Sep 28, 2009

Kukagami Environment Watch Area News
http://www.kewatch.blogspot.com/ Autumn 2009

The best remedy for those who are afraid, lonely or unhappy is to go outside, somewhere where they can be quiet, alone with the heavens, nature and God. Because only then does one feel that all is as it should be and that God wishes to see people happy, amidst the simple beauty of nature. Anne Frank



Annual Road Clean-up
The official fall road clean up will take place between October 3rd and 13th.. This allows two weekends so that it can fit into most folks’ schedules and allow you to pick a sunny day. This is also over the Thanksgiving weekend, so you can do a little litter cleanup while walking off that big TG dinner!
Many folks have committed to clean a section of the road every year. There are still some sections that could use a little help. Sign up to clean a one or two km section of the road. We can provide garbage bags and work gloves. To register for your section of the road, drop a line here at KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com.
Bring a friend – it’s a fine way to spend a autumn day while at camp.

Lakeshore Clean-up
All though the summer, Kukagami neighbours enjoyed boating, swimming, fishing and camping on and around Kukagami and Donald Lakes. Many of us took the time and effort to pick up stuff we found along the way: pop cans, beer bottles, bait containers, food wrappers, water bottles! Also found were: a 30 foot waterline, pieces of foam water toys, balloons, and sadly, dirty diapers.
Keeping our water and shoreline clean and healthy insures happy and healthy lakeside living for all of us, residents and visitors alike.
During our third annual Great Canadian Shoreline Clean-up project on September 26th, we carted another boatful of rusty garbage from one of the ‘historic’ dumpsites on the lake. This year, the load included an old fridge!
Thanks to the dedicated folks who work to keep our shoreline beautiful!
The Great Canadian Shoreline Clean-up project welcomes opportunities to add more lakes to its roster. Anyone with a strong interest in restoring any lakeshore to its natural beauty is encouraged to contact them at www.vanaqua.org/cleanup.

Autumn is Here!
The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is a global effort (UNESCO) to help the citizens of the world rediscover their place in the Universe through the day- and night-time sky, and thereby engage a personal sense of wonder and discovery. KEW newsletters this year have been encouraging folks to pay attention to their outdoor lighting.
Here’s some information from the Campaign for Dark Skies. “The detrimental effect of bad lighting is now so serious that the American Medical Association has called for a national effort on light pollution, stating that "many species (including humans) need darkness to survive and thrive"
There is now significant evidence showing that exposure to light at night can disrupt the body's production of melatonin, a brain hormone best known for its daily role in resetting the body's biological clock. Secreted primarily in the brain, and at night, melatonin triggers a host of biochemical activities, including a nocturnal reduction in the body's production of oestrogen. Research has shown that decreasing nocturnal melatonin production increases an individual's risk of developing oestrogen-related malignancies, such as breast cancer.

Local Logging News
Piquette Logging, contractor for Domtar, began harvesting on Friday Sept 4. They are operating in a jack pine stand just North of Boot Lake. The Dump by-pass has been re-opened for truck traffic and will be used for hauling. Vermillion Forest Management (VFM) expects 4-6 loads of logs to be hauled out per day. They may also harvest a few poplar stands along Kukagami Lake road just south of the dump after the timing restrictions no longer apply. (Thanksgiving weekend). Whether they harvest these poplar stands or not will depend on market conditions at the time.

VFM is currently preparing the Draft Plan for logging from 2010 to 2020. An Open House for the public to view areas selected for cutting will be scheduled for early winter. KEW will post dates/places on the website when they are announced.


Blog from the Bog The Common Loon “Gavia Immer”
Common loons establish their breeding territories on freshwater lakes. New territories can be on vacant lakes or by replacing a missing pair member or by actively evicting a member of another pair of loons. If it is the female loon that is displaced she will move to an adjacent lake. When the intruder is a male, a vicious battle takes place and the winner stays and the loser leaves the lake. About 30% of male territorial battles are fatal and if a loon is killed it is almost always the resident male, not the intruder. If the intruding male loses the battle, he usually survives. Death usually occurs by one loon being speared underwater by the beak of the aggressor. Sometimes a battle can last an entire day!

