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Cabin by the Lake is a horror TV movie released in It tells the story of Stanley, played by Judd Nelson, a script writer who begins killing girls for research.
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The dominance of camp in the two widely separated entities of Northwestern Ontario and New Brunswick troubles word people. Barber speculates that the joint connection is through logging camps common to both areas — "rudimentary but permanent structures for seasonal use in the countryside," is her phrase for tying it all together.

Boberg notes that camp is also a popular word in New England and may have simply migrated across the border, but he can't explain Northwestern Ontario's outlier position. Even further apart from the norm is Cape Breton, where the standard word for a summer place is bungalow — originally a Hindustani word used to describe a low house with a veranda in the cooler foothills of the Himalayas that the British would have adopted as a summer retreat. Somehow the word got to Cape Breton, and Cape Breton alone, to a denote a beloved family cottage of the kind British potentates wouldn't acknowledge.

But there's a great pride about them because most have been in the family for several generations. According to Newfoundland humourist Ray Guy, writing in , the most common term for a summer place in his part of the world, however beautiful or spacious, is "a shack in the country" — one of those self-deprecating terms that grounds contemporary backwoods longings in a simpler, rougher past.

The language of local habitat seems to have a natural conservatism, especially in buildings that pass from generation to generation — it's a lot easier to keep an older word in the family, even as the shack gets renovated and upgraded into something more cottage-like. Yet for novelist Michael Winter, who came to Newfoundland from England as a small child, "shack" doesn't exist — the operative words are the utilitarian camp "for hunting from, or for picking berries' , the "house around the bay," a fixed-up outport house and the cabin, made for pleasure and situated on a "pond" i.

As Pretty As A Postcard

Of all the terms used in Canada, cottage was the first to move upscale in its pretensions to grandeur, which may explain its residual snob associations. Muskoka, a handy escape for Toronto plutocrats and American industrialists, had its Millionaires' Row in the early s, and vacationers who wanted a sampling of the wilderness experience were already scorning its golf clubs and yacht regattas. Highway development and automobile ownership opened up cottage country and made it more accessible to the do-it-yourself masses, restoring a certain democratic humility of habitat.

But more recently, cottage megalomania has returned: Muskoka now has a Billionaires' Row and helipads for Hollywood holidayers — a far cry from "cottage" in its original sense.

Nancy Lake State Recreation Area

Barber says, "although these were people who probably didn't have secondary country residences. Loggers might indeed build a seasonal residence to shorten their commute to work, but it was a makeshift shelter with a down-at-heels name to match — a shanty, a shack, a tilt. But when railways made the lakes and wilderness more accessible to the upper classes in the later 19th century, the word cottage was available to describe the civilized version of roughing it in the bush — nothing too fancy, but not too crude either, with all the advantages of the city available in a simpler, more restful setting.

This return to nature was predicated on an easy relationship with the beauties of the wild, as seen from the comforts of the veranda in the company of people like oneself. People stayed in railway-owned lodges at first, secure in the company of others. But quite rapidly a rougher, more individualized sense of wilderness experience begin to develop, creating the link we now recognize in Canadian English between the camps and cabins of the loggers and settlers and the cottages of the wealthier urbanites on holiday. Luxury hotels come to Ontario's rugged Algonquin Park in By , the Grand Trunk Railway is opening "outpost camps" with individual cedar cabins for guests who want to get closer to the wild while maintaining access to hot and cold running water.

A railway brochure touting the park's creature comforts promises "real camp life with only the rough edges taken off. So the built-in tensions between vocabulary, locale and experience are integral to the summer-getaway experience. Now, it's like Kennebunkport, with all these uber-cottages. The linguistic fit may be more of a mismatch than ever. But the pleasure at the heart of it all, the one Mr. Joly keeps returning to despite these delusions of grandeur, remains the throwback experience the summer-getaway words suggest.

There's only one problem he faces when he tries to spread the word about his Canadian cottage experience, and it's once again a problem of language. So when I tell people I'm off cottaging in Canada, it causes great confusion. This is a space where subscribers can engage with each other and Globe staff.

Fawn Bluff - The Lake Cottage

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Due to technical reasons, we have temporarily removed commenting from our articles. We hope to have this fixed soon. Thank you for your patience. Count on half a day from trailhead either direction. Portages can be muddy and buggy, so headnets, bug dope and the right shoes can be helpful. Be prepared to encounter bears and moose. Canoes can be rented from Tippecanoe Rentals in Willow: Here is a good PDF map of the area. Depending on snow conditions and ice cover, you can travel by snow vehicle, skis, snowshoe, dog sled, snow bike or foot. Check the park conditions report first.

Beginning at the winter trailhead at Mile 2. Alternative routes could follow extensive snowmobile and ski trails. Amenities A by log cabin with sleeping space for six on bunks and benches.

Lady of the Lake | Cherry Log, GA

Good fishing for Northern pike, especially in weed beds near sunken snags. Take a portage south to tiny Javit Lake and then down to Lynx Creek, making a fun loop back to James via Lynx Lake and the canoe trail. Can done winter or summer. Paddle a shallow channel to Owl Lake when water is high, almost doubling the shoreline available to explore. Check out a species of carnivorous plant growing in the wet bog between the lakes: jewel-like Sundew.

A gravel bottom good for swimming can be found along the peninsula across the cove to the south. Explore the hillside above the cabin on an unofficial trail system, with a possible view or even a bushwhack toward Chicken Lake.


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