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There are 3 branches to the Provo River, the lower, middle, and upper. Washington. Yakima River [34] West Virginia. Cheat River; Lost River; Mill Run; Wyoming. Yellowstone National Park: Firehole River - Fly fishing only in Yellowstone National Park [18] Gibbon River - Fly fishing only below Gibbon Falls [18] [35] [36]
The Saugeen then turns west again, once again paralleling what was once Highway 4. The Saugeen River then skirts the northern edge of the town of Hanover before entering the Darroch Nature Reserve where it takes in the South Saugeen River. The Saugeen River then continues flowing west until it makes a sharp north turn near the town of Walkerton ...
Fishing activity has been observed on the Bruce Peninsula as far back as 1000 BC, in the Archaic period. [3] In the Late Woodland period, there is evidence for both Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples being present and fishing in the area. [4] Around the time of European contact, the Petun and Ottawa peoples were known to be fishing there. [5]
The Saugeen Valley Conservation Authority (SVCA) is a conservation authority in Ontario, Canada. It operates under the Conservation Authorities Act of Ontario . [ 1 ] It is a corporate body, through which municipalities, landowners and other organizations work cooperatively to manage the Saugeen River watershed [ 2 ] and natural resources ...
The river heads west, over Holstein Dam at the community of Holstein, and under Ontario Highway 6 south of the community of Orchardville. The Beatty Saugeen turns northwest, passing to the south of the community of Hampden in the township of West Grey, before reaching its mouth at the South Saugeen River on the south side of the town of Hanover.
Teeswater is located on the Teeswater River, a tributary of the Saugeen River. Surveyors named the river after the River Tees in England and the settlement was named for the river. The post office dates from 1855. [2] The first settlers, mainly English and Scottish, arrived in 1856.
The Donaldson site is an archaeological site in Ontario that was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1982. The 3-acre (12,000 m 2) site is the largest within the Saugeen complex, and is representative of typical habitation and mortuary practices of the Woodland period before the European discovery of the Americas, from about 200 BCE until 700 CE.
The Official Plan for the Town of Saugeen Shores (2014) includes the following comment about this issue: "The Chippewas of the Saugeen First Nation and the Chippewas of Nawash First Nation have filed a Native Land Claim for the islands in the Saugeen River, the lands that border the north side of the Saugeen River and the shoreline from the ...