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Haliburton Forest is the only wholly privately owned snowmobiling operation in the world, holding 80,000 acres (320 km 2) of forest wilderness, 50 lakes, and numerous ponds and creeks across the area. The core of the 300-kilometre (190 mi) trail system is double-tracked and up to 20 feet (6 m) wide, with single-tracked trails that access some ...
Kennisis Lake is bordered by Haliburton Forest on the north and east, nearby Algonquin Provincial Park to the north, and also a third tract of land to the west, which is a 24,000-hectare (59,000-acre) tract of Crown land referred to as the Frost Center Area, after Leslie M. Frost. The lake is accessible through the town of West Guilford on ...
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A view of the reserve from the Canoe Point campsite. Haliburton Scout Reserve (HSR) is a 22-square-kilometre (5,400-acre) Scout camp, originally a frontier Canadian logging camp, located east of Haliburton, Ontario and just south of Algonquin Park, one of Canada's natural wonders situated deep and secluded within the Canadian shield.
Highway 35 begins at a trumpet interchange with Highway 401 west of Newcastle, where it is concurrent with Highway 115 for 18.9 km (11.7 mi) to Enterprise Hill. [1] [3] For the length of this concurrency, which is located entirely within the municipality of Clarington in the Regional Municipality of Durham, it is a divided four lane route with no left turns, known as right-in/right-out (RIRO). [4]
The Fairholme Range is a mountain range east of the Bow River valley in the Canadian Rockies.The range is bounded on the west side by the Trans-Canada Highway as it passes through the towns of Exshaw and Canmore, while the northern section of the range extends into Banff National Park to the southern shores of Lake Minnewanka. [4]
Haliburton Lake is a lake in the municipality of Dysart et al, Haliburton County in Central Ontario, Canada [1] [4] [2] [5] [6] It is situated west of the southern portion of Algonquin Park, between Percy Lake to the east, and Redstone Lake to the west.
Abbot Pass lies between Mount Lefroy and Mount Victoria, in the divide between the valleys of Lake O'Hara and Lake Louise. [1] It was named for Philip Stanley Abbot who died in 1896 in an attempt to climb Mount Lefroy with Charles Fay , Charles Thompson, and George T. Little.