4,000 km …