Pierre's father goes home
Perseid meteor shower - August 11th, 1991
Our camping trip up in the White Mountains coincided with the Perseid Meteor Shower. Pierre and I were on our backs, a little high, with a view of the entire sky. A million stars above... the constant murmur of the stream surrounding us and enough streaking meteors to keep our eyes focused. .
At this point Pierre knew that he father was not long for the world. Some of our conversation was about life, the meaning of life, and death.
In my mind's eye I can still recall the meteor that came straight down the river, the brightest one I'd ever seen. Right above us. It blinked right above us, illuminated again and kept going, out of sight. I remember being startled. "Holy shit!". Pierre then told me "that's it, that's a sign. My father has passed. I'll call in the morning". He was right, his father had passed right at the same time as that meteor shot above our heads.
Pierre told me that his father used to take him to Go Home Lake in Ontario when he was young, and was it on my agenda to visit Canada? Not out of the question I told him. Pierre took a stone from the Wild River which I placed on the banks of Go Home Lake. The decision was made then and there. Visit Ontario!
Go Home Lake is a lake in west central Ontario in the Township of Georgian Bay, District of Muskoka. Go Home Lake is a natural lake which is actually part of the Musquash River system (also spelled as "Musquosh" on some maps). It was opened up as a recreational lake starting in the late 1950s when Crown Lands were surveyed, subdivided and auctioned off in public bids that took place from 1958 through 1962. In the early 60's the construction of two dams was completed, a permanent earthen dam at the Go Home River outlet and a stop log dam (control dam) at the Musquash River outlet. The intent of the dams was to control the water level to maintain a constant water level throughout the boating season eliminating the seasonal fluctuations in the water level.
There is actually two stories about how the Lake was named, one is It was named after Go Home Bay, immediately downstream. Loggers would send timber down the Musquash River and meet steamers at Go Home Bay, which would transfer timber to various mills around the Great Lakes and then "go home", hence the name. The other story dates further back to when the Voyageurs travelled down Georgian Bay from the French River and met the Indigenous peoples that lived along the shore of Georgian Bay at the mouth of the Go Home River (Go Home Bay). The Indigenous peoples would pack up each fall and move inland to the area of Go Home Lake which was more protected, to live out the winter months. When asked where they were going by the Voyageurs, they would reply "Kewa", which meant "Go Home" in their native language, hence the name for both the Bay on Georgian Bay, the river and the Lake.
Go Home Lake is approximately 5 miles (8 km) long and ranges from 1/2 to 3/4 miles (800 - 1,200 m) wide. Of Muskoka's 1600 lakes, it is the 14th biggest by size. Its length runs in a north–south orientation. The lake is fed at its most northern point by the Musquash River. It then empties back into the Musquash River through a control dam at the south end of the lake, and into Go Home River at the north end of the lake. Both the Musquash and Go Home Rivers empty into Georgian Bay. Go Home Lake is considerably more rugged and rockier than other Muskoka lakes. Both the "New Cut" (a man made channel), and the "Haunted Narrows" link the south end of the lake to the north. The "Haunted Narrows" received its name from the eerie sound caused by the movement of rocks on the bottom of the channel that can be heard in the dead of night due to the strong current flow.
Our camping trip up in the White Mountains coincided with the Perseid Meteor Shower. Pierre and I were on our backs, a little high, with a view of the entire sky. A million stars above... the constant murmur of the stream surrounding us and enough streaking meteors to keep our eyes focused. .
At this point Pierre knew that he father was not long for the world. Some of our conversation was about life, the meaning of life, and death.
In my mind's eye I can still recall the meteor that came straight down the river, the brightest one I'd ever seen. Right above us. It blinked right above us, illuminated again and kept going, out of sight. I remember being startled. "Holy shit!". Pierre then told me "that's it, that's a sign. My father has passed. I'll call in the morning". He was right, his father had passed right at the same time as that meteor shot above our heads.
Pierre told me that his father used to take him to Go Home Lake in Ontario when he was young, and was it on my agenda to visit Canada? Not out of the question I told him. Pierre took a stone from the Wild River which I placed on the banks of Go Home Lake. The decision was made then and there. Visit Ontario!
Go Home Lake is a lake in west central Ontario in the Township of Georgian Bay, District of Muskoka. Go Home Lake is a natural lake which is actually part of the Musquash River system (also spelled as "Musquosh" on some maps). It was opened up as a recreational lake starting in the late 1950s when Crown Lands were surveyed, subdivided and auctioned off in public bids that took place from 1958 through 1962. In the early 60's the construction of two dams was completed, a permanent earthen dam at the Go Home River outlet and a stop log dam (control dam) at the Musquash River outlet. The intent of the dams was to control the water level to maintain a constant water level throughout the boating season eliminating the seasonal fluctuations in the water level.
There is actually two stories about how the Lake was named, one is It was named after Go Home Bay, immediately downstream. Loggers would send timber down the Musquash River and meet steamers at Go Home Bay, which would transfer timber to various mills around the Great Lakes and then "go home", hence the name. The other story dates further back to when the Voyageurs travelled down Georgian Bay from the French River and met the Indigenous peoples that lived along the shore of Georgian Bay at the mouth of the Go Home River (Go Home Bay). The Indigenous peoples would pack up each fall and move inland to the area of Go Home Lake which was more protected, to live out the winter months. When asked where they were going by the Voyageurs, they would reply "Kewa", which meant "Go Home" in their native language, hence the name for both the Bay on Georgian Bay, the river and the Lake.
Go Home Lake is approximately 5 miles (8 km) long and ranges from 1/2 to 3/4 miles (800 - 1,200 m) wide. Of Muskoka's 1600 lakes, it is the 14th biggest by size. Its length runs in a north–south orientation. The lake is fed at its most northern point by the Musquash River. It then empties back into the Musquash River through a control dam at the south end of the lake, and into Go Home River at the north end of the lake. Both the Musquash and Go Home Rivers empty into Georgian Bay. Go Home Lake is considerably more rugged and rockier than other Muskoka lakes. Both the "New Cut" (a man made channel), and the "Haunted Narrows" link the south end of the lake to the north. The "Haunted Narrows" received its name from the eerie sound caused by the movement of rocks on the bottom of the channel that can be heard in the dead of night due to the strong current flow.