Vocalizations: The male loons are the ones with the “yodel” and this yodel plays a role in the territorial defense. The male yodel is usually given in response to the potential intrusion of another male. Each male has his own characteristic yodel and it is stable from year to year. However if a male changes his territory he changes his yodel. The pitch of the yodel reflects the mass and physical condition of the male loon. The heavier the male loon, the lower the pitch of the yodel, and the lighter the male loon the higher the pitch of the yodel. Often males who are thinking of invading a territory will fly over it and listen to the yodels of the resident males to determine what shape they are in! The length of the yodel reflects the willingness to fight – a long yodel is much more of a threat than a shorter yodel.
The nervous call we hear from loons (both male and female) is called a tremolo.

Migration: In the fall there are often social gatherings of from 15-20 adult loons (there have been some of up to 75 loons in one place at one time). However when they are ready to start the migration, the larger group breaks up and they head south in smaller groups of from 2 to 10 adult loons. The loons migrate south to salt water. The adults tend to leave first for the south and the young are left on the lakes to fend for themselves and they wait until the last minute before the lake ices over to begin their migration south The young tend to stay on the salt water for 3 to 5 years before returning to the northern lakes. Interestingly, the male young tend to return to within 2 to 3 kilometers of their birth lake. The female young are more scattered when they return but still come to the same general area as they were born in.

Canadian Lakes Loon Survey: This project is volunteer based and provides a general summary of loon breeding success on Ontario lakes since 1995. You can take part in next year’s survey by contacting Canadian Lakes Loon Survey at Bird Studies Canada (1-888-448-2473 email: aqsurvey@bsc-eoc.org website: http://www.birdscanada.org/



Website and Newsletter
The KEW newsletter is published monthly, and sent by email to any interested person. Paper copies can be provided to residents upon request. Drop a note to Kukagami Environment Watch, 432 Fox Road, Wahnapitae, ON, P0M 3C0. The Website is updated randomly through the month – so check for new information and photos! Submit photos and news items to our email – listed below.
If you know anyone who would like to receive the KEW newsletter, send his or her e-mail address to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com. If you would like to be removed from the list, please reply to this address.

Jun 27, 2009

Area News July 2009

I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in tune once more.

John Burroughs







early summer morning on the lake photo by Mary Waddell

Chiniguchi Park in Review

In July 1999, Ontario's Living Legacy announced that Kukagami and surrounding lakes would be protected areas. No more logging, no new prospecting, no new land sales, no new dams. Essentially, being included within the protection of Ontario's Living Legacy has ensured that our lakes and 200 metres of forest around us will not be changed by industrial development!

Most of the waterways north of us were regulated as the Chiniguchi Park in 2005. Regulation does not change anything for those of us who hunt, fish, ATV, snowmobile, canoe and hike in the area. Currently, there is no fee for overnight camping in the protected areas. Although there are camping fees in the Temagami Area Parks, there are no plans to extend these fees into the Chiniguchi Park.

One good reason not to charge camping fees in the regulated part of Chiniguchi Park is that this would increase camping pressure in the areas that are not yet regulated, which includes Wolf Lake, the south end of Matagamasi Lake, and Kukagami Lake.

Sometime this year, there may be a proposal to remove all protection from the Wolf Lake area, and the southern part of Matagamasi where active mining claims still exist. As well, there may be a proposal to regulate Kukagami Lake as a Conservation Reserve, instead of the original intention to include Kukagami in the Chiniguchi Waterway Park. KEW will send out a special newsletter when these proposals are opened for comment.

Lakeshore Clean-up

KEW once again will work with the TD Canada Trust Great Canadian Shoreline Clean-up project. For the last two years, we concentrated on an old dumpsite on a point across from Lion's Head narrows. We took out two boatloads of garbage. This year, we will begin clean-ups at the mid lake dumpsite. Let us know you are interested by dropping a note to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com

All though the summer, we ask all our Kukagami neighbours to take a few minutes to pick up stuff you find while boating along our beautiful shoreline.

The Great Canadian Shoreline Clean-up project welcomes opportunities to add more lakes to its roster. Anyone with a strong interest in restoring any lakeshore to its natural beauty is encouraged to contact them at www.vanaqua.org/cleanup. You can go to this site to see a list of lakes that already have organized clean-up dates, as well as to register new lakes.

