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magazine / so05 / indepth

In-depth

The Ottawa Valley

FEATURES
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Canadian Geographic feature
Agricultural city
Rural evolution
    Farmers’ Markets
Urban preservation
    “Treatise of an urban farmer”
Top 10 adventures
    Down in the Valley
Toxic solution
Ghost towns
Burying the past

DEPARTMENTS
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Just the facts
From the CG vault
Re:Sources
A wild ride on the river’s white waters is just one of many adventures the Ottawa-based weekend warrior can enjoy. (PHOTO: Owl rafting)

Down in the Valley
Have you ever wondered where some places get their name? Here are some answers to those Ottawa Valley nomenclature questions.




Learn more:
• Top 10 list
• Read more about Balaclava as a ghost town.

Balaclava (map)

A small ghost town located in Renfrew that gradually became abandoned due to lack of supplies and languishing farms.

Bastard Township (map)

The most likely origin for the ward’s name is from an old and prominent British family, the Bastards from Devonshire, England. Some say the township derived its name from a bold and cocky clerk who, when faced with the shy township’s founder, jested that since it had no father, it must be a bastard.


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Bullies Acre (map)

Near Kerr Line in the township of Ross, you’ll find a place known as Bullies Acre. It was named after a group of intoxicated builders after they decided to harass some church-goers one night.



Eeyore Lake (map)

Named for the character in A.A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh in 1947 by an Algonquin Park superintendent.

Rocher Fendu (map)

This hamlet, also known to residents in the Valley as "Russia Fendy," is by the Ottawa River. The French term means "split rock" and refers to a nearby channel on the river.

Wilno (map)

Hagarty Township is home to Wilno village, the first Canadian Polish settlement. Founded in the 1860s by a small group of Polish settlers from, you guessed it, Wilno, Poland.

L.F.


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