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Sauble Beach (pop. 2000 [citation needed]) is a beach community and unincorporated area in the town of South Bruce Peninsula, Bruce County, in the northern area of southwestern Ontario, Canada. It is on the Bruce Peninsula , along the eastern shore of Lake Huron , on the north edge of the Saugeen First Nation .
Woodland Caribou Provincial Park is a provincial park in Northwestern Ontario, Canada, west of the municipality of Red Lake. [ 2 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] It borders Atikaki Provincial Park and Nopiming Provincial Park in eastern Manitoba , [ 6 ] [ 7 ] and is made up of Canadian Shield and boreal forest.
Saugeen 29 is a First Nations reserve in Bruce County, Ontario. It is the main reserve of the Saugeen First Nation. Like Chief's Point 28, this band owns land that is rented to cottagers who pay an annual lease fee for the use of the land. The current (mid 2019) lease contract between the cottagers and the two Reserves is in effect until 30 ...
The beach area to the south of Main St. in the community is referred to by the band as Sauble Park or South Sauble Beach Park. [ 22 ] [ 23 ] [ 24 ] In addition to the south Sauble Beach, Ontario area, the Saugeen First Nation claims the rights to another stretch of the public beach, approximately 2 km long, west of Lakeshore Boulevard extending ...
Bruce County is a county in Southwestern Ontario, Canada.It has eight lower-tier municipalities with a total 2016 population of 66,491. It is named for James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin and 12th Earl of Kincardine, the sixth Governor General of the Province of Canada.
The Bruce Peninsula is a peninsula in Ontario, Canada, that divides Georgian Bay of Lake Huron from the lake's main basin. The peninsula extends roughly northwestwards from the rest of Southwestern Ontario, pointing towards Manitoulin Island, with which it forms the widest strait joining Georgian Bay to the rest of Lake Huron.
Equirectangular projection, N/S stretching 155 %. Geographic limits of the map: N: 57.1° N; S: 41.3° N; W: 95.5° W; E: 74.0° W; Date: 26 August 2009
Port Burwell Provincial Park (formerly Iroquois Beach Provincial Park 1971-1986) 1971 42°38′53″N 80°48′58″W / 42.648055555556°N 80.816111111111°W / 42.648055555556; -80.816111111111