Thunder Boxes

A thunder box is a great thing to find. Tucked back into the woods, down a narrow little trail, and often with a great view, Thunder Boxes are placed near campsites for the toiletry convenience of the campers. These boxes are placed far enough away from water to eliminate human waste contamination of our waterways.

Several of these boxes were built at a local high school and donated to KEW this summer. We are looking for suggestions for which campsites on our local lakes are getting heavy camper use, and volunteers to place the boxes. Tell us where! We'll get a box there!

Summer is Here!

The sun rises early in the morning, and sets late in the evening. We hardly even need to turn the lights on at all! The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is a global effort (UNESCO) to help the citizens of the world rediscover their place in the Universe through the day- and night-time sky, and thereby engage a personal sense of wonder and discovery.

Here's some information from the International Darksky Association

Need that Light to Feel Safe at Night?

Real Safety vs. Perceived Safety: The 175-watt dusk-to-dawn security light may give the illusion of safety, because it's so bright, but it is really counterproductive to good vision. The criminal can hide in the glare or in the deep shadows near such poor lighting. (Look around near one. See the deep shadows next to the overlit areas? It is hard for the eye to adapt to such sharp transitions.) Light used for security should be of such a nature that the owner can see better.

So what to do? Here are two suggestions:

1. Use a low wattage light source, in a good (well shielded) fixture.

The fixture should control the light output so that it goes only where needed, not into a neighbour's yard or windows, or up into the sky.

2. Use an infrared sensor spotlight fixture. The spotlights only come on when the sensor sees movement. Any intruder will be scared off by the sudden turn-on of the spotlights. You are alerted by the light coming on, and your neighbours are more likely to notice, too.

Click here for the full article on how to keep our dark sky.

NEW Feature: Blog from the Bog

Since is the first blog from the bog –we'll start with some actual bog news.

Beware of the carnivores on a paddle through the swamp!! Actually they are friends – they eat bugs!! I have seen the 2 most common found in our neck of the woods. The sundew is a "tiny ground hugging plant with small circles of leaves covered in bright red bristles tipped with tiny beads of 'dew' which glisten in the sun and attract small insects." Those beads are a sticky gel that traps the insect and eventually suffocates the bug. (ha!) The enzymes in the goo then digest the insect. Not a happy story for the wicked helpless little bugs – but one we all like the ending of! Keep an eye out for the pitcher plant as well.

The word from the Temagami people is that there are a lot more bears this year – doesn't sound good at all. I have seen 5 already – one a baby cub . Something else of interest I heard from someone at MNR is that the city of Sudbury no longer bans the use of firearms in the city (Mind you this is all hearsay but it might be worth checking into.)

A friend of mine was talking with some of them "Tarauna" (Toronto) folks. The one lady had done many trips up in this area and started all her trips at " meta ma gassey" (Matagamasi). He tried to correct her pronunciation whereupon she announced she knew what she was talking about as she had been tripping there for years! Go figure.

Too hot to work too hard – will have to float around in the lake for a while – which I am very good at.

All for now,

The Swamp Rat

Website and Newsletter

The KEW newsletter is published monthly, and sent by email to any interested person. Paper copies can be provided to residents upon request. Drop a note to Kukagami Environment Watch, 432 Fox Road, Wahnapitae, ON, P0M 3C0. The Website is updated randomly through the month – so check for new information and photos! Submit photos and news items to our email – listed below.

Kukagami Neighbours Share Their Spirit

Honouring Roy Pella at 41st House of Kin Sports Celebrity Dinner

A group of Kukagami neighbours enjoyed an evening with the Pella family to honour Roy Pella who was posthumously inducted into the 2009 Sudbury Sports hall of Fame.

As a young man, Roy gained world recognition as an athlete.

At the 1952 Olympic trials, Roy shattered the Canadian record with a discus

toss of 157 feet 3.25 inches. At the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki, Finland, Roy placed 14th.

In 1954, at the British Empire Games, Roy set another Canadian record with a toss of 162 feet 6 inches. At the Commonwealth games of the same year, Roy became a silver medallist.

