Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Little Lake is used for swimming, fishing and boating, including power boats, kayaks, canoes and windsurfers. [6] Anglers may catch bass , walleye , perch and muskie in the lake. [ 3 ] There is a small marina on the lake in downtown Peterborough with 92 open slips where boats may be moored on a daily, weekly or seasonal basis. [ 9 ]
Barrie/Little Lake Water Aerodrome (TC LID: CPT5) was located on Little Lake on the north side of Barrie, Ontario, Canada.. The aerodrome served floatplanes, which parked along wooden docks along the south side of the lake, and was accessed via Little Lake Drive.
Kempenfelt Bay is a 14.5 km (9.0 mi) long bay that leads into the Canadian city of Barrie, Ontario. It is as deep as 41.5 m (136 ft) in places, and is connected to the larger Lake Simcoe. It is known for its ice fishing and legends of Kempenfelt Kelly, a Loch Ness monster style prehistoric creature.
Ontario relief map Lake Superior at Neys Provincial Park Ontario Lake Huron Frozen Lake Erie Looking east across Lake Ontario to Toronto Scarborough bluffs Lake Ontario Lake Nipigon Rainy Lake from Tango Channel. This is a list of lakes of Ontario with an area larger than 400 km 2 (150 sq mi). [2] [3] [4]
Little Lake, Ontario in Puslinch, Ontario; Little Lake (Nova Scotia) in Nova Scotia; In the United States: Little Lake, Inyo County, California; Little Lake, California, former name of Willits, California; Little Lake, Michigan in Forsyth Township; Little Lake, Bedford Township, Michigan, a former settlement
Barrie is a city in Central Ontario, Canada, about 90 kilometres (56 mi) north of Toronto. The city is within Simcoe County and located along the shores of Kempenfelt Bay. Although it is physically in the county, Barrie is politically independent. The city is part of the extended urban area in southern Ontario known as the Greater Golden Horseshoe.
The Bay of Quinte (/ ˈ k w ɪ n t i /) is a long, narrow bay shaped like the letter "Z" on the northern shore of Lake Ontario in the province of Ontario, Canada. It is just west of the head of the Saint Lawrence River that drains the Great Lakes into the Gulf of Saint Lawrence.
Lake Simcoe's name was given by John Graves Simcoe in 1793 in memory of his father, Captain John Simcoe. Captain Simcoe was born on 28 November 1710, in Staindrop, in County Durham, northeast England, and served as an officer in the Royal Navy, dying of pneumonia aboard his ship, HMS Pembroke, on 15 May 1759.