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The Gouin Reservoir (French: Réservoir Gouin, pronounced [ʁezɛʁvwaʁ ɡwɛ̃]) is a man-made lake, fully within the boundaries of the City of La Tuque, Quebec, Canada.It is not one contiguous body of water, but the collective name for a series of connected lakes separated by innumerable bays, peninsulas, and islands with highly irregular shapes.
Forestry comes second. Recreational boating is particularly popular on this water, especially for sport fishing. The hydrographic slope of the "Du Mâle Lake" is served on the side: North, by the forest roads R2046 and R1045 which connects the village of Obedjiwan, Quebec; West, by the forest road R1009, serving the Gouin Reservoir;
The Lake Simard is bounded on the east side by a peninsula stretching northward on 5.1 kilometres (3.2 mi) to Miller Lake (Gouin Reservoir), where the current flows through a narrow passage towards the East is located, either to the Du Mâle Lake (Gouin Reservoir). On the west side, a mountain peak rises to an altitude of 505 metres (1,657 ft ...
Include “Fishing Report” in the subject line and a full caption and email to sports@fresnobee.com. ... McClure Reservoir. Bass 2 Trout 2 King salmon 0 Kokanee 0 Crappie 2 Catfish 2.
This canal was designed to divert water from the Suzie River and upper part of Mégiscane River to the Gouin Reservoir which is at the head of the Saint-Maurice River. “Piciw Minikanan Bay” is bounded on the east by a peninsula stretching northward on 2.3 kilometres (1.4 mi), which forms the west shore of the Adolphe-Poisson Bay .
Thus, this pass is a must to sail from the west to the north-central part of the Gouin Reservoir. On the west side of the lake, an archipelago delimits Lake Bourgeois with the Du Mâle Lake . The largest of these islands has a length of 7.2 kilometres (4.5 mi) and a width of 3.1 kilometres (1.9 mi); it straddles the townships of Toussaint and ...
This lake feeds in the South-West by the discharge of Simard Lake (Gouin Reservoir) and by the discharge (coming from the North) of Lacasse Lake (Gouin Reservoir). The southern part of Miller Lake is bounded by the north end of a peninsula that runs northward on 6.6 kilometres (4.1 mi).
A map dating from 1924 has three distinct water bodies, not connected to each other, on the site of the present Lake Bureau. The gradual raising of water, caused by the creation of the Gouin Reservoir in 1948, led to the merger of the Great South Lake and the lakes of the North and East, creating a new lake entity.