A few years later, Roy built his camp on Kukagami Lake set between his friends Roger DelBosco and Ed Kusnierczyk. With his wife Roma and their children Debby, Laurie, and Gordon, the renowned athlete found joy, contentment and lasting friends on our shores. During his years of battle with cancer, Roy found strength and peace, as he enjoyed the beauty and thrill of the changing seasons at Kukagami. His death in 1993 at 62, reminds each of us to enjoy each moment.

The evening with friends to acknowledge the achievements of Roy and so many of Sudbury's athletes was a testament to the heart of the House of Kin which welcomes patients and families who must leave their homes and travel long distances to get hospital care .The money raised at the dinner will help House of Kin remain a home away from home.

More Kukagami Neighbours Raise Money

Spring awakens the generous spirit of Sudburians; Kukagami neighbours get out to wholeheartedly support valuable events to raise money and ensure that research and advancements are made in the fight against

disease.

Kukagami Crusaders

The McDonalds gather their family and friends to raise money for the Muscular Sclerosis Society. The funds raised go to research, client care and equipment. In May, the walk for MS saw more than 20 Kukagami Crusaders carrying their banner as they joined in the yearly walk. After 11 years of working to raise awareness and money to find a cure, the McDonald family has lost none of its determination, its energy, and its fun loving spirit. They have walked, strolled, and scootered through sunshine, rain, sleet and snow. Their crusaders include friends and family from infants to 80 year olds, those who can join in the walk and those who work at organizing the unfolding of the day's events. It is no surprise that they have been Top Team in size and in pledges raised for all of the 11 years.

Their efforts would be in vain without the donations from so many in the community. In eleven years, the Crusaders have collected an impressive $49,513.00. Next spring, when you see announcements about The Walk

For MS, remember to drop in to McDonalds, view their awards and plaques, and leave a donation to encourage our own Kukagami Crusaders.

Kukagami Ladies' Lunch for Relay for Life

About ten years ago, a group of Kukagami ladies were invited to meet for lunch without the handsome men of the camps. There would be no talk about the number of fish caught, the biggest fish lost, the best time and place to catch more fish. This would be a time to share girl conversations, to giggle, to enjoy each others' company and eat some interesting food.

Of course, the women always ask, "What can I bring?" Four years ago, the answer was, "Bring a donation for Relay for Life." The women enjoy a pleasant few hours; always seem to meet one new Kukagami neighbour and they help raise money for The Retired Teachers' Relay for Life team.

Since we have many retired teachers living on our shores and we all have known the suffering and loss caused by cancer, donating money to find a cure seems a fitting cause.

"Life is mostly froth and bubble,

Two things stand like stone,

Kindness in another's trouble,

Courage in your own" Adam L Gordon

If you know anyone who would like to receive the KEW newsletter, send his or her e-mail address to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com. If you would like to be removed from the list, please send a note to that effect.


Apr 17, 2009

Area News, Spring 2009

Kukagami Environment Watch Area News

http://kewatch.blogspot.com/ Spring 2009

Darkness is as essential to our biological welfare, to our internal clockwork,

as light itself.” -Verlyn Klinkenborg, “Our Vanishing Night,” National Geographic magazine, November 2008

April 20 is International Dark Sky Night

All over the world, the night of 20 April is dedicated to the appreciation of starlight and the promotion activities that showcase the breathtaking spectacle of the universe at night. Simply turn your eyes to the sky from your backyard. How lucky we are here at the lake to have such a spectacular view of the universe!

Click here for ideas on how to keep our dark sky.

ICE!

Kukagami is full of ice this spring. Chances are good that it will be May before we can all get out to enjoy the open water again.

Fish!

MNR has been working to monitor and improve the lake trout fisheries in the northeast (Zone 10). They have just released a brochure for public comment. Here’s the website. http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/Business/LetsFish/2ColumnSubPage/264844.html

Kukagami is still considered to be vulnerable to over fishing, and so will remain closed in winter.

The brochures also discuss some reasons why the lake trout are not as plentiful as they used to be. This could include the introduction of other fish species into the lakes, such as small mouth bass, and especially rock bass.

Frogs!

There are more than just a few million spring peepers out there. Get to know the mating calls of all the frogs that live nearby. You can clearly hear the songs of eight or nine frogs, as well as the lovely toad, once you know what to listen for. Go to Frogwatch to learn about our local frogs, and hear samples of their songs.

