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How many lakes are there in Ontario?
#1
Posted 11 November 2011 - 09:08 PM
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#2 Guest_Blair_*
Posted 11 November 2011 - 09:23 PM
There seems to be some confusion about how many lake their are in Ontario. Last year I remember see on a government website that we had over 400,000 lakes in the province. I was on the MNR site yesterday and the number that they gave was 250,000 which is still a big number, but a far cry from that first number.
Ontario means "Shining Water" in Iroquois.
With over a quarter million lakes and rivers in the province, there are more places to catch fish in Ontario than one can imagine. The province has over 15% of all the freshwater on the planet. Ontario truly is a fishing paradise!
There are waters in Ontario that have yet to see an angler! The sheer size of the province make it difficult to reach all the waters as Ontario covers more than one million square kilometers. Who knows, there might be a 60 pound muskie in an untouched lake somewhere with your name on it!
Ontario has 144 species of fish. This is remarkable when you think that Canada has 180 varieties of fish total. If you are an angler that likes diversity, Ontario is your place. Walleye, pike, salmon, muskie, and a variety of trout just scratch the surface of what you can catch while fishing in Ontario. Ontario is divided up into six fishing regions and each region offers something a little different.
Quote from Internet Board:
"A FEW YEARS AGO, A SURVEY WAS TAKEN TO ANSWER THAT VERY QUESTION. THE RESULT WAS 250,000 + LAKES IN ONTARIO. NO MINIMAL SIZE WAS REVEALED, BUT MY UNCLE IN ORRVILLE NOTED THAT ONLY ONE OF THE THREE LAKES THAT SURROUND HIS LODGE WAS LISTED!
INCIDENTALLY, LAKE MICHIGAN IS THE ONLY GREAT LAKE THAT IS NOT SHARED WITH CANADA.
TIGHT LINES"
It could be as high as: 500,00 to 750,000
This is an incomplete list of lakes in Ontario, a province of Canada.
ContentsA B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A
B
- Balsam Lake
- Bamaji Lake
- Baptiste Lake
- Bark Lake
- Bass Lake
- Basshaunt Lake
- Beech Lake
- Lake Belwood
- Lake Bernard
- Big Hawk Lake
- Big Rideau Lake
- Big Trout Lake
- Big Yirkie Lake
- Birch Lake
- Bitter Lake
- Black Lake
- Blue Heron Lake
- Boshkung Lake
- Bobs Lake (Peterson Creek)
- Bobs Lake (Shallow River)
- Bobs Lake (Timmins, Ontario)
- Brampton Lake
- Branch Lake
- Buckhorn Lake
- Cameron Lake
- Canonto Lake
- Canoe Lake (disambiguation), multiple lakes by this name
- Caribou Lake (North Bay)
- Caribou Lake (Temagami)
- Carson Lake
- Cat Lake
- Catchacoma Lake
- Lake Cecebe
- Cedar Lake
- Champlain Trail Lakes
- Chandos Lake
- Charleston Lake
- Lake Chemong
- Clearwater Lake
- Lac des Chats
- Commanda Lake
- Lake Couchiching
- Cranberry Lake (Ontario)
- Crane Lake
- Crotch Lake
- Crowe Lake (Kawartha)
E
F
G
- Gananoque Lake
- Gibson Lake
- Gloucester Pool
- Go Home Lake
- Golden Lake
- Gordon Lake
- Gough Lake
- Gould Lake
- Green Lake
- Grundy Lake
- Guelph Lake
- Gull Lake (Ontario)
- Gullrock Lake
- Halls Lake (Haliburton County)
- Hammer Lake
- Head Lake (Kawartha Lakes)
- Head Lake (Haliburton County)
- Heart Lake
- Holden Lake
- Lake Huron
K
- Kabinakagami Lake
- Lake Kagawong
- Kahshe Lake
- Kamaniskeg Lake
- Kashagawigamog Lake
- Kashwakamak Lake
- Kasshabog Lake
- Kawagama Lake
- Kawartha Lakes
- Lake Kelso
- Kennisis Lake
- Kesagami Lake
- Kimber Lake
- Kushog Lake
- Lake Kairiskons
- Lake Kishkatina
- Lac des Mille Lacs
- Lady Evelyn Lake
- Lake Madawaska
- Lake of Bays
- Lake of the Woods
- Lake of Two Islands
- Larder Lake
- Little Bob Lake
- Little Branch Lake
- Little Sachigo Lake
- little Yirkie Lake
- Limerick Lake
- Long Lake
- Lost Lake
- Loughborough Lake
- Lower Buckhorn Lake
- MacDowell Lake
- Madawaska Lake
- Mameigwess Lake
- Lake Manitou
- Marmion Lake
- Mary Lake
- Maynard Lake
- Maple Lake
- Mazinaw Lake
- Mississauga Lake
- Mississippi Lake
- Lake Mindemoya
- Minnitaki Lake
- Missisa Lake
- Mojikit Lake
- Morrison Lake
- Mountain Lake
- Mozhabong Lake
- Mud Lake (Haliburton County,Ontario)
- Lake Muskoka
- Muskrat Lake
- Net Lake
- Night Hawk Lake
- Lake Nipigon
- Lake Nipissing
- North Caribou Lake
- Lake Nosbonsing
- Nungesser Lake
