6/16/2007

now magazine has always been great to temagami


this article got me thinking about how great now magazine has always been to temagami. whether the topic is travel, environment, politics, or.... or.... well, what else is there in temagami, really? now magazine has always been there for the temagami wilderness.

now magazine articles on temagami

now i'll have to write something about bob hunter and citytv, before it is swallowed up by ctv.

btw, congratulations to hap wilson on winning the 2007 bill mason award.

6/05/2007

plus ca change

in an update to my posting from april on the arrival of a skills training school in temagami, n.a.c. has decided not to locate here. rumour is that the deal was sunk by a prominent local businessman who wants to use temagami shores inn for another purpose. there is no official line on this story though.

this development is very unfortunate for the economic diversity of temagami. more on diversification in future editions of wild temagami. needless to say, i'm a big fan of anything that has nothing to do with being a "hewer of wood and drawer of water."

april 10, 2007 - welcome to temagami, n.a.c.

6/04/2007

temagami environmentalist receives honourary degree

minnijean trickey, who played an instrumental role in temagami's environmentalist protests of the late 1980's, received an honourary doctorate of laws degree from laurentian university in sudbury last week. trickey is more famously known as one of the 'little rock nine,' a group of black teenagers who were the first to attend a desegrated high school in arkansas in 1957.

minnijean trickey at laurentian university's convocation ceremony, may 31, 2007. courtesy of the sudbury star.

trickey being escorted into central high in little rock, arkansas, by national guardsmen, 1957.

native protest on the red squirrel road, 1988.

sudbury star article on trickey's honourary degree
wikipedia entry on the little rock nine

6/02/2007

what's new in town?

a compendium of photos highlighting what's new and exciting in the village of temagami this summer.


the little shop with no name, occupying the former temagami garden centre lot, sells muskoka chairs and assorted lawn ornaments. my only question is, will the chairs now be known as "temagami chairs?"


the angele egwuna exhibit will be housed this summer in twin boxcars next to the train station. from their webpage: "the purpose of this touring exhibition is to present works and historical materials that "set the record straight" in terms of an important and strong individual who lived in our area and, by virtue of her values and intellect, was able to contribute to the making of what has become a northern legend: the legend of grey owl."
the angele project


extensive repairs to the temagami municipal building continue apace. the original building was based on a scaled-down, rejected design from science north. it leaked extensively and garnered derisive comments from residents and visitors alike due to its extreme ugliness. it won't look much different when finished, but one crucial question remains: will the new trim be the same atrocious orange?


temagami's cop shop is moving out of the venerable building on lakeshore drive and into an expanded boathouse across the way. word on the street says this is so the province can sell the old mnr, mto, opp, and jailhouse buildings as a package for some developer to build waterfront condos.

5/10/2007

why youth camps should be able to have 12/site

in most ontario provincial parks, groups are limited to 9 people per campsite. this grew out of a practice developed in algonquin park in the 1970s. algonquin youth camps have a tradition of tripping with a mojo, or third person in a canoe. when algonquin began seeing negative impacts from increased use, park authorities implemented the 9 person rule. this allowed the parks to send out 3 canoes with 3 people in each boat. over the years, the 9 person rule was adopted across the province.

now in temagami, ontario parks is considering implementing the 9 person rule.

it is true that limits are needed. groups of 30 are not uncommon in temagami, stereotypically a church group or scout troop from the northeastern u.s.a. these groups are attracted here because it is the nearest high quality wilderness area to southern ontario and the northeastern states where such practices are not prohibited.

temagami's youth camps, however, trip with 2 people in a canoe, with a maximum of 12 on a trip. that's pretty standard practice everywhere, with the exception of algonquin park. if the 9 person rule were implemented in temagami, that would mean that temagami camps could only trip with 8 people through the local parks. provincial camping association rules require at least 2 staff. that would mean a ratio of 2 staff and 6 campers. the camps can't afford to do that. they could trip outside of the parks with larger groups, but those routes are of lower quality. besides, shouldn't the camps, who have maintained the routes for over 100 years, be allowed to continue using those routes?

imagine no group from wabun ever going to wabun lake again?

temagami's canoe routes and parks would quite literally not exist without the youth camps. when camp keewaydin started tripping here in 1902, the nastawgan were in a state of disrepair. the anishnabe were moving off the land, abandoning the trails their ancestors created. for 105 years, youth camps have been maintaining the trails. true, the department of lands and forests, precursor to the mnr, did trail maintenance off and on from the early 20th century until the 1980s. (in fact, just prior to world war one, the nastawgan were probably in their best shape ever, thanks to the hundred or more fire rangers who worked all summer long keeping the trails open for fire access.) furthermore, the parks would not exist without the nastawgan. it was love of the temagami backcountry, connected by the nastawgan, which drew the save maple mountain committee together in the 1970s. this committee was the beginning of temagami's environmental movement, which pushed successfully for park creation and expansion in the 80s and 90s.

so to recap, the youth camps saved and maintained the nastawgan. the nastawgan brought the environmentalists to temagami. the environmentalists lobbied for the parks. therefore, without the youth camps, there would be no parks in temagami. and now ontario parks wants to push the camps out.

ontario parks should stop bullying the youth camps and let them continue to trip with 12 people per trip.

4/30/2007

the aurora trout need your help

in my last post, i encouraged you to take action on behalf of temagami. this week, I'd like to point out something concrete you can do, today, to fulfill the earth day pledge. ontario's new endangered species act is being debated at queen's park. our mpp's need to hear that the people of ontario support this important legislation. wildlands league has put together an excellent resource for us to use to learn more about the esa, as well as take action by writing our provincial representatives. you can find their page on the esa here.

so before we go, can you name all of temagami's species at risk?

endangered fauna

peregrine falcon
eastern cougar (pictured)
bald eagle
aurora trout (pictured)

rare fauna
black tern
northern long-eared bat
ruddy duck (pictured)

rare insects
ebony boghaunter (pictured)
black meadowhawk
ski-tailed emerald
kennedy's emerald
clamp-tipped emerald
brush-tipped emerald
least clubtail
elusive clubtail
muskeg darner
ocellated darner

rare flora
milk-vetch
rugulose grapefern
cloud sedge
limestone oak fern (pictured)
hygrohypnum subeugryrium
potamogeton confervoides

smooth woodsia

4/22/2007

earth day pledge

happy earth day, temagami!



in honour of this wonderful occasion, i would like to encourage all of us to commit to doing some things for mother earth and temagami.

1. write at least one letter a month to a politician or businessperson about an important environmental issue
2. be a responsible consumer - the reason that temagami is being pillaged is because there are people out there buying the products made from these natural resources
3. travel lightly on the land
4. support an organization doing work you believe in, with time or money. see the sidebar for some willing recipients.
5. expose lies and hypocrisy
6. educate yourself about the issues, then tell a friend
7. give thanks to the four winds, mother earth, father sun, and grandmother moon