Forests!

Once again, some areas on the west side of Kukagami are available for logging in the coming year. However, markets are poor, so Vermilion Forest Management (VFM) staff doesn’t know yet if these areas will be cut.

Also, the new Forest Management Plan is currently available for public review. The new plan will cover the years 2010 to 2020. Contact VFM at vfm@ontera.net for details. Or call 560-3636.

Spring Road Clean-up

The official spring road clean up will take place between April 24th and May 3rd. This allows two weekends so that it can fit into most folks’ schedules and allow you to pick a sunny day. This is also before the blackflies! Sign up to clean a one or two km section of the road! To register for your section of the road, drop a line here at KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com.

Bring a friend – it’s a fine way to spend a spring day while at camp.

Spring Cleaning at Camp

Keep the three R’s in mind while doing your spring-cleaning this year…Reduce - Reuse - Recycle. If you find you have clothes, books, toys, or other small goods, take them in as a donation to the Salvation Army thrift store, the Jarrett Centre, or Value Village. (all in the Flour Mill area)

If you have usable construction materials, donate them to the RE-Store, on Frood Road. Also, plan on shopping at the RE-Store for hardware, paint, sinks, lamps, and lots more. Proceeds go to the local Habitat for Humanity.

Recreation and Education

Congratulations to the Kukagami Campers Association for securing a $14,000 grant from the city to enhance recreation and educational activities in our area! We look forward to activities coming to our neighbourhood soon!

If you know anyone who would like to receive the KEW newsletter, send his or her e-mail address to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com. If you would like to be removed from the list, please reply to this address.

Dec 21, 2008

Area News December 2008

Kukagami Environment Watch                                       Area News

www.KEWatch.blogspot.com                                                                    December 2008

 

 


Happy Christmas to All, and to All a Good Night!   Santa Claus 

 

 

 

Winter is here!

            Technically, winter arrived with the winter solstice on the morning of December 21st.  However, the snow arrived in the middle of November and the ice came on December 8th.   Here at the lake, winter comes early and stays late.  At Kukagami, winter is not a three-month season, but five months of quiet under the blanket of snow. 

 

close-up of new ice forming, December 1st

 

All About the Ice

            The first ice rimmed edges of the lake in early November.  By the end of the month, the smaller bays had frozen over.  Then the winds of November pushed the ice right back to the shore.  As soon as the wind died down, the ice slipped over the surface of the lake once again.  Cold, calm nights brought new ice, blustery days blew it away.  On the first weekend of December, most of the lake was open – the cold dark waters rippled in the morning mist. 

            Then, we woke on the morning of December 8th to find ice everywhere.  By noon, at least an inch of ice had covered the whole of the lake.  On December 9th, we had a beautiful 6 inches of snow that effectively insulated the new ice, keeping it from getting any thicker.  For the next 6 days we looked out to the pure winter beauty of the lake, but dared not venture upon its surface.  Then came 24 hours of rain.  Lots of rain.  Snow on the lake washed away.  Great puddles formed on top of the ice.

            Next, the temperature suddenly dropped.  The wind blew, rain changed to snow.   The puddles froze, the slushy remains froze, and new ice could form.  By mid-morning on December 16th, the ice measured a minimum of five inches.  Lots of ice!

            On December 20th, the beginning efforts to open the snowmobile trail across the lake began in earnest.  Ice depths were measured in several places, varying between 8 and 12 inches.  The trail could be officially opened by Christmas!

           

Local Trails

            Caution is advised for travellers on local lakes and forests.  While the ice on Kukagami has been measured and found to be safe, that may not be the case in other areas.  Because the snow came early, the ground underneath has not frozen, meaning that in some swamps there could be wet areas, and possibly less ice than we have on the lake.  On any lake where currents run, there may not be enough ice for travel. 

            If you don’t know the area where you are travelling, it’s best to wait for the trails to be opened, and stay on the marked trail!  

 

 

 

Website and Newsletter

  The KEW newsletter is published online, and sent by email to any interested person.  Paper copies can be provided to residents upon request.  Drop a note to Kukagami Environment Watch, 432 Fox Road, Wahnapitae, ON, P0M 3C0.   Check KEWatch.blogspot.com to post your own messages, photos, or to see what’s new between newsletters.

