The Opeongo Line
One way to know an era and its people is to study the historical events that influenced them. Another is to look at what the people said about themselves and about one another; in short, their literature.
Roots become tangible through the life lived in small settlements and along the roads that served them. One such road is The Opeongo Line, surveyed in 1852, at first called the Ottawa and Opeongo Road.
A few people think the Opeongo line is a manner of speaking that belongs to a certain type of Ottawa Valley person. ‘He is not one to spoil a good story with the truth,’ they say. However, it’s not true at all, hardly worth considering, scarcely believable.
The Opeongo Line is the most famous of several local settlement roads. At first considered to be an alternate route to move troops to Toronto in case American forces seized the Rideau and Kingston corridors, it later became a major artery for settlement and accessing the stands of giant pine in and near Algonquin Park. Although the days of squared- timber rafts and log drives are gone, the abundant waters, second and third growth forests, and beautiful scenery are known worldwide for recreation, business and wilderness settings. Opeongo, likely of Ojibwa origin, means a safe place to cross, a place to be on the lookout for, ‘a shallows at the narrows’ of a river. From such historical origins springs the name - Opeongo High School - a school that is proud of its roots and is forging its own traditions.
Traditions old and less old
Lumbering, hunting and fishing, old-time fiddling and step-dancing, fairs, bazaars, church suppers, soft ball and base ball, hockey, squared- log buildings, mixed farming, stone fences, split rail fences, hiking, cave exploring, alternative life styles, studios for arts and crafts, classical music groups, electrical energy, nuclear energy, resorts, water recreation, construction and transportation businesses, technical and professional skills, snowmobile races, Rural Ramble, celebrating the Flaming Leaf - they are all part of the area within a half hour's drive of the Opeongo Mountains.
Learn more: take a self-guided driving tour of The Highway 60 Corridor through the Bonnechere and Madawaska River Valleys.