- Nishin Lake
- Oba Lake - North
- Oba Lake - South
- Lake Ogoki
- Old Man's Lake
- Onaman Lake
- Onigam Lake
- Lake Ontario
- Opeongo Lake
- Opinicon Lake
- Otter Tail Lake
- Otty Lake
- Ozhiski Lake
- Lake Panache
- Pakeshkag Lake
- Paudash Lake
- Peninsula Lake
- Percy Lake
- Pierce Lake
- Pierre Lake
- Pike Lake
- Pigeon Lake
- Pokei Lake
- Professor's Lake
- Puslinch Lake
- Rainy Lake
- Lake Ramsey
- Rebecca Lake
- Red Cedar Lake
- Red Squirrel Lake
- Redstone Lake
- Restoule Lake
- Rice Lake
- Ril Lake
- Riley Lake
- Rock Lake
- Lake Rosalind
- Lake Rosseau
- Round Lake
- Ruth Lake
- Saskatchewan Lake
- Sachigo Lake
- Lake Saint Clair
- Saint Francis (Lac Saint-François)
- Salmon Lake
- Sand Lake, numerous lakes by this name
- Sandy Lake
- Savant Lake
- Sawyer lake
- Lake Scugog
- Seseganaga Lake
- Lac Seul
- Severn Lake
- Seymour Lake (disambiguation), several lakes by this name
- Sharbot Lake
- Shibogama Lake
- Shoal Lake
- Lake Simcoe
- Six Mile Lake
- Skeleton Lake
- Skootamatta Lake
- Smoothrock Lake
- Soap Lake
- Sparrow Lake
- Steel Lake
- Stoco Lake
- Lake St. Joseph
- Stony Lake
- Sturgeon Lake
- Sunfish Lake
- Lake Superior
- Sydenham Lake
- Talon Lake
- Tangamong Lake
- Lake Temagami
- Tetapaga Lake
- Tetu Lake
- Thirty Island Lake
- Lake Timiskaming
- Triangle Lake (Ontario)
- Trout Lake
- Turtle Lake
- Twelve Mile Lake (Ontario)
W
- Wabatongushi Lake
- Wabigoon Lake
- Wahwashkesh Lake
- Wanapitei Lake
- Wapikopa Lake
- Wawa Lake
- Weagamow Lake
- White Lake
- Whiteclay Lake
- White Otter Lake
- Whitewater Lake
- Windermere Lake
- Wintering Lake
- Windigo Lake
- Windy Lake
- Winisk Lake
- Wolfe Lake
- Lake Wolsey
- Wunnummin Lake
Z
#3
Posted 11 November 2011 - 11:29 PM
#4
Posted 12 November 2011 - 03:19 AM
I guess one of the first questions that should be asked is "what is a lake". Is it bigger than a pond? What size is a pond? I don't know if there is a proper description for these things or if there is who decides where a pond stops and a lake starts? I am wondering if this is the reason for the difference in the number of lakes?
Take a look at this site they made an interesting chart, but I don't know how they got higher values for depth and wave height.
http://www.aquahabit...s.lakes.ed.html
I'll bet there are still some un-named lakes in the backwoods of northern Ontario. I think during the Gulf war, Ontario government named a previously un-named lake after the first soldier that was killed, or some thing like that.
#5
Posted 12 November 2011 - 01:24 PM
I think it's fair enough to say that there is more than enough lakes to last a person a life time. If you fish one lake a day from the day you are born until you are 70 that is only 25,550 lakes I'll never get to 250,000 lakes, sadly.
Alfie.
#6
Posted 12 November 2011 - 02:27 PM
http://www.thedailyp...e=true&e=771284
Manitoba government names lakes after soldiers
Posted 4 years ago
Before he was killed when his armoured vehicle ran off the road in Afghanistan last year, Master Cpl. Timothy Wilson loved to spend time fishing on Manitoba's lakes.
Now his name will be permanently attached to a remote body of water in the heart of the Canadian Shield.
The Manitoba government is honouring Wilson and another soldier who died while serving in Afghanistan, Cpl. Keith Morley, by naming two lakes after them.
"He really enjoyed fishing, he enjoyed camping. He just loved the outdoors," Wilson's father, Dale Wilson, said at a ceremony Friday at the Manitoba legislature.
"That's the way I raised him."
The lakes, both north of Flin Flon, were unnamed until now. Manitoba has a long-standing practice of naming geographical features such as lakes and hills after residents who die during military service.
"It's bittersweet, it really is," said Dale Wilson, who has two other sons in the military.
"I can't tell you how much Timothy's loss devastated us. There's a piece of my heart missing and there always will be. But I was very proud of Tim and what he accomplished."
Relatives of both soldiers said they plan to head north soon to visit the lakes that now bear the names of their families.
"I would love to go up there soon ... I plan on it," said Della Morley. Her son Keith was on foot patrol when he was attacked by a suicide bomber in September of 2006.
