A lot windier but continued hot and humid on Wednesday. The afternoon high once again hit 91F. Good day to cool off in the spray of a PWC ride around the lake. Thursday has been one of changes. The morning storms pretty much missed this area, but around the lunch hour there was a deluge. My rain gauge recorded .46 inches of rain in a fairly short period of time. That set of storms moved out around 2PM, and it has been getting cooler by the minute. The days high of 78F was way back at midnight. These storms are supposed to clear out overnight and Friday be quite nice. Both Saturday and Sunday have a slight chance of rain. Sunday looks to be the nicer of the two days.
Last fall my wife and I visited Golf Galaxy in Syracuse and became seriously bad golfers. We have been enjoying getting fractionally better with each lesson and round played. Thursday morning Marilyn scored her first legitimate par. High fives all around. Next goal: A birdie for one of us.
Latest update on boating access to Dixon Lake. The creek is open and navigable, but Land Escapes employees continue to attempt to intimidate boaters into not boating to Dixon Lake. Limerick Township solicited a legal opinion from the municipal attorneys and got back a comprehensive summation of what the municipality may and may not do. There will be a delegation to Council at the July 21st meeting to further discuss the situation. The bottom line for now is the creek is open, and you have every right to use it and to use the shoreline of both Dark and Dixon Lakes. The more of us who do that, the better.
The construction along Hwy 62 south of Madoc is underway. On the 17th they were working on grinding pavement on a long section just south of Madoc. I did not follow my own advice and on my way northbound at 2PM I sat for 27 minutes. I once again be taking the 14 to Stirling and Marmora then across the 7. If you are coming from the east, I recommend the 41 to the 7.
The LWRA will be having their traditional activities on the August holiday weekend. The paddle sports (canoe, kayak, etc.) competition will be Saturday morning August 2 at Frasers Beach (169 LL North Shore) at 9:30AM. The AGM and social event will be that afternoon (being held at the Aaron Huizinga cottage across the bay from the dam on St. Ola lake. There is a yellow slide on his dock.) starting at 1:00PM, and the sailboat regatta will be Sunday afternoon August 3 starting near the Coxwell cottage (202 LL South Shore) at 2PM.
The Rogers 5G tower on Sutton Rd. is operational. The Rogers / FOCA special pricing plan for internet service is $60 per month this year. (unless you have a Rogers phone in which case it remains $50 per month) Even at the $60 price it is the best internet service for us on the lake. If you have signed up for that service, FOCA today sent me a long list of other Rogers benefits available. (drop me a line and I will send you the link) It appears they throttle the 5G connection to 40MBps down, and 10MBps up. That is plenty of bandwidth for any single-family use. I have tested the connection and can stream multiple videos simultaneously on separate devices with no buffering. I have had virtually zero down time in the last 8 months.
The municipality is on summer burning rules. Daytime burning is not allowed until November 1. (see exceptions below) No permits were issued last year. Campfires less than 3 feet by 3 feet are allowed from 7PM to 7AM. There is a daytime burn permit by-law up for discussion at the July 21st Council meeting.
Now, to answer some more technical questions about daytime fires. I am fairly adept at reading Ontario "O.reg" legalese but will insert the disclaimer here that this is MY interpretation of what was provided by the "Fire Prevention Officer" for the municipality. O.Reg. 207/96 sections 8.1 through 8.4 say that during the day:
You can use a commercially sold camp stove during the day that uses a liquid or gas fuel as long as that stove can be turned off by a control valve.
You can have a charcoal fire in a BBQ designed for charcoal while using only commercially available charcoal, AND, you are within 100 meters of your permanent dwelling.
You can have a charcoal fire in a BBQ designed for charcoal while using only commercially available charcoal, AND, you are in a commercially operated campground with permission from the campground owner/operator.
You can have a wood fire in a commercially available wood burning stove or oven as long as the stove is 5 meters from any combustible material, the area under the stove is bare rock, the stove encloses the fire on all 4 sides, and the stove is within 100 meters of your dwelling.
You can have a campfire in a commercial campground in an above ground grate that is permanently affixed to the ground and cannot be moved and is clear of any combustible material by 3 meters in all directions including vertically (no overhanging branches) and you have permission from the campground owner/operator.
You can have a daytime campfire that is less than 1 meter in diameter and 1 meter high as long as it is on bare rock and at least one meter from all flammable material.
This last section (taken from O.Reg. 207/96 Section 8.5 paragraphs 1 through 4) seems to say that as long as you build a small fire on bare rock, you can have a daytime campfire at a wilderness campsite. Remember, all of these exceptions are for daytime burning when a total "fire ban" is NOT in effect.
The dump is on summer hours. It is open Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday and holiday Mondays from 11AM to 6:00PM. It changes back to winter hours on September 1.
The 2025 fishing regulations are available on the Ontario.ca website. The Limerick chain of lakes remains at the very south end of fisheries zone 15. Pages 104 to 114 of the regulations book. Bass season opened June 28 and closes November 30. Lake trout season opened January 1 and closes September 30. The Limerick chain of lakes has a "slot size" for lake trout that MUST be returned to the lake if caught. It is roughly 16 to 22 inches. It is also a "one line" lake when ice fishing.