Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Steamboat Bay, south side of Port Carling. Port Carling is an unincorporated community in the Township of Muskoka Lakes in the Canadian province of Ontario. [1] It has been the municipal seat of the township since 1971. It has several hundred year-round residents and is a service centre for thousands of other seasonal residents in the area.
Steamboat Bay in Port Carling. The township is located on Canadian Shield and thus is marked with outcrops of igneous rock and evergreen trees. Although inland from both Lake Huron's Georgian Bay and Lake Simcoe, the township contains the Muskoka Lakes consisting of Lake Muskoka, Lake Rosseau and Lake Joseph, amongst many other smaller lakes.
Muskoka Lakes Museum is an independent non-profit community museum, focusing on the history of the Muskoka Lakes. [1] It is located in James Bartleman Island Park and accessed by footbridge from the village of Port Carling in the Township of Muskoka Lakes, District of Muskoka, in Ontario, Canada.
Port Carling 45°07′00″N 079°33′00″W / 45.11667°N 79.55000°W / 45.11667; -79.55000 ( Lake Rosseau/Arthurlie Bay Water Aerodrome Lake Rosseau/Onnalinda Point Water Aerodrome
Lake Muskoka is located between Port Carling and Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada.The lake is surrounded by many cottages.The lake is primarily within the boundary of the Township of Muskoka Lakes, the southeast corner is within the boundary of the Town of Gravenhurst, and another small portion around the mouth of the Muskoka River is within the boundary of the Town of Bracebridge.
Get the Port Carling, ON local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to ...
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
The government was eager to reinforce development in light of the faltering agricultural plan, and built the big locks in Port Carling in 1871. Cockburn's steamers had access to the entire lake system. Through the years he added more ships; when he died in 1905, his Muskoka Navigation Company was the largest of its kind in Canada. [16]