 

           

 

 

 

Oct 16, 2008

Fall Road Clean-up

Gabrielle picking up garbage on Kukagami Road on Thanksgiving weekend

Sep 23, 2008

Area News Autumn 2008

Kukagami Environment Watch                                       Area News

www.KEWatch.blogspot.com                                                                    Autumn 2008

 

The landscape belongs to the person who looks at it.    Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

 

Fall Road Clean-up

The official fall road clean-up will take place from September 26th Thanksgiving Day.  This allows lots of time so that it can fit into most folks’ schedules and allow you to pick a sunny day.  To register for your section of the road, drop a line here at KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com, or leave a message at 853-1571.  We can provide garbage bags and work gloves.  Bring a friend – it’s a fine way to spend a fall day while at camp. 

Folks who have helped with this effort over the past year – let us know if you want to keep the same section you worked on in the spring.

 

 

North Island Fire! 

 

Friday August 25, Laurentian University Adventure leadership program was completing their 4 day canoe trip in the area under the leadership of Mary Waddell. They camped on the island in the North end and upon departing Saturday morning, met 2 young fellows with a boat full of equipment for camping.  The departing canoers chatted with the young men and learned they were planning to stay on the island for a few days .

 

On August 31st, another Laurentian group travelled this same route. The leader of this second trip, Darcy, had been on the previous the trip and knew the island would be a nice place to stop for lunch. He was shocked to discover that the fishermen had cut down a huge red pine and dug a huge trench - 4' long, 2' wide for a fire. The logs in the trench were still smouldering -so the LU students poured a lot of water on the fire and continued on to camp at Sturgeon Point.

 

The next morning Darcy reported this to Mary as he travelled by her camp. Mary jumped in her boat and drove up to check it out. The fire was now rekindled, smouldering in at least 3 different places and was into the roots of the surrounding trees. Mary returned to camp and called MNR and Hank Richer fire chief.

 MNR had a spotter plane and helicopter in within the hour. and the fire was successfully contained

 

So - many thanks to Laurentian University for dousing the fire the fishermen started, and alerting the locals !!

 

 

Lakeshore Clean-up

  KEW once again worked with the TD Canada Trust Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup project.  In early September we concentrated on an old dumpsite on a point across from Lion’s Head narrows.  We took out a huge load of ancient garbage.  Another crew has worked through the summer to reduce the garbage at the public landing at the causeway.  Others have concentrated on cleaning up campsites in the north end of Kukagami and on Donald Lake.  There are still a few campsites on the main lake that need some attention!  Free tee-shirts are available to anyone who leads a clean up on Kukagami Lake.

 Let us know you are interested by dropping a note to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com

All though the year, we ask all our Kukagami neighbours to take a few minutes to pick up stuff you find while boating along our beautiful shoreline.

 

                                         North Island Clean-up                                            by M. Waddell

 

On August 22-25, 12 Adventure Leadership students from Laurentian University completed a 4-day, 80 km canoe trip in our area.  Their final campsite was on the North end of Kukagami on the island . They cleaned up a number of branches that had been cut from live trees and a large part of the old dump - 6 garbage bags.  Great job - keep it up and pass on that interest in the care of our environment.

 

 

Don’t Cut All the Dead Trees!

(Tips from Cottage Life website)

Leave standing dead trees Not just for woodpeckers, these “snags” are a veritable hotel for a host of other birds, mammals, and insects. Let them stand, unless they pose a safety hazard; if felled, leave them on the ground to decay, providing another source of food and habitat for creatures such as salamanders and chipmunks. 

In our area, those tall dead pines along the shore have been hoisting eagles all summer!  Large birds often rest in tall dead trees to soak up the sun, and to keep a sharp eye on the water for their next meal.

 

 

Website and Newsletter

  The KEW newsletter is published online, and sent by email to any interested person.  Paper copies can be provided to residents upon request.  Drop a note to Kukagami Environment Watch, 432 Fox Road, Wahnapitae, ON, P0M 3C0.   Check KEWatch.blogspot.com to post your own messages, photos, or to see what’s new between newsletters.

