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| Fishing |
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Virtually
any fish species found in the Great Lakes can be caught in our waters:
Lake Trout, Rainbow Trout, Speckled Trout, Brown Trout, King Salmon,
Pink Salmon, Chinook Salmon, Northern Pike, Walleye, Smallmouth
Bass, Yellow Perch, etc. (Please help us keep it that way and practice
conservation)
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| Boating |
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Ojibway
Park makes an excellent launching point for your Great Lakes boating
adventure. You can be on any one of three of the Great Lakes in
minutes: Huron, Michigan and Superior.
The
immediate waters are superb for virtually any water craft, from
canoe and kayak, to jet skiis, water skiis, fishing and speed boats.
With wide open access to the Great Lakes, there's always enough
room!
Our water level is the same as Lakes Michigan and Huron, but to
get onto Lake Superior, you must go through one set of Locks (The
Soo Locks) to reach Lake Superior's higher water level.
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| Wildlife
Viewing |
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There
are many wildlife viewing opportunities in and around Ojibway Park.
Our immediate area borders on an unpopulated wilderness frontier
that abounds in native animals and birds, plants and insects.
Red
Squirrel, Snowshoe Hare, Ruffed and Spruce Grouse, Golden and Bald
Eagle, Racoon, Porcupine, White-tail Deer, numerous varieties of
ducks and geese, etc. all make appearances around the Park at their
leisure.
In
The Canadian Shield, a vast, ancient mountain range that rises immediately
north of the Park, there are Black Bear, Timber Wolves, Red Fox,
Mink, Marten, Fisher and Moose.
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| Swimming |
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outstanding qualities of Ojibway Park are it's huge, manicured sand
beach and it's superior (Lake Superior!) water quality! These two
conditions make swimming at the Park ideal. Add in a lazy summer day
and you have the stuff memories are made of. |
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| Relax |
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There's
tons of things you could do while you visit with us. Or, you can
always choose to sit back, relax, smell the pines and enjoy our
northern way of life. Have a picnic. Food always seems to taste
better cooked and eaten in the great outdoors. Enjoy a camp
fire at night and listen to the haunting call of a loon on the water;
the sound of northen Ontario evenings. On clear nights, you can
see every star in the sky.
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