Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Michigan’s annual fishing license is valid from March 1 through March 31 of the following year. DNR Sportcards are issued to non-residents, minors or individuals without a valid Michigan Driver ...
James Bay is important in the history of Canada as one of the most hospitable parts of the Hudson Bay region, although it has had a low human population. It was an area of importance to the Hudson's Bay Company and British expansion into Canada .
All inland sports fishing guides operating in Michigan now require a license, per the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
The GRAND Canal system would also deliver new fresh water from the James Bay dyke-enclosure, via the Great Lakes, to many water deficit areas in Canada and the United States. The project was estimated in 1994 to cost C$100 billion to build and a further C$1 billion annually to operate, involving a string of nuclear reactors and hydroelectric ...
By the 1920s and 1930s, Bay Port was known as the largest freshwater fishing port in the world, with over 30 fishing boats working from the port. Operations in what is now the historic district included ports for the boats, and also processing of the catch, repairs, and advertising and promotional offices.
The river empties into the Akimiski Strait on James Bay via a series of channels. The community of Fort Albany lies on a southern channel and the Kashechewan First Nation on a northern one. The river is navigable for the first 400 kilometres (249 mi).
Lake St. Joseph is a large lake in Kenora District and Thunder Bay District in Northwestern Ontario, Canada. [1] It is in the James Bay drainage basin and is the source of the Albany River. The east end of the lake can be reached using Ontario Highway 599 from the town of Ignace, 260 kilometres (160 mi) to the south on Ontario Highway 17.
Kesagami Lake is a lake of Cochrane District, in Northeastern Ontario, in Canada. [3] It is a shallow lake that was formed assumedly by glacial erosion and unique for its size in the James Bay area. [2] Entirely protected within Kesagami Provincial Park, it is notable in particular for its trophy pike and walleye fishing. [4]