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travel / travel magazine / may08

Live & Learn



Locks, docks & narrows
By Erin Anderssen with photography by David Barbour

A young family tests its homemade boat and sense of adventure along the Rideau Canal

THE AVALON WAS BORN IN OUR OTTAWA GARAGE, hammered together by my husband Joel and his father with fallen oaks and cedars from the ice storm that hit Central and Eastern Canada in 1998. Its design, a V-bottom launch, was a favourite among East Coast rum-runners in the late 1800s, though our own 18-foot replica has spent most of its days performing humbler duties, such as ferrying groceries from town to the summer cottage we rent on Nova Scotia’s south shore.



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It motors at about 12 knots flat out, which is like riding a bicycle alongside a car when we’re up against a day cruiser. But what it lacks in speed, it makes up for in style, with the graceful curve of its unpainted hull. Perched on its bench seats, I feel as if I’m in another era.

What better boat, then, to retrace a historic route.

For years, Joel had wanted to make a trip along the Rideau Canal, the 202-kilometre waterway between Ottawa and Kingston, Ont., looking for close-to-home adventures to test the Avalon’s seaworthiness. So last July, a few weeks after the canal was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site, we decided the time was finally right.

You can travel the entire system of lakes, rivers and locks in about five days, if you hurry. But even on a quiet day, a boater arriving at the wrong time at the eight-lock chambers of the Ottawa Lock Station, the canal’s northern terminus on the Ottawa River, right beside Parliament Hill, might wait half a day just to be lifted through. There are picnic tables and lawns large enough to kick around a soccer ball at most of the locks and even museums to tour during the wait, but with six-year-old Noah and two-year-old Samson aboard an open boat and rain in the forecast, we thought it best to start where traffic would be light and the trip shorter.


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