"Manitobans cannot even begin to thank (Morley and Wilson) for their sacrifice, for the sacrifice of their families and for the great military dedication they had during their careers," Premier Gary Doer said shortly before presenting relatives of the men with framed certificates. Morley and Wilson are the first Manitobans who died in Afghanistan to have lakes named after them.
I think all individuals who gave their life should have either a lake or part of the land, a park or something, named after them not just those who liked fishing. If they made the ultimate sacrifice for our country, should we not honour them with eternal rememberance? I also recall that many small lakes only have a number for a designation. So plenty of lakes for all who died for our freedom. That's just my thoughts.
No articles about Ontario naming a lake for an Ontario fallen soldier(s), how sad. Probably takes a commission and years to do b/c all the maps will constantly change and THAT is too inconvenient for someone.
#7
Posted 14 November 2011 - 07:55 PM
I guess one of the first questions that should be asked is "what is a lake". Is it bigger than a pond? What size is a pond? I don't know if there is a proper description for these things or if there is who decides where a pond stops and a lake starts? I am wondering if this is the reason for the difference in the number of lakes?
I think to be a lake it just has to have an inlet and an outlet. That can be anything from a river to an underground spring.
#8
Posted 14 November 2011 - 08:54 PM
Just looked at yahoo answers and they say the difference between a pond and a lake is that a pond has photic zone where light can penetrate to the bottom and plant life can cover the entire surface of the water. A Lake has an aphotic zone where light cannot penetrate and therefore cannot be completely covered by plant life. So technically a pond can have a bigger surface area than a lake, it seems it is the depth that counts. Don't know, just sayin'.I think to be a lake it just has to have an inlet and an outlet. That can be anything from a river to an underground spring.
Alfie.
#9
Posted 15 November 2011 - 05:05 PM
Just looked at yahoo answers and they say the difference between a pond and a lake is that a pond has photic zone where light can penetrate to the bottom and plant life can cover the entire surface of the water. A Lake has an aphotic zone where light cannot penetrate and therefore cannot be completely covered by plant life. So technically a pond can have a bigger surface area than a lake, it seems it is the depth that counts. Don't know, just sayin'.
Alfie.
if that were the description of a pond then lake Scugog is actually a pond?
#10
Posted 15 November 2011 - 05:13 PM
Just looked at yahoo answers and they say the difference between a pond and a lake is that a pond has photic zone where light can penetrate to the bottom and plant life can cover the entire surface of the water. A Lake has an aphotic zone where light cannot penetrate and therefore cannot be completely covered by plant life. So technically a pond can have a bigger surface area than a lake, it seems it is the depth that counts. Don't know, just sayin'.
Alfie.
I dont think that is correct, but I could be wrong. You have lakes like Puslinch lake where plant life covers almost the whole lake with some pockets without plants.
#11
Posted 15 November 2011 - 05:40 PM
I dont think that is correct, but I could be wrong. You have lakes like Puslinch lake where plant life covers almost the whole lake with some pockets without plants.
I would agree that I think plant life covering the entire area does not make it a pond, but the actual size of the body of water that determines whether it is a lake or pond. so if that is the question, what is that size difference?
#12
Posted 15 November 2011 - 06:05 PM
BTW if any conestoga college students are reading this you should try the lake for bass inbetween classes. Once inbetween class I caught between 20 and 30 large mouths on a spinner. Now the biggest one I got was maybe 9" but it was still a fun way to spend my inbetween class break.
#13
Posted 15 November 2011 - 06:07 PM
#14
Posted 15 November 2011 - 09:02 PM
#15
Posted 15 November 2011 - 10:36 PM
Alfie.
#16
Posted 16 November 2011 - 01:44 PM
I was only reporting what I found.
Alfie.
That's good stuff for this discussion.
#17
Posted 20 November 2011 - 10:32 AM
Just to add a little more to the discussion, check out a map of Newfoundland and all the "ponds" you find there, like Ten Mile PondThat's good stuff for this discussion.
In Newfie it is a pond unless it is very big. I have a Newfie brother, a 20 year friend and he calls almost every lake we go to a pond, but some of the bigger ones we go to he will refer to as a lake for instance Simcoe. He does call Scugog a pond when we go there.
On the other hand he refers to "Specks" as Mud Trout, LMAO.
I guess a lake or a pond is all a matter of perspective.
As to the original question, the number of lakes in Ontario. We drove from Hamilton to Trenton this week for work and then from there to Barrys Bay,where our next job is. For the return trip we decided to go through Algonquin last night. Besides the lakes or ponds I saw beside the roads there were so many X Lake Roads we passed. My number of lakes in Ontario is "Ferkin lots."
Alfie.
#18
Posted 20 November 2011 - 08:18 PM
#19
Posted 20 November 2011 - 09:24 PM
Agreed my friend.We are very fortunate to have such a vast resource in this province. Fresh water is becoming more and more valuable as time goes on. Canada has 25% to 35% of all the fresh water in the world and we need to make sure tat it is protected.
Alfie.
#20
Posted 21 November 2011 - 01:22 PM
Dirk
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