 

Kukagami Spirit Trumps Kukagami Oops

 

            For years to come, stories (some real, some exaggerated) will be told and retold about the summer of 2008.

 

            After the last snowflake had fallen, after the ice guessing contest winnings had been spent, after snow boots, snowmachines and snowblowers had been put away, Kukagami neighbours smiled broadly.  Summer fun would soon begin.  The men of the camps lifted their well-worn tools and polished their fishing gear.  The ladies of the camps gathered garden paraphernalia and eagerly prepared to escape cooking in the kitchen, as dads would be grilling on sunny decks.  Children of all ages put on colourful bathing suits, grabbed their favourite water toys and waited.  They waited with moms and dads; they waited with grandmas and grandpas, they waited with aunts and uncles; they waited with cousins and friends.  They all waited for the long, hot, sunny days of summer to begin.

 

            Somewhere, well hidden, Kukagami Oops giggled.

 

            Every morning, families gathered to gaze longingly at the eastern horizon, expecting the red sun to break through the dark clouds.  But, more rain drizzled, it poured, it fell in heavy sheets.  Families huddled around TV’s; maybe the Weather Channel would give them hope for tomorrow….for the weekend…for next month…

 

            The usual gatherings were planned, from crowded reunions to romantic getaways in the North end; everyone believed the sun would shine on that chosen day.  It couldn’t rain every day.

 

            Peaking out from his hidey-hole, Kukagami Oops grinned.

 

            So, hope filled Kukagami neighbours got busy.  They would be ready for those lazy, hazy days, when family and friends would eagerly come for fun in the sun on our beautiful shores.

 

            And, more rain came, driven by howling winds, storms with flashing lightning and crashing thunder, steady rain pounded on our roofs through the dark nights.

 

            And so, families heaved a sigh, then carried on with their summer plans.  Kukagami bays bustled with activities, resounded with sounds of work and pleasure, drills and saws combined with drums and guitars, melded with shouts and laughter.

 

           

 

 

When the sun did briefly pierce through overcast skies, motor boats of all types crisscrossed the lake; children noisily splashed through waves; canoes glided silently around islands; beautiful people draped themselves on lounge chairs.  Oh! Ah! The feel of baking under the hot rays of summer.

 

Kukagami Oops danced a little jig, ducked back into his hole and guffawed.

 

In an instant, the summer moment ended.  Boats roared back to shore; soaking wet children ran for cover; canoeists frantically paddled for home; drenched, beautiful people donned sweatshirts & baggy pants.

 

But, somehow all the hopeful plans continued.  Costco tents dotted properties, garages were decorated, a new gazebo was built.  Guests would find cover.  Happily, there were some sunny mornings, a few warm afternoons, now and then a starry, moonlit sky.  Kukagami hosted gatherings:  Proud Canada Day celebrations, a fun filled neighbourly picnic, memorable family and friend gatherings.  And work got done…homes got built, roofs repaired, decks & trim painted.   Families gazed at the beauty of their wilderness havens; souls filled with contentment.

 

·        Loons serenely glided by - their haunting calls a comfort.

·        Stormy skies left us awestruck – no artist could capture such colours

·        The blue herons flew by just above the water – a daily treasure.

·        The reflections on the water constantly changed – a kaleidoscope of wonder.

·        And oh…the butterflies…the flowers…the birds…all the shades of greens of our forest.

 

Kukagami Oops stamped his feet and slunk off into the underbrush muttering;  “No blueberries for their pies…big hungry bears in their camps…miles of rough roads for them to drive over…”

 

Ah, yes, more stories about the Summer of 2008, stories to be told around our campfires for decades, but the best of all remind us that the Kukagami Spirit can never be dampened.

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If you have ideas for a Kukagami story, send them to KEW or call 853-4772.  If you don’t want to write the story, the storyteller will use your details to write for you.  You will get to edit before final printing.                                   

 

 

    One of the main objectives of Kukagami Environment Watch is to serve as a source of accurate and timely information for residents and friends of Kukagami Lake and area.  Ask you neighbours of they are receiving this newsletter!  Offer to forward it to them, or ask them to send their address to KEW@kukagami